
Onto the Ice, October - 19th November 1933
The next few days saw the barometer
fall swiftly and Professor Caine, although seasick, grow even more animated with
the advent of so many new and possibly unique phenomena to observe. On the
eighth night out, several investigators woke to loud banging from forward in the
ship. Battling the winds and the rolling seas, they made their way to the
forward cargo holds, where two of the engines for the Boeing had broken there
bonds and were crashing around the cargo hold. With considerable risk to
themselves, they made the engines secure and notified the rest of the ship. The
Boeing aircraft (the Shackleton) was damaged beyond repair and the engines too
badly damaged for repair without a full workshop. Further investigation by
Malcolm indicated yet more sabotage!
The ship moved onwards in to the pack
ice. The cold grew more intense and, at times, the crush of the ice threatened
to hold the ship in its grip and destroy it. Still the plucky little Gabrielle
moved South. On the morning of the 6th November, they came across a wreck held
fast in the ice, the Wallaroo, a whaler which had gone missing last Autumn. The
investigators rowed across to, well, investigate, finding a grisly scene. The
ships boilers had exploded and remains were scattered in much of the ship.
Several skeletons had been laid out on the aft deck of the ship. In the captains
cabin, they found the ships log and several gold coins with an unknown sea
creature depicted upon them, together with a key. the key allowed them to
retrieve the ships liquor store, a dozen bottles of whisky. They returned to the
Gabrielle, more aware than ever of the dangers they would face in the coming
months, particularly after spotting the wreck of the Wallaroos life raft
entombed in the ice less than two miles from the ships final grave.
The Gabrielle continued on her way,
pushing through the pack ice into the Ross Sea. After a few days, the ice lead
the ship was following began to freeze up, trapping the ship and necessitating
the use of dynamite to clear a passage, which was a risky proposition given the
lack of explosives expertise amongst the crew. However, after two days of
blasting (and some minor wounds to the investigators) a passage was cleared and
the ship continued to inch forwards, reaching landfall on Ross Island on the
14th of November. The next few days were filled with frantic activity, setting
up a temporary base camp, unloading supplies and seeking routes up the ice
barrier to safer ground. The work was dangerous and served as an introduction to
the difficulties of working on the ice to many of the investigators. Jack
Sorrell found time to play with penguins and Professor Caine installed his
equipment (which mainly consists of an armchair). After a couple of days, the
unloading of the ship was complete and the move to a more permanent base further
up the ice shelf started, with the planes flying constantly in the eternal
daylight. Unfortunately, the ice shelf took a hand in the expeditions fortunes,
as, on the 18th, it began to break up around the camp. Although no lives were
lost, a large quantity of aviation fuel (nearly half the expeditions supply) was
lost to a watery grave. An emergency withdrawal up the ice to the second base
camp was completed with little further incident and the investigators found
themselves in cramped conditions but alive on the barrier ice. The next few days
were spent trying to make the camp, if not comfortable, at least survivable
(which I personally do not think is a word).
A Shock in the Lightest
Night, 20 - 27th November 1933
At 3 am on the 20th, a thin clangour from the
radio was heard. Realizing that this was the radio mayday signal (which
apparently they had been told while sailing South, a fact that the universe had
only just discovered), the investigators ran to the radio in the meeting hall.
they were in time to hear Hopewell, of the Lexington expedition, broadcasting
that their camp was under attack. The message was punctuated by two gunshots
before the radio ominously fell silent. Starkweather, suddenly every inch the
heroic adventurer, galvanized the camp into action, organizing an impromptu
rescue mission. In reality, as he strutted about being imperious, Moore quietly
managed the loading of sledges and crewed the rescue attempt. The investigators
set off on the dash to reach the other camp, eight miles away. After an
uneventful trip, they arrived to find a scene of devastation. A pall of smoke
hung over the camp, from burnt fuel and tents. Men were clearing up as best
possible but the situation appeared under control. Starkweather headed for the
main hall to see Alicia, surreptitiously accompanied by Professor Caine and
Piotr Ivanoff, as Zachariah Shuttlebolt went to the medical tent. Jack Sorrell,
meanwhile, looked to the dogs, together with Tuvinnen, a Finnish member of the
Lexington expedition. At the main hall, a furious argument broke out, lasting
for some time. In the medical tent, Shuttlebolt discovered two men under guard,
who, it transpired, were the perpetrators of the chaos in the camp. One,
Bradbury, was unconscious in some kind of catatonic stupor. Interviewing the
conscious man, Dinsdale, the doctor soon came to the same conclusion as the
Lexington medic - he had suffered temporary madness, brought on by the isolation
and the snow. According to Dinsdale, he had awoken to find the camp crawling
with spiders and in his single-minded determination to eradicate these horrors
(his own personal phobia) he had managed to set fire to the camp and shoot
members of his own expedition. Surprisingly, the men he had shot seemed to bear
him little ill will. Professor Caine, meanwhile, went in search of a pipe.
Sorrell learnt much the same as the doctor, while Ivanoff heard a rum tale of an
apparent suicide on the trip out, with a sailor called Bicks suddenly starting
to scream for no reason before jumping to his death over the side of the ship.
At this point, the 'discussion' in the main hall reached critical mass and
Starkweather stormed out, gathering the rescue party to him and setting off back
to his own camp.
Back at their own base, the investigators briefed Moore on
the situation, pointing out that the Lexington camp had little choice but to
return home. Over the next couple of days, it became apparent that Moore had a
different idea, as he realized that combining forces would allow both camps to
achieve their aims to some extent, with the plane of the Lexington expedition
and the power and food of the Starkweather-Moore expedition complementing each
other. the only difficulty with his plan was the antipathy between the two
expedition leaders. Despite the aid of Ivanoff, a bargain was struck between the
rival expeditions and the Lexington crew gradually joined the Starkweather-Moore
camp on thanksgiving day (23rd November). Four days later, Starkweather flew out
to the top of Beardmore Glacier, mostly as an exercise in providing some
excitement for the press back home. Meanwhile, the investigators set off for the
foothills of the Miskatonic Mountains, together with several members of the
Lexington expedition, to set up their main base camp and to try to find the camp
of the ill-fated previous Miskatonic University expedition.
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