Sitting at the Bandit's inside chart table, Henry Taggart looked over the ship's instruments and compared their readouts to what he'd just encountered on a quick run topside. Writing in his logbook as he spoke, he was growing concerned: "Noon + 22 min. Wind now out of the northwest at 35, gusting to 50 knots, outside air temp 30 degrees Fahrenheit, sea temp 42 F, I'm guessing wave height at 8 to 10 feet with a few 12-foot growlers. Position now North 67 13 by East 12 21 12. Have to decide now whether to try for Reine and hope for a wind-shadow or change course and head for Bodø, which is the safer option if the weather deteriorates. BBC weather vague, Norwegian forecasts are for gale-force conditions and small craft warnings have been posted. Lots of small boats out, a couple of Maydays already, teaching Rolf radar navigation."
He heard Rolf yell-out 'Hang on!' and he just had time to look up, see a 15-foot wave breaking ahead and he grabbed the chart table and braced with his knees as Bandit lifted and rolled into the wave. He felt Rolf correcting, then Bandit was surfing down the back of the wave and he looked at his speed, grinning as it slipped into the 10-knot range.
"Boy, we're havin' fun now, ain't we, girl...?"
Another even taller wave loomed and Bandit plowed through this one, sending a wall of green water over the foredeck and Rolf grinning as he 'Woo-hoo'ed'. Taggart shook his head, ran out a quick course on the chart-plotter...
"Rolf?" he called out.
"Yessir?"
"Make your course 7-8 degrees."
"7-8, got it. So...Bodø?"
"Yup. I don't want to shoot that harbor entry in a gale."
"Okay," he yelled, just as Bandit climbed the face of another twelve footer.
"How you doin' up there?"
"Man...this is great!"
He looked at the boy and grinned, shot him a thumb's up. The kid was steering well, already a natural sailor, and he'd stopped worrying about him two days before. Still, the boy was new at this and he'd never sailed in a gale, so Henry remained the patient teacher and let the kid have at it.
He put the logbook up and slipped back into his heavy-weather jacket before he climbed back into the cockpit; Rolf was grinning but he looked cold. "Go below, get some coffee and warm up."
"Thanks."
"Good job, Rolf. Really good."
The boy beamed as he made his way below.
Taggart adjusted his course north a little, to 75 degrees, hoping to account for any unexpected drift approaching a lee shore, and noted they were now on a broad reach and that the Bandit was really screaming now, surfing waves and hitting a solid nine knots over the ground.
He heard something on the radio but lost it over the howl of a gust and bent down to turn up the volume...
"Mayday-mayday-mayday...this is Jonmeri three, taking on water and two people in the water..." Taggart noted Jonmeri's position then saw a red flare arc up into the sky just ahead. He pulled his binoculars out of their case on the binnacle and scanned the horizon but the wave action was too frenzied, then he picked up his radios mic...
"Jonmeri, this is Time Bandit. I have your flare and am a mile south of your position. Say again, you have people in the water?"
"Jonmeri, Jonmeri, we are sinking fast...will have four people in the water...life jackets, no raft...please hurry...repeat, please hurry!"
"Jonmeri, Time Bandit, try to shoot flares when you can. Will be there in about fifteen minutes."
Taggart put a man overboard marker on the chart plotter; the computer would begin to account for drift and adjust his course...
"Time Bandit, this is Coast Guard Bodø, please advise, do you have Jonmeri in sight?"
"Bodø, Bandit here, I saw their flare, have their position plotted, I am now point seven eight miles from their last known position..."
"Bandit, Bodø here, all our helicopters are engaged but we will send a boat to your sector."
"Bandit, understood we are the primary search vessel at this time. Will advise progress on ten-minute intervals."
"Bodø received."
When he looked up Rolf was by his side, already scanning with the binocular when another flare went up.
"Okay," he said, "I see people in the water."
"How's our heading?"
"Come left a little."
Taggart adjusted course and sheeted in the sails; bandit heeled a little as she bit into the wind and as they crested a wave he could see little yellow specks mixed in with the spray and spume.
"Big wave!" Rolf yelled, and Henry turned into the face, held on as they crested and began surfing down the backside...he watched in disbelief as their speed hit eleven knots...so he sheeted in the sails a bit more, trying to get every bit of speed he could from her.
"How will we get them on board in these waves?" Rolf asked.
"We furl the sails upwind of them, let the wind blow us down and we get lines to them, pull them to the platform."
"Is that what we use the MOB system for?"
Taggart nodded. "I'll handle that while you take the wheel."
Rolf shook his head. "I don't know, Henry. I'm not sure I know what to do?"
"Well, what makes you think I do? You just have to trust your instincts and follow them. Now...you take the wheel, steer to the left of their position in the water. I'm going to rig-up two extra lines..."
"Okay..."
"Rolf? You can do this."
"What about the sails?"
"Don't worry about those yet. I'll help you when the time comes..." Then he shook his head, picked up the mic. "Bodø, Bandit here, we have sighted people in the water. ETA five minutes."
"Bodø, people in the water received, five minutes out."
Taggart dashed aft and rigged lines, readied his two MOB canisters, then went back to the wheel. He could see two people clearly now and guessed they were about two hundred yards ahead, but no one else was visible...
"Okay, head up a little more. I'm going to roll up the main..."
Taggart pushed a button, rolled the mainsail into the mast and cleared the lines, saw they were almost abeam to the survivors in the water...
"Okay, turn dead into the wind!"
Rolf turned the wheel and Taggart rolled the storm jib onto the second fuller, tossing the excess line into bags attached to the wheelhouse so they wouldn't trip on them.
"Alright...Rolf?...just back down like we practiced...ride the wind...that's right...you're doing perfect...perfect...I'm going aft...keep it steady..."
He dashed aft and fired the first Man Overboard canister towards a woman in the water, the second at what looked like a small child...the woman looked lethargic, hypothermic, and there was a good chance she wouldn't be able to get the harness her chest...but the little girl just managed and he pulled her in quickly...
Bandit was riding the wind now and quickly passing the woman...who appeared comatose...
Taggart grabbed the girl and carried her to the cockpit, then looked at the lines in the water before he started the engine. "Rolf, head aft and pull in all the lines...don't want to wrap the prop..."
"Got it!"