Introduction

Art Work by Doug O'Dell - Running the Edge (An online Fiction Action Novel) Matthew Jacobs, a member of an elite U.S. Coast Guard search and rescue team, finds himself facing the greatest challenge of his life. As a confident and aggressive search and rescue coxswain operating the venerable 44foot motor lifeboats, his job is to do the impossible, but sometimes the impossible can’t be done and he finds himself unable to save the crew of the fishing vessel Marc Eagle during a dramatic rescue attempt. During the failed rescue, he also loses two of his crewmen and very nearly his own life. He faces a loss of confidence and is haunted by the events of that fateful night. His world is further complicated when the former love of his life, the daughter of the skipper of the Marc Eagle, returns from her overseas missionary assignment and reveals a hidden secret, one that could forever tear them apart. Not only must they run the edge of danger presented by the tumultuous waters off the Oregon Coast, they must run the edge of their emotions as they attempt to reconcile their lives. Together they must face a final test that not only challenges their faith, but threatens to destroy them both.

2022/05/09

Running The Edge: Chapter 13 - The Harmony

 

Chapter 13

The Harmony

The Next Day

 

                Matt lumbered across the ramp and into the boathouse stopping in the paint preparation room that overlooked the inside of the boathouse. Tied to either side of the short dock sat the 44331 and the newly refurbished 44303, both gently rocking against the shallow swells that filtered through the front of the structure. A stiff breeze swirled around inside the housing area where several of the deck crew were working on the hull of the 331 which, in comparison to the newly refitted 303, looked somewhat worse for wear.

Corrosion caused dull streaks of brown to create uneven stripes to spill down her flanks and the crew could be seen sanding and preparing the surface to apply a new touchup coat of vinyl white paint. In most cases the sanded surface required a new layer of a primer called Blue Death so the vinyl paint would stick without curdling. Sometimes a crewman would often try to hurry the job and do it without the primer. In most cases they could get away with it. Sometimes the vinyl paint would curl after a short delay as it dried.

                Matt made his way down the ramp to the docking area, stepped into the lower well of the 331 an inspected a recently touched up location. The paint had curled.

                “Who worked on this area?” He shouted not directing his voice to any one person.

                BM3 Conners, a twenty-two- year old Boatswains mate who handled many of the routine deck maintenance duty rosters, stepped over and took a look. He ran his hand over the crinkled surface of the poorly done paint job, then motioned to Seaman Andrews to come over.

                “You do this.”

                Andrews grimaced when he noticed the crinkled paint. “Yeah, crap. I thought it would hold.”

                Matt stuck his finger in his face, “Do it again and do it right, or no liberty. Got it.”

                Andrews looked at Conners for support who didn’t respond, then he shifted his gaze back to Matt. “Okay Matt. I got it covered.”

                “Just do it.” Matt turned to address the entire deck crew. “I’m tired of all this slacking off. Get your act together or I’ll put you all on report.”

                He doubled timed his way up the ramp and left.

                Conners placed his hand on a despondent Andrew’s shoulder. Andrews ask, “What’s eating him. Good grief you’d think I had gone AWOL or something.”

               “Don’t worry about it. Just fix it and it’ll be alright. Matt’s been through a lot. He’ll get over it. Not like him to get upset over something as insignificant as this.” Andrews knelt closer to the affected painted area and began sanding again shaking his head while doing so.

                Matthew stepped into the Chiefs office to find him staring out the window. In his hand he held a weather report for the next 48 hours. Chief Adams turned away from the window and returned to his desk and handed the report to Matt.

                “We’re in for another big blow. Already starting to build and continue to do so on into late in the evening. We will most likely have to close up the bar again.”

                “Better let all the trawler skippers know.”

                “They know, that’s why they are all heading back in today before it blows up. The bar is already starting to act up but the main channel is clear. If they make back in before the tide changes, they should be okay.”

                Matt didn’t say anything, he just stood there staring at the weather report. In the back of his mind he could see the bar rolling and collapsing in on itself. The Chief saw through his blank stare.

                “What’s eating at you Matt? You look like a country and western song about a guy who just lost his best friend.”

                He shook his head left and right before answering, “I think maybe I just did.”

                “Want to talk about it?”

                “No.”

                “Alright then. Maybe you should take some real time off. Regroup. Take some leave and get away for a while.”

                “That wouldn’t help. Besides, I’ve been away too long already. What I need is to get back into the saddle and do something that matters.”

                Before the Chief could respond the comm watch stepped into the office.

                “Chief, the Harmony skipper, Joe Brown, is on the radio. Looks like their engines are overheating and they are afraid they will breakdown if they keep pushing them. The seas are running 15 up to 20 feet creating some issues for them. They need a tow.”

                “How far out are they?”

               “Said they were 15 miles out and about 20 miles north. They are drifting at idle to maintain the bow into the wind. Wind is out of the northwest at 25 knots.”

                Matt and Chief Adams entered the chart room and using calipers and a straight edge they began to calculate the Harmony’s drift and an intercept point.

                Drift is calculated by using the formula Speed = Distance / Time. Determining the advance position, the set and drift are factored in. Using dead reckoning, the intercept position can be determined with a reasonable degree of accuracy. Matt did some quick calculation, took a bearing off the number 2 buoy outside the bar, drew a line with a grease pen, and made an X at the calculated intercept location.

                “Let me take her Chief.”

                Chief Adams stepped back and tossed a surprised look. “I don’t think so Matt, not this time. You’re not ready.”

                “What’s that supposed to mean?”

                “It means you’re not ready yet. The doctor said no active duty missions until he clears you.”

                “Doctor’s, what do they know. We’re wasting time Chief.”

                Chief Adams shook his head and hesitated. All he saw was uncertainty. Against his better judgment, he blurted out,

                “Alright, pick your crew. Take the 303. It will be a good shake down mission, and Matt, just be careful.”

                Matt clinched his fist snapping it in front of him like a basketball player who had just made the winning shot. He again clambered down the ramp into the boathouse. He snapped at EN2 Johnson, “Light off the 303. We’re heading out. Andrews, forget the paint, let’s go.”

                Within one minute, the 303’s engines were rumbling, but the boat was still secured to the dock. Matt stepped into the coxswains flat and stiffly lifted himself into the driver’s chair. His ribs jabbing at his side as he had to bend slightly to get into the chair. He pulled his ball cap down tighter, and repositioned his jacket around his shoulders. It felt good to be in the driver’s seat again. He motioned to cast off the lines and Andrews tossed the last line onto the dock. Matt pressed the throttles forward a few inches to idle out of the enclosure blowing the 303’s horn in the process to warn other vessels that might be coming around the corner out of sight.

                “Station Umpqua River. CG44303 underway.”

                The Comm Watch entered the event into the stations log.

By the time the 303 reached the bar, three other trawlers had already crossed over and two others were waiting outside waiting their turn. Across the North Spit and middle ground, 12foot breakers were rolling, but the main channel was mostly open with only an occasional small breaker rising up. Matt throttled back as he surveyed the crossing. The other two trawlers were waiting for him to come out before they tried to come in.

                With confidence the channel was open, he pressed the throttles full forward, the 303 dug into the swells and plowed through the crossing without incident, angled toward the number 2 buoy, then turn northwest, setting an intercept course that corresponded with the calculated drift of the Harmony.

                Andrews sat on the right where the radar was located while Johnson stood in front of the forward compartment entrance hatch where he could easily drop into the engine room should he need to. The wind created a great spray to fly across the windshield as they road over the tops of each swell. The farther out they motored, the bigger the swells became and the force being thrown against the 303 caused it to roll and pitch more like a slow-motion bronco than a boat. Matt’s ribs stabbed at him as they rolled over every swell, but he said nothing to complain.

                Andrews had been here before, but this would be his longest and most difficult SAR mission. “Kind of nasty out today.” He said trying to break some of the tension of the moment.

                Matt nodded but did not say anything. Johnson cast a long questioning look at Andrews as though he wasn’t sure Matt was not yet up to the task. A few months ago, there would have been no doubts. But now after all Matt had been through, he wasn’t sure how ready he was.

                 The 303 lunged upward at a steeper angle than before then slammed hard against the backside of the swell. What were reported as 12-foot swells, we now easily 15 feet multiplying the force by two.

                Matt glared forward rarely wavering his vision to either side. He subconsciously spun the large wheel to keep the compass on the correct heading. An hour and half after they left the number 2 buoy, the sky began to close in on them and visibility turned into a haze, which in turn became a common blend of sky and water with barely a discerning break between the two. The relentless swells stirred the ocean into boiling caldron with no rhyme or reason to its motion.

Matt’s head began to spin into a vertigo induced sense of disorientation. The front of the 303 and ocean seemed to extend forward distorted out of context from what his mind expected and what his eyes were experiencing.

                He closed his eyes. Rubbed his face with a wet hand. His insides began to churn into a nauseated bile, and his skin turned pale. He yelled at Johnson, “Take the wheel…take it.” Then he lunged into the lower well and bent over the side vomiting with a violence of someone in complete internal distress. Two, then three times he wretched. Then a fourth time until nothing else came out except a thin yellow slime before he stopped. He remained silent, pale with a green hue across the back of his jaw area behind the ears.

                  Andrews stepped into the lower well. “Hey man…you okay?”

                Matthew, slow to respond, took a deep breath and allowed the spray exploding off the bow to hit him in the face which provided a refreshing splash. After he wiped himself partially dry, he said, “Yeah, I’m okay. Guess I got a little seasick.”

                “That can happen,” Andrews said trying to reassure Matt knowing full well he had never been seasick before.

                “No…I’ll be alright. Turn on the radar and see if you can spot Harmony. We should be getting close.”

                Andrews climbed back into the coxswains flat and removed the radar cover. Flipping a couple of switches, he peered into the cone shaped screen covering to see if he could see any blips. All he saw was a myriad of indiscriminate echoes bouncing off the swells as they tossed for miles around them.

                “Man, what a mess.”

                “What have you got?” Matt questioned as he struggled to keep the 303 pointing into the swells.

                “Not much, just a jumbled mess.”

                “Try a longer-range setting.”

                Andrews flipped to the 10-mile setting and the blips died down. In their place he saw one solid blip.

                “I think I’ve got her.”

                “Where is she?” Matt asked.

                “Dead ahead about 2 miles. Man, oh man what a sight. Now that’s some kind of seamanship. Hear that Matt. We’re dead on her.”

                Matt picked up the radio microphone and called, “Fishing vessel Harmony, this is the CG44303…do you read, over.”

                A few seconds later Joe Brown from the Harmony responded. “Roger that 303.”

                “Yeah, Joe, 303, looks like we’re about 2 miles due south of your position. I do not have a visual yet, but we have you on radar. ETA should be maybe 10 - 15 minutes. Standby to take a line.”

                “Roger that 303…standing by.”

                Andrew was already preparing the tow line disconnecting the eye from its secured spot on the towing post directly behind the coxswains flat. He played out about fifteen or so feet careful not to tangle it into a knot. Next, he removed a smaller line with a weighted monkey’s fist knot attached to the end. He would attach this to the towing line and toss it over to the Harmony who use it to pull the larger line across to them. Ten minutes later, “There she is,” Johnson shouted, “just off the starboard bow about four hundred yards.”

                Matthew cut the throttles to half and turned toward them. “We’ll run past them, turn and come up on their port side down wind. Andrews, I’ll get you to within about thirty feet. You’ll have to give that line a good heave to make it through this wind. Stand ready.”

                Matt motored past the Harmony, and looped around behind them cutting the throttles to one quarter, just enough to ease alongside. The following swells caused both boats to roll over the top in a choreographed dance of machines. Matt turned the wheel and inched in closer. On the bow of Harmony stood a short stocky man wearing a wool watch cap and rain gear. He waved signaling he was ready to receive the line. Again, the swells lifted both boats in their waltz across the sea.

                “Andrews…next swell, give it a toss, but not until we’re at the bottom and leveled off.”

                Andrews stood at the ready bracing his knee against the side of the lower well area. Johnson stood ready behind the towing post the tow line wrapped in a crisscross loop around its stout cross member. For a third time both boats lifted over the top of a swell and floated into the trough behind. Andrews gave the smaller line a heave, a perfect toss, and it landed across the bow of Harmony whose crewman secured it and started pulling the tow line across.

                “Watch those props…keep the slack out.” Matt shouted at them. They already knew not to allow the line become slack and drift under the stern of the 303 for the props would surely suck the line in and foul the props. Within a few seconds thirty yards of line had been played out and the large eye was secured onto the towing station on the bow of Harmony. Her crewman waved and headed back inside the wheelhouse.

                Matt began to slowly move forward. Andrews now controlled the payout of line. The idea was to allow enough line out so both boats would ride the swells in unison, rising and falling at the same time. Not always easy, when the seas were angry.

                It took about 80 yards of line to get both boats to ride that way. Even so the swells were not always evenly spaced and there were times when Harmony disappeared behind a swell. The towline whipping and cutting through the water, snapping and popping as the strain on it tested its strength.

                “Alright guys, get behind the barrier. If that line snaps it will take your head off It hits you.” Matt spoke directly to them.

                The barrier was a simple arch extending about three feet wide and seven feet tall with chain link fencing material stretched across it. Its purpose was to prevent a snapped line from driving itself into the coxswains flat. A simple but effective deterrent.

                At their reduced speed because of the heavy tow. It was well over two hours later before they approached the number 2 buoy outside the bar. The overcast still hovered just above the surface and the distant ridge behind the sand dunes was obscured. All they could see was a thin white line of foam that marked the backside of the breakers that rolled up on the beach. Once they approached the number 2 buoy, they were about a half mile from the entrance channel. Yet Matt could not see clearly enough if there were breakers inside. Large swells continued to run with them and as they approached Andrews shortened the tow line to about 40 yards.

                Matt took a long look at the channel, then called the lookout tower.

                “Umpqua River Tower, 303.”

                “Go ahead Matt.”

                “Do you have an updated bar report. What have we got in there?

                “Last one is about an hour old, been socked in since then. We had a few random breakers in the channel, but the tide should be reaching its peak outward flow. There could be some in there now. I just can’t see anything.”

                “Roger that.”

                Johnson turned to Matt and asked, “What do you think. Should we risk it with Harmony in tow?”

                Matt took a deep breath and simply stared toward the channel entrance. It looked clear, but if a rogue breaker hit them as they were coming in, things might get ugly very quickly. His mind drifted again back to the Marc Eagle. Visions of breakers and screams chided him and his breathing started to increase. All he could hear, all he could see, were those nightmarish images from that night. His hand and shoulders began to shake. Andrews cast a worried look toward Johnson who returned the same.

                “Matt…Matt…you okay?” Johnson finally blurted out.

                Matt’s focus snapped back to the present moment and he looked up. “Yeah…yeah, I’m good.”

                “What’s your call?”

                “Let’s do this. Andrews tighten up the line bring them in another 10 yards or so.”

                Matthew backed the throttles slightly so Andrews could recover a few more yards of towline. Bringing them closer allowed a bit more control over their situation.

                “Once we get inside, we will bring them alongside and take them to the dock. Ready…here we go.”

                Matt pushed the throttles forward and picked up speed, the props straining against the heavy bulk of Harmony as it lagged behind. The once long swells became more compressed as they gathered over the shallower waters across the bar. Harmony began to drift to one side out of line with them. Matt radioed, “Keep her in line skipper, it’s going to be tight through here.”

                “You bet, sorry.”

                The 303 was lifted by a following swell and started to broach to starboard toward the jetty. Matt was slow to respond and allowed the boat to get too far to one side.

                “Whoa, Matt…that Jetty is getting close.”

                “I see it okay.” With that he worked the throttles and brought the 303 back in line. It took almost a full minute to cross the bar, but other than the close approach to the jetty, all went well. As they rounded the front edge of the training jetty, he called Harmony again.

                “Harmony, 303. Joe, once we are a little further in, we will bring you alongside so we can tuck you into your docking slip.”

                “Roger 303…no need to do that. I think we can nurse these engines long enough to take us home. Thanks for the tow…you did a good job.”

                A Harmony crewman tossed off the towline and Andrews rolled it back aboard and the crews waved as she motored by. A few minutes later, Matt pulled the 303 into the fueling dock for servicing. Chief Adams was standing there waiting.

                Johnson secured the engines and Andrews sprayed the hull down with fresh water. Matt continued to sit in the coxswain’s chair, physically spent far beyond what he should have been. As Johnson stepped off the 303, he walked up to Chief Adams.

                “How’d it go?” Chief Adams asked.

                Johnson stopped and looked the Chief square in the eye. You need to have a talk with Matt. He did okay, this time. But you need to have a talk with him. I don’t think he’s ready for primetime yet. He almost froze up out there.

                Chief Adams raised his head as he took in a strong breath. When Matt stepped off the 303, he walked over to him.

                “Get you something to eat and a hot shower, then come see me.”

                Matt stopped and threw a puzzled look toward the Chief. “Alright. Any reason.”

                “Just want a status report.” The Chief replied as he walked away.