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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55723 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55723)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Chief Mate's Yarns, by Mayn Clew Garnett
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Chief Mate's Yarns
- Twelve Tales of the Sea
-
-Author: Mayn Clew Garnett
-
-Release Date: October 9, 2017 [EBook #55723]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHIEF MATE'S YARNS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David E. Brown and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
-
- CHIEF MATE'S YARNS
-
- _TWELVE TALES OF THE SEA_
-
- BY
-
- CAPT. MAYN CLEW GARNETT
-
- [Illustration]
-
- G. W. DILLINGHAM COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1911, 1912, BY
- STREET & SMITH
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1912, BY
- G. W. DILLINGHAM COMPANY
-
- _The White Ghost of Disaster_
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- THE WHITE GHOST OF DISASTER 5
-
- THE LIGHT AHEAD 42
-
- THE WRECK OF THE "RATHBONE" 76
-
- THE AFTER BULKHEAD 105
-
- CAPTAIN JUNARD 123
-
- IN THE WAKE OF THE ENGINE 148
-
- IN THE HULL OF THE "HERALDINE" 172
-
- A TWO-STRANDED YARN--PART I 198
-
- A TWO-STRANDED YARN--PART II 234
-
- AT THE END OF THE DRAG-ROPE 263
-
- PIRATES TWAIN 279
-
- THE JUDGMENT OF MEN 310
-
- ON GOING TO SEA 333
-
-
-
-
-THE WHITE GHOST OF DISASTER
-
-
-We had been sitting in at the game for more than an hour, and no life
-had entered it. The thoughts of all composing that little group of five
-in the most secluded corner of the ship's smoking room were certainly
-not on the game, and three aces lay down to fours up.
-
-The morose and listless ship's officer out of a berth, although he
-spoke little--if at all--seemed to put a spell of uneasiness and unrest
-on the party. The others did not know him or his history; but his looks
-spelled disaster and misfortune.
-
-At last Charlie Spangler, the noted journalist, keen for a story or
-two, threw down his cards, exclaiming: "Let's quit. None of us is less
-uneasy than the rest of the ship's passengers."
-
-"Yes," chimed in Arthur Linch, the noted stock-broker. "We have
-endeavored to banish the all-pervading thought, 'will the ship arrive
-safely without being wrecked,' and have failed miserably. Cards will
-not do it." This seemed to express the sentiments of everybody except
-the morose mariner, whose thoughts nobody could read or fathom. He sat
-there, deep in his chair, gazing at a scene or scenes none of us could
-see or appreciate.
-
-"Well! Since we cannot take our thoughts off 'shipwreck,' we may as
-well discuss the subject and ease our minds," added the journalist
-again, still hot on the scent of the possible story which he felt that
-the ship's officer hoarded.
-
-The mariner, however, did not respond to this, and continued with his
-memories, apparently oblivious of our presence.
-
-Under the leadership of the journalist the discussion waxed warm for
-some time, until the stock-broker, ever solicitous for the welfare of
-the stock-market and conforming his opinions thereto, exclaimed loudly:
-"The officers and the crew were not responsible for the collision with
-the berg. It was an 'act of God!' and as such we are daily taking
-chances with it. What will be, will be. We cannot escape Destiny!"
-
-"Destiny be damned!" came like a thunderbolt from the heretofore
-silent mariner, and we all looked to see the face now full of rage and
-passion. "What do you know of the sea, you land pirate? What do you
-know of sea dangers and responsibility for the safety of human lives?
-Man! you're crazy. There is no such thing as Destiny at sea. A seaman
-knows what to expect when he takes chances. If you call that an 'act of
-God,' you deserve to have been there and submitted to it."
-
-The face of Charlie Spangler was glowing. His heart beat so fast when
-he heard this sea clam open up, that he was afraid it might overwork
-and stop. "Our friend is right!" he exclaimed. "I infer that he speaks
-from knowledge and experience. We are hardly qualified to discuss such
-matters properly.
-
-"You have something on your mind, friend. Unburden it to us. We are
-sympathetic, you know. Our position here makes us so," saying which,
-Spangler filled the mariner's half-empty glass and looked at him with
-sympathy streaming out of his trained eyes. We all nodded our assent.
-
-Having fortified himself with the contents of the glass before him, the
-mariner spoke: "Yes, gentlemen, I am going to speak from knowledge and
-experience. It was my luck to be aboard of the vessel which had the
-shortest of lives, but which will live in the memory of man for many a
-year.
-
-"It is my misfortune to be one of its surviving officers. I am going
-to give you the facts as they happened this last time, and a few other
-times besides. It is the experiences through which I have passed that
-make me wish I had gone down with the last one. I must now live on with
-memories, indelibly stamped on my brain, which I would gladly forget.
-Your attention, gentlemen--"
-
- * * * * *
-
-Captain Brownson came upon the bridge. It was early morning, and the
-liner was tearing through a smooth sea in about forty-three north
-latitude. The sun had not yet risen, but the gray of the coming
-daylight showed a heaving swell that rolled with the steadiness that
-told of a long stretch of calm water behind it. The men of the
-morning watch showed their pale faces white with that peculiar pallor
-which comes from the loss of the healthful sleep between midnight and
-morning. It was the second mate's watch, and that officer greeted the
-commander as he came to the bridge rail where the mate stood staring
-into the gray ahead.
-
-"See anything?" asked the master curtly.
-
-"No, sir--but I smell it--feel it," said the mate, without turning his
-head.
-
-"What?" asked Brownson.
-
-"Don't you feel it?--the chill, the--well, it's ice, sir--ice, if I
-know anything."
-
-"Ice?" snarled the captain. "You're crazy! What's the matter with you?"
-
-"Oh, very well--you asked me--I told you--that's all."
-
-The captain snorted. He disliked the second officer exceedingly. Mr.
-Smith had been sent him by the company at the request of the manager of
-the London office. He had always picked his own men, and he resented
-the office picking them for him. Besides, he had a nephew, a passenger
-aboard, who was an officer out of a berth.
-
-"What the devil do they know of a man, anyhow! I'm the one responsible
-for him. I'm the one, then, to choose him. They won't let me shift
-blame if anything happens, and yet they sent me a man I know nothing of
-except that he is young and strong. I'll wake him up some if he stays
-here." So he had commented to Mr. Wylie, the chief mate. Mr. Wylie had
-listened, thought over the matter, and nodded his head sagely.
-
-"Sure," he vouchsafed; "sure thing." That was as much as any one
-ever got out of Wylie. He was not a talkative mate. Yet when he knew
-Smith better, he retailed the master's conversation to him during a
-spell of generosity engendered by the donation of a few highballs by
-Macdowell, the chief engineer. Smith thanked him--and went his way
-as before, trying to do the best he could. He did not shirk duty on
-that account. Wylie insisted that the captain was right. A master was
-responsible, and it was always customary for him to pick his men as far
-as possible. Besides, as Wylie had learned from Macdowell, Brownson had
-a nephew in view that would have filled the berth about right--so Wylie
-thought--and Smith was a nuisance. Smith had taken it all in good part,
-and smiled. He liked Wylie.
-
-Brownson sniffed the air hungrily as he stood there at the bridge rail.
-The air was chilly, but it was always chilly in that latitude even in
-summer.
-
-"How does she head?" he asked savagely of the man at the steam-steering
-gear. The man spoke through the pilot-house window in a monotone:
-
-"West--three degrees south, sir."
-
-"That's west--one south by standard?" snapped Brownson.
-
-"Yes, sir," said Smith.
-
-"Let her go west--two south by binnacle--and mark the time accurately,"
-ordered Brownson.
-
-He would shift her a bit. The cool air seemed to come from the
-northward. It was as if a door in an ice box were suddenly opened and
-the cold air within let out in a cold, damp mass. A thin haze covered
-the sea. The side wash rolled away noisily, and disappeared into the
-mist a few fathoms from the ship's side. It seemed to thicken as the
-minutes passed.
-
-Brownson was nervous. He went inside the pilot house and spoke to the
-engineer through the tube leading to the engine room.
-
-"How is she going?"
-
-"Two hundred and ten, sir; never less than two and five the watch."
-
-"Well, she's going too almighty fast--shut her down to one hundred,"
-snapped Brownson. "She's been doing twenty-two knots--it's too
-fast--too fast, anyhow, in this weather. Ten knots will do until the
-sun scoffs off this mist. Shut her down."
-
-The slowing engines eased their vibrations, and the side wash rolled
-less noisily. There was a strange stillness over the sea. The silence
-grew as the headway subsided.
-
-The captain listened intently. He felt something.
-
-There is always that strange something that a seaman feels in the
-presence of great danger when awake. It has never been explained. But
-all good--really good--masters have felt it; can tell you of it if they
-will. It is uncanny, but it is as true as gospel. The second officer
-had felt it in the air, felt it in his nerves. He felt--_ice_. It was
-danger.
-
-Smith stood there watching the haze that seemed to deepen rather than
-disperse as the morning grew. The men turned out and the hose was
-started, the decks were sluiced down, and the gang with the squeegees
-followed. Two bells struck--five o'clock. Smith strained his gaze
-straight into the haze ahead. He fixed and refixed his glasses--a pair
-of powerful lenses of fifteen lines. He had bought them for fifty
-dollars, and always kept them near him while on watch.
-
-A man came up the bridge steps.
-
-"Shall I send up your coffee, sir?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, send it up," said Smith, in a whisper. He was listening.
-
-Something sounded out there in the haze. It was a strange, vibrating
-sound, a sort of whispering murmur, soft and low, like the far-away
-notes of a harp. Then it ceased. Smith looked at the captain who stood
-within the pilot-house window gazing down at the men at work on the
-deck below. The noise of the rushing water from the hose and their low
-tones seemed to annoy him. They wore rubber boots, and their footsteps
-were silent; but he gruffly ordered the bos'n to make them "shut up."
-
-"Better slow her down, sir--there's ice somewhere about here," said the
-second mate anxiously. He was thinking of the thousand and more souls
-below and the millions in cargo values.
-
-"Who's running this ship--me or you?" snarled Brownson savagely.
-
-It was an unnecessary remark, wholly uncalled for. Smith flushed
-under his tan and pallor. He had seldom been spoken to like that. He
-would have to stand it; but he would hunt a new ship as soon as he
-came ashore again. It was bad enough to be treated like a boy; but to
-be talked to that way before the men made it impossible, absolutely
-impossible. It meant the end of discipline at once. A man would retail
-it, more would repeat it, and--then--Smith turned away from the bridge
-rail in utter disgust. He was furious.
-
-"Blast the ship!" he muttered, as he turned away and gazed aft. His
-interest was over, entirely over. He would not have heard a gun fired
-at that moment, so furious was the passion at the unmerited insolence
-from his commander.
-
-And then, as if to give insult to injury, Brownson called down the tube:
-
-"Full speed ahead--give her all she'll do--I'm tired of loafing around
-here all the morning." Then he rang up the telegraph, and the sudden
-vibrations told of a giant let loose below.
-
-The _Admiral_ started ahead slowly. She was a giant liner, a ship of
-eight hundred feet in length. It took some moments to get headway upon
-that vast hull. But she started, and in a few minutes the snoring of
-the bow wave told of a tearing speed. She was doing twenty-two and a
-half knots an hour, or more than twenty-five miles, the speed of a
-train of cars.
-
-The under steward came up the bridge steps with the coffee. Smith took
-his cup and drank it greedily, almost savagely. He was much hurt. His
-feelings had been roughly handled. Yet he had not even answered the
-captain back. He took his place at the bridge rail and gazed straight
-ahead into the gray mist. He saw nothing, felt nothing, but the pain
-of his insult.
-
-"Let him run the ship to hell and back," he said to himself.
-
-There was a puff of colder air than usual. A chill as of death itself
-came floating over the silent ocean. A man on lookout stood staring
-straight into the mist ahead, and then sang out:
-
-"Something right ahead, sir," he yelled in a voice that carried like
-the roar of a gun.
-
-Brownson just seized the lever shutting the compartments, swung it,
-jammed it hard over, and screamed:
-
-"Stop her--stop her--hard over your wheel--hard over----"
-
-His voice ended in a vibrating screech that sounded wild, weird,
-uncanny in that awful silence. A hundred men stopped in their stride,
-or work, paralyzed at the tones coming from the bridge.
-
-And then came the impact.
-
-With a grinding, smashing roar as of thousands of tons coming together,
-the huge liner plunged headlong into the iceberg that rose grim and
-silent right ahead, towering over her in spite of her great height. The
-shock was terrific, and the grinding, thundering crash of falling tons
-of ice, coupled with the rending of steel plates and solid planks, made
-chaos of all sound.
-
-The _Admiral_ bit in, dug, plowed, kept on going, going, and the
-whole forward part of her almost disappeared into the wall of white.
-A thousand tons of huge flakes slammed and slid down her decks,
-burying her to the fore hatch in the smother. A thousand tons more
-crashed, slid, and plunged down the slopes of the icy mountain and
-hurled themselves into the sea with giant splashes, sending torrents
-of water as high as the bridge rail. The men who had been forward were
-swept away by the avalanche. Many were never seen again. And then, with
-reversed engines, she finally came to a dead stop, with her bows jammed
-a hundred feet deep in the ice wall of the berg.
-
-After that it was panic. All discipline seemed to end in the shock
-and struggle. Brownson howled and stormed from the bridge, and Smith
-shouted orders and sprang down to enforce them. The chief mate came
-on deck in his underclothes and passed the word to man the boats. A
-thousand passengers jammed the companionway and strove with panic and
-inhuman fury to reach the deck.
-
-One man clad in a night robe gained the outside of the press, and,
-running swiftly along the deck, flitted like a ghost over the rail, and
-disappeared into the sea. He had gone crazy, violently insane in the
-panic.
-
-Brownson tied down the siren cord, and the roar shook the atmosphere.
-The tremendous tones rose above the din of screaming men and cursing
-seamen; and then the master called down to the heart of the ship, the
-engine room.
-
-"Is she going?" he asked.
-
-"Water coming in like through a tunnel," came the response. "Nearly up
-to the grates now----"
-
-That was all. The man left the tube to rush on deck, and the captain
-knew the forward bulkheads had gone; had either jammed or burst under
-that terrific impact. The ship was going down.
-
-Brownson stood upon the bridge and gazed down at the human tide below
-him. Men fought furiously for places in the small boats. The fireroom
-crew came on deck and mingled with the passengers. The coal dust showed
-upon their white faces, making them seem strange beings from an inferno
-that was soon to be abolished. They strove for places in the lifeboats
-and hurled the weaker passengers about recklessly. Some, on the other
-hand, helped the women. One man dragged two women with him into a boat,
-kicking, twisting, and roaring like a lion. He was a big fellow with a
-red beard, and Brownson watched him. The mate struck him over the head
-with a hand spike for refusing to get out of the boat, and his interest
-in things ended at once and forever.
-
-The crew, on the whole, behaved well. Officers and men tried to keep
-some sort of discipline. Finally six boats went down alongside into
-the sea, and were promptly swarmed by the crowds above, who either
-slid down the falls or jumped overboard and climbed in from the sides.
-The sea was as still as a lake; only the slight swell heaved it. Great
-fields of floating particles of ice from the berg floated about, and
-those who were drenched in the spray shivered with the cold.
-
-The _Admiral_, running at twenty-two knots an hour, had struck straight
-into the wall of an iceberg that reached as far as the eye could see in
-the haze. It towered at least three hundred feet in the air, showing
-that its depth was colossal, probably at least half a mile. It was a
-giant ice mountain that had broken adrift from its northern home, and,
-drifting southward, had survived the heat of summer and the breaking of
-the sea upon its base.
-
-Smith had felt its dread presence, felt its proximity long before he
-had come to close quarters. The chill in the air, the peculiar feeling
-of danger, the icy breath of death--all had told him of a danger that
-was near. And yet Brownson had scoffed at him, railed at his intuition
-and sense. Upon the captain the whole blame of the disaster must fall
-if Smith told.
-
-The second officer almost smiled as he struggled with his boat.
-
-"The pig-headed fool!" he muttered between his set teeth. "The
-murdering monster--he's done it now! He's killed himself, and a
-thousand people along with him----"
-
-Smith fought savagely for the discipline of his boat. His men had
-rushed to their stations at the first call. The deck was beginning
-to slant dangerously as the falls were slacked off and the lifeboat
-lowered into the sea. Smith stood in the press about him and grew
-strangely calm. The action was good for him, good for the burning fury
-that had warped him, scorched him like a hot blast while he had stood
-silently upon the bridge and taken the insults of his commander. Women
-pleaded with him for places in the boat. Men begged and took hold of
-him. One lady, half clothed, dropped upon her knees and, holding his
-hand, which hung at his side, prayed to him as if he were a deity, a
-being to whom all should defer. He flung her off savagely.
-
-Bareheaded now, coatless, and with his shirt ripped, he stood there,
-and saw his men pass down sixteen women into his craft; pass them down
-without comment or favor, age or condition. Thirty souls went into his
-boat before he sprang into the falls and slid down himself. A dozen men
-tried to follow him, but he shoved off, and they went into the sea. His
-men got their oars out and rowed off a short distance.
-
-Muttering, praying, and crying, the passengers in his boat huddled
-themselves in her bottom. He spoke savagely to them, ordered them under
-pain of death to sit down. One man, who shivered as he spoke, insisted
-upon crawling about and shifting his position. Smith struck him over
-the head, knocking him senseless. Another, a woman, must stand upon the
-thwarts, to get as far away as possible from the dread and icy element
-about her. He swung his fist upon her jaw, and she went whimpering down
-into the boat's bottom, lying there and sobbing softly.
-
-Furiously swearing at the herd of helpless passengers who endangered
-his boat at every movement, he swung the craft's head about and
-stood gazing at his ship. After a little while the crowd became more
-manageable, and he saw he could keep them aboard without the certainty
-of upsetting the craft He had just been debating which of them he
-would throw overboard to save the rest; save them from their own
-struggling and fighting for their own selfish ends. He was as cold
-as steel, hard, inflexible. His men knew him for a ship's officer
-who would maintain his place under all hazards, and they watched him
-furtively, and were ready to obey him to the end without question.
-
-"Oh, the monster, the murdering monster!" he muttered again and again.
-
-His eyes were fixed upon the bridge. High up there stood Brownson--the
-captain who had sent his liner to her death, with hundreds of
-passengers.
-
-Brownson stood calmly watching the press gain and lose places in the
-boats. Two boats actually overloaded rolled over under the immense
-load of human freight. The others did not stop to pick them up. They
-had enough to do to save themselves. The ship was sinking. That was
-certain. She must have struck so hard that even the 'midship bulkheads
-gave way, or were so twisted out of place that the doors failed. The
-chief engineer came below him and glanced up.
-
-As he did so, a tremendous, roaring blast of steam blew the
-superstructure upward. The boilers had gone. Macdowell just gave
-Brownson a look. That was all. Then he rushed for a boat.
-
-Brownson grinned; actually smiled at him.
-
-The man at the wheel asked permission to go.
-
-"I'm a married man, sir--it's no use of me staying here any longer," he
-ventured.
-
-"Go--go to the devil!" said Brownson, without interest. The man fled.
-
-Brownson stopped giving any more orders. In silence he gazed down
-at the press of human beings, watching, debating within himself the
-chances they had of getting away from that scene of death and horror.
-
-The decks grew more and more steep. The liner was settling by the
-head and to starboard. She was even now twisting, rolling over; and
-the motion brought down thousands of blocks of ice from the berg. The
-engines had long since stopped. She still held her head against the ice
-wall; but it would give her no support. She was slipping away--down to
-her grave below.
-
-Brownson gazed back over the decks. He watched the crowd impersonally,
-and it seemed strange to him that so much valuable fabric should go to
-the bottom so quickly. The paint was so clean and bright, the brass
-was so shiny. The whole structure was so thoroughly clean, neat, and
-in proper order. It was absurd. There he was standing upon that bridge
-where he had stood so often, and here below him were hundreds of dying
-people--people like rats in a trap.
-
-"Good Heaven--is it real?"
-
-He was sure he was not awake. It must be a dream. Then the terrible
-knowledge came back upon him like a stroke; a blow that stopped his
-heart. It was the death of his ship he was watching--the death of his
-ship and of many of his passengers. Suddenly Brownson saw the boat of
-the second mate, and that officer standing looking up at him.
-
-The master thought he saw the officer's lips move. He wondered what the
-man thought, what he would say. He had insulted the officer, made him a
-clown before the men. He knew the second mate would not spare him. He
-knew the second mate would testify that he had given warning of ice ten
-minutes before they struck. He also knew that the man at the wheel had
-heard him, as had the steward who brought up the coffee, and one or two
-others who were near.
-
-No, there must be no investigation of his, Brownson's, blame in the
-matter. The master dared not face that. He looked vacantly at Smith.
-The officer stood gazing straight at him.
-
-The liner suddenly shifted, leaned to starboard, heeled far over,
-and her bows slipped from the berg, sinking down clear to her decks,
-clear down until the seas washed to the foot of her superstructure
-just below Brownson. Masses of ice fell from her into the sea. The
-grinding, splashing noise awoke the panic again among the remaining
-passengers and crew. They strove with maniac fury to get the rafts and
-other stuff that might float over the side. Two boats drew away full
-to the gunwales with people. The air below began to make that peculiar
-whistling sound that tells of pressure--pressure upon the vitals of the
-ship. She was going down.
-
-Brownson still stood gazing at his second mate.
-
-Smith met the master's eye with a steady look. Then he suddenly forgot
-himself and raised his hand.
-
-"Oh, you murdering rat, you cowardly scoundrel, you devil!" he roared
-out.
-
-Brownson saw the movement of the hand, saw that it was vindictive,
-furious, and full of menace. He could not hear the words.
-
-He smiled at the officer, raised his hand, and waved it in reply. It
-seemed to make the mate crazy. He gesticulated wildly, swore like a
-maniac--but Brownson did not hear him. He only knew what he was doing.
-
-He turned away, gave one more look over the sinking ship.
-
-"She's going now--and so am I," he muttered.
-
-Then he went slowly into his chart room, opened a drawer, and took out
-a revolver that he always kept there. He stood at the open door and
-cocked the weapon. He looked into its muzzle, and saw the bullet that
-would end his life when he pulled the trigger.
-
-He almost shuddered. It was so unreal. He could not quite do it. He
-gazed again at the second mate. He knew the officer was watching him,
-knew Smith would not believe he had the nerve to end the thing then and
-there. It amused him slightly in a grim sort of way. Why, he _must_
-die. That was certain. He could never face his own family and friends
-after what he had done. As to getting another ship--that was too absurd
-to think of.
-
-The form of a woman showed in the boat. She had risen from the bottom,
-where the blow of the officer had felled her in her frenzy. Brownson
-saw her, recognized her as his niece, the sister of the man he had
-wished to put in Smith's place. It was for his own nephew he had
-insulted his officer, had caused him to relax and lose the interest
-that made navigation safe, in the hope that Smith would leave and let
-his relative get the berth.
-
-He wondered if Smith knew. He stood there with the revolver in his hand
-watching for some sign from his second officer. Smith gazed at him in
-fury, apparently not noticing the girl whom he had just before knocked
-into the boat's bottom to keep order. She stood up. Smith roughly
-pushed her down again. Brownson was sure now--he felt that Smith knew
-all.
-
-But he put the revolver in his pocket. He would not fire yet.
-
-The ship was listing heavily, and the cries of the passengers were
-dying out. All who had been able to get away had gone, somehow, and
-only a few desperate men and women, who could not swim and who were
-cool enough to realize that swimming would but prolong an agony that
-was better over quickly, huddled aft at the taffrail. They would take
-the last second left them, the last instant of life, and suffer a
-thousand deaths every second to get it. It was absurd. Brownson pitied
-them.
-
-Many of these women were praying and talking to their men, who held
-them in a last embrace. One young woman was clinging closely to a
-young man, and they were apparently not suffering terror. A look of
-peacefulness was upon the faces of both. They were lovers, and were
-satisfied to die together; and the thought of it made them satisfied.
-Brownson wondered at this. They were young enough and strong enough to
-make a fight for life.
-
-A whistling roar, arose above all other sounds. The siren had ceased,
-and Brownson knew the air was rushing from below. The ship would drop
-in a moment. He grasped the pistol again. He dreaded that last plunge,
-that drop into the void below. The thought held him a little. The ocean
-was always so blue out there, so clear and apparently bottomless, a
-great void of water. He wondered at the depth, what kind of a dark bed
-would receive that giant fabric, the work of so many human hands. And
-then he wondered at his own end there. His own end? What nonsense! It
-was unreal. Death was always for others. It had never been for him. He
-had seen men die. It was not for him yet. He would not believe it. He
-would awaken soon, and the steward would bring him his coffee.
-
-Then he caught the eye of Smith again in that boat waiting for the
-end out there. His heart gave an immense jolt, began beating wildly.
-The ship heeled more and more. The ice crashed and plunged from her
-forward. Brownson was awakening to the real at last. He felt it in
-those extra heartbeats; knew he must hurry it. Then he wondered what
-the papers would say; whether they would call him a coward, afraid
-to face the inevitable. He hoped they would not. But, then, what
-difference would it all make, anyhow--to him? He was dead. His interest
-was over. What difference would it make whether he was a coward or
-not? Men knew him for what he was, but he existed no longer. He was
-dead.
-
-While he stood there with these thoughts in his mind, his nerve half
-lacking to end the thing, it seemed to him it was lasting for an
-eternity. He was growing tired of it all. He turned away again and
-entered the chart room.
-
-His cat crawled from somewhere and rubbed its tail and side against his
-leg. Then the animal jumped to the table, and he stroked it; actually
-stroked it while Smith watched him, and swore at him for a cold-blooded
-scoundrel.
-
-The ship sank to her superstructure. Her stern rose high in the air.
-It was now impossible to stand on deck without holding on. Some of the
-remaining passengers slid off with parting shrieks. They dropped into
-that icy sea.
-
-Brownson felt the end coming now, and turned again to the doorway,
-looking straight at his second mate. Smith was trying to quell the
-movement among his crowd which was endangering his boat again.
-
-The captain clutched the door jamb and watched. Then the ship began
-to sink. He could not make up his mind to jump clear. There was Smith
-looking at him. He dared not be saved when hundreds were being killed.
-No, he could not make that jump and swim to a boat under that officer's
-gaze. And yet at the last moment he was about to try it. Panic was
-upon him in a way that he hardly realized. He simply could not face
-the black gulf he was dropping into with his health and full physical
-powers still with him. It was nature to make a last effort for his
-life. Then, before he could make the jump overboard, he saw Smith again
-shaking his hand at him and howling curses.
-
-He pulled the pistol. An ashy whiteness came over his face. Smith saw
-it. He stopped swearing; stopped in his furious denunciation of the man
-who had caused so much destruction. He also saw the pistol plainly, and
-wondered at the captain's nerve.
-
-"You are afraid, you dog--you are afraid--you daren't do it, you
-murdering rat!" he yelled.
-
-The men in the boat were all gazing up at the chart-house door where
-the form of their commander stood.
-
-"He's going to shoot, sir," said the stroke oarsman.
-
-"He's afraid--he won't dare!" howled Smith.
-
-Brownson seemed to hear now. The silence was coming again, and the
-sounds on the sinking ship were dying out.
-
-Brownson gazed straight at his second officer. Smith saw him raise the
-pistol, saw a bit of blue smoke, saw his commander sink down to the
-deck and disappear. A cracking and banging of ice blocks blended with
-the report, and the ship raised her stern higher. Then she plunged
-straight downward, straight as a plummet for the bottom of the Atlantic
-Ocean. Smith knew his captain had gone to his end; that he was a dead
-man at last.
-
-He stood watching the mighty swirl where the liner had gone under. The
-men in his boat were also looking. They had seen all.
-
-"Look--look!" shrieked a passenger. "The captain has shot himself!"
-
-"She's gone--gone for good!" cried another. "Oh, the pity of it all!"
-
-Smith did not reply. He was still gazing at the apparition he had
-seen in that chart-house door; the figure of the man shooting himself
-through the head. It had chilled his anger, staggered him. The awful
-nerve of it all, the horror----
-
-"Hadn't we better see if we can get one or two more in her, sir?" asked
-the stroke oarsman. "I see a woman swimming there."
-
-Smith did not answer. He seemed not to hear. Then he suddenly awoke to
-his surroundings. He was alive to the occasion, the desperate situation.
-
-"Give way port--ease starboard--swing her out of that swirl--hard on
-that port oar," he ordered.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Smith looked around for the other boats. The chief mate's was in sight,
-showing dimly through the haze. She was full of people, crowded, and
-it was a wonder how she floated with the screaming, panic-stricken
-passengers, who fought for places in her in spite of Wylie's oaths and
-entreaties. Smith glared.
-
-"The fools!" he muttered. "If they would only think of something
-besides their own hides for a second. But they won't. They never do.
-It's nature, and when the trouble comes they fight like cats."
-
-He steered away from what he saw was trouble. He would not pick up the
-participants in the scuffle when they overturned the boat. He was full
-up now, carrying all his boat would hold. She rocked dangerously with
-every shifting of the crowd, that still trembled and scuffled for more
-comfort in her. Her gunwales were only a few inches above the sea, and
-it might come on to blow at any minute.
-
-"Sit down!" he roared to the old man, who would shift and squirm about
-in the boat, interfering with the stroke oarsman, who jammed his oar
-into the small of the fellow's back, regardless of the pain it caused.
-
-"Sit down or I'll throw you overboard! Do you hear?"
-
-The old man whimpered and struggled for a more comfortable position;
-and Smith reached over with the tiller and slammed him heavily across
-the shoulders, knocking him over.
-
-"If you get up again I'll kill you, you cowardly old nuisance!" he said
-savagely.
-
-The old man lay quiet and trembling. A young woman upbraided Smith for
-brutality and talked volubly.
-
-"Talk, you little fool!" he said. "Talk all you want to, but don't you
-get moving about in this boat, or I'll break your pretty neck."
-
-"You are a monster," said the girl.
-
-"Yes; but if I'd had my way, you would have been safe and sound below
-in your room instead of out here in this ice," snapped Smith.
-
-The girl quieted down, and then spoke to the young woman, who lay in
-the bottom of the boat where she had fallen when Smith struck her down.
-She was the niece of Captain Brownson.
-
-"I never heard of such utter brutality in my life," she said.
-
-Miss Billings, who had first found fault, agreed with her.
-
-"Was your brother aboard, Miss Roberts?" asked Smith.
-
-"Yes, he was--I think he went in the mate's boat--why do you ask?"
-
-"Oh, I was just thinking--that's all. He would have been second officer
-next voyage. That seemed to be fixed, didn't it?"
-
-"Yes; and if it had, this thing would not have happened," said the girl.
-
-"No; probably it would not," said the second officer sadly. He spoke,
-for the first time, with less passion. He thought of the manner they
-had taken to get his berth, the insults, the infamy of the whole thing.
-
-"No; I don't suppose you knew how it was done," said he, half aloud.
-
-The girl sat up. She had stopped whimpering from the blow.
-
-Smith watched her for a few minutes while he swung the boat's head for
-the gray mist ahead where he knew lay the iceberg. He thought the face
-pretty, the figure well rounded and perfectly shaped. He felt sorry he
-had used such harshness in making her behave in the boat. But there
-was no time for silly sentiment. That boat must be manned properly
-and kept afloat, and the slapping of a girl was nothing at all. She
-might start a sudden movement and endanger the lives of all. Absolute
-trimming of the craft was the only way she could be safe to carry the
-immense load. The men rowed slowly and apparently without object. Smith
-headed the boat for the ice.
-
-A long wall of peculiar pale blueness suddenly burst from the haze
-close to them. It was the iceberg. He swung the boat so that she would
-not strike it, and followed along the ragged side.
-
-The two young women gazed up at the pale blueness caused by the fresh
-water in the ice. It was a beautiful sight. The pinnacles were sharp
-as needles, and they pierced the mist in white points, tapering down
-to the white-and-blue sheen at the base, where the ocean roared and
-surged in a deep-toned murmur. Great pieces broke from the mass while
-they gazed. Smith steered out and sheered the boat's head away from the
-dangerous wall. It was grand but deadly. A large block lay right ahead.
-
-"Ease starboard," he said.
-
-The craft swung clear. The mist from the cold ocean thinned a little.
-Right ahead was a flat plateau, a raised field of ice joining the berg.
-It sloped down suddenly to the sea, and the swell broke upon it as upon
-a rocky shore. A long, flat floe stretched away from the higher part.
-It was a field of at least a half mile in length. The huge berg reached
-a full half mile further. The whole was evidently broken from some
-giant glacier in the Arctic.
-
-Smith debated his chances within himself. He scorned to ask his men,
-for he had seen much ice before in his seagoing. To remain near the
-berg was to miss a ship possibly; but to row far off was to miss fresh
-water. He had come away without either food or water, owing to the
-furious panic. He knew very well that, within a few hours at most, the
-famished folk in his boat would rave for a drink. They must have water,
-at least, even if they must do without food.
-
-The iceberg lay right in the path of ships, as his own had proved, the
-liner running upon the great circle from New York to Liverpool. There
-was the certainty of meeting, or of at least coming close to a vessel
-shortly, for others of his line would run the same circle, the same
-course, as he had run it before.
-
-With giant liners going at twenty-five knots speed, they usually kept
-pretty close to the same line, for there were few currents that were
-not accurately known over that route. The Gulf Stream was a fixed unit
-almost; and in calm weather other ships would certainly reckon with
-accuracy to meet its set. If he rowed far off the line, then he might
-or might not meet a ship. If he did not, then there would soon be death
-and terror in that boat.
-
-He decided to keep close to the berg, and ordered his men to give way
-slowly while he navigated the field and skirted it, keeping just far
-enough out to avoid the dangerous breaks and floating pieces.
-
-The morning wore away, and the occupants of his boat began to grow
-restless. They had been cramped up for several hours now, and they were
-not used to sitting in a cold, open boat in a thick, misty haze without
-food or water. The old man began to complain. Several women began to
-ask for water. One woman with three children begged him to go ashore
-and get them a piece of ice to allay their thirst. Smith saw that the
-effects of the wild excitement were now being felt, and the inevitable
-thirst that must follow was at hand.
-
-He headed the boat for a low part of the field.
-
-"Easy on your oars," he commanded. The boat slid gently upon the
-sloping ice.
-
-"Jump out, Sam," he said to the bow oarsman. "Jump out and take the
-painter with you." The man did so, hauling the line far up the floe.
-
-One by one the rest were allowed to climb out of the boat. They
-gathered upon a part of the field that rose a full ten feet above the
-sea; and there they began trying to get small pieces of ice to eat. It
-was as salt as the sea itself, and they were disappointed, spitting it
-out. Smith took a man along with him and started for the berg. The boat
-was left in charge of four men, who held her off the floe.
-
-Within half an hour, the whole crowd had managed to get fresh-water
-ice. The second officer kept them close to the boat and watched for
-any signs of change in the weather. They were allowed to go a short
-distance and get the stiffness from their limbs by exercise.
-
-"I am very tired and cold. Can I get back into the boat?" asked Miss
-Roberts, after she had been stamping her feet upon the floe for half an
-hour.
-
-Smith looked at her. The print of his hand was plainly marked upon her
-face. He felt ashamed.
-
-"Yes, you can go aboard," he said; and then, as if in apology for what
-he had done, he explained: "You must keep quiet in that boat, you know.
-You must not try to walk about, for it endangers the whole crowd. You
-understand, don't you?"
-
-"Yes, I'll try and keep still, but my feet get so cold and I grow so
-stiff."
-
-"Well, you must forgive me for having used you roughly. I had to do it.
-There was no time for politeness in that panic." He came close to her.
-His eyes held a light she feared greatly, and she shrank back.
-
-"I hope it is not a time now for politeness," she said, with meaning.
-
-"Oh, I wouldn't hurt you," said Smith.
-
-"I hope not," said the girl.
-
-Miss Billings asked if she could go aboard also. Smith allowed her, and
-called the boat in.
-
-The two girls climbed into the boat, and the older women commented
-spiritedly upon the favors of youth. Smith shut them up with an oath.
-The woman with the three children huddled them back aboard as the ice
-caused them to shiver with the cold on their little feet. They had
-neglected to put on their shoes. The women, for the most part, were
-only half dressed, and few, if any, had on shoes. They had rushed on
-deck at the first alarm, and the time allowed for dressing was short.
-The ship had gone down within fifteen minutes from the first impact
-with the berg.
-
-Smith walked to and fro upon the ice for some time. The sun shone for a
-few moments, but was quickly hidden again in the haze.
-
-A gentle breeze began to blow from the southward, and the haze broke up
-a little. Smith began to get nervous about the ice, and finally ordered
-all his people back into the boat, where they huddled and shivered,
-hungry but no longer thirsty.
-
-During all these hours there had been no further sign of the other
-boats. Smith knew that at least ten of them had gone clear of the
-sinking ship. The chief mate's boat was the one he was most interested
-in at present. He wanted to see the man who had indirectly caused the
-disaster; the man whom Brownson was playing up for the berth of second
-officer. The thing was a reality now since the tragedy. Before it, he
-had looked upon the matter as slight indeed.
-
-The second mate headed his boat out and kept clear of the drifting
-ice; but always under the lee of the berg, which offered considerable
-shelter from both wind and sea, which were rising. The danger of
-floating ice was not great during daylight, and he swung the small boat
-close and rode easily, keeping her dry and clear of water. He dreaded
-the plunging he must inevitably undergo in the open ocean with that
-load of women.
-
-With the increasing breeze, the haze lifted entirely until the horizon
-showed clear all around. There was no sign of the other boats. Smith
-knew then that they had steered off to the southward to avoid the ice.
-As the sea began to grow, the masses of ice broke adrift with distinct
-and loud reports, the plunging pieces from the higher parts making
-considerable noise above the deepening roar of the surge upon the base.
-
-At three in the afternoon, Smith began to feel nervous. The ice was
-breaking up fast, and immense pieces were floating in the sea which
-bore them toward him. They grew more and more dangerous to the small
-craft, and the officer headed away from the vicinity and sought the
-open at last.
-
-By five that afternoon, when the light was fading, he was riding a
-heavy sea, that grew rapidly and rolled quickly, the combers breaking
-badly and keeping two men busy bailing the boat. She made water fast.
-
-The night came on with all its terrors, and the small boat was in great
-danger. Smith tried his best to keep her headed to the sea, which
-was now running high and strong. His men began to weaken under the
-continuous strain; and by ten that night they could no longer hold the
-boat's head to the sea. She fell off once or twice, and nearly filled
-when in the trough. There was little to do but make a last effort to
-hold her. The steady second officer came to his last resource.
-
-There were five oars in the boat. Four of these he lashed into a drag
-by fastening two of them in the shape of a cross, and then lashing the
-other two across the end of the cross. He had a spare line of some
-length in the boat; and with this bent to the painter, he had a cable
-of at least twenty fathoms, which he led over the bows and to the drag.
-The drag was weighted with some chain that lay forward. The fifth oar
-he kept aboard, and used it himself for a sweep to hold her head as
-nearly as possible behind the drag and to the sea.
-
-He was tired, sore, and hungry, but he kept the boat's head true for
-hours, and his people huddled down in the bottom, and prayed or swore
-as the humor took them. The children wept, and some of the older women
-fainted and lay prone. These gave no trouble. Some of the younger ones
-still insisted on moving about, and brought the wrath of the mate upon
-them in no uncertain manner. Smith was making a fight for their lives,
-and would not tolerate any hysteria. He smote all who disobeyed with
-his usual impersonal and rough manner; but the two girls were now too
-much cowed to give him trouble. They lay in the boat's bottom and wept
-and sobbed the night long, holding to each other, while the boat tossed
-high in the air or fell far down the slopes of ugly seas. And all the
-time the water broke over her low gunwales as she sat well down under
-her load of living freight.
-
-It was about midnight when the old man, who had been unruly from the
-first, sprang upon a thwart and plunged over the side with a shrill
-scream.
-
-Smith saw him, and made, a pass to catch him with the oar; but the old
-fellow drifted out of reach. The second officer swung the boat as far
-as possible toward him; but still he could not reach the figure that
-showed floating for a few moments in the darkness. Then Miss Roberts,
-who was close to the stern sheets, spoke up.
-
-"Oh, the pity of it, the pity of that old man dying like this! Will no
-one save him?" she cried.
-
-Her companion sat up.
-
-"There's no one aboard here who can do anything but bully us women. If
-we had a man here, we might save him. I would jump after him myself,
-but I can't swim. It's horrible to see him drown right alongside of us
-in this darkness."
-
-Smith heard and smiled grimly. He was tired out, sore, and almost
-exhausted, but he was full of pluck and fight still. To drop the
-steering oar might prove fatal if a comber struck the boat. He called
-to the stroke oarsman who took the oar. Smith took the stern line, gave
-a turn about a cork jacket that lay upon the seat, and then over the
-side he went, calling the men to haul him in when he gave the word.
-
-The affair had only taken a few moments, and the form of the old fellow
-was hardly under the surface. Smith floundered to him; but, being a
-poor swimmer, as most sailors are, he was quite exhausted when he
-finally grabbed him. Instead of easing on the line, he hung dead upon
-it, hardly able to keep his face out of the sea. The girls watched him
-over the gunwales, but keeping their places. Two men started to haul
-him in without waiting for a signal; and they hove upon the line with a
-right good will. It was old and dry-rotted, as most lines in lifeboats
-are, and it parted.
-
-Smith felt the slack, and knew what it meant. The cork jacket held him
-above the surface, and he looked at the boat which seemed so far away
-in the darkness, but in reality was only a few fathoms. Yet it was too
-far for him to make it again. It meant his death, his ending.
-
-He tried to swim, but the exertion of the day had been too much. His
-efforts were weak and ill-directed, and he floundered weakly about,
-drifting farther away all the time.
-
-The stroke oarsman called for another line. There was none except that
-of the drag. It would not do to haul it in. The boat was doing all she
-could now to keep herself afloat, and to risk her broadside in the sea
-might be fatal for all hands.
-
-Miss Roberts begged some one to go to the officer's assistance. Smith
-seemed to hear and understand. He floundered with more vigor. There
-was not a man among the boat's crew who dared to go over the side in
-the night. There was nothing more to do but watch and hope that the
-second mate would finally make it. But he did not. He struggled on for
-many minutes. They could see him now and then fighting silently in the
-night. He still seemed to hold the old man with one hand.
-
-"It is dreadful--can no one do anything for him?" begged Miss Roberts.
-
-"I can't swim a stroke, lady," said the man at the steering oar.
-
-No one volunteered to go. Smith slowly drifted off as the boat sagged
-back upon her drag. Then he disappeared entirely in the darkness.
-
-"The brute--I didn't think it was in him," said Miss Billings, with
-feeling.
-
-"Don't talk that way," said Miss Roberts. "Don't talk that way of a man
-who did what he has done. I forgive him with all my heart----"
-
-The morning dawned, and the sea rolled with less vigor. The boat was
-still able to keep herself clear. The white faces of the men told of
-the frantic endeavor. The women were now nearly all too exhausted to
-either care for anything or do anything. They lay listless upon the
-boat's bottom, and she made better weather for that fact. By nine
-o'clock a steamer was heading for them; and within an hour they were
-safe aboard and bound in for New York. They arrived a few days later.
-
-The chief mate's boat had kept her course to the southward after
-leaving the berg--she had gone ahead of Smith's. By midnight that night
-she was almost dead ahead of the second officer's boat when Smith
-jumped in to save the old man.
-
-Daylight showed Wylie a dark speck on the horizon; and at the same time
-he saw the smoke of the approaching steamer. He had made bad weather
-of it, also; but with more men and less women in his craft he had kept
-to the oars, and, when it was very bad, had run slowly before it for
-several hours. This had brought him from many miles in advance to but
-a few ahead of Smith's boat; and he was rowing slowly ahead again by
-daylight. He sighted her, and noticed there were no oars; but he saw
-the man steering, and rightly guessed that they were hanging onto a
-drag.
-
-Mr. Roberts, the nephew of Captain Brownson, sat close to the mate. He
-had relieved him several times during the night. Large and powerful, he
-was able to aid the chief mate very much.
-
-"I think my sister is in that boat," he said as they sighted her.
-
-"It looks like the second officer's boat, all right," said Wylie.
-
-They rowed straight for her as the smoke of the steamer rose in the
-east. Before they came within a mile, they saw that the steamer would
-reach them before they could reach the boat. They then rowed slowly,
-and watched, waiting.
-
-"Something right ahead, sir," called a man forward.
-
-Roberts looked over the side. He saw something floating.
-
-"Starboard, swing her over a little," he said to the chief mate.
-
-Roberts leaned over the side. He was nervous at what he saw. It had the
-look of something he dreaded. Then the object came drifting along, and
-he reached for it. Long before he grasped it, he saw it was the form of
-a man holding to a cork jacket with one hand and the collar of a man's
-coat with the other.
-
-The old fellow floated high, and Smith's hand was clenched with a death
-grip in his clothes. His left hand was jammed through the life jacket,
-and the fingers clutched the straps. His head lay face upward, and his
-teeth showed bared from his gums.
-
-"Heavens! It's Smith himself!" exclaimed Roberts. He hauled him aboard
-with the help of a man.
-
-"It's poor Smith, all right," said Wylie sadly. The life jacket told a
-tale too plainly. Wylie knew what had happened.
-
-"It's just as well he didn't come ashore. He was guilty, all right,"
-said Mr. Roberts. "A man who wrecks a liner and kills hundreds of
-passengers might just as well stay out here. Shall we leave him?"
-
-"Not if I know it," said Wylie, with sudden heat.
-
-Within fifteen minutes they were picked up by the steamer and were
-safe. The manager of the line welcomed Mr. Roberts gladly when that
-gentleman came to seek him.
-
-"I'm sorry we didn't have you that voyage, Mr. Roberts," he said. "I
-don't like to say anything against a dead man; but, of course, Smith
-was on duty when she struck--that is all we know."
-
-"And I suppose you'll want me to go into the other ship, now, sir?"
-asked the officer.
-
-"Yes, you can report to Captain Wilson any time this week. How is your
-sister? Did she recover from the boat ride?"
-
-"Well, in a way, but she's forever talking about that blamed second
-mate, Smith, who seemed to have a strange sort of influence over her
-while she was with him in the boat. He struck her, too, the dog! It's
-just as well he didn't come back," said Roberts.
-
-"Well, she'll get over that all right. Smith was a rough sort of man;
-but as we knew him, he was a first-class sailor, a splendid navigator;
-and no one seems able to explain how he ran the ship against an iceberg
-during daylight. It's one of those things we'll never find out. The
-truth, you know, is mighty hard to fathom in marine disasters. It
-must have been a terrible blow to Brownson to have to kill himself,
-unable to face the shame for a mate's offense--but Brownson was always
-a sensitive man, a splendid fellow; and I suppose he would not go in
-a boat after what Smith had done. Brownson was captain, and might
-come under some criticism. Some of the men say he shot himself after
-upbraiding Smith for his crime."
-
-"Yes. My sister tells me they had quite heated words while the liner
-was sinking," said the new second mate.
-
-And so William Smith passed out. His name was never mentioned in
-shipping circles without reserve. But there are still some men who
-remember him, who knew plain "Bill" Smith, the fighting second officer
-of the liner that went to her end that morning off the Grand Banks. And
-those who knew Smith always think of that cork jacket. They made no
-comment. They knew him. It is not necessary.
-
-
-
-
-THE LIGHT AHEAD
-
-
-"Red light on starboard bow, sir," came the hail from forward. The man
-was Jenson, a "square-head" of more than usual intelligence and of keen
-eyesight.
-
-"All right," said the mate softly, with no concern. He gazed steadily
-at a point two points off the starboard bow, picked up the night glass,
-and took a quick look. Then he left the pilot house where he had been,
-and walked athwartships on the bridge.
-
-He was a young man. His eyes squinted a little under the strain of
-night work and showed the wrinkles at their corners. His hair was black
-and curly, and his bronzed face, strong-lined and handsome, was full
-of the strength and vigor of youth. He had gone to sea at fifteen. He
-was now twenty-five and a chief mate in a passenger ship, a first-class
-navigator, a good seaman. And the company liked him. He was a favorite,
-a young man rising in the best ships. Five feet eight in his white
-canvas shoes and white duck uniform, he looked short, for he was very
-stout of limb; a powerful man who had gained his strength by hard work
-in the forecastle and upon the main deck of several windjammers whose
-records in the Cape trade were well known to all shipping men.
-
-It was the midwatch. Mr. James had been upon the bridge about half an
-hour only. It was the blackest part of the night, the time between one
-and two, in the latitude north of Hatteras. James rubbed his eyes once
-or twice, brushed his short mustache from his mouth with his fingers,
-and felt again for the night glass just within the pilot-house window,
-which was open.
-
-"How does she head?" he asked the helmsman softly.
-
-"West, two degrees north, sir," said the quartermaster at the steam
-steering wheel.
-
-James looked again, and, replacing the glass, walked to the bridge rail
-and stopped.
-
-The point far ahead to starboard was showing plainly. It was the red
-light of some steamer whose hull was still below the horizon. Her
-funnel tops just showed like a black dot, darker than the surrounding
-gloom. Her masthead light was very bright, shining like a star of the
-first magnitude that had just risen from a clear sky. He knew she was a
-long way off. Not less than twelve miles separated the vessels. There
-was plenty of time for a change of course. He began to hum softly:
-
- "When the lights you see ahead,
- Port your helm and show your red----"
-
-"Yes," he muttered, "it's a good old saw--poetry of the night. I wonder
-if _she_ knows of the poetry of--of--the sea----"
-
-His mind went back to the days ashore, the last days he had spent upon
-the beach with her.
-
-"And I have worked up to this for you," he had told her with all the
-feeling he could muster, the strong passion of a strong man asking for
-what he desired most. "I have worked up to this for you, just you."
-
-The words rang in his ears. The scene was there before him. The
-beautiful woman, the woman he loved more than his life. He could tell
-her no more than that--he had done all he had done just for her, just
-to be able to call her his own.
-
-The dead monotony of the life before him hung like a black pall, heavy
-in the night. He saw all the lonely years he must face, all the hard
-life of the sailor, for she had simply laughed lightly, looked him
-squarely in the eyes--and shook her head.
-
-"No," she had said gently. "No, you mustn't think of it--I mean it----"
-And he knew that what he had done was as nothing to her, nothing at
-all--what was a mate to a woman like that?
-
-The steady vibration of the engines below made the steel rigging shake.
-The low drone of the side wash as the surf roared from the bows made
-a soft murmur where it reached his ears. It made him drowsy, dreamy,
-and sullen. He cared for nothing now. What was a mate, after all? Any
-corner groceryman was far better in the eyes of most women. Perhaps he
-had been mistaken. Perhaps the position he had ideals of was not much.
-Yes--that was it; he had been mistaken. And he gazed steadily out into
-the dark future, and subconsciously he saw a long, dreary life of toil
-and trouble, without the woman he loved to relieve the dark solitude.
-
-Before him rose the lights. The red was now well up and rising fast.
-It had been but a flickering spark at first, showing soon after the
-bright headlight had risen. It was upon the port side of that vessel's
-bridge and high above the sea. It was electric, for no ordinary oil
-burner would show so far with color. The ship must be a liner of size,
-and must be going fast. Suddenly he saw a flash of green. It was the
-starboard light of the approaching ship. Then for an instant both side
-lights shone brightly.
-
-The vessel then was not crossing his bows, after all. The green was her
-starboard light, and that was the one she must show. It was all right
-then. He would not change the course. If she swung out, she must be
-coming almost head on now, for her red had shone but two points off the
-bow, and the converging courses must be drawing together.
-
-All right then. If they crossed before the ships met it was well and
-good. There would probably be a mile or more to spare, and he was even
-now crossing her course, for he saw her green light, which showed him
-he was right ahead of her, and his rate of speed would take him over
-in a few moments. Then her green would be upon his right or starboard
-side, showing that she was passing astern of him. It was simple, plain
-as could be. He paid little or no attention any longer.
-
-And then suddenly the green light faded and the red shone again. It
-caused the officer to stop in his walk, which he had begun again to
-keep in action.
-
-"Port your helm a little," he ordered as he realized the positions.
-
-"Aye, aye, sir--port it is, sir," came the monotonous response from the
-pilot-house window; and the clanking of the steam gear sounded faintly
-upon his ears.
-
-The giant liner swung slowly to starboard, swung just a little; and,
-as she did so, the loom of a monstrous figure rose right ahead in the
-night. The glare of the bright headlight shone close aboard. The red of
-her port light was a dangerous glare; and at a space to port flickered
-a moment the fatal green of the starboard side light, flickered, and
-then went out, shut off by the running board as the vessel swung across
-the bows of the ship, where the mate stood gazing at her.
-
-"Hard aport," he yelled savagely.
-
-"Hard aport, sir," came the response from the wheel, and the voice
-showed more or less concern now.
-
-There was an instant of suspense, a moment of silence, and the two
-giant shapes came close with amazing speed. The liner swung to her port
-helm, and her bows pointed clear of the light ahead. But the speed was
-awful. Both going at twenty-five knots an hour, making the closing
-speed nearly a mile a minute, brought the giants too close to pass
-clear.
-
-There was a hoarse cry from forward. The mate knew he was not going
-to clear, and the roar of his siren tore the night's silence. Then
-the huge fabrics came in collision. There was a gigantic crash, a
-thundering shock, and a tearing, ripping sound as steel tore steel to
-ribbons.
-
-The shock made the rigging sing like a giant harp under the strain,
-and the "ping" of parting steel lines sounded in accompaniment to the
-tumultuous crashing of wood and iron. The cries of men came faintly
-through the uproar from forward, and this was followed almost instantly
-by frantic shrieks from aft as the effect of the shock was felt by the
-women passengers.
-
-The liner had failed to clear, and, swinging too late to port, had cut
-slantingly into the other ship's quarter and tore away the greater
-part of her stern. Tearing, grinding, ripping, and snapping, the huge
-shapes ground alongside for a few moments as their headway took them
-along without reducing speed. Too late the reversing engines, too late
-the telegraph for all speed astern. The ships had come in contact.
-The mate had run into another ship that had shown him her red light
-to starboard. There was no mistake about it. The cry of the seaman on
-watch had been heard by fifty persons.
-
-"Red light on the starboard bow, sir----"
-
-It rang in the officer's ears. It sounded above the terrible din of
-smashing steel and beams, and even above the roar of the sirens telling
-of the death wound that had been given a marine monster of twenty-five
-thousand tons register.
-
-The awful feeling of responsibility paralyzed the mate. The terror of
-what he had done numbed him; stunned him so that he stood there upon
-the bridge like a man asleep. Fifteen hundred human souls were sinking
-in that ship, which was now drifting off to port in the night with
-their cries sounding faintly through the blackness, even rising to be
-heard through the roar of the steam. He thought of it. It was ghastly.
-Fifteen hundred souls; and he knew how badly he had wounded the ship.
-He knew the terrific power of the blow he had delivered--shearing off
-the after part of that vessel and letting in the sea clear to the
-midship bulkhead. There was no chance for her to float. The wound
-was too deadly. It was as bad as though he had rammed her with a
-battleship's ram.
-
-The half-dressed form of the captain rushed to him--his captain.
-
-"What happened?" he whispered hoarsely. He seemed to be afraid to ask
-the question loudly. "Great Heaven, did you hit her?"
-
-The mate stood gazing at the huge shadow, and his tongue refused to
-answer the question. Then the voice beside him seemed to gain its
-power. It roared out:
-
-"Bulkheads, there--close them, quick!" And the automatic device, worked
-from the pilot house, was pulled savagely.
-
-The captain rushed into the pilot house. The man at the wheel who had
-left it to throw the lever to close the bulkheads sprang back to his
-post.
-
-"How'd you do it?" asked the master again, in a low voice full of
-passion and strained to the utmost. "How'd you strike--don't you know
-you killed at least five hundred men? You murdering brute--you were
-asleep." Then he raised his voice again, and bawled down through the
-tube to MacDougal, the chief engineer.
-
-"How is she--quick--get the pumps going--collision--keep the firemen
-cool, and for God's sake don't let them panic--keep them at their posts
-until we see what's up. We've run down the express steamer _Blue Star_,
-of the Royal Dutch Line----"
-
-The master turned to the pilot house again and looked out of the
-window. His chief officer was still standing where he had left him.
-
-"In Heaven's name, Mr. James, what's the matter with you to-night?"
-he broke out wildly, in passionate tones, almost sobbing. "It's all
-hands--get 'em out quick!"
-
-He was a strange creature standing there in his undershirt and drawers,
-with his long gray beard streaming down across his breast. The man at
-the wheel even looked at him for a moment, but did not smile. It was
-tragedy, not comedy.
-
-"Is she full speed astern?" asked the master quickly.
-
-"Yes, sir, full speed astern, sir," said the man. His face was white,
-and his hands shook a little while he held the spokes of the wheel.
-There was death for many that night, and he knew it. It would be hard
-to tell who would survive in the rush that was sure to come if the
-ship went down. Yet his seamanship told him that much was to be hoped
-from the forward bulkhead. It would hold her up if it could stand the
-strain.
-
-In two minutes there was a rush of hundreds of feet upon the decks
-below the flying bridge. The second officer came up half naked, dressed
-in shirt and trousers, without shoes or stockings. He was a powerful
-man and short, with a tremendous voice, a real Yankee bos'n voice;
-and he roared out orders for the men, who jumped to their stations
-automatically.
-
-The captain came again to the bridge and took command. He yelled to
-the boat crews below, and strove to quiet the crowding passengers who
-pushed and fought about the boats in spite of the after guard and
-seamen.
-
-"Get down there and wade into that mess, Wilson," said the master
-to the second officer; and he jumped down and went bawling through
-the press, pushing and pulling, striking here and there a refractory
-passenger who would insist upon trying to fill the small boats.
-
-"There is no danger--no danger whatever," roared the captain again
-and again from the bridge. The petty officers took up the cry, and
-gradually the press about the starboard lifeboats grew less. The boats
-upon the port side had been all carried away or smashed to bits. Ten
-boats were left.
-
-A man rushed up the bridge steps coming from aft.
-
-"She's sinking, sir," he panted, pointing to the dim shadow of the
-rammed ship drifting astern. The steady roar of her siren told of the
-danger, and seemed to be a resonant cry for help.
-
-The master gazed aft. Then he rushed to the pilot-house window and
-took up the night glass hanging there. He looked hard at the ship now
-lying astern and riding with her bows high in the air. The man was
-right. She was rapidly going down. Ten minutes at the most would tell
-the whole story.
-
-"Get the starboard boats out, Mr. James," called the captain in an
-even tone, "and let no one but the crews in them. The first man who
-attempts to get in will be shot. Go to the vessel and bring back all
-you can--quick----"
-
-But the form there had vanished before he had finished speaking. The
-chief officer had awakened at last from his stupor. His responsibility
-came back to him with a rush of feeling. But an instant before he had
-faced the end. He had decided to kill himself at once, and was just
-about to go to his room for his gun. He was too ashamed to face the
-ordeal, the ordeal of the officer who has run down a ship in a clear
-night. There had been literally no excuse for him. He could not plead
-ignorance of the laws; his license as officer made that impossible. He
-knew what to do when raising a light to starboard when that light was
-red. The rules were plainly written. Every common waterman knew them
-by heart. He had disobeyed them by some mischance, some mistake he
-could not exactly define; but he knew that under it all was that dull,
-sullen apathy from a wrong, or fancied wrong, that had caused him to be
-negligent.
-
-He would not go upon the witness stand and say that, because a woman
-did not love him, he had allowed his ship to ram a liner with fifteen
-hundred souls aboard her in a clear night. No! Death was a hundred, a
-thousand times better than such ignominy, such a miserable, cowardly
-sort of excuse. He would blow his brains out just as soon as he saw the
-finish, just as soon as he knew his vessel would float. Then came the
-captain's voice of command:
-
-"Get out the starboard boats and save all you can----"
-
-Yes, it was his duty; his above all others. He was at number one boat
-before the master had finished his orders.
-
-Six good men were at their stations. The falls were run taut, the boat
-shoved clear, and down she went with a rush into the sea. Nine others
-followed within a minute, and ten boats pulled away into the darkness
-astern, where the roar of the siren still sounded loud and resonant--a
-wild, terrible cry of death and destruction.
-
-James met a boat coming toward him before he reached the ship. She was
-full. Sixty-two men and women filled her, and she just floated, and
-that was all, her gunwales awash in the smooth sea. The swell lifted
-her, and she rose high above him, a dark object against the sky. Then
-she sank slowly down into the trough, and disappeared behind the hill
-of water that ran smoothly from the northeast in long, heaving seas.
-
-The night was still fine, and the wind almost nothing at all. The banks
-of vapor rising in the east told of a change; but the change was not
-yet. James noticed the weather mechanically, as a good seaman does,
-from a small boat when at sea at night; but he was thinking of the
-huge shadow which now drew close aboard.
-
-As the boat came under the port side, he could see the passengers
-crowding the rail in the waist, where the lifeboats were being filled
-and sent away as fast as men could work them. Seven boats were
-alongside full of human beings. Two more were being lowered. Three came
-from under the stern as he drew alongside.
-
-There was a mass of people still to be taken off. He saw at a glance
-that the liner had twenty large lifeboats for her complement. One was
-smashed. There was every reason to believe she would send out nineteen
-with at least a thousand people in them. There would be several hundred
-more to take besides these. The life rafts might do it, but he knew the
-danger of life rafts in the furious struggle in a sinking ship.
-
-The thing would be to save the passengers with his own boats. This he
-might do if the ship floated long enough. She was sinking fast, as he
-could see by her rising bows. She was probably even now hanging solely
-by her midship bulkhead, and that would most likely be badly smashed by
-the collision, for he had struck the ship far enough forward to do it
-damage, although his vessel had only cut into her well aft. The blow
-had been slanting. A little more time, perhaps a few seconds, and the
-ships would have swung clear.
-
-He came alongside and hailed the deck.
-
-"Send them down lively--come along now, quick!" he called up in his
-natural voice. It was the first time since the collision he had
-spoken. It sounded strange to hear his own tones coming natural again.
-
-In a few moments he was crowding and seating the women and children
-in his boat. Then came the men from everywhere. They crowded down the
-falls, jumped into the sea, and swam alongside, begging to be hauled
-aboard, or climbed over the high gunwales themselves. One powerful
-young man, stripped to the waist, dived clean from the hurricane deck,
-and almost instantly rose alongside. Then he swung himself into the
-boat, and stood amidships hauling others in until the craft settled
-down to her bearings and the men at the oars could hardly row.
-
-"Shove off--give way," ordered James.
-
-The boat started back slowly, the men rowing gingerly, poking and
-striking the passengers in the backs with the oars until the crowd
-settled itself. Then she went along slowly toward the ship, and the
-women in her prayed, the men swore, and the children wept and sobbed.
-And all the time the fact that he was the cause of it all impressed
-James queerly. He could not understand it, could not quite see why he
-had done it, and yet he knew he had. One man spoke to the athlete who
-had dived.
-
-"They should burn a man who would sink a ship like this on a clear
-night; they should burn him to a stake--the drunken, cowardly
-scoundrel----"
-
-And James sat there with the tiller ropes in his hand; sat silent,
-thoughtful, and knew in his heart the man had spoken the truth. If he
-could only be sure of the passengers--he would not give them a chance
-to say anything more. His boat came alongside his own ship. The crowd
-above cheered him--they did not know--he was a hero to them, the first
-boat with the rescued. How quickly they would change that cheer when
-they learned the truth! He almost smiled. His set face, strong-lined,
-bronzed, and virile, turned away from the people in the boat. He gave
-orders in the usual tone. The passengers were quickly passed aboard.
-Then he started back for another load.
-
-By this time the sides of his ship were crowded with boats. She was
-taking aboard over a thousand people, and the sea was still smooth.
-
-The swell heaved higher as the small boat went back toward the sinking
-steamer. James noticed it. The sky to the eastward was dark with a
-bank of vapor. The air had the feeling of a northeaster. It was coming
-along, and there was plenty of time, for it would come slowly. The last
-of the passengers would be either sunk or aboard his own ship before
-the breeze rose to a dangerous extent.
-
-The men rowed quickly. They were anxious. The horror of the whole thing
-had fallen upon them like a pall; but they strove mightily to do their
-share. James found his boat to be the last to reach the sinking ship.
-
-The liner was well down now by the stern and her deck was awash aft.
-She rose higher and higher as he gazed at her, her decks slanting,
-sloping, and she rolled loggily in the growing swell. Her siren
-stopped. A dull, muffled roar from the sea, a smothered explosion told
-of the end of the boilers. She would go in a moment. The passengers
-were clinging, grabbing to anything to hold on. The deck slanted so
-dangerously that many were slid off into the sea where they plunged,
-some silently and hopelessly, others screaming wildly with the terror
-of sudden death.
-
-James watched them. He saw many die, saw many go to their end. Others
-swam; and he strove to pick them up, forgetting himself in the struggle.
-
-He picked up sixteen in this manner, steering for them as they swam
-about in the night calling for help. The last one was a girl, a
-beautiful girl of twenty or less. He hauled her into the boat.
-
-A sudden, wild yelling caused him to look. The sinking liner stood upon
-end, her forefoot clear of the sea. She swung loggily to and fro for a
-moment, settling as she did so. Then, with a rush, she plunged stern
-first to the bottom, the crash of her bursting decks as the air blew
-out being the last sound he heard.
-
-The ship was very close to him. Her swing as she foundered brought her
-closer. The vortex sucked his boat toward her, drew the craft with a
-mighty pull. A spar, twisting, whirling in the swirl, struck the boat,
-and instantly she was a wreck, capsized, engulfed in the mighty hole
-the sinking liner made in the sea with her last plunge.
-
-James found himself smothered, drowning, drawn downward by a great
-force he could not fight against. The whole ocean seemed to pull down
-upon him and crush him into its black depths.
-
-The whole thing took such a small space of time, he hardly realized his
-position. The utter blackness, the salt water in his eyes and mouth,
-all paralyzed his mind for a few moments. Then he thought of his end.
-It was just as well. He was drowning, going to the bottom. He must soon
-go, anyhow; he could not face those wrecked passengers; and with the
-thought came a grim peacefulness, a satisfaction that the fight was all
-over. He could now rest at last.
-
-But nature within him was very strong. He was a powerful man. When he
-gave up the struggle, his natural buoyancy lifted him to the surface
-of the sea. He came up, his head appearing in the air, and he breathed
-again in spite of himself. Then the old, old fighting spirit, the
-desire to survive which is so strong within the breast of every young
-animal, took charge. No, he would not go down yet. He must see the
-finish, the end of things in which he was concerned.
-
-He swam about aimlessly. The swell heaved him high up, dropped him far
-down; and he noticed that now the sea was running, the small combers
-rising before a stiff breeze. These burst upon his face and head and
-smothered him a little. He turned his back to them, and swam on, on,
-and still on into the darkness.
-
-He saw nothing. The ship, the boats had all gone. Once he was about to
-cry for help; but the thought was horrible, distasteful to the last
-degree. He had no right to call for help. He would not. But he swam
-and tried to see something to get upon.
-
-Something struck him heavily upon the head. Stars swam before his eyes.
-He reached upward with his hands, and they met a solid substance. Then
-he sank slowly down, down--and the blackness came upon him.
-
-The object that had hit him was a small boat. In it were a man and a
-girl, the girl James himself had picked up from the sea a short time
-before. The man was a seaman, and he heard the boat strike. He reached
-over the side, caught the glimpse of a human form as it struck the
-boat's side and sank.
-
-The seaman took up the boat hook and was about to poke the body away.
-He was sick of dead men, sick of seeing corpses floating about. He had
-met half a dozen already that night. But this one seemed to move, and
-the hook caught in his clothes. He pulled the body up, and saw the man
-was not dead, but dazed, moving feebly in a drunken way. Then he pulled
-James into the boat.
-
-James regained his senses after half an hour; and during that time the
-boat ran before a stiff squall of wind and rain that swept it along
-before it into the darkness. The seaman steered with an oar, and kept
-the boat's head before the wind. The mate opened his eyes, and in the
-gray of the early dawn he saw a man he did not know, a seaman from the
-sunken liner, steering the boat calmly before the gale that was now
-coming fast with the rising sun. Near him in the bottom of the boat lay
-the girl huddled up and moaning with cold and fright, and fatigue.
-
-James arose and staggered aft.
-
-"How'd I get here?" he asked.
-
-"I pulled you in, sir," said the sailor. "Are you from the ship that
-sank us?"
-
-"Yes. I'm the mate, the chief officer."
-
-"Well, if I'd 'a' know'd it, I mightn't have taken the trouble," said
-the seaman.
-
-James said nothing. There was nothing for him to say. He knew the
-sailor was right. He knew the officers of his ship were men to scorn,
-to hate--but he would not say it was himself alone who had done
-the terrible deed. Something stopped him. It might have been sheer
-shame--or fear. He looked at the girl. Then he went to her and raised
-her, placing her upon a seat and trying to cheer her up.
-
-"We'll be picked up soon--don't worry about it. Our ship will stand by
-and hunt for all the missing----"
-
-"But I'm dreadfully cold," said the girl, with chattering teeth.
-
-"Put my coat on, then," said James; and he took off his soaked coat and
-made her put it on.
-
-The man grinned in derision.
-
-"Say," he said, "who was on watch when you hit us?"
-
-James took no notice. He would not answer the question. Then the girl
-spoke up.
-
-"Yes, whose fault was it? You belong to the other ship, you'll know all
-about it. They ought to hang the man who is responsible for this awful
-thing--my poor mother and father--oh----" And she broke into a sob.
-
-The man at the steering oar smiled grimly.
-
-"Yes, miss, that's right, they sure ought to hang the officer who
-runs down a liner on a clear night when he's bound to see the lights
-plainly. I don't make no excuses for him--it's more'n murder."
-
-"You were on watch, on duty--you are dressed?" said the girl.
-
-"Yes, I knowed it when I first seen you," snarled the seaman. "I reckon
-you're the man who did it--what was the matter? Couldn't you keep
-awake, or what?" The tone was a sneer, an insult, yet the sailor did
-wish to find out how so unusual a thing could happen as the running
-down of a ship on a clear night when her lights could be seen fifteen
-miles or more.
-
-James tried to defend himself. It was instinctive. The contempt of the
-sailor was too much. On other occasions, he never allowed the slightest
-insolence from the men of his own vessel. But now the officer was numb,
-paralyzed. He was guilty--and he knew it.
-
-For hours they sat now in silence, the seaman holding the boat steady
-before the northeaster, which grew in power until by nine in the
-morning it was blowing a furious gale, and the sea was running strongly
-with sweeping combers. There was nothing to do but keep the boat before
-it. To try to head any other way meant to risk her filling from a
-bursting sea. The exertion of steering was great. The seaman, with set
-face, held onto the oar, and James could see the sweat start under the
-constant strain, but he said nothing--he waited.
-
-"You'll have to take her, sir--a while--I'm getting played out," panted
-the man.
-
-"All right," said James, "give her to me--now----"
-
-He took the oar during the backward slant as she dropped down the side
-of the sea that passed under her. He was ready for the rush as she rose
-and shot forward again upon the breaking crest of the following hill.
-The exercise did him good. It made him think clearly, it took his mind
-from the hopelessness of his life.
-
-All that day the two men took turns keeping the small boat before the
-sea; and they ran to the southward a full half hundred miles before
-the gale let up. Both were too exhausted to talk, too thirsty to even
-speak--and there was neither water nor food in the boat. Her ration of
-biscuit and water had been lost when she had been drawn down by the
-sinking liner.
-
-The sailor had righted the boat after great effort, aided by the sea;
-and owing to the smoothness of the swell at the time he had managed to
-get her clear of water. Then he had picked up the girl who had been
-floating about, swimming and holding onto fragments of wreckage since
-James' boat had gone under.
-
-The mate noticed that, although the girl had not spoken to him again
-after knowing he had caused the disaster, she still wore his coat. He
-studied the matter, the inconsistency of women, and he thought it
-strange. The sun shone for a moment before it set that evening; and
-in the glowing light James gazed steadily at the woman. She was very
-beautiful. She had not made a complaint since the morning. The sea was
-still running high, although the wind was going down with the sun, yet
-the girl had not been seasick, nor had she shown any suffering.
-
-"How do you feel now?" he whispered, as he waited his turn at the oar.
-
-"I'm all right, thank you. Do you think we will get picked up?" she
-said.
-
-"We'll be picked up to-morrow--sure," said the officer. "We are now
-right in the track of the West India ships, and will sight something by
-daylight when we can set a signal. Are you very thirsty?"
-
-"Tell me first, how did this accident occur? Were you really asleep, or
-just what? I can stand the thirst, and I'm warm enough now. This water
-is like milk in comparison with the air, it's so warm."
-
-"We are in the Stream," said James; "the Gulf Stream, and that is about
-eighty along here--it's better than freezing in the high latitudes."
-
-"You haven't answered my question," said the girl.
-
-"I don't know--I don't remember what it was. I must have lost my
-head--been asleep--or something--yes, I was on duty, on watch--it was
-my fault entirely. I saw your ship, saw her red light to starboard--the
-right, you know. She had the right of way under the rules. I intended
-to swing off, waited a few minutes to see her better--then her
-green light showed--and--then it was too late. I went hard aport,
-did my best--but hit her--we were going very fast--both ships were
-going twenty-five knots--making the approaching speed fifty miles
-an hour--nearly a mile a minute--I must have lost my head just a
-moment--maybe I was dreaming----"
-
-"I know you are not to blame," said the girl, placing her hand in
-his. "You have told me the truth, a straight story--but yet I don't
-see how it all happened. I'm not a sailor, anyhow; perhaps I couldn't
-understand. But I feel you didn't do it on purpose----"
-
-"No, no," whispered James. "How could a man do a thing like that on
-purpose?" He could not tell her the truth. He was ashamed to mention a
-woman, to say he was sullen, depressed, stupefied at the loss of a love
-he bore a woman.
-
-He took his place at the oar for the last time that night. The sea was
-no longer dangerous. They spoke of rigging a drag with the oar and
-thwarts, making a drag by the aid of the painter or line, which still
-was fast to her forward. They had finished this before dark, and then
-they lay down, exhausted. The girl stood watch. In the dim dawn the
-girl gave out. She had stood watch all night, and she was exhausted.
-
-"I understand," she muttered to herself, "this poor fellow, this
-officer was tired out--he slept--I don't blame him at all, it was not
-his fault."
-
-The sun shone upon the three sleeping, the boat riding safely and
-dry to the drag made of the oar and thwarts. James aroused himself
-first, awakening dimly with the warmth of the sun. He sat up. The two
-others slept on. The girl was breathing loudly, almost panting, and her
-parted lips were blue. Yet she was beautiful. James knew it. She was
-exhausted, and help must come soon for her.
-
-He sat and gazed at the horizon, and when the sea lifted the boat,
-he stared hard all around to see if anything showed above the rim.
-Hours passed in this fashion. The girl moaned in her sleep. The sailor
-shifted uneasily, and grunted, snored, and murmured incoherently. They
-were all very thirsty.
-
-It was about ten o'clock in the morning that James saw something to
-the northward. It was just a speck, just a tiny dot on the rim of sea;
-but he knew it was a ship of some kind, a vessel passing. The minutes
-dragged, and he was about to rouse the sailor to get him to help watch.
-Then he remembered how the fellow had striven so manfully the day
-before when they rode out the gale. No, he would let them sleep.
-
-By noon, the vessel was close aboard and coming slowly with the wind
-upon her port beam. She was a schooner bound south. James could see the
-lumber on her decks. Her three masts swung to and fro in the swell, and
-she made bad weather of the sluggish sea. The foam showed white under
-her forefoot, and told of the speed being at least a few knots an hour.
-James called the sailor.
-
-"Get up--turn out--there's a schooner alongside," he said. The man
-moved slightly, and slept on. James shook him roughly.
-
-"Lemme alone," muttered the seaman.
-
-"Ship ahoy!" yelled the mate as the schooner came within a quarter of
-a mile and headed almost straight for them. He stood up and waved his
-arms. Nothing came of it. The girl awoke. She sat up and realized the
-position. In a moment she had taken off her skirt and handed it to the
-mate. He waved it wildly; and his yelling finally awoke the exhausted
-seaman. The man stood up and bawled loudly. Then he washed his mouth
-with salt water, and yelled again and again. James swung the skirt. The
-girl prayed audibly.
-
-The schooner stood right along on her course. She had not noticed the
-boat. Passing a few hundred fathoms from them caused all three to
-become frantic. The men bawled, cursed, and begged the schooner to take
-them in.
-
-The captain of the vessel, coming on deck, happened to look in their
-direction. He spoke to the man at the wheel, who for the first time
-seemed to take his eyes from the compass card. Then, taking his glass,
-the captain saw that three living souls were in the small boat. The
-next instant he was bawling orders, and the schooner hauled her wind
-and came slatting into the breeze.
-
-Six men appeared on her deck. James saw them working to get the small
-boat clear from her stern davits. Then they seemed to realize that this
-was unnecessary, and the schooner, flattening in her sheets, worked
-up to them slowly, rising and falling into the high swell. She stood
-across to windward, and then came about, easing off her sheets and
-drifting slowly down upon the boat.
-
-She drew close aboard.
-
-"Catch a line," yelled the captain from her deck.
-
-James waved his hand in reply, and a heaving line flaked out and fell
-across the boat's gunwales.
-
-In another moment they were being hauled aboard.
-
-Explanations came at once. The master of the schooner was bound for
-South America.
-
-"Of course, I'll put you all aboard the first homeward-bound ship I
-fall in with," said he.
-
-"But you surely will put us ashore at once," said the girl, after she
-had drunk tea and changed her clothes. They were eating gingerly of
-ship's food and drinking water ravenously.
-
-"That I cannot do, miss," said the captain. "I'm bound to Valparaiso
-with cargo, and I must take it there."
-
-"But we will pay you to take us ashore--pay you anything, for I am very
-rich," said the girl.
-
-The master smiled sadly. The effects of the forty hours in the open
-boat were evidently having their effect upon the young woman.
-
-"No," he said, "you go below, and the steward will give you all you
-want to eat, and your clothes will be dry enough to put on again before
-night. We might fall in with a ship bound north any time now. Then
-you'll have a chance."
-
-James knew the man was within his rights, of course. He was glad to be
-in the schooner. The sailor didn't seem to mind where he went. One
-ship was very much like another to him. The consul would be bound to
-ship him home, anyway. The girl was given a stateroom in the after
-cabin; and she soon slept the sleep of the exhausted.
-
-The mate stayed on deck. The whole thing had a strange look to him.
-He had decided to kill himself. He dared not go back to the States,
-anyhow, to face the charges that would be made against him. He might
-slip overboard any night on the run down, and no one would be the wiser.
-
-The fact that the schooner was bound to South America seemed to give
-him a respite. There was no hurry to commit the desperate act that he
-felt he must, in all honor and decency, do. He might live a month at
-least before dying.
-
-After the awful struggle through the gale and shipwreck, he felt a
-desire to live more than before. The whole affair was more distant,
-almost effaced. And now he was not going back, anyhow.
-
-The captain asked him few questions regarding his wreck, seeming to
-feel a certain delicacy about it. The day passed, and the next and the
-next, and no ship was sighted going north. They were now drawing out of
-the track of vessels, and a strange hope arose with the mate that they
-would not meet one.
-
-The girl sat with him often, and they talked of other things than
-shipwreck. She was beautiful--there was no question about it. The
-glow of returning strength made her more lovely. James found himself
-wondering at her. She had been the only human being so far that would
-condescend to speak to him without contempt. He was lonely, very
-lonely, and the girl seemed to feel he needed some one to cheer him
-up. She did not realize his weakness. He was very strong to her; a
-strong man who had suffered from an accident, due, perhaps, to his
-carelessness, but not to criminal negligence. But he knew, he knew, and
-could not tell.
-
-The days passed, and the terror of the thing he had in his mind began
-to fade slightly. He knew he must die. The sailor, his shipmate who had
-been picked up with him, had told every one in the schooner that he,
-James, was on watch and was responsible for a terrible disaster, the
-death of a great number of persons. James saw it in their looks. He
-knew he would never get a ship again, never hold a place among white
-men. Yes, he must die.
-
-It gave him a sort of grim satisfaction to feel that he was just to
-live a certain length of time, that he would cut that short at the last
-moment. He wondered how a prisoner felt when the sentence of death
-was pronounced upon him. He had pronounced it upon himself. It was
-a genuine relief, for the vision of those terror-stricken, drowning
-passengers was always with him night and day, except when he was in a
-dreamless sleep. That sleep seemed to be portentous of what he would
-face.
-
-The days turned to weeks and the weeks to months. The voyage was long
-and the winds light. They were ninety days to the latitude of the
-Falklands when they struck a furious "williwaw" from the hills of
-Patagonia. The schooner was in a bad fix. She was lightly manned; and,
-in spite of the addition of James and the seaman from the wreck, she
-held her canvas too long.
-
-The struggle was short but terrific. The fore-topsail blew away and
-saved the mast; but the main held, and the topmast buckled and finally
-went by the board. The headsails had been lowered, but they blew
-out from the gaskets, and the jibboom snapped short off under the
-tremendous threshing of flying canvas. The maintopmast, hanging by the
-backstays, fell across the triatic stay, and the steel of the backstays
-cut into the spring until it finally parted under the jerks, and the
-mizzen was left to stand alone. It went by the board, and the great
-mast, snapping short at the partners, went over the side, and smashed
-and banged there at each heave of the ship.
-
-There was desperate work to do to save the vessel. Her master did
-wonders and showed his skill; but the most dangerous and deadly task of
-going to leeward to cut adrift the lanyards was left to James. No one
-else would go.
-
-James was a powerful man, and had won his way to an officer's berth
-by endeavor, not by nepotism. His hope was that he might be killed in
-the struggle. He dared anything, tried to do the impossible--and did
-it. How he succeeded in clearing away the wreck of that mast remains a
-mystery to those who watched him. He was almost dead when dragged back
-and the schooner floated clear.
-
-The girl had seen the whole affair from the glass of the companionway.
-She had held her breath, almost fainted again and again at the
-sight of James in that fight for life. To her it was simply grand,
-tremendous--she had never been touched by a man's heroism before.
-
-When it was all over and the schooner, dismantled and storm-driven, lay
-riding down the giant seas that swept around the Horn in the Pacific
-Antarctic Drift, she watched over and attended the officer as he lay
-in his bunk with a broken arm, a cut across the head, and the toes of
-one foot gone. She knew that there was something behind the will to do
-as James had done. But she could not fathom it, could not tell why he
-was unresponsive. He lay silent mostly, and seldom looked at her. Yet
-he was sane in his conversation, not delirious in any way. It worried
-her. It caused that peculiar thing that is in every woman to make the
-man she admires responsive. And the more she showed her feelings, the
-less he seemed to care. It ended the way it usually does under such
-conditions. She fairly worshiped him.
-
-After that storm the weather grew very calm. The dark ocean seemed to
-be at rest for a spell. The schooner was now to the south'ard of the
-Falklands, and the captain decided that he would not venture around the
-Horn in the desperate condition he was in. Stanley Harbor was under his
-lee, and he bore away for it. Then, with the perversity of the southern
-zone, the wind hauled to the eastward and blew steadily for a week;
-blew right in their faces.
-
-James came on deck before they were within a hundred miles of the
-land. He sat about in the cold of the evening wrapped up in rugs, and
-the girl waited upon him, brought him anything he wished. In the long
-hours of daylight--for it was light enough to read until midnight--they
-sat near the taffrail. The captain said nothing; he would not notice.
-He liked the man who had saved his ship. The girl was sympathetic, and
-James often held her hand. She did not attempt to withdraw it.
-
-But he would not tell her he cared for her. That was absurd. He had
-already sacrificed his life. He was as good as dead. Yet he wondered
-at the passion that had brought him into such desperate trouble and
-had caused so much ruin and death. He pondered silently, and now often
-watched the girl furtively.
-
-Into the beautiful harbor, the great fiord of Port Stanley, they came,
-the schooner making fairly good way in spite of her crippled condition.
-Her arrival was greeted with joyous acclaim by the land sharks, who
-smelled the wound and saw the damage. They would make a good haul.
-Ships didn't come often--but when they did, well, they paid.
-
-The governor was notified of the arrival. He was told everything but
-the relation of the passengers to the ships to which they originally
-belonged. The master was generous; and, besides, it was not America
-they were now in. It was an outlying foreign colony at the edge of
-the world, a place where one seldom went or heard from. They might
-go ashore if they wished. The seaman asked to remain aboard. He was
-allowed to do so, and consequently did not go ashore and talk too much.
-
-James passed that last night in high spirits. He was going out on his
-last voyage. He was going to die, going to leave the woman who he knew
-loved him, who had been so sympathetic, so lovable. They were on deck a
-long time that evening, and the captain, being wise and old enough to
-understand, did not molest them.
-
-"Good night," she said finally. "Good night. I'll see you to-morrow
-before we go ashore. We can take the ship across to the straits, and
-meet the regular liner as she comes through from Punta Arenas. We'll be
-home again in a few weeks."
-
-"Good-by," he said simply. That was all. She went below.
-
-Shortly after four bells--two o'clock in the morning--James, with set
-face and grim resolution, stole on deck. He gazed up at the Southern
-Cross for a few moments, at the beautiful constellation that he would
-see for the last time; then at the grim, barren hills back of the
-settlement.
-
-It was a farewell look, his farewell to things in this world. He was
-determined not to be disgraced. He would die like a man, as he could no
-longer live like one.
-
-Then he dropped softly over the side, and sank down--down into the
-quiet waters of Stanley Harbor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The instinct of woman is often more certain than her reason. The girl
-had noticed something strange in the man's behavior. She had woman's
-instinct to divine its cause. She had not gone to bed that night, but
-waited to see just what might happen to the man who owned her very
-soul. She had not realized before that she loved this officer, this man
-who had confessed partly to his disgrace. The realization awakened her
-wits. She would see what he meant.
-
-At the slight splash, she was on deck in an instant. Her first thought
-was to call for help. Then she knew to do so was to call for an
-explanation; and she realized the disgrace that would follow instantly
-upon the explanation. She seized a life buoy always hanging upon the
-taffrail, and with it dropped over the side.
-
-She swam silently toward a spot that showed disturbed water rapidly
-drifting astern with the tide. Within a minute she had reached the form
-of James, who had not placed enough weights in his clothes to insure
-quick sinking. He was lying silently upon his back, waiting--waiting
-for the end that must come shortly.
-
-"Swim with me," she pleaded. "You must--come with me--we'll swim ashore
-together."
-
-Before the morning dawned, the pair were upon the beach, several miles
-distant from the schooner. James saw he was doomed to life. He could
-not even die. Then the beauty of the woman, the sympathy, the love he
-could not deny, had its way with him, and they decided to vanish into
-the country, to disappear together.
-
-This might or might not have been hard to do in the islands where
-every one is well known. But it happened that Captain Black, of the
-whaling station situated near the entrance of the fiord, was on deck
-that morning. He saw an amazing thing, a woman and a man swimming
-together, and finally making the land near the point.
-
-Calling a couple of men, he started for them in his whaleboat, and
-caught up with them before they had gone more than a few fathoms from
-the shore. They were chilled through, cold and exhausted. He took them
-aboard the whaling steamer, and soon saw that he had a seaman of parts
-in Mr. James. Men were hard to get. All of his crews were convicts or
-ticket-of-leave men; and the addition of a man even with a wife was
-something to be taken advantage of.
-
-He took James aside and asked him a few questions. He was satisfied
-that he would not get into trouble by giving the officer a billet; and
-he forthwith made him one of the company in charge of a small boat. The
-affair would be kept secret, and the governor would be told nothing. He
-probably would not ask too many questions, anyhow.
-
-"I shall ship you both to the north'ard station, fifty miles up the
-coast. You can have a shack there--plenty of peat for fires and good
-grub--I'll inspect you once a month. Johnson will be in charge of the
-station. You can take this letter to him. Your wife can go with you if
-you wish."
-
-James looked at the girl. She nodded her head.
-
-"Is there a priest about here?" asked James.
-
-"Yes. Why?" asked Black.
-
-"Well, if you'll kindly send for him, he can marry us before we start."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Back of the northward station, on the ramp that rises sheer back from
-the beach like a table-land, there are a few cottages. These are
-occupied by the crews of the whaling station and their families. In
-one of them is a handsome woman with two little tots--happy-faced and
-smiling she is. But she seems a bit out of place in her surroundings.
-Mrs. James Smith they call her, and she is apparently very happy, very
-happy indeed, in spite of it all.
-
-James Smith is the best gun pointer in the fleet, the best harpooner
-with the gun-firing harpoon. He is a sober, quiet, steady man, who has
-nothing now of the ship's officer about him. He never talks of wrecks.
-If some one starts a conversation regarding them--and they are much
-hoped for in the Falklands--he goes away.
-
-Sometimes in Jack's saloon down at Stanley, he has been known to sit
-and stare out over the dark ocean, to sit and often mutter:
-
-"Was it right, after all--was it worth while--was it?"
-
-But he is a sober, quiet, industrious man, who goes about his duties
-without enthusiasm, without effort.
-
-
-
-
-THE WRECK OF THE "RATHBONE"
-
-
-"Eight bells, sir," came the voice from without, following the _rap_,
-_rap_ upon the door of my room. I had just five minutes to dress myself
-and get out, and I rolled over, listening to the sounds on deck. As
-I had only taken off my sea boots, I was in no hurry to turn to. My
-sou'wester hung upon a peg, but my oilskin jacket was still buttoned up
-close about my neck, where it had been during my sleep; and the oilskin
-trousers scraped noisily as I slid my legs to the edge of the bunk.
-
-I had slept three hours and forty minutes, and must go out and relieve
-Slade, the second mate, who had, in turn, relieved me at the end of the
-mid-watch. It was now just five minutes of four in the morning, a cold,
-snowy nor'easter blowing, and the brig running wildly into the thick of
-it.
-
-We had cleared from New York for Rio, and were trying to run out into
-the warm Gulf Stream before the gale overblew us and forced us to heave
-to, to ride it down. January at sea on the coast was hard, indeed.
-
-I swore at the hard luck, for my sleep had seemed just an instant,
-just a second's unconsciousness, and I was stiff and soaked with sea
-water; so cold that I had to keep on my oilskins to sleep at all. I had
-finally steamed my body, incased as it was, into some sort of warmth,
-and the first movement sent the chills running down my spine. I threw
-off my blankets and stood shivering, trying to jam my feet into the wet
-boots as the bells struck off, and I was due on deck.
-
-Slade stood with his shoulders hunched to his ears at the break of the
-poop, holding to the rail to steady himself as the brig plunged and
-tore along under a reefed fore-topsail and close-reefed spanker, with
-the wind abaft the beam. The gray light of the winter morning had not
-come yet, and the snow beat upon my face, as if some invisible hand
-hurled it from the utter blackness to windward.
-
-The dull, snoring roar of the wind under the feet of the topsail told
-of the increasing velocity of the squalls; and the quick, live jerk
-of the ship as she went rushing along the crest of a roller for an
-instant, and then slid along the weather side, dropping stern foremost
-into the trough, with a heave to windward, indicated that we were doing
-all we could.
-
-"Southeast b'south!" yelled Slade into my ear. "You'll have to watch
-her."
-
-I knew what he meant. She was steering hard, and might broach to in any
-careless moment.
-
-"Call the old man if there's any change," he added, and stumbled down
-the poop steps to the main deck, where the watch were huddled under
-the lee of the deck house. Then he disappeared aft, and the night
-swallowed him up.
-
-I made my way to the wheel. Bill, a strong West Indian negro, was
-holding her steady enough, meeting her as she came to and swung off. He
-was assisted by Jones, a sturdy little fellow with a big shock head. I
-could just make out their faces in the light from the binnacle, which
-burned, for a wonder, in spite of the gale. It generally blew out in
-spite of all we could do to keep the lamps lit. Beyond was a hopeless
-blackness.
-
-I went to the weather rail and tried to see to windward. A fleeting
-glimpse of a white comber caught my gaze close aboard; but beyond a few
-fathoms I could see nothing at all. Aft under the stern the torrent
-of dead water boiled and roared, showing a sickly flare from the
-phosphorus. We were going some, probably twelve or fifteen knots an
-hour; and right ahead was nothing--that is, nothing we could see; just
-a black wall of darkness.
-
-Vainly I tried to make out the light of the coming morning; but the
-snow squalls shut off everything. Pete, sharp-eyed fellow of my watch,
-was on lookout on the forecastle head. I knew Pete's eyes were the best
-ever, but he could see nothing in that wild gale of snow and sleet and
-inky darkness. I went to the break of the poop again, and hailed the
-deck below.
-
-"Keep a sharp lookout ahead, there," I said, bawling the words out to
-reach through the storm. Then I stood waiting, for there was nothing
-else to do.
-
-Two bells came--five o'clock--and the watch reported all well and the
-lights burning brightly. Our starboard and port--green and red--lights
-were none too bright at any time, yet they were well within the law,
-and had served the ship for five years or more.
-
-I answered the hail, and stood trying again to see something over
-the black hills of water that were rushing to the southwest under
-the pressure of the gale. Something made me very nervous. I began to
-shiver, and the snow struck my face and melted enough to run down my
-neck, making me miserable, indeed. I still stood gazing right ahead
-into the night, hoping for the dawn which was now due in another hour,
-when I heard a yell from the forecastle head.
-
-"Light dead ahead, sir," came the hail.
-
-I looked and saw nothing, but took Pete's word for it.
-
-"Keep her off all she'll go," I roared to the wheel.
-
-And just as I felt her swing her stern to the following sea, I saw
-close to us the green light of a steamer, and above it her masthead
-light. Then the thing happened.
-
-A wild cry from forward, followed by the loom of a gigantic object in
-the gloom ahead. We were upon the vessel in a moment.
-
-A tremendous crash, grinding, tearing, splintering. The brig staggered,
-seemed to stop suddenly, and then the deep, roaring note of the gale
-smothered the rest.
-
-We struck, fairly head on, swung to, glanced along the ship's side,
-and were lying dismasted in the trough of the sea, our foremast over
-the side, and nothing but the lower main mast standing. The seas tore
-over us, and we lay like a log, while the shadow of the steamer passed
-slowly astern.
-
-The old man was on deck before I knew just what had happened. So also
-was Slade. The smashing and grinding of the wreckage alongside told of
-the spars; but we were too stunned to think of them.
-
-Was the hull split open with that furious impact? That was the thought
-in our minds. Ours was a wooden vessel--little, light, and very strong.
-Did we ram our plank ends in? If so, we were lost men, all of us.
-
-It was fully a half minute before we spoke of it. We knew just what to
-do, but we were stunned for a few moments. Then we made for the main
-deck, and tried the pumps. The water was coming in lively.
-
-"All hands on the pumps!" came the skipper's order; and we manned the
-brakes with the feeling that it was just a respite, just a little time
-to lose. The men took to them with a will, however; but I had a sinking
-feeling in the pit of my stomach, and I worked half-heartedly for a few
-minutes, until I brought myself around with a jerk. I was mate. I had
-the responsibility. And more than that--it had happened in my watch on
-deck. I was the one who must do the most.
-
-"Come along, bullies--get a couple of axes!" I roared, and made my way
-to the weather fore channels, where the rigging of the topmast and
-lower mast held the wreckage alongside, being drawn taut, as it were,
-across the deck, the spars to leeward, and banging and pounding against
-the ship with each surge. "Get into those lanyards!" and they chopped
-away in the gray light of the morning, cutting everything they could,
-and clearing the weather rigging of the strain.
-
-The wreckage now hung by the lee rigging, and drifted farther aft. The
-wheel was lashed hard down, and a bit of spanker raised again upon the
-mainmast, the halyards still being intact, although the boom had been
-broken by the shock. We soon had canvas on her aft, and she headed
-the sea, dropping back from the wreckage to a mooring hawser bent to
-the standing rigging of the foremast. We got a lashing to the foot of
-the mast, and she dragged the mass broadside, making a lee of it, and
-riding easily to the heavy seas, which now took her almost dead on her
-bows.
-
-When I had a chance to look about me again, the light of the morning
-had grown to its full height, and we were able to see around us.
-
-The gray light made things look almost hopeless for us. The pumps
-worked full stroke, and the water gained rapidly on us. There had been
-three feet made during the first half hour. We were settling, and the
-brig was riding more heavily, taking the seas over her head with a
-smothered feeling that told of what was coming.
-
-I had a chance to breathe again, and I looked out over the gray ocean,
-where the white combers rolled and the heavy clouds swept along close
-to their tops. A large, black object showed to the westward of us, and
-we recognized her as a steamer. She was very low in the water, and upon
-her rigging floated the signal, "_We are sinking._" She was the one we
-had run down.
-
-The old man stood gazing at her as I came on the poop. He was trying
-to make her out; and this he did finally, when the wind stretched her
-flag in a direction so that we could see it plainly. She was one of the
-Havana steamers bound up from Cuba, and was about five thousand tons.
-Her number was that of the _William Rathbone_.
-
-"No better fix than we are," snarled the skipper. "What was the matter?
-Didn't you see him? He's big enough."
-
-"Too dark," I said. "You know what kind of a night it was--look at it
-now. We might do something if we were sure of floating ourselves--no
-boat would live in this sea five minutes; but it'll smooth out,
-maybe----"
-
-"Maybe blow a hurricane!" howled the old man, his voice rising above
-the gale. "Get the boats ready, anyhow--get the steward to put all the
-grub he can get in them--too bad, too bad," he went on.
-
-While Slade helped to get the boats ready for leaving the brig, I went
-to the bow and tried to see just what damage we had done ourselves. It
-was dangerous work, as the seas came over in solid masses, and more
-than once I came near getting washed overboard. Splintered plank ends,
-a crushed stem showed through the wreck of the bowsprit, which still
-hung by the bobstays and shrouds, jammed foul of the catheads, so
-that only the end swung, and struck us a blow now and then. It was a
-hopeless mess.
-
-A great sea rose ahead, with its crest lifting for a break, and I
-ducked behind the windlass, holding on with both hands. The solid water
-swept over the bows, and I was almost drowned; but I held on. There was
-nothing I could do forward, and no men could work there. The steady
-grind of the pumps took the place of desperate rushing about the decks.
-The men stood in water to their knees as the seas swept her, but they
-still kept it up. As fast as one man gave out another took his place,
-regardless of watch; and the waiting ones chafed under the shelter of
-the mainmast.
-
-The boats were on booms over the forward house, where the seas could
-not wash them away; and Slade had them all ready to leave, although it
-was a study how to get them overboard in that sea with nothing forward
-to raise them with. The mainstay still held, and the mainmast was
-strong enough; but there was nothing forward at all above them. I went
-aft and waited.
-
-Old Captain Gantline was still standing at the poop rail watching
-the steamer. Our drift was about equal to hers, and we sagged off to
-leeward together, keeping about a mile apart. The steamer was settling.
-
-"Of course, he ought to have gone clear of us!" howled the old man as
-I came up. "I don't blame you, Mr. Garnett; I don't blame you--but you
-certainly swung us off at the last minute when you knew the law was to
-hold your course, and let him get out of our way."
-
-"But he was dead ahead, sir. I saw his lights right aboard. To luff
-meant to come to in that sea, and that would have been just as bad, for
-he'd have struck us aft--probably cut us in two."
-
-I really had done nothing out of the way. The steamer had not seen us,
-that was certain. I was supposed, under the law, to hold on until the
-last moment, and I had done so. I had only swung her off a little;
-tried to clear when I saw he would not. I knew the law well enough,
-and had followed it up to the moment of striking. Our swing off had
-made our bows fetch up against the steamer, and had probably caused him
-serious damage. But it had saved us from being cut down by her sharp
-steel stem, which would have gone through our wooden side as if through
-butter.
-
-No, I did not feel guilty; although there were evidently some hundred
-passengers and crew of that ship in dire peril and sore put to it. The
-old man knew I had done the best thing I could for us, and there was no
-possible way of avoiding a collision in a wild, thick night like the
-last when the ships were invisible but a few fathoms distant.
-
-We waited, and the brig settled slowly, while the wind still held
-from the northeast, and the sea still ran strong and high. There was
-apparently no chance for launching a small boat. The scud flew fast
-and the gray wind-swept ocean looked ugly enough, the surface covered
-with white. The steamer was slowly sinking, like ourselves, and it
-was only a question whether either would go through the day or not. I
-hoped that it would not come in the night. There's something peculiarly
-nerve-racking in wild night work in a sinking ship. The very absence of
-light lends terror to the already awful situation, and the wild rush of
-the wind and seas makes chaos of the blackness about.
-
-The day dragged slowly. It was like waiting for the end of the world.
-The vessels drifted apart but another mile or two, and we were still
-close enough to exchange signals. We had long ago run ours up, telling
-that the same state of affairs existed aboard the brig. If some
-passing coasting steamer came along, all might still be well with the
-passengers and crews of both of us. But not a sign of anything showed
-above the horizon.
-
-At five o'clock--two bells--that evening, the brig was well down in the
-water; and she was taking the seas nastily over her. The main deck was
-all but impossible to remain upon, and the men at the pumps had to lash
-themselves to keep there. It would be only a question of a few hours
-now. The drawn faces told of the strain. Slade, the second mate, came
-to me.
-
-"All over but the shouting," he said. "How'll we ever get them boats
-clear in this sea?"
-
-"Better start now before it's too late," I said, and went to the old
-man for orders.
-
-"All right, get them over," said the old man, in answer to my question;
-and we started on the last piece of work we were to do in that brig.
-
-Bill, the West Indian negro; Wilson; Peter, the Dutchman; and Jones
-were to row; and, with myself at the steering oar in command, made the
-working crew. Besides these men we had three others, making eight men
-all told for our boat. Slade went with the old man, dividing the little
-crew up evenly.
-
-We had a good crew. Long training in that little ship had made them
-good men. But for their steadiness we would never have got those
-boats clear. It was desperate work getting them over the side without
-smashing them. With a tackle upon the main, however, we managed to lift
-them clear and let them swing aft, lifting and guying them out by hand.
-Then we dropped them over the quarter, and let them tow astern to the
-end of a long line, and they rode free, being lighter than the ship and
-pulling dead to leeward.
-
-I was the first to leave, as became my place. The old man, as captain,
-must be the last. I hauled the boat up, and we climbed in, jumping the
-now short distance as she took the seas and rose close to the taffrail.
-The brig was very low, and settling fast.
-
-"Go to the steamer first," said the old man; "then head westerly until
-you get picked up or get ashore. We are not more than one hundred and
-fifty miles off--good-by."
-
-I dropped over, and the line was cast off, letting the boat drift
-slowly back, but still heading the sea so that she rode almost dry, in
-spite of the combers.
-
-The _Rathbone_ was in view about three miles distant, and by the weight
-upon the four oars we held her so that she drifted off bodily in that
-direction, while still heading well up to the wind. There was plenty
-of light left yet, but there was a night coming, and I hoped we would
-get a chance to board the big vessel before it was black dark. Perhaps
-she was not so dangerously hurt as she looked.
-
-I saw the old man's boat come away and take the general direction of
-our own; but the seas were too high to see her often. She was evidently
-making good weather of it, and I thanked the lucky stars that we had
-whaleboats for our business, and not the tin things they use for
-lifeboats in steamers.
-
-By keeping the boat's head quartering to the wind and sea, she drifted
-bodily off toward the _Rathbone_, and before dark we drew close aboard.
-
-There was much action taking place on her decks as we came close enough
-to see. Passengers ran about, and forms of seamen dashed fore and aft.
-It was evident that they were hurrying for some purpose, and that
-purpose showed as we noted the list to starboard the ship had. She was
-very low forward, and seemed to be ready to take the final plunge any
-moment.
-
-Our boat had been pretty badly smashed getting her overboard, and she
-was leaking badly from the started seams. In that strong, rolling sea
-she had all she could do with the crew in her; and I fervently hoped
-that I would not be called upon to take passengers. Four rowing and
-three for relief was all right, but a dozen more would swamp her.
-
-We came close under the _Rathbone's_ lee. She lay broadside to the sea,
-and her high stern, raised as it were by her sinking head, shut off the
-sweep of the combers.
-
-"Steady your oars," I commanded, as we came within a few fathoms. A man
-in uniform rushed to the ship's rail and hailed us through a megaphone.
-He was followed by several passengers.
-
-"Can you come aboard and help us?" he bawled. "We're sinking--all the
-boats gone to starboard--captain killed and chief mate knocked on the
-head by wreckage."
-
-"Men have refused duty," howled a man standing near him. "Mutiny
-aboard, and we're going down--come aboard and help us."
-
-While they hailed, I noticed the boats to port going over the side. One
-had already gone down, but she had fouled her falls, and had dropped
-end up, smashing against the ship's side and filling. Struggling men
-tried to clear her, but the sea was too heavy. A life raft was pushed
-over the rail, and fell heavily close to us, held by a line. It surged
-in the lee, and, as the ship drifted down, it struck her heavily,
-smashing the platform.
-
-"Don't go, sir," said Jake, in a voice that barely reached me.
-
-"We'll have troubles enough of our own," said another.
-
-"Shut up, there are passengers--don't you see the women?--we've got to
-help them," I said.
-
-I looked for the other boat. It was not in sight. The forms of two
-women came to the rail, one a young girl.
-
-"Throw me a line," I yelled to the man in uniform.
-
-A small line came sailing across the boat. I seized it, and went
-forward.
-
-"Jake and you, Bill, come with me, the rest lie by--keep her clear
-whatever you do," I said, and waved my hand to those above to haul
-away. With the bowline under my arms, I was soon on deck. Then I helped
-to haul my two men up.
-
-"I'm the second," said the man in uniform; "but I can't make 'em do
-anything. Just stretched one out when the rest knocked me over and took
-to the boats."
-
-Without delay we made our way along the port rail to amidships, where
-the boats were being lowered. Men crowded around them, and fought for
-places. The fireroom crew, white-skinned and partly clothed, their pale
-faces dirty with coal dust, stood around the nearest boat, and worked
-at the lashings, cursing, swearing, and shoving each other in the
-suppressed panic of men who are hurrying from death.
-
-The canvas covering was ripped off, and four men sprang into her,
-the rest shoving her bodily outboard. The men at the falls howled
-and swore, slacked off without regard to consequences, and the craft
-dropped a few feet, then swung off, and came with a crash against the
-side.
-
-"Fine discipline," I said to the second mate, who was close to me.
-
-A form touched my elbow. I turned, and saw a young girl.
-
-"Aren't they going to take us along with them?" she asked quietly, but
-with a voice full of pleading.
-
-I looked at her. She was not over twenty, and very pretty. Her big eyes
-were looking right into mine.
-
-"Sure, lady, you shall go," I said.
-
-Jake and Bill stood right behind me.
-
-"Have you a gun?" I asked the officer.
-
-"No; haven't got a thing--let's hoof 'em."
-
-"Avast slacking that boat down," I roared, rushing in.
-
-"Tell it to George," snarled a big fireman, shoving me aside.
-
-I hooked him under the jaw with all my strength, and he staggered back.
-Jake slammed the next man in the stomach, while the second officer
-waded in now, striking right and left in the press.
-
-"Get back--stand back!" we roared; and, for a wonder, forced our way
-along the ship's side, taking the falls.
-
-"Get a line below the block hook. Hold her off," came the order, and
-some one passed a line at the after fall, while a man in the boat
-pushed manfully against the ship's side to steady her.
-
-"Now, then, slack away together," I yelled; and Bill, who had the
-forward fall, slacked off with me, and the craft went rushing down just
-as the ship rolled to leeward. She struck the sea, the block unhooked;
-and, as the sinking ship rolled up, she fell clear, and hung to her
-painter. We had got one down all right. The men then rushed.
-
-Four of us fought back with all our might; but the weight of frantic
-men was too heavy for us. We were forced back and down, struggling
-under the crush of fighting firemen and seamen, who trampled, struck,
-and then tore loose to slide down the hanging boat falls or jump over
-into the sea, to climb in the floating craft below. The men below in
-the boat saw they would be swamped by numbers, and cut the painter. She
-drifted off, then crashed up against the ship's side, and finally swept
-around the stern, where she met the sea. That was the last I saw of her.
-
-With my clothes half torn off, oilskins hanging in rags, my face
-bleeding, and utterly exhausted, I got to my feet, and we made for the
-next boat. The press about her was not so great, and we managed to make
-way against it. It was the last boat, and the remaining few men left
-aboard were not enough to hold us. Among them were some passengers,
-whom we got aboard--four of them--and then finally sent the boat down
-clear. I looked around for the girl. Two women were in the boat, and
-the second officer said there was another aboard. I was out of breath,
-and stood panting a few moments, gazing aft through the bloom of the
-evening trying to see what had become of that girl. She was not in
-sight. I remembered she was near the other boat.
-
-"I'll run aft and try to find her," I yelled, and rushed down the deck.
-
-At the door of the saloon I saw a form huddled up on a transom just
-inside.
-
-"Come," I called roughly; "come along, quick--the boat's waiting."
-
-"Oh, it's you," she said; and I saw it was the girl I was looking for.
-She sat up. "Did you ever see such brutes?"
-
-"Never mind that now. Get a move on--the boat won't wait."
-
-As I spoke, I felt the ship drop suddenly forward. I turned quickly,
-and gazed forward. It was almost dark now; but I could see the white
-surge burst over the forecastle head.
-
-"She's going," I yelled, and grabbed the girl.
-
-A great sea crashed against the house, bursting it in, roaring,
-smashing, and pouring like a Niagara into the saloon. The deck forward
-had gone under, the stern was rising high in the air, and the slanting
-deck told me there was not a second to lose.
-
-The girl sprang up, and we dashed together to the taffrail, which was
-now fully twenty feet above the sea. There was nothing below but that
-life raft, the boats had gone to leeward to keep clear. Without a
-moment's hesitation, I dropped the girl into the sea, and sprang after
-her.
-
-Hampered with my ragged clothes and oilskins, I could hardly swim a
-stroke. A rushing comber struck me, and I felt myself going down,
-unable to fight any longer. My breath was gone.
-
-When I came to I was lying upon the life raft, and the girl was
-clinging to me with one hand, and passing one of the lashings of the
-raft with the other. It was black dark. Only the rushing seas about me
-told of our whereabouts; and the wild flings of the raft as it swept
-along with the rush made me aware of the present. I tried to see,
-raised my head, and felt very weak.
-
-"How'd we get here?" I asked.
-
-"I grabbed you and pulled you up," she said simply. "You were hit on
-the head by it--better tie yourself fast with that piece of cord, I
-can't hold you any longer."
-
-I took a few turns of the side lashings of the raft about our bodies,
-and, as the seas washed us, I noticed that the water felt so much
-warmer than the air. We were clear of the sea a few inches, but each
-comber dashed over and soaked us, washing so heavily that it was
-necessary to hold one's head up in order to breathe freely.
-
-"Did you see the boats?" I asked. "They'll pick us up presently."
-
-"No; I couldn't see anything. I had all I could do to pull you on the
-raft. You're pretty heavy, you know. Then I had to hold you for what
-seemed an hour, but maybe was only a few minutes. Do you think they'll
-find us?"
-
-"Sure. They wouldn't leave us. Ship went down, didn't it--rather
-sudden, and they had to let go. My men will stand by if it takes all
-night," I said.
-
-"I sincerely hope you are right about it. I don't much fancy this raft
-for a place to spend the night. Will we be drowned on it, do you think?"
-
-"No fear; we're all right. It can't sink. All we have to do is to keep
-a lookout for a boat and sing out for help. Why, there's five boats
-altogether, counting ours. Five boats, and it's just dark, not after
-six or seven o'clock at the most."
-
-"How far from land are we?" she asked, seemingly cheered but still
-somewhat doubtful.
-
-"Not far," I lied. I thought of a hundred and fifty miles of floating
-to get in--if the boats didn't pick us up. I began to experience that
-sinking feeling that comes to many when the outlook seems pretty bad.
-
-The girl was silent for some time after this, and seemed to be thinking
-of her troubles, for once she gave a little gasp of complaint.
-
-"Cheer up," I said; "don't give way to it yet. We'll be all right soon."
-
-As the hours passed and no boat come near, I began to feel very
-nervous. I could see but a few fathoms distant, and knew the chances
-were growing less and less. I hailed the blackness, bawled out as loud
-as I could, keeping it up at minute intervals. The wind seemed to be
-going down, but the sea still ran quickly, and was high and strong,
-lifting the raft skyward at each roll, and then dropping it down gently
-into the hollow trough. We felt the wind only when on the top of the
-seas, and it chilled us; but the warm edge of the Gulf Stream soaked
-us, and we could stand it for a long time. The sea was as warm as milk.
-
-How that long night passed I don't know. It seemed like eternity.
-Several times I lost consciousness, whether from exhaustion or from the
-blow I had received upon the head I cannot say. I held to the girl,
-and together we stood it out. Our lashings kept us upon the piece of
-platform remaining upon the two hollow iron cylinders comprising the
-raft.
-
-The girl lost her power of speech some time during the night, and
-seemed to faint, her head dropping upon the slats of the platform.
-I held it up to keep the water from her nose and mouth, and finally
-propped her head so that little water broke over it. It was all I could
-do.
-
-The raft swung around and around, sometimes with the sea on one side
-and then with it upon another. I felt for the oarlock, which is usually
-placed at either end to steer by, but it was gone. So also were the
-oars that had been placed between the cylinders and the platform. We
-simply had a float, that kept us bodily out of the sea, and that was
-all.
-
-After hours and hours of this wild pitching and rushing upon the crests
-of high, rolling seas, the motion began to get easier, and I noticed
-that the wind was rapidly falling. The crests no longer broke with the
-furious rush and tumble as formerly. Then the gray light of dawn came,
-and I began to see about us.
-
-The form of the girl lay alongside me, lashed to the platform. Her hair
-trailed into the sea in long tresses from her head, and her face was
-white as chalk. I thought she was dead, and shook her to see if there
-was any life to stir up. She lay limp. I took her hand and felt the
-wrist. A slight pulse told of the vital spark still burning. It seemed
-brutal to arouse her, to bring her back to the horror of her position.
-But I felt that it was best. I called to her, and she finally opened
-her eyes. She shivered, placed one arm under her, and then raised
-herself painfully into a sitting posture.
-
-"Cut the cord around my wrist, will you, please?" she said. "I promise
-not to fall off."
-
-"Better let it stay," I said. "I'll loose it so you can move about a
-little. Seems like they missed us in the dark."
-
-"Well, do you still think they'll pick us up? See; it's light now, the
-sun is coming up. I don't know as I care very much. Do you?"
-
-"Sure I care. Why not? We'll be all right soon."
-
-She let her head fall forward, and gave a little sob; just a bit of a
-cry.
-
-"Well, then I'm glad I pulled you out of the water," she said. "Seems
-like we might just as well have gone during the night. Do you really
-think it's worth struggling for like this? Life is good--and I want to
-live--but this is too hard--too terrible--and my poor mother----"
-
-"We'll be picked up before breakfast, sure," I said. "The boats must
-have drifted just the same as ourselves. Something'll come along soon."
-
-And yet deep down in me I knew that this was a bare chance. We were out
-of the track of ships, well off shore for the coasters, and not far
-enough for the Bermuda ships, like the _Rathbone_, which had stopped at
-the island on her way north.
-
-The sun rose, and daylight broadened into the morning. The wind fell
-rapidly, and the sea began to get that easy run of the Atlantic when
-undisturbed. I loosened my lashings and stood up, gazing about us.
-The motion of the raft was still severe; but I could stand, balancing
-myself. I shivered and shook with the wet and cold; but I now felt that
-with the sun shining we would soon be in better straits. As the raft
-rose upon the swells I looked all around the horizon. But there was
-nothing; not a thing save the sea in sight.
-
-"You can't see anything?" The girl's voice sounded strange, querulous,
-and pitiful. She was sitting with her head bowed upon her hands, which
-rested on her knees. Her wet dress clung to her, and she looked very
-frail, very delicate.
-
-"No; I can't see anything yet," I answered; "but we'll sight something
-before long. Tell me, were you from Bermuda?"
-
-"Yes; I was visiting my aunt there," she said. "I just graduated from
-the convent of the Sacred Cross last month. I've never been anywhere,
-or seen anyone, until this year. My mother is the only other near
-relative I have living."
-
-"Well, you've made a good start seeing things," said I, trying to smile
-at her. She turned a little pink, just flushed a bit; but it gave her
-white face a more natural look. She was a very pretty girl.
-
-"How old are you?" I asked.
-
-"Eighteen. Why?"
-
-"Oh, nothing, only----"
-
-I felt like a fool. Why should I bother this child about her age? She
-had saved my life by dragging me upon the raft, and I would save hers,
-if possible. It produced a feeling in me I could not quite understand.
-I liked to hear her talk, to have her look at me. She was very pretty;
-a good, innocent young girl.
-
-"I could eat a house, roof, and foundation," I ventured finally,
-seating myself. The wash of the sea now hardly reached us, and we were
-drying out fast in the cool breeze and sunshine.
-
-"Yes; I could eat a ship, masts, and spars," I went on.
-
-"Well, I suppose I'll be tough enough," she said, glancing at me with
-some show of fear in her eyes. "I once read of men on a raft who ate
-each other; but I never thought it would be my turn. No, never."
-
-"Don't be absurd," I said. "I don't intend to eat you--not yet."
-
-She looked at me very hard. Her eyes were moist; big, lustrous eyes.
-"No," she said seriously, "I don't believe you will," and she put her
-hand in mine.
-
-"Aw, don't be frightened, kid," I said. "I may look like the devil, but
-I'm not."
-
-And I sat there like an idiot holding that girl's hand, while the sun
-rose and shone warmer and warmer upon us, drying our garments and
-cheering us wonderfully. I had never met a girl of this kind before;
-and it was something of a problem how I was to keep her alive and
-cheerful on that raft. I swore fiercely at Jake, at Jones, and the rest
-for leaving us adrift. My oaths were something strange to the girl, for
-she shivered and drew her hand away.
-
-"Please don't," she said quietly. "What good does it do to use such
-language?"
-
-"Eases me a lot, miss. What's your name?"
-
-"Alice Trueman."
-
-I mumbled the name a few times, then relapsed into silence. After that
-there was nothing more said for a long time; but I saw her looking at
-me at intervals. Evidently I was an animal she was not used to, and I
-wondered at a mother who would bring up a girl to view a man as such a
-terrible sort of creature. I was a rough sailor; but I was human.
-
-The day advanced and the wind fell to a gentle breath. Then it became
-quite still, a dead calm, while the swell rolled steadily in from the
-eastward, but smoothed out into long, easy hills and hollows, upon
-which the raft rode easily and the platform kept clear of the sea at
-last.
-
-We took turns standing up and looking about the surrounding waste
-to see if there were any signs of a ship. Nothing showed upon the
-horizon, and the day wore down to evening. We were both very hungry
-and thirsty. I knew that the limit would soon be reached if there were
-nothing to eat or drink. The sun was now warm, and we ceased shivering
-as it settled in the west. The darkness of the night came on with its
-terrors, and still there was no sign of help from anywhere.
-
-"I really don't think I can stand it any longer, captain," said the
-girl.
-
-"I'm not the captain--just the mate," I answered; "but you'll have to
-stick it out for the night."
-
-Miss Alice gave a little sob. "I'm _so_ hungry and thirsty," she
-wailed. And added plaintively: "I've never been hungry in my life
-before."
-
-"Probably not," I said, sitting close to her and taking her hand in
-mine again. She made no resistance, and I passed my arm about her.
-"You must remember you've seen very little of the world yet. I've been
-hungry often--expect to be again before I go."
-
-"You see, I've had everything in the world I wanted. My father died
-very rich--and I can't stand the things people can who are used to
-them," she lamented.
-
-"Cheer up," I said. "While there's life there's hope, you know."
-
-She gave a little sigh, and let her head fall back upon my shoulder.
-And so we sat there in the growing darkness, together upon a raft in
-the middle of the Atlantic. As I look back upon it, there seems to be a
-bit of sentiment lacking. I felt nothing but pity for the girl at the
-time. I wasn't the least unhappy. I wasn't the least disturbed, except
-that hunger was gnawing at me and the fear the girl would die there.
-Personally I was not displeased with the position. Such is youth.
-
-"Alice," I said finally, "I find a lot of comfort in you being here
-with me, but I honestly believe I could stand it better if you were
-safe ashore. You've been a mighty brave little companion though."
-
-She gave my hand a bit of a squeeze, and sighed like a tired child.
-Then she closed her eyes.
-
-I was aroused by a hail.
-
-"Hey, there, aboard the raft!" came a yell from the darkness.
-
-"Boat, ahoy!" I howled, in desperation, hardly believing my ears.
-
-"Stand by and catch the line," came the yell again, and I jumped up and
-stared into the gloom.
-
-A dark spot showed close aboard. The sound of oars came over the water.
-A man's voice hailed again, and I recognized Jones, my bow oarsman.
-
-"Mr. Garnett----Is it you?" he cried; and a line came hurtling across
-the platform, striking me in the face. I seized it, snatched a turn
-upon one of the slats of the platform. The boat came alongside, while
-they held her off with the oars and boat hook.
-
-"A girl--one of the passengers, hey?" asked Jones. "Climb aboard, sir,
-and we'll take her in all safe enough."
-
-Wilson and Jones sprang upon the platform, and helped me lift the girl
-to her feet. She opened her eyes at the motion, and gave a cry of joy.
-
-"I'm so glad!" she said, and fainted dead away, while we placed her in
-the stern of the whaleboat.
-
-"Water, in the name of Heaven!" I panted. "You cowards! Why did you
-leave us?"
-
-"Hunted for you, sir, all night," said Jones, getting at the water
-breaker and measuring out a full quart. I held it to the lips of the
-girl, and she revived enough to drink part of it. I drank the rest, and
-drew another measure, drinking it off in a gulp.
-
-"Grub," I said, without further ado; and, while they shoved clear of
-the raft, I took a share of the ship's biscuit, eating ravenously.
-
-"Sit up and chew a bit of bread," I said to Miss Alice.
-
-She raised herself with an effort, and soon recovered sufficiently to
-eat something. Then she nestled close to me, let her head fall again
-upon my shoulder, and went to sleep like a tired child.
-
-We were heading almost due west for the coast now, and could not be
-very far away from coastwise traffic. I felt that the end would soon
-come, and that we would be picked up.
-
-Before midnight a light showed ahead. It was a steamer's headlight, and
-I soon made out her green light, showing she was heading north, inside
-of us. We would pass very close.
-
-"Give way strong; give way together. Let's get out of this," I said;
-and the men set to the oars.
-
-The light grew brighter, the green still showing. Soon the black form
-of the ship's hull showed through the gloom, her masthead light now
-looming high in the air, and her side light close aboard. We were
-drawing in, and I stood up and bawled out for help. The black bulk of
-her hull towered over us, and for an instant it seemed that she would
-run us down.
-
-"Hold--back water--hold hard!" I yelled, and the men obeyed.
-
-The ship tore past us, the foam of her bow wave splashing into the
-boat. I roared out curses upon the men above in her. Then she went on
-into the night. I howled, swore at her, called her skipper every name
-I could devise. The men seconded me, and together we called down enough
-curses upon that ship to have sunk her. Suddenly she seemed to slow up,
-to stop, and then lay dead in the gloom.
-
-"Row, you bullies, row for your lives!" I yelled; and the men gave
-their last spurt, putting their remaining strength into the pull. We
-drew closer, and a voice hailed us from the ship.
-
-"Ship ahoy!" I called again. "Throw us a line and stand by to pick us
-up."
-
-We came alongside. A line was dropped down, and Jones seized it,
-snatched a turn, and we were fast. The ship was wallowing slowly ahead;
-but we hung alongside safe enough.
-
-"Pass down a bowline," I sang out; "and be quick about it."
-
-The line came down into the boat, and I slipped it over the head of
-Miss Alice Trueman, jamming it under her arms.
-
-"H'ist away on deck," I directed; and the girl went aloft. The rest of
-us came one after the other.
-
-"I can't take your boat, sir," said the captain; "haven't any room."
-
-"Forget the boat. Give me something to eat and drink, and a place to
-lie down for a few weeks," I said, and I was led below.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Two days later we were at the dock in New York. I had not seen Alice
-since she had been turned over to the care of the stewardess; but I
-waited for her to come on deck. She came, pale but self-possessed.
-She was still weak, but was now nearly recovered. The ship was being
-warped to the pier, and it would be a few minutes before we could leave
-her. I came up and held out my hand.
-
-"Well," I said, "Alice, how about it? You were a good companion in
-trouble, a brave shipmate in the face of terrible danger. Somehow it
-has drawn me to you. I want to see you again."
-
-"Always, Mr. Garnett; always will I be glad to see you--but do you
-think it wise under the circumstances? Don't you think we had better
-say good-by now? It will only be more difficult later on. You know what
-I mean----"
-
-She looked up at me with moist eyes--eyes that told so much. I was
-taken all aback; but I understood. I was only a sailorman, a mate of
-a sailing ship. She was an heiress--a lady, as they say, educated and
-refined. She couldn't make me what she knew I would have to be to
-retain her respect and love, the love she would want to give. It was
-for my own good she was saying good-by. Yes, I believe she meant it
-only for that.
-
-"Sure, girl, I was only fooling," I said, with my throat choking so
-that the blamed ship reeled and swung about me.
-
-"Believe me, it's best so," she whispered, looking at me strangely with
-eyes now full of tears. She held out her hand, raised her head, put up
-her lips.
-
-"Kiss me good-by. You were awful good to me. Good-by."
-
-I felt that kiss burn my lips for many a day--yes, for a long time.
-
-
-
-
-THE AFTER BULKHEAD
-
-
-After coming home from the East I had, like many other ship's officers,
-taken up steam. There was more in it than the old wind-jammers, and the
-runs were short in comparison. It was not long before I went in the
-Prince Line, as they needed navigators badly.
-
-I was chief mate of the liner, and it was my unpleasant duty to do
-about everything. Old Man Hall, captain and R. N. R. man, did little
-beside working the ship's position after we got to sea. Ashore, he left
-everything to Mr. Small and myself, as far as the ship was concerned,
-and if there were a piece of frayed line, a bit of paint chafed, we
-heard all about it within two hours after he came aboard.
-
-Small was second under me, while the third and fourth officers were
-hardly more than apprentices, both being for the first time in the ship
-and not more than twenty-one or two years of age.
-
-Captain Hall was nearly seventy, and somewhat decrepit, but he was an
-accurate navigator, and had kept his record clean, making one hundred
-runs across the Western Ocean without accident. Masters of merchantmen
-are good or bad, according to their records, according to their
-reputations. Some said Hall had excellent luck. But, anyway, he was a
-good man, a fair-minded skipper, and he always brought in his ship on
-schedule, which was saying a good deal, for the Prince Line steamers
-were not noted for keeping close to time--any old time was good enough
-for most of them until the _Prince Gregory_, of twenty thousand tons,
-came along and made the lubbers look up a bit.
-
-She was the largest ship of the fleet--which comprised ten good
-steamers--and she was fitted with all the modern conveniences, from
-telephones to wireless, had a swimming pool, barber shop, gymnasium,
-café, and elevators to the hurricane deck.
-
-With only four watch officers, and six cadets, who were about as useful
-as a false keel on a trunk, I had enough to do before clearing.
-
-The chief engineer was an American, for a wonder, and his six
-assistants, including donkey man, were Liverpool cockneys. They drove a
-swarm of fire rats and coal passers that would have made a seaman crazy
-in two days, but Smith took things easy below, and, although he had to
-push her to keep the new record, he let his assistants do the heavy
-work. That's the reason he grew so fat--grew fat and even-tempered,
-while poor Small and myself sweated out our lives after the usual
-routine.
-
-We had forty men in the crew, and needed more, for we often had a
-thousand emigrants in the steerage. Sometimes we carried bunches of
-those big chaps from the European forests, Lithuanians, strong, sturdy
-brutes, totally without sense.
-
-It was in December that we took over five hundred of them on board, and
-while I was polite as possible, I put Small wise to keep a lookout on
-the critters. They were miners, for the most part. Contract men, going
-to the mines in Pennsylvania.
-
-By some means a quantity of their baggage got below with that of the
-cabin passengers. We had a lot of cabin folks that voyage. There was
-a bunch of actors, men and women you hear at the opera, drummers
-galore, buyers who were coming home from the fall trading, several
-millionaires; and, among the society or upper-strata people, the ones
-without occupation to give them distinction, were the Lady Amadoun and
-her following.
-
-Lady Amadoun was American born, but French by adoption, or, rather,
-marriage, preferring in her youth the suave manners of older
-generations to the rougher ones of her own countrymen. Raoul, Vicomte
-Amadoun, her husband, had not turned out the soft and gentle creature
-he appeared before marriage. In fact, he had followed the usual
-time-worn game of demanding money at unusual crises, which, as you
-know, has a tendency to make intelligent women think twice before
-coming across with it. The Vicomtesse Amadoun, or countess, as they
-called her, was young; in fact, looked hardly twenty-five--but, of
-course, a countess has maids to fix her up a bit!
-
-You see, being first officer, and sitting at the head of my own table
-in the saloon, the countess came under my observation more than I
-intended. Old Hall had his own cronies, who sat with him, and Driggs,
-the steward, gave the most prominent passenger my right-hand seat--sort
-of compliment. Driggs was a good steward, and owed his place to my
-exertions in his behalf.
-
-It was about this confounded baggage that I had a chance to further
-acquaint myself with nobility, for the trunks of the countess--and she
-had about fifty, including those of her friends who came with her--got
-mixed with the stuff that the baggage-master had sent by mistake to the
-first-class baggage room--the unlovely dunnage of the human moles who
-were roosting low in the steerage, and paying two pounds sterling a
-head for the privilege.
-
-"I would take it as a great favor if you would allow me to get into my
-baggage by to-morrow at the latest," said the countess, beaming upon me
-from the adjacent seat at my table at dinner that day. "You see, we've
-been all over Europe, and while traveling through Russia I picked up
-some very pretty furs, which will be nice to use on deck during this
-cool sea weather."
-
-"Madam," said I, "I shall be at your service right after eight bells
-to-morrow, when I leave the bridge." So I warned the baggage man,
-below, to have the place cleaned out a mite, so that her ladyship
-could go below without getting her frock spoiled from contact with the
-steerage passengers or their belongings.
-
-To be sure that he would do my bidding--he belonged to the purser's
-force--I went below that morning, and looked the baggage over myself.
-I passed in through the steerage, and noted the men stowed there. Two
-big brutes of Lithuanians sat upon their dunnage, and jabbered in their
-language.
-
-"Hike!" I said abruptly to the pair. "Git away from the baggage, and
-let the trunk slingers dig up."
-
-"Oh, Mister Mate, Mister Chief, we have our trunks here, also, and want
-to get to them," answered one fellow in fairly good lingo.
-
-"Beat it!" I ordered. "Make a get-away as quick as you can. Only
-first-class passengers can take their baggage out, or get a look-in.
-Why, you lubber, if every one of you steerage rats wanted to get into
-your trunks, it would take about fifteen hundred stewards and baggage
-men to take care of you."
-
-"But it is of great importance that we see our things--there are some
-things in my trunk I must get at, some important things----"
-
-"Try and fergit them until next Wednesday, when they can be dumped on
-Ellis Island; nuff sed--no more lingo--beat it!"
-
-The pair went away in very ugly humor, and I started the work of
-clearing that baggage room of their dunnage, and trying to select the
-trunks of the countess from the raffle. I managed to get about twenty
-of them, and let it go at that.
-
-The next day I took the countess below, and personally showed her over
-the trunks. She was accompanied by the count and her maid.
-
-"Now, Marie, which trunk was it in, _ma chère_? You must remember it
-very well," she said, looking at the mass of baggage.
-
-"_Mais oui_, it must be that grand affaire--that beeg one--see!" And
-the maid pointed to an immense Saratoga trunk, big enough to hold the
-clothes of a full man-o'-war's crew.
-
-The baggage master and I pulled the trunk out of the ruck, and the
-count produced a bunch of keys.
-
-I sauntered over to the other side of the room, where the gratings
-separated the steerage from the rest. The two fellows I saw there
-yesterday were watching through the slats, and did not notice me.
-
-"_Deux cent_," said one, in a whisper.
-
-"Whew, _mon Dieu_----"
-
-I knew that there was something about two hundred, but just what I
-couldn't quite log. My lingo goes mostly to Spanish and Chink, having
-sailed to those countries.
-
-The countess asked me to move the big trunk to the side of the ship.
-I did so without seeing the reason for the extra work, but the lady
-was gracious, and there was really no reason for not doing it. Two
-other trunks were opened, and the furs brought out. Then the lady
-went on deck again, after thanking me most profusely. Raoul was more
-reticent. He was not the tongue-lashing Frenchman he looked. He seemed
-preoccupied; but all very rich and powerful men seem that way to me,
-and after all I was but the chief officer. Perhaps the skipper would
-have drawn him out more.
-
-Nothing happened until we were within sight of the Nantucket Shoals
-lightship. That night the countess and her husband were on deck, and,
-the air being cool, they were well wrapped in furs. I watched them
-from the bridge. They kept well forward, near the starboard forward
-lifeboat. That was my boat under the drill orders, and I remembered it
-afterward.
-
-It was about two bells--nine o'clock in the evening--when there was a
-most terrific roar from below. The ship shook as though torn asunder.
-As I gazed aft, the deck seemed to rise and blow outboard. Something
-struck me heavily, and I was down and out for a few minutes. When I
-arose with ringing ears, I looked aft again, hardly realizing that I
-was awake and not dreaming. The siren was roaring full blast, and a
-throng of men and women were rushing forward toward the bridge. Old
-Hall came out of his room half dressed, and ran to me.
-
-"What is it--what's happened?" he yelled in my ear.
-
-"Don't know," I howled, and even then I didn't believe I was awake.
-
-The chief engineer ran up.
-
-"Starboard engine room full, sir--something blowed up below--whole side
-gone above water line--won't float ten minutes," he howled.
-
-"For God's sake, shut off that siren, then!" yelled old man Hall. Then,
-turning to me, he ordered: "Stand by the boats, and get the passengers
-out."
-
-In a few minutes the roar of the steam stopped. Hall stood calmly upon
-the bridge, and gave the orders for the small boats, and away they went
-one after the other. The wireless was sending its call for help, but
-there was no time for us to listen to replies; we had plenty to do.
-
-The _Prince Gregory_ settled slowly by the stern, and raised her bows
-high in the air. There she stopped, and, for a wonder, did not fall
-from under us.
-
-"Get into the boat, quick!" I said to the countess, and she sprang with
-amazing ease into the stern, followed by her husband and the maid.
-
-"Nix on the men!" I yelled, and grabbed the count. "Come out--women
-first," and I dragged him from the boat with no show of deference. He
-struck me savagely in the face, and I stretched him out with the boat's
-tiller. Seamen tossed him aside, and the swarm of women crowded up and
-into the craft while I held the men back as best I could.
-
-I knew it was to be a close haul. Seven hundred men and women, and only
-twenty boats! The life rafts would be doing duty pretty soon, and no
-mistake.
-
-I saw very little of the fracas around me, as one never does see much
-if he is tending to his own business, and mine at that time was getting
-forty-five women into a small boat, many of them in before she was
-lowered away.
-
-Luckily there was no sea running at all. It was calm and foggy, the
-water like black oil.
-
-I slid down the falls, and when we loaded up I took command at the
-tiller, and went out a little distance to clear the wreck in case of
-trouble. We lay at rest a hundred fathoms distant, and watched the
-scuffle aboard. Men yelled like mad, screamed, and fought. I caught
-the flash of a gun, and heard the report. I knew Hall would not stand
-for lawless rushing the boats, and was doing some fierce work. Pretty
-soon the outcry died away more and more, and still the black hull
-showed plainly, her bow still pointing skyward, and her stern submerged.
-
-"God's blessing, there's no wind or sea!" I said to Driscoll, my stroke
-oarsman.
-
-"You're right there, cap," said he. "What wus ut anyway?"
-
-"Blessed if I knew--she's just blowed up, whole stern gone out of her.
-She can't float two hours, and there'll be no one out here before
-daybreak if they do get the signal."
-
-"You brute!" exclaimed the countess, who was sitting close to me. "Why
-didn't you let my husband come in this boat?"
-
-"If he was a man, he wouldn't have wanted to," I snapped, hot at the
-insult.
-
-"I notice _you_ are here, all right, you ruffian!" she retorted,
-sneering. "What do you call yourself?"
-
-I thought best not to answer her. Words with women are generally
-wasted, and the woman always gets the last one, anyhow. The countess
-had always been so courteous and gentle that I supposed the excitement
-had turned her head; and then, after all, I had treated her husband
-a bit rough. He was a gentleman, and I was only a mate. That made a
-difference in her point of view, although I can't say it did so much in
-my own.
-
-I talked to Driscoll, and watched the _Prince Gregory_ as she lay there
-in the oily sea. Boats came and went toward the light vessel, and,
-thinking it would be a good thing to get rid of my cargo, I trailed off
-after the bunch, and was soon alongside the lightship.
-
-As fast as we could, we sent the women aboard, finding that the little
-ship would hold hundreds of passengers, in spite of her diminutive
-size. Inside of half an hour, she had fully five hundred people in her,
-and was jammed to the rails, below and on deck. Still, it was better
-than an open boat, and I kept bringing them by scores, until there
-were no more, save a few boatloads, and these we kept afloat in the
-lifeboats.
-
-During this time I thought little, or not at all, about the count.
-The ship still hung by her after bulkhead, and Lord knows the man who
-set it in her deserves praise enough. How it stood that strain is a
-wonder to this day. If there had been any sea running she would have
-gone down like a stone, for no unbraced cross-section of a ship can
-stand the surge of ten thousand tons in a seaway. It must have burst
-like blotting paper when wetted down. With ten men--all second-class
-passengers--in my boat besides the crew, I went back to the ship for
-the last time, and watched old man Hall as he stood upon the bridge.
-I could just make him out through the hazy gloom of the night, but I
-could hear his voice distinctly, as he gave orders to the few men who
-stayed with him.
-
-"Do you want any more help, sir?" I asked, coming alongside.
-
-"What's that--you, Jack?" he answered. "No, I reckon not. She'll hang
-on for hours, if the weather remains calm like this. All the passengers
-safe?"
-
-"All aboard the lightship, or hanging to her by painters--there's a
-line of boats half a mile long trailing on behind her, and they're safe
-enough, as they can't get lost as long as they hold to her. Tide runs
-hard here on the edge of the Stream, but her wireless is going right
-along, and she says two cutters left Boston half an hour ago, under
-full steam--ought to be here before late in the morning, anyway. Never
-lost a man, hey?"
-
-"No," says he, "not that I know of; and that's some remarkable, too."
-
-I thought it was, also, but said nothing more for a few moments,
-watching the half-sunken hull slowly rolling from side to side in the
-smooth swell.
-
-While I watched I saw the form of a man coming from aft, along the
-rail of the main deck, which was just awash. As every one had left the
-after part of the ship and the engine room abandoned, I thought this
-strange, and watched the figure until it came almost amidships. Then it
-disappeared in the cabin.
-
-"More men aft, sir?" I asked Hall, who still stood leaning upon the
-bridge rail, waiting for help.
-
-"No, no one left aboard--just Jenkins and his crew of four men--myself,
-that's all." Jenkins was carpenter.
-
-"Saw a man coming from aft, sir--must be some passenger overlooked.
-Shall I jump up, and see to him?"
-
-"All right," came the response, and almost before he spoke the men who
-waited on their oars shoved the boat astern until she was almost level
-with the sunken deck. I sprang out of her, and sung to them to lie by
-and keep clear of the captain's boat, which lay alongside, just forward
-of us, waiting until the old man found it necessary to leave.
-
-I made my way in through the passageway to the saloon, and found the
-deck still clear of water, although the sucking roar and surge of the
-sea beneath told of the immense volume in the lower decks. The lights
-had long gone out, with the drowning of the dynamos, and I felt for a
-cabin door, intending to grab one of the emergency candles which are
-always in place on the bulkheads.
-
-I found one, and struck a light; then made my way along the passage in
-front of the lower staterooms, calling at intervals for any one who
-might be near and unable to realize the peril of a foundering ship. I
-admit it was some ticklish. I had my hair raised more than once when
-the ship took a more than usually heavy roll, and the rushing thunders
-below started with renewed force. What if she should drop? It was a bad
-thought, and not tending to still my pulse. I couldn't help thinking of
-the thousand fathoms or so of blue sea beneath my feet----
-
-I thought I heard a footstep crossing the passage in front of me. It is
-strange how, above the general thunder of rushing water, a slight sound
-makes itself evident. It was like standing upon the shore during the
-running of a heavy surf. One can almost talk in a whisper while the
-thunder reverberates along the coast.
-
-A shadow crossed in front of me, and I hailed again. It was a man, and
-he was coming from below, from the sunken lower decks. He came up the
-staircase of the lower saloon, and darted along the passageway to port.
-
-"Hey, there! Stop!" I yelled.
-
-The man turned, and in an instant I recognized him. It was the Vicomte
-Raoul.
-
-He eyed me with a savage look, and waited for me to come up.
-
-"What ees it you want?" he growled.
-
-"Just you!" I told him. "Don't you know you are in danger of getting
-killed down here?"
-
-"And how does that matter interest you?" he retorted, with those
-shrugging shoulders and arched eyebrows he could handle so well.
-
-"It don't, except that, as I'm an officer, it's my duty to see you
-leave the ship under orders of the captain."
-
-"I noticed you were not so queek to have me leave dees sheep when
-I first started," he sneered, "and eef I go back for my jewels, my
-valuables, eet ees no affaire of yours--eh?"
-
-"It is only to the extent that I must see you off the vessel," I said.
-
-We were standing near the after companionway, and I noticed the
-splintered planking, where the force of the explosion had blown it
-upward. It was directly over the baggage room, where the trunks were
-stowed below. This was now under six to ten feet of clear water.
-
-"If you want to get into your trunks, you will have to be a good
-diver," I said. "There's no chance in the world of getting below
-here--she's flooded full to the after bulkheads number four in the wake
-of the starboard engines. You couldn't do a thing below if you got
-there."
-
-In a more courteous tone, the count explained:
-
-"Eet is a matter of small valuables in my room, not my trunk. Go along
-like a good fellow, and I will follow instantly. I just go below to my
-room--I come with you instantly--go!"
-
-"Well, I'll wait here if it don't take too long," I said. "It's against
-orders, and if anything happens to you I'll get it, all right. Hurry
-up, and beat it back--the boat's waiting, and the ship'll drop any
-minute. It's only that number four bulkhead holding her."
-
-"Ah, yes, dat number four! Eet ees just at my stateroom door, zat
-number four you call heem. Wait, my good fellow, I come immediate," and
-he went down the companionway, which was knee-deep at the bottom in sea
-water.
-
-He splashed through the shallow wash, and disappeared along the
-gloomy passage, where the candlelight failed. I stood above and
-waited, holding my breath at times, and cursing the luck that made
-me weak enough to allow him to do such a foolish thing as go below
-for valuables. However, I had treated him pretty rough at the first
-getaway, and felt he had a right to some consideration.
-
-Suddenly I remembered that his stateroom was not below on that
-main deck! It seemed to me he had rooms forward and above; but the
-excitement had caused me to forget this detail, and I was so taken up,
-even at the time, that I only remembered it in a half-dazed way. What
-did he want below, then?
-
-I waited, and the minutes flew by, seeming long enough. The candle ran
-its hot grease down upon my hand, and burned it. I was getting sore and
-impatient at the wait. If anything happened, I could never be given a
-reprimand, for I would never show up to receive it. The ship would go
-down and take me with her, all right enough. I hadn't a chance in the
-world--and I was waiting there for a count, a man who had sprung into
-the mate's boat to get clear, when there were hundreds of women waiting
-and screaming to go!
-
-There was a sharp explosion from below. The ship shook a little, and
-rolled to port.
-
-"Just Heaven! Did that bulkhead go?"
-
-A form tore down the passageway, splashed through the water at the foot
-of the companion, and was upon me in an instant. Raoul struck me fairly
-between the eyes, and I went down to sleep--that was all I remember
-of the inside of the _Prince Gregory_, as she lay foundering off the
-Shoals.
-
-When I came to, I was in the boat, with Driscoll bending over me and
-pouring sea water upon my head. The dark stain showed me that I was
-bleeding fast, and the sailor tore off the sleeve of his jumper, and
-tied it about my forehead. I tried to sit up, but everything swam and
-rolled about me horribly. Finally I managed to get my head up.
-
-"What's happened?" I asked.
-
-"Bulkhead gave way, sir," he told me. "You was hit on the head by
-wreckage. I run in after you, an' jest managed to git you clear. She's
-gone, sir!"
-
-"What! The ship?" I cried.
-
-"Sure, sir."
-
-"And the old man--Jenkins, and the rest of them?"
-
-"All got clear just in time--seems like Jenkins and his gang were at
-the bulkhead from forrards, trying to shore it up, when _bing!_ she
-went, and them as was left beat it--all got clear, sir."
-
-"See anything of a passenger--that chap we had a run-in with at the
-first getaway?" I asked.
-
-"Yes, sir; one man got away in the skipper's boat--that's them headin'
-for the lightship over there," and he pointed to a blur that showed
-through the hazy night. I began to gather my senses again, but I
-couldn't make head or tail of it. What did that fellow nail me for? I
-had hit him, to be sure; but that was for a purpose. He surely intended
-to fix me, all right. About a minute more, and I would have gone with
-the ship.
-
-"Cowardly rat!" I whispered.
-
-"Who?" asked Driscoll.
-
-"That white-livered dog who knocked me out," I said, gritting my teeth
-at the thought.
-
-"Better lie quiet, sir; better keep still--you're bug a bit, but will
-be all right to-morrow. Does it hurt you much, sir?"
-
-"Shut up!" I commanded ungratefully, and Driscoll gazed at me
-sorrowfully, pulling away again at his oar, for we were now almost to
-the lightship.
-
-All that night we lay trailing astern. There was a long line of
-lifeboats reaching nearly half a mile back, all hanging to the taffrail
-of the ship.
-
-About daylight she got in touch with a passing passenger ship, bound
-in, and while we were busy shifting the hundreds of passengers the
-cutters showed up, and helped to expedite matters by towing the small
-boats. Before breakfast time we had all the outfit aboard and away for
-New York. Hall and myself went aboard the cutter _Eagle_. We waited
-for several hours, to see if there were anything more to find drifting
-about, and then away we went for home, thanking the captain of the
-Nantucket Shoals lightship for what he had done.
-
-"I don't understand it at all--don't seem to be just right," repeated
-Hall over and over to the captain of the cutter. "She just blew
-up--that's all there is to it. We had a drove of miners aboard, and you
-know how hard it is to keep those fellows from carrying explosives in
-their dunnage. You simply can't stop to search them. There was probably
-a couple of hundred pounds of blasting powder, at the least--went off
-like a mine blowing up a battleship. That bulkhead in the wake of the
-starboard engine room saved us--that's all!"
-
-I was out of a ship. When we got in, the manager laid me off for a
-month, and then gave me the second greaser's berth on the old _Prince
-Leander_, a bum ship--and that's a fact. When I reached the other
-side again, I saw by the papers that a certain Frenchman had tried to
-collect nearly a million francs on his insurance for cargo and personal
-belongings in the _Prince Gregory_. It seems that he had shipped tons
-of expensive machinery and had insured it fully. The stuff was cased
-tightly, but one case marked for him had broken while being handled on
-the dock, and nothing but bricks fell out.
-
-The insurance companies held up the claim. I hurried to the consul's
-office, and told of the episode of the trunk, and how I was hit
-over the nut by a certain French gentleman during the fracas. The
-description answered to the man of machinery, and when I told of that
-last little crack I had heard below, the consul waited not on the order
-of his going, but ordered a cab and fairly threw me into it. We tore to
-the office of the underwriters, and I told my tale. Then I began to see
-the light, at last.
-
-It was the old game tried under a new guise--and it had nearly cost the
-lives of a half thousand human beings. The horror of it appalled me,
-and I found myself wondering if I were to be trusted about without a
-nurse again. However, I was not censured severely. The crook was well
-known to the police, and since then the police of many countries have
-been trying to locate a gentleman who answers to the description of the
-Vicomte Raoul de Amadoun.
-
-
-
-
-CAPTAIN JUNARD
-
-
-Captain Junard awoke suddenly from a sound sleep. He listened intently
-for a few moments. The steady vibrations of the ship's engines told of
-the unchecked motion, the unhindered rush of the ship through the sea.
-Yet something had awakened him, something had given him a start from a
-dreamless sleep, the sleep of a tired man. He knew that something was
-wrong, felt it, and wondered at it, while his heart began to sound the
-alarm by its increasing pulsations. He wondered if he were sick, had
-eaten something that might produce nightmare; but he felt very well,
-and knew he never started at trifles. His hand reached for the revolver
-at the head of his bunk. He always kept it there for emergencies. It
-was a heavy forty-five, with a long, blue barrel--a strong weapon that
-had stood him handily in several affairs aboard the steamer. The light
-in his room was dim, but there was enough of it to show him that his
-room was empty. His hand reached the spot where the weapon usually
-hung, but failed to reach it. He groped softly for several moments.
-There was nothing upon the bulkhead; the gun was gone.
-
-This fact made a peculiar impression upon him. He felt now that
-his instinct was correct, that he was indeed in danger. His mind
-cleared quickly from the stupor of sound sleep, and he remembered.
-He was carrying papers of peculiar importance in his strong box, or
-safe--papers relating to a deal in shipping connected with a revolution
-in a Central American state. A rival line had tried to stop the affair,
-which grew into political importance when secret agents of the United
-States tried to find out how deeply it might affect the Panama Canal.
-The concession had not been granted. The Canal Zone was not yet in
-existence, and the United States was sure to get it if this deal went
-through. The president had watched the affair with hungry eyes. Now the
-papers were in his--Junard's--possession, aboard his ship, bound for
-the state department in Washington.
-
-Junard started up when he found his hand missing the butt of that
-revolver. It had been a pleasant fancy to him when he remembered its
-solid grip and deadly accuracy, a dependable friend in the hours of
-darkness and distress. Now it was gone, and could not have gone without
-some one having taken it. If they took it, they took it to keep him
-from using it. The idea of its loss awakened him more than anything
-else, and sent his heart beating fast as with sudden quickness and
-energy he sprang from his bed. There was nothing in his room, nothing
-at all. The lamp burned low. The electrics had been switched off, as
-they gave too much light for him to sleep in. Junard stood wondering,
-studying, and gazing at his safe, which lay bolted to the deck in a
-corner of his room.
-
-The captain's room was just abaft the pilot house, as is usual in
-ships of that class. A stairway, or companion, of five steps led to
-the pilot house, but these were cut flush with his room and into the
-floor of the house above, so that he could shut the door. The door was
-shut now as he looked, but the sound of the steering gear told him
-that the man at the wheel, within a dozen feet of him, was steering
-and attending apparently to his business. The room ran clear across
-the superstructure, opening with a door upon either side. To starboard
-was his bathroom, to port was a closet, which adjoined the room of the
-chief officer, being separated from it by the bulkhead. Both these
-rooms led aft and opened into his room by doors in the bulkhead. This
-made his room a complete section of the superstructure about twelve
-feet deep and running clear through. There was nothing in it that could
-hide any one. A table, a couch with leather cushions, several chairs,
-and a large desk completed the furniture. His bed was a large double
-bunk let in to port and hung with curtains. It somewhat resembled an
-old four-poster bed.
-
-Junard walked quickly to the safe. It was locked. He smiled at himself.
-The absurdity of the thing almost made him laugh. And yet he was as
-nervous as a ship's cat when watching a strange dog. He opened the door
-leading to the pilot house. The man in there was standing in regulation
-pose, with his hands upon the spokes of the steam steering gear. The
-sudden rattle and clank told Junard the fellow was awake and alert.
-The dim light from the binnacle made his outline plainly discernible,
-and Junard recognized him as Swan, a quartermaster of long service and
-excellent ability.
-
-"How's she heading, Swan?" whispered the captain.
-
-"No'the, two east, sir," said the man, with a slight start. The words
-had come to him from the gloom behind him, and he had not heard the
-door open.
-
-"That's right; they haven't reported the Cape yet?"
-
-"No, sir; but that's Cape Maysi, sir, I think," said Swan, pointing
-to a light that had just begun to show right over the port bow. Eight
-bells struck off upon the clock in the house as he spoke, and the
-cry came from forward. The chief mate, who was on watch, came to the
-pilot-house window, reached in, and took out the night glasses. He
-adjusted them and gazed at Cape Maysi. Captain Junard watched him
-narrowly, and noted that he took the bearings and made the remark
-in his order book. Mr. Jameson was a good officer and a first-class
-navigator, and Junard did not wish to appear on deck until he was
-called. It looked as if he did not trust the officer sufficiently. He
-would wait until the light was reported officially.
-
-When Junard turned to reënter his room, he heard a slight noise. There
-was a rustle, a whirl, and the door of the room to port clicked to. It
-had been shut when he jumped from his bunk. He gazed in the direction
-of the safe, and saw that it was now standing wide open, the door
-swinging slowly with the motion of the ship. He sprang to the switch
-and turned on the light, full power.
-
-In front of him was the safe, with the door open. In front of the safe
-lay a huge knife, and alongside of the knife lay his revolver, fully
-loaded, and cocked. Whoever had it was ready to use it upon a moment's
-notice. The intruder had fled at the sound of Junard's steps upon the
-pilot-house companion.
-
-Junard was a very heavy-set man. He stood but five feet two inches, but
-was at least three feet across the shoulders, an immense man for his
-height, his chest being as broad and hairy as a gorilla's. His powerful
-legs were set wide apart to steady himself to the ship's motion, and
-for a brief instant he stood there in the full light, clothed in his
-pajamas. Then, with a roar like that of a bull, he plunged headlong for
-the lattice door of his room, and, bursting it with a crash, reached
-the deck in full stride. He just caught sight of what appeared to be
-a skirt, switching around the corner of the deck house, and he leaped
-savagely for it. He reached the corner, swung around it--and saw no
-one. Down the alleyway he ran, swung about, and came out to port upon
-the deck. There was not a soul to be seen, and he hesitated an instant
-which way to run. Then he ran aft with prodigious speed, and, within a
-couple of seconds, reached the cabin companionway. The light burned at
-the head of the broad stairs, but not a soul was in sight. He dashed
-inside silently, being barefooted, and, peering over the baluster, he
-saw the steward on watch peacefully snoring away in a chair near the
-water-cooler at the foot of the stairway.
-
-"Sam!" he called sharply.
-
-The man awoke with a start.
-
-"Aye, aye, sir!" he said, looking about him, recognizing the captain's
-voice, but not seeing him at once.
-
-"Has any one come down this way within the last few minutes?" asked
-Junard.
-
-"No, sir, not a soul, sir."
-
-"Sure?"
-
-"Sure, sir. I've only been dozing but a minute. I'd have seen 'em, sir."
-
-Junard slipped away quietly, leaving the under-steward wondering what
-he wanted. With amazing swiftness, the master rushed back to his room.
-He reached it, and went inside the broken door. The light was still
-burning, but the safe was now closed. He tried the combination lock,
-and found it had been locked. The gun and knife had also disappeared.
-The room was in perfect order, the light burning full power, and there
-was not a thing to show that there had been an entry made. The bursted
-door was the only sign of any irregularity. He stood gazing at the safe
-for a few minutes. The thing was almost uncanny. He began to wonder
-if he had not had a nightmare, dreamed the whole thing. He turned the
-combination of the safe, and opened the door again. The contents of the
-safe were apparently intact. He reached for the inner drawer, where the
-important papers had been kept. They were gone.
-
-It was not nightmare, after all. The thing was real. The papers had
-been taken from the safe, and they were worth perhaps a million to the
-finder, if not much more; that is, if they could be gotten out of the
-ship and into the hands of those who were antagonistic to the deal. He
-pondered a few minutes more, and then decided to go on deck and stand
-the next watch upon the bridge, remaining there, with the excuse that
-the cape was drawing abreast and he would take his departure from it.
-He decided not to say anything to either officer. The thing had best
-be kept secret, for the very existence of the papers might imperil his
-company, if that existence were known to certain parties. He hastily
-dressed and went on the bridge.
-
-Mr. Dunn, the second officer, was now on watch, and it was about a
-quarter of an hour past midnight. The cape was drawing up, and was fast
-approaching the port beam. The ship was running about sixteen knots
-through a smooth sea, with a stiff northeast trade blowing almost dead
-ahead.
-
-Junard came to where the second officer stood. Mr. Dunn turned and
-spoke to him, remarking upon the blackness of the night and the
-clearness of the Cape Maysi light.
-
-Captain Junard said nothing, but watched the second officer narrowly,
-and tried to fathom his demeanor, looking for some sign that might show
-a knowledge of what had transpired aboard within the past few minutes.
-Dunn had been upon the bridge when that safe was shut, when the
-revolver had been taken away. Yet Dunn had been in the employ of the
-company for ten years, and was a reliable man, a sailor who had always
-done his duty without murmur. He had a fine record.
-
-The light drew abeam, and the ship ran close to the low, rocky point
-where it juts out into the sea. The high mountains a few miles back
-showed dimly in the gloom, making a huge shadow in the background. As
-the light is upon the north side of the low promontory and shows across
-to the southward, the land was very near as the ship steamed past it
-and laid her head for the passage.
-
-Junard gazed hard at the shore. He was thinking. Would any one try
-to get into communication with Cuba here at the cape? There was a
-question. If a small boat lay near, with lights out, she might get
-close to the ship without being observed, for it was quite dark, and
-the loom of the land made it darker than usual. It was nearly six
-hours' run to the next light, in the Bahamas, across the channel, and
-the Inagua Bank was too far to the eastward to invite shelter for a
-small boat. It would be either at the cape, or near Castle Rock, or
-Fortune Island, he believed, that an attempt might be made to get into
-communication with the ship. This he must stop. No one must get in
-communication with the land before daylight. Then he would search every
-passenger thoroughly, go through all rooms, and take a chance at the
-result. At Castle Rock he would be on watch, if nothing occurred here.
-
-He gazed steadily into the blackness ahead. The stiff trade wind blew
-the tops of the seas white. They broke in whitecaps, which showed now
-and then through the gloom of the night. He strained his eyes, but
-nothing showed ahead. The glass showed a dull, dark sea; there was
-nothing in the line of vision within three miles--that is, nothing as
-large as a whaleboat. He was sure of this. There might be something
-under the dark loom of the land, but the glass failed to show anything.
-
-"You take a four-point bearing upon the light, Mr. Dunn, and get the
-distance accurate," said Junard. "The mate took his bearing before
-he left the deck, but you can take another--we are about abreast
-now--she's doing exactly sixteen."
-
-Knowing that this would take the second officer until the light bore
-four points abaft the beam, Junard left the bridge and went aft without
-notice. He slipped down to the main deck, and went along the gangway
-until he reached the taffrail. The whirl of the wheel shook the ship
-mightily here, the long, steel arm of the tiller under the gratings
-shook and vibrated with the pulsations. The chains drawn taut clanked
-and rattled in the guides and sounded above the low murmur of the
-shaking fabric. Junard gazed over the stern and watched the thrust of
-the screw as it tore the sea white and whirled a giant stream astern
-that showed sickly white with the phosphorescent glow.
-
-When he turned again, he was aware of some one watching him. A head had
-appeared and vanished from behind the end of the cabin structure. The
-captain sprang for it with a bound. He turned the corner in time to see
-a skirt disappearing into the alleyway leading into the saloon. He was
-upon it with a catlike rush. He reached the saloon door just as it
-closed in his face.
-
-Without hesitating an instant, he plunged against it, and it gave way
-to his great weight and power. He burst with a crash into the saloon.
-
-The under steward who was on watch aft saw an apparition of a man in
-uniform coming through the door like a bull. He had opened his eyes in
-time to recognize the captain, who ran right across the cabin and out
-upon the deck beyond.
-
-Junard was swift. He made a reach for the figure as it flitted into a
-room which opened upon the deck nearly amidships. His iron grip closed
-upon the skirt, which stretched out in the wind behind the fleeing
-figure. Then something struck him full in the face, took his breath,
-and blinded him. He clung to the cloth, choking, coughing, and blinded;
-made a grab with his free hand to clutch the person--but his grip
-closed upon empty air.
-
-When he got the ammonia out of his eyes, which were almost blinded
-by the scorching fluid, he hurried to his room and bathed his head
-copiously in cold water until he regained his sight.
-
-"Well, it's a woman, all right," he commented. "We'll have her all
-right in the morning; she won't get a show to-night to get away with
-anything. I guess I've got her measure."
-
-In a few minutes he sent for the purser.
-
-That individual came to the captain's room with fear and trembling.
-He had been playing draw poker, and breaking the rules of the ship,
-regardless of discipline, and expected, of course, to get a rating.
-
-"Give me the passenger list," said Junard.
-
-It was produced. They ran over it, looking for the location of all the
-women under thirty or thereabouts in the ship. Junard said nothing of
-his adventure, and the purser was amazed at his appearance.
-
-"Had a bad night, captain?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, rather. There's a case of cholera aboard--among the women--I
-don't know which one, but we'll have a chance to find out to-morrow.
-Don't speak of it to any one, mind you; don't let it out under any
-conditions--you understand?"
-
-"Sure not," said the purser, paling a little under the news. "How did
-you come to find it out, sir?"
-
-"Never mind that now. Just keep an eye on all the women in this ship,
-and don't let any of them get to throwing things overboard, or trying
-to do anything foolish. Watch them, and tell me of anything that might
-happen."
-
-The purser, amazed, went back to his game of poker with certain
-passengers; but before doing so, he instructed several of his force to
-watch both gangways for the rest of the night. He did not know what
-the "old man" expected, but supposed that cholera patients attempted
-to throw things overboard, or tried suicide. The thought of the dread
-disease aboard made him forgetful of the game, and he lost heavily
-before morning.
-
-Junard, still smarting from the ammonia thrown in his face, came again
-upon the bridge. He had saved his eyes by a fraction, for the fluid had
-struck him right in the nose and mouth, and only the spray of it had
-gotten into his face higher up. It had been squirted by a fluid "gun"
-of the kind commonly used by bicyclists for repelling angry dogs. Part
-of the skirt had remained in his grip, but the person had slipped away
-in an instant and disappeared. It angered him to think a woman could do
-such a thing. And yet, if it were a woman watching him, there was sure
-to be more than a woman connected with it. No woman, he reasoned, could
-have tried his safe. No woman would have taken his revolver and carried
-it, along with a deadly knife. There must have been a well-organized
-party to the affair, and they had watched him, after taking the papers,
-to see just what he would do. Of course, he knew they would not toss
-such a valuable document overboard in the night time without a boat
-being close at hand to pick it up. The ocean is a hard place to find
-anything at night. He knew now that they were aware of his watchfulness
-and would not attempt to get rid of the papers except under the most
-favorable conditions. To throw them overboard attached to anything
-small enough not to attract attention would be to invite sure loss. He
-reasoned this out as he stood out the rest of Mr. Dunn's watch, and at
-eight bells--four o'clock in the morning--the mate came again on the
-bridge without anything happening to excite him.
-
-"I've been on deck for a short time, Mr. Jameson," said Junard; "but
-I'm going to turn in for a little while. Call me when we get well up to
-Castle Rock--we'll raise it before morning, before daylight with the
-weather clear like this."
-
-"Aye, aye, sir; I will, sir--she's doing fine now," said Jameson, as he
-signed the order book for his course during his watch.
-
-At two bells--five o'clock--the mate called the captain by going to his
-port door and knocking. He was amazed at the sight of a young woman
-who came forth from the room and whisked herself quickly down the
-deck and out of sight. Such a thing as a woman in the master's room
-at that hour was enough to excite Mr. Jameson. He had not been on the
-ship long, and the captain was new to him. Masters naturally had love
-affairs as well as sailors, but they were generally careful about being
-caught. Here Junard had asked him to call him when they sighted Castle
-Rock, and, as he knew they must do this by five, at least, the mate
-was puzzled to see a woman leaving the captain's room when he knocked.
-Why hadn't she left sooner? It was a joke he would be bound to retail
-to the rest sooner or later, and he smiled at the thought. He tried to
-get a glimpse of her face, but failed. Then he waited a decent length
-of time, and knocked again, louder, announcing the light ahead on the
-starboard bow.
-
-Junard came on deck instantly. He had been dressed and dozing.
-
-The gray light of the morning, which was now beginning to show things
-a little, enabled Junard to note the smile upon the face of his chief
-mate.
-
-"Anything funny doing?" he asked.
-
-"No, sir; but I seen her--I couldn't help it."
-
-"Seen who?"
-
-"I beg your pardon, sir; but she was just going out when I came to call
-you when I raised the light--your orders, sir, you know. I wouldn't----"
-
-"Out with it! Whom did you see?" snapped the captain sharply, and his
-tone told plainly that he was in no mood for a joke. The mate sobered
-at once.
-
-"There was a lady leaving your room as I came to knock--that's all,
-sir," he said sullenly. The captain had a poor appreciation of humor,
-he thought.
-
-"What kind of looking woman was she?"
-
-"Medium-sized, very well built--I might say stocky, sir--dressed in a
-dark cloth dress; she didn't have on a hat." This last was with almost
-a sneer. It brought Junard around with a jerk.
-
-"I don't wish to seem foolish, Mr. Jameson, but you appear to presume
-too much. I might insinuate gently that you are a damn fool--but I
-won't, not until you tell me what is amusing you, and what you saw.
-I will say there was no woman in my room. If there was, I'd not be
-troubled to confess it."
-
-"That's all I seen, sir," said Jameson sourly.
-
-"Which way did she go?"
-
-"She went aft," said the mate, wondering at the captain trying to hide
-the obvious. It irked him to think his master a fool. "She went aft,
-and that's all I seen."
-
-"Mr. Jameson, there's a few things you don't know," said Junard. "When
-we get abreast of Castle Rock, I want you to go aft and watch both
-sides of the ship carefully, you understand? I want you to see that
-not a thing is thrown overboard--not a single thing--and if there is
-anything showing in the wake, come to me at once--or, better still,
-ring off the engines and mark it to pick up. This is very important.
-I can't tell you right now just how important it is, but I will say
-your berth depends upon it. Do not let anything leave the ship without
-notice--not a thing."
-
-"Aye, aye, sir," said Jameson; and he went aft amazed at the outcome of
-his deductions. He wondered what was up. Some affair of the captain's,
-he was sure. But the severity of the master's tone, the earnestness
-of the captain's manner, disturbed him greatly. There was something
-peculiar about it that made him, forced him, to give his attention to
-it. And there was the threat of his own berth, his position, being in
-forfeit. He did not like that kind of talk from a captain. It savored
-of undue severity. He took his station aft of the superstructure with
-some misgivings. In the gray light of dawn, he watched both gangways,
-first one side and then the other, keeping well back of the house.
-
-Castle Rock light drew well upon the bow. It was now within a mile, and
-Junard noticed a small fishing boat riding in the fairway just ahead
-of the ship. As the water was very deep here, he knew she was not
-anchored, but must be waiting and under way; yet no sail showed upon
-her. Perhaps a powerful motor lay within her. He watched her carefully,
-and walked from side to side of the bridge, waiting for some sign from
-those aboard. The wake was now showing white in the gray of morning,
-and a small object could soon be distinguished in the smooth sea to
-leeward of the lighthouse, where the heavy swell of the Atlantic was
-cut off.
-
-Jameson, who stood at the taffrail, saw a figure of a man peer from
-the window of a stateroom nearly amidships. The head was quickly
-withdrawn. The mate watched, and then walked quickly across the stern
-and watched the wake, wondering what might be taking place. The form
-of a woman flitted down the gangway from forward, showing dimly in the
-gloom. She came from the opposite side of the ship from where he had
-seen the head peer forth. Hiding behind the house, he watched her come
-quickly aft. She was carrying something in her hand that looked like a
-life buoy. Instinctively the mate made ready to catch her. He saw that
-life belt, and to his imagination it spelled something like a person
-going overboard. The form of a man came quickly behind her, and Jameson
-recognized one of the under stewards, who had been watching for trouble
-at the purser's orders.
-
-The woman ran at the sound of footsteps behind her. She came with
-amazing swiftness to the taffrail, near where Jameson stood. He
-gathered himself, and sprang forth, clasping her in his arms just as
-she hurled the life belt over the side into the sea.
-
-The girl screamed shrilly, struggled frantically in the embrace of the
-officer. Jameson wondered what he was about--began to think he had
-captured a lunatic--when the rush of feet above caused him to loosen
-his grip. He turned in time to see Captain Junard take a header from
-the rail of the deck above and plunge headlong into the sea where it
-boiled and swirled from the thrust of the screw.
-
-Jameson was paralyzed for an instant. He distinctly saw his commander
-go overboard. It gave him a shock. He let go the girl and stood
-motionless for a second. Then, as the head of Junard arose in the white
-waste astern and struck out for an object, the life belt the girl had
-thrown over, he gathered his wits again, and dashed for the quarter
-bell pull, or telegraph, to the engine room.
-
-Full speed astern he threw it, and the astonished engineer on watch
-nearly fainted under the sudden warning. Thinking that a collision
-was at hand, he shut down and reversed under full power, opening the
-throttle wide, and giving her every ounce of steam in her boilers as
-she took the strain. The sudden take-up, the tremendous vibrations, and
-the slowing speed awoke many passengers. Not a sound of action had gone
-forth save the screams of the girl, and these were now silent as she
-had quickly flitted out of sight when the mate released her. Jameson
-rushed to the bridge and called his watch as he ran. Then he set the
-siren cord down hard, and the unearthly roar awoke the quiet tropical
-morning. Men rushed about. The watch hurried aft.
-
-"Stop her!" yelled Jameson to the quartermaster. "Stop her--don't go
-astern!"
-
-"Stop her, sir!" came the answering cry from the wheel. Jameson rushed
-to the rail again, and cut loose a life buoy from its lashings. He ran
-aft with it, intending to throw it out to his captain. Junard, however,
-was but a speck, far astern, his head showing like a black dot in the
-white water of the wake. The mate noticed for the first time that the
-small fishing boat ahead was now standing down toward the ship under
-rapid headway, the exhaust from her motor sounding loud and sharp over
-the sea.
-
-"Get the quarter boat down--quick!" came his order.
-
-Then he hesitated a moment. The small fishing boat was nearing them
-with rapidity. She headed straight for Junard, and would reach him long
-before any rowboat from the ship could get there.
-
-"Hold on! Avast the boat there!" he ordered. "That motor boat will pick
-him up, all right." Then the thought that he was not quite right in
-not lowering down a boat for his commander, that it might look queer,
-waiting for a stranger to do his evident duty, came over him, and he
-gave the order to lower away. The small boat dropped into the sea. The
-steamer was now motionless, lying in the calm sea behind the rock, with
-her engines stopped. Men crowded the rail aft to watch.
-
-"What's the matter? What made him jump overboard?" came the question
-from all sides. "It's the captain! What's up?"
-
-Jameson could not quite tell. He was vaguely aware that his commander
-sprang over for some object. That he took a desperate chance, with the
-ship going ahead, was certain. Had he not been seen, the vessel would
-have been miles away before missing him, for there had been no warning
-from the bridge. The mate slid down the falls, wondering what he was
-doing.
-
-"Cast off--give way, port; back, starboard!" came his order. He stood
-up, to see better, and gazed at the fishing boat, that now approached
-the speck he knew to be the head of Captain Junard.
-
-"Give way together!" he said, glad to get away from the ship, with the
-inquisitive crowd gathering rapidly and increasing in both anxiety and
-numbers.
-
-He watched the motor boat come quickly to where Junard swam. The
-captain was not a good swimmer. Few seamen can swim well. Jameson saw
-the boat approach, men lean out from her side, and grab something,
-apparently trying to lift the captain aboard. Then there was a
-tremendous floundering and threshing about in the sea, distant shouts
-for help from the captain, and the mate grasped the tiller yoke with a
-certain grip.
-
-"Give way, bullies! Give way--all that's in you now!" he urged.
-
-Something was taking place that he did not quite understand, but he had
-heard that call for help.
-
-Junard saw the fishing boat coming toward him before it reached him.
-He waited, swimming slowly and reserving his strength, feeling that
-the occupants were hostile and were waiting for the papers that had
-been tossed overboard. It was about where he expected something to
-happen. The lighthouse and the shelter of the island made it a most
-convenient spot to pull off the finish of the affair. The light-draft
-fishing boat, with her motor, could easily evade capture from anything
-the ship could send out after her. The steamer herself could not enter
-the shoal water, and must allow the smaller boat to get away across
-the shallow parts of the Great Panama Bank to some distant rendezvous,
-where the papers could be put aboard a proper ship to take them to the
-conspirators. He, the commander, had no right to leave the ship in the
-manner he had done; but necessity called for drastic action, and he had
-plunged over the side as soon as he had seen the girl fling an object
-overboard.
-
-Three men in the fishing boat were watching him as she drew up. His own
-boat was a long distance off, but he hoped the mate would hurry.
-
-A man came forward in the motor boat, and leaned out from her side.
-He watched him narrowly. The man made a grab for Junard as the
-boat reached him, and the captain, with a sudden jerk, dragged him
-overboard. Then he yelled for help.
-
-The man's two companions in the boat sprang to his aid. Junard found
-himself engaged in a desperate struggle with three men, and shoved
-himself away from the side of the craft.
-
-He held fast to the package, a metal cylinder, tightly wrapped in
-canvas, and at the same time struggled out of reach of the men above
-him. The man he had pulled overboard regained his strength, and,
-grasping the life belt with one hand, grabbed at the package with the
-other. The package tied to the life belt could not be gotten out of
-his reach, and Junard was struggling with one hand and fighting and
-grasping alternately at the life belt with the other.
-
-"Give it up, you scoundrel!" hissed the fellow. "What do you know about
-this package? Give it to me--do you hear?"
-
-"I hear well enough," snarled Junard, struggling farther out of the
-reach of those in the motor boat. "But I'm the captain of that ship
-there--and the papers are in my care. Let go, or I'll do you harm!"
-
-The man glared at him savagely. Then he turned to the men above him in
-the boat, now a dozen feet away.
-
-"Shoot, Jim--shoot quick--kill the fool if he won't let go!" he said.
-
-The man addressed was a tall, dark fellow with a sinister look. That
-he was Colombian, Junard knew from his accent and appearance. The
-other, who had stopped the engine, and who seemed to be the engineer,
-looked askance. He evidently did not like the shooting part. This man
-was also a Colombian, but his features were those of a man who works
-outdoors at a simple trade. The other two looked like desperate men,
-and Junard felt that they would stop at nothing to get the papers from
-him. The man who was called Jim hesitated, and then, seeing the small
-boat approaching from the steamer, reached behind his back and brought
-forth a long, blue revolver. Junard waited until the barrel came within
-a line with his eye; then he ducked, and swung the life belt around,
-coming up with it in front of him, and raising it partly before his
-face. The pistol cracked sharply, and the bullet tore through the cork.
-Junard let go the package, and seized the man in the water with both
-hands, whirling him about and holding him squarely in front of himself.
-
-"Start that engine!" called the man, struggling vainly to get away.
-
-The man who had stopped it whirled the wheel over again, and the rumble
-of the motor began. The two waited, without throwing on the clutch.
-
-Junard grasped the man firmly, and forced him down under the sea, going
-under with him, and holding his breath to the limit of his great lungs.
-
-When he came up again the man was choking, gasping for air. Junard
-only waited long enough to fill his own lungs with a breath, and then
-ducked again, the crack of the revolver ringing in his ears as he went,
-pulling his antagonist down with him.
-
-The next time he came up the fellow could not talk, but choked and
-gasped for air. Junard held him with a giant's grip, his long, powerful
-arms encircling him like those of a gorilla. The fellow let go the life
-belt and the package. Junard took in more air, and dropped down again,
-while a bullet tore through his hair, cutting his scalp.
-
-This time when he came up the fellow was limp. Junard held him before
-him, and the man with the pistol was afraid to fire, as the captain's
-eyes just showed above the man's neck. The captain struggled farther
-and farther away from the boat, getting fully twenty feet distant. The
-man at the engine threw on the clutch, and the boat shot ahead, swung
-sharply around, and headed for the floating men.
-
-Junard saw the mate standing up in the stern of the ship's boat, and
-knew he was doing all he could to reach him. The shots had made him
-aware of the desperate situation, and the men were bending their backs
-with a will to the oars. Jameson yelled harshly, the men in the motor
-craft saw that to remain longer would mean capture. They swung off and
-headed for the steamer, leaving their companion in Junard's grip. The
-next moment the mate came tearing up, and, leaning over, grasped his
-commander and hauled him aboard the boat.
-
-Junard came over the side, and immediately reached for a boat hook. He
-stabbed at the cork jacket, and hauled it alongside, dragging it aboard
-before the boat lost her headway. The body of the exhausted man sank
-before either he or Jameson could get another hold of him.
-
-"To the ship--quick!" gasped the captain.
-
-"What's the matter? What's up?" questioned the mate.
-
-"Never mind--swing her, quick!"
-
-The boat turned around and headed back, the captain urging the men to
-their utmost. The fishing boat, with her motor going full speed, left
-them far behind. They were unable to get near the craft.
-
-Junard, watching them, saw the boat come close under the ship's stern.
-A form of a woman leaped from the rail of the lower deck. The splash
-threw spray almost into the boat as she went past, and they saw the
-tall Colombian reach over and drag the girl aboard. The boat shot
-around the steamer's stern and disappeared for a few moments; and when
-Junard saw her again she was a quarter of a mile distant, and making
-rapid headway for the shoal water of the island. He started after her,
-when the shots from the revolver began to strike about the craft, and
-Junard ordered his men to stop rowing. He knew he could not capture
-her, unarmed as he was, and he had his precious papers safe in his
-mighty hands. To follow was only to invite trouble.
-
-The fishing boat ran quickly out of range, and Junard watched her for a
-few minutes. Then he headed his boat back to the ship.
-
-The rail was crowded as he came alongside, the purser watching him, and
-half the passengers were on deck to see what was taking place.
-
-"What was it? What's the matter?" asked a score at once.
-
-"Man overboard--that's all," said Jameson.
-
-"H'ist her up," said Junard, and he clambered up the swinging ladder
-thrown over to him, taking the life belt and the package under his arm.
-
-Mr. Dunn was on deck, and Junard gave him his orders.
-
-"Full speed ahead--on her course, north to west," he said, and went
-into his room. The door closed behind him. Then he switched off the
-lights, for it was now broad daylight, and then he opened the package.
-The papers were all there and intact, the water not reaching them at
-all. The safe was opened, and they were placed within. Then Junard
-stripped and turned in for a few hours of dreamless, quiet sleep.
-
-He had saved the papers of his company, documents that were valued at
-more than a million dollars--and not a soul aboard knew what had really
-happened. Even Jameson was never quite sure.
-
-The purser asked no questions about cholera, the ship headed along upon
-her course toward New York, and the warm day took its routine without
-further incident. Junard appeared very happy, and told many interesting
-stories at the dinner table that day. He answered no questions
-concerning the affair of the night.
-
-He brought in his papers, delivered them in person, and a great
-political change took place without any one but a few select souls ever
-knowing how near the verge of revolution a prominent South American
-republic had been. Junard was offered a medal for risking his life
-trying to save that of a man overboard--but he refused it. The shots
-from the fishing boat were explained as signals for help. That was all.
-
-
-
-
-IN THE WAKE OF THE ENGINE
-
-
-I had been transferred to the old _Prince Albert_, one of
-the freighters on the Jamaica run, and the skipper was Bill
-Boldwin--Boldwin who was once in the Amper Line, but who had a
-monstrous thirst and a reckless disposition--too reckless for
-first-class passengers. The "old man," as all captains are called,
-having these failings, had also a mighty poor education, and his
-navigation was mostly, "Let her go and trust to the sun."
-
-"Compasses?" said Bill. "How'd they get along before they had 'em, hey?
-Steer the course, or thereabouts; you'll git thar or somewheres nigh to
-it--if you don't fetch up."
-
-"But the company?" I said in amazement.
-
-"The company be blowed! Take life easy--it's short. Don't let the
-company worry you to any great extent. They'll give you a job as night
-watchman at twenty per month after they get out of you all there is in
-you."
-
-At the same time Bill, who was my "old man," and who, by the way,
-was ten years younger than myself, would not stand for any too much
-carelessness on the part of his first officer. I was his chief mate.
-He knew what I had to do, and hated to tell me. I confess I seldom gave
-him a chance. The second greaser was a little, short squarehead named
-Andersen; at least we called him that, going on the principle that
-it was a sure thing that if he was a squarehead he was either named
-Andersen or Johnson. There are no other names in Sweden, and a man
-naturally just has to be one or the other. They're good enough.
-
-Andersen knew his business and was an able seaman, learning his little
-book in the old sailing ships where they teach you something not always
-taught in steam. He had the bos'n in with him, and what the bos'n
-didn't know about handling the steam winches would be hard to tell. But
-that's all the bos'n knew. Not a thing else. If he had he wouldn't have
-rammed greasy rags in behind the ceiling of the after deck house in a
-hurry to get his grub at knock-off time.
-
-No, that was the failing of the bos'n; he lacked knowledge, and was as
-good a navigator as you might find in a young lady's finishing school.
-He had paws on him like a loggerhead's flippers, nearly a foot across,
-and each finger was a marline spike, and every thread of his hair,
-where he wasn't clean bald, was a rope yarn. He knew sailoring--nothing
-else.
-
-He was about as much afraid of anything in this world or the next as
-a hungry shark is of beef; in fact, he seemed to take to trouble with
-about the same sort of appetite. In six months I never had a chance to
-tell him anything except the routine.
-
-The chief engineer was McDougal, and the second was Mac something--all
-of our engine-room force went under the same name of Mac, just plain
-"_Mac_," and if they were not Scotchmen, I never saw one in my life.
-Scotchmen are born engine men, take to a machine like a dago does to
-a knife. The rest of the fireroom bunch were the old-style Liverpool
-Irishmen, and I'll tell you something, they were hard ones all right.
-They were the toughest lot of coal tossers I ever sailed with, and even
-the donkey man, O'Hare, was a peach of a Donegal Irishman with Galways
-of reddish hue that stuck out from under his shirt collar, pointing
-upward as if they were growing some husky on his throat.
-
-That was the principal part of our crew. There were some twenty others,
-including the cooks, galley boys, seamen, and quartermasters.
-
-We cleared for Antonio, and were soon running out over the Western
-Ocean in the lazy, tiresome routine of ship's duty. We were licensed to
-carry passengers and had a few waiters aboard, a steward, and a lady of
-about thirty signed on as stewardess.
-
-As there were no passengers this voyage out--no one ever went out
-with us if he could help it, but came back when there were no other
-ships--the cabin crowd had an easy time, regular yachting trip; and if
-Miss Lucy Docking had a stupid time, it was because she wouldn't talk
-to the rest.
-
-"Stuck-up and sassy," they said aft, but I never could tell, never
-getting a chance to talk with her without a dozen or more listening.
-At the same time I didn't like to blame the girl just because she
-didn't like the set of lovers the ship furnished free of charge. "Let
-her pick her own," said I, "it's like enough she'll make a mistake,
-anyways, without your help." I never had a big opinion of women,
-anyhow, for the only one I ever proposed marriage to fell down and
-nearly died laughing at me, and that after I had been dreaming of her
-and thinking her the greatest angel in the world.
-
-Miss Lucy was all right with me, because I let her alone, except in
-the mid-watch, when I was cold and thirsty. Then she used to get me a
-cup of cocoa or chocolate or coffee, and I tell you the man who stands
-the mid-watch on the old freighters is earning all he gets, whether it
-comes by way of the stewardess or by way of the front office.
-
-We crossed the Western Ocean in the usual manner. I had my order book
-to sign, and I saw that the second greaser didn't get gay with it. Days
-and days of the old routine passed, and we were in the edge of the
-trade when the first thing happened to show what a wild lot of yaps we
-had in that ship.
-
-The bos'n stuffed his oiled rags in behind the ceiling of the after
-house, and it was about three days afterward we struck the hot weather.
-The rags promptly caught fire--they always do when snugged in from the
-air--and we hove the old hooker to in the teeth of the trade with the
-after deck a roaring furnace. If you think we didn't have a time of
-it putting that deck house out, throwing it overboard in pieces, you
-should look up Lloyd's. Well, the way I talked to that bos'n would have
-given heart disease to most men, but the beggar didn't see it at all.
-
-"Rags is rags," he says, "and what for don't I put them behaind
-something?"
-
-"Because if you do it again we'll toss you overboard with twenty pound
-of kentledge to your feet," I told him, and it was the only reason he
-could get through his bullet head. It didn't scare him at all. He only
-looked upon the matter as closed, for he would not mutiny. He was too
-good a sailor for any foolishness.
-
-"Rags is rags," he would repeat as we chopped the blackened wreck away
-the day after, when all hands had been near the port of missing ships
-and were tired and nervous, having been on duty for fifty hours without
-a break. "Rags is rags, an' some son of a sea-cook set fire to 'em--no
-rags I ever seen ever took fire of themselves. Does a ship run herself,
-hey? Answer me that! Does a ship run her own engines, steer her own
-course, what? Some one of you sons of Ham did that dirty trick and I'll
-get you for it yet!"
-
-"But rags do fire themselves, even if a ship don't," said the old man,
-"and you are the leading bonehead not to know it. You don't rate a
-brass boy in anything but a coal barge, and if you don't look out I'll
-have to train you some."
-
-"Rags is----"
-
-Only the size and look of the bos'n's hands prevented the old man from
-committing murder right there. But the bos'n took it out on the men.
-What he didn't do to them that voyage was never logged.
-
-Miss Docking stood the test well. She stayed on deck and watched the
-fracas and never turned a hair, so to speak, waiting for the word to
-take to the boats with as cool a nerve as anything I ever saw. She
-was billeted for my boat, Number One, and I confess I was somewhat
-disappointed when the blamed deck house burned to the steel and the
-danger of leaving the ship was past.
-
-Boldwin was always taking it easy, and he never even took that real
-hard, although it would cost him something to explain how he did the
-damage when the underwriters asked him.
-
-"Don't do it again," was all he said to me.
-
-"No, not until we get another deck house at least," I said. "Maybe I
-can see that they don't set fire to the anchor or burn up the windlass,
-or eat the coir hawser, or----"
-
-"Well, see that you don't. That's your business--you're mate," he
-snapped back, and started for the chart house.
-
-Andersen came to me. "I tank I sign de order book for sou'west half
-sou'--here we bane running eastb'no'th. How I tell de truth wid sech a
-t'ing--hey?" said he.
-
-"If you always tell the truth in this line of packets you'll soon get a
-job hoeing potatoes in Essex! What's the matter with you? Do you want
-the company to get wise that we fought a fire set in with oiled rags by
-a fool of a bos'n and had to run the ship fifty miles off her course?
-Who'll pay for the coal? Who'll square the old man? Who'll tell the
-passengers that we don't always have a bonehead bos'n to wreck us, and
-that if they'll promise to come again we'll see that it don't happen
-often--no, not often?"
-
-Andersen went on duty with a queer look in his eyes. He had seen
-something and it amazed him--just why I never could tell, for he had
-been in steamers before and ought to have known something of a ship's
-officers' duties before coming into the Prince Line.
-
-The truth in many lines is sacred. Absolutely sacred. Too sacred
-entirely to shift about the deck like a bag of dunnage and leave lying
-around for some fools to play with. No, never play with the truth in
-some lines of shipping. Do your duty. That's all you've got to do, and
-if it's so logged, why, then you're all right. If it isn't, why, then
-you better get to driving a truck or peddling peanuts.
-
-Well, Boldwin was a pretty good sort, as I have said. He mostly saw
-that all of us did our duty--in the log book, in the order book, and
-with the company officers. We went along slowly on our course after
-that, and were in the latitude of Watlings when bad weather came on.
-It was nothing much, just a cyclone of the usual order, coming as it
-did in the hurricane season; but we were a full-powered ship of six
-thousand tons, and it wouldn't have delayed us to any extent--except
-that we didn't count on the donkey man from Donegal.
-
-You see, the _Albert_ had one of those underwater ash-chutes. The pipe
-came down through the bilge, about fifteen feet below the water line.
-It was a foot in diameter, and was supposedly bolted to the skin and as
-solid as the keel or garboards.
-
-The metal of the pipe was half an inch in thickness, and was braced and
-bolted so that the top which showed above the water line could be hove
-on and shut off in a seaway. The top had a sliding cover working with
-a lever, and when the ashes were to be fired out the cover was thrown
-back, the bucket dumped, and a jet of steam blew the mass out through
-the ship's bottom, making no dirt or dust at all, and doing away with
-the everlasting firing over the side.
-
-It was a good invention. It saved the company many dollars in paint,
-and it kept the ship, which was always short-handed, looking better
-than most vessels that used the old way over the side.
-
-It would have lasted forever if the man from Donegal hadn't been of an
-inquisitive turn of mind, and started exploring it with a monkey wrench
-the week before the storm. As it happened he broke several of the
-bolts which had rusted in the bottom, and the metal, having been much
-worn and corroded, the first thing Mac knew was a torrent of sea water
-pouring into the after compartment, coming as it did through a pipe
-hole about a foot in diameter and fifteen feet below the sea level.
-
-It caught the firemen unawares. The donkey man was with them and
-let out a yip that brought every coal passer, oiler, and fireman
-to the chute. A wild burst of water tore through that hole, and the
-compartment was flooded in less time than it takes to tell about
-it--and that compartment ran the whole length of the engine room and
-aft of it until it brought up in the wake of the machinery, where the
-bulkhead of the tail-shaft room shut off the stern.
-
-The donkey man managed to get out with the rest, and the fires in
-starboard boilers swamped, nearly blowing up the ship as the water
-flooded them. It was only because there was enough water to prevent the
-making of steam to any great extent that saved us from having the whole
-midsection blown in the air.
-
-And all the time I was holding to the bridge rail with a cyclone
-snoring down upon us at the rate of seventy miles an hour. Luckily the
-ash pipe stayed partly bolted to the skin of the bottom. That alone
-saved us from total loss.
-
-Of course I knew something was wrong the minute the boilers went
-smothered. The terrific roar of steam and the easing of the engines
-told me that sure enough trouble was coming, and all the time I had
-been wondering how we would hold the hooker up to that gale with the
-full power in her.
-
-"What's the matter--bottom blow away?" howled Boldwin, coming from the
-pilot house and yelling in my ear.
-
-"God knows--anything might happen to us after last week," I howled in
-return, but the force of the hurricane blew the words away, and the
-old man went staggering and pulling himself along the rail until he
-managed to get below. For the next fifteen minutes on that bridge I did
-some small bit of thinking. Looked like all day with us. Not a sign
-could I get from anywhere, and of course I dared not leave the bridge.
-Once I thought she had blown up with powder. Next I thought the engines
-had gone through the bottom. And all the time I could feel her settling
-in that whirlwind sea--a sea torn white with the blast of the squalls
-that were now coming faster and faster each minute.
-
-"Well, I'm mighty glad I'm not married, anyway," I said to myself, for
-it looked like the long sleep coming fast. And then I somehow thought
-of that Miss Docking below there in the comfortable cabin waiting for
-the finish. It gave me a bit of a turn, and I tried to imagine what
-that cabin would look like in a few minutes when the sea water swept
-through it with all its transoms and cushions, piano and carpet----
-
-"Hard a starboard, sir," came the cry.
-
-It was most welcome. Anything but that standing there waiting for the
-next minute to follow the last. I saw that the quartermaster swung the
-wheel over quickly. It was steam steering, and the ship fell off in the
-trough of the sea in a few minutes, the weight of the gale driving her
-bodily to leeward and heeling her over to quite a list.
-
-"Heave her to," came the order passed up from the old man, and I put
-the wheel hard down and waited to see if she would stay without coming
-up. She lay easily drifting off, and while I watched her for trouble
-the old man sent for me. Andersen came up and took my place, and I ran
-down, half blown, half crawling to the shelter of the deck house, and
-from there below to see what had happened.
-
-Bill Boldwin was standing at the ash chute swearing at the man from
-Donegal. The donkey man was trying to tell what he didn't know about
-his business, and all the time the water flowed freely through the
-one-foot pipe until it so filled the compartment that nothing more
-could come up through it. It was a good thing! If the whole Atlantic
-Ocean had been delegated to flow through that pipe, nobody was there
-to stop it, not a soul to say why not. And then I was aware of the
-stewardess standing in the press of faces, looking scared but cool.
-
-"Why don't you ram something in it?" she asked.
-
-Simple? Sure it was simple. No one had tried to do such a thing, but
-there she was asking why.
-
-"The pipe'll break away--you can't shove anything down it," said
-Boldwin.
-
-"No? But why don't you shove something from the outside?" said Miss
-Docking.
-
-"Go to your room," snarled the old man.
-
-"She's right--we'll stop it in a jiffy--from the outside," I yelled.
-
-The skipper thought I was crazy. He looked at me.
-
-"How'll you get anything over the outside in this seaway, you
-bonehead?" he asked.
-
-"Get me the hand lead," I yelled to the bos'n, "and a stick of light
-wood--big piece, big enough to float a man."
-
-The bos'n ran for the stuff. That was one good point in that bos'n.
-He'd do what he was told even when he hadn't the slightest idea what
-he was doing. He came back in a few minutes with a long piece of white
-pine and the hand lead. I looked them over for a moment to judge the
-weight and floating power of the tools. Then I quickly hitched the lead
-to the piece of pine and left the bight of the line so that as soon as
-I jerked it hard the lead would free itself and go hell bent for Davy
-Jones, leaving the Pine line fast to the lead line to float up and away.
-
-To the end of the chute I now quickly made my way. The Donegal man
-wanted to help, and faith! he was a good man when it came to doing
-things he understood. He showed me where the upper end of that chute
-was in that roaring surge of filthy water, and the beggar actually got
-a hold of the lever that worked the cover and jammed it open.
-
-I instantly dropped the lead, the wood, and the line through, and had
-the satisfaction of feeling the line going fast to the bottom out
-through the hole in the bilge. When the line had gone about ten fathoms
-I gave the sudden jerk. Off comes the lead and the line stops running
-out.
-
-"Get to windward and grab that plank," I yelled, and even the old man
-followed the bunch that struggled to the rail and watched the sea
-where we drifted bodily off. In a minute the bos'n saw it. In five more
-he had the plank back aboard and a three-inch line fast to the lead
-line. This I hauled quickly but cautiously back through the ash pipe
-until I got a good hold of the end.
-
-"Now," I yelled, "give me mattresses, beds, canvas, fearnaught, or
-oakum--anything so long as you get it here quick."
-
-The stewardess had already anticipated my work. I caught her eye back
-of the line of men.
-
-"Here they are," she said quietly.
-
-The bos'n got a Number Double O hatch cover. I wrapped the mattresses
-in it, and then quickly hitched the three-inch line carefully about the
-middle.
-
-"Over the side with it," I shouted. Over it went, and as it did so I
-got the line hauling through the pipe. Two men helped me. We hauled the
-plug jam up tight against the ship's bilge, and then surged upon the
-line and made it fast.
-
-"Now go ahead and pump her clear, Mac, pump her out--she's tight as a
-drum," I said, and the old man looked at me with a peculiar smile.
-
-An hour later that compartment was clear of water, and she leaked only
-a little around the stuffing, which was not enough to wet a man's feet.
-Another day and the starboard boilers were doing duty with a smoothing
-sea and a sun peeping out through the banks of trade clouds. The storm
-had long passed; the _Prince Albert_ was on her way under full power,
-with nothing at all to disturb the serenity of the passage, save
-the knowledge that we had a masterly crew aboard and some excellent
-specimens for manning passenger ships.
-
-Down the Western Ocean we ran without further incident, and hove to off
-the entrance of Antonio, burning flares for the pilot. You know the
-place. Narrow cut in through the reef, with the harbor lying like a
-pool of blue water in the surrounding hills. Not a breath of air in the
-place even when, half a mile distant, just outside, the trade might be
-blowing a twenty-knot breeze.
-
-The pilot came out at daybreak, and we ran in, tied up to the wharf,
-and began discharging. My duties were ended for the time, as I thought,
-and I took a stroll up to the hotel upon the hill. There was no use
-trying to get any sleep in the watch below while at the dock, for two
-hundred howling Jamaica blacks roared and surged along the gangways and
-crowded the winches, handling the cargo ably, while the women came down
-in swarms to chat with the crew and sell a few grapefruit and oranges.
-Boldwin let any one come aboard, and as the men were not supposed to
-handle cargo, they had plenty of time in spite of all we could do to
-keep them busy.
-
-The skipper reported the damage to the agents, and told of the disaster
-below. He was honest. He might have saved that bit of knowledge until
-we reached England again, but he told his tale, and the agents refused
-to allow him to sail until the pipe was repaired and properly bolted
-down into the bilge plates as it should be. In the smooth water of
-that mirror-like harbor it seemed an easy thing to do. All that was
-necessary was to get a diver to go under the fifteen feet to the
-outside end and pass up the bolts through the flange.
-
-Mr. Man from Donegal could then get at them with his monkey wrench and
-screw down the nuts upon them, clamping the pipe as fast as the keel
-itself.
-
-"You take a look around uptown and try to get hold of a diver," said
-the old man. "Mr. Sacks, the agent, says he don't know of any nearer
-than Kingston, and it'll take two days to get the one over there, as
-he's out on a wreck off the harbor. We can't wait two days. Got to get
-to Montego Bay and take on a lot of stuff, then get to Kingston for
-clearing and off we go."
-
-"Why not wait until we get to Kingston to do the trick?" I asked.
-
-Bill Boldwin gazed at me in contempt.
-
-"Say, do you want to advertise the fact that we are on the bum to all
-the passengers the line'll carry? Think a minute, man, and don't ask
-fool questions. We got to get that job done right here--see? We don't
-go outside until there's something more'n a mattress and a bit of
-fearnaught between us and the bottom of the Caribbean."
-
-"But we carried it the last thousand miles all right," I said.
-
-Bill turned away in disgust.
-
-As a matter of fact, I didn't like the idea of trying to get hold of
-a diver in Antonio. There were not enough divers to go down to find
-the bottoms of the rum bottles ashore, let alone a ship's bilge. It's
-true, a man might do the thing naked in that clear water. I've seen
-men in the East copper a ship twice as deep with nothing on them but a
-hammer and a mouthful of nails.
-
-After a day's search I gave it up. Not a man knew anything about
-submarine work, and at the hotel they laughed at me when I inquired for
-a diver. I also noticed that Miss Lucy Docking looked well sitting upon
-the veranda of the joint, togged out as she was in white linen. She
-gave me a nod, but wasn't keen on talking when I tried to find out if
-she had made arrangements for lady passengers that voyage.
-
-"There's two on the books--that's all," she said, and gazed placidly
-out over the tops of the cocoa-nuts growing upon the beach below.
-
-"Your advice last Friday helped me a lot," I said, "and I appreciate it
-and would----"
-
-"Would you like some more?" she interrupted suddenly.
-
-"Anything you might suggest," I said.
-
-"Beat it back to the ship, then," she answered without a smile.
-
-"Sure--if that's your advice," I snarled; "the hot weather has
-evidently soured your----"
-
-"Cut it out--I'm not a guest here, and what do you think the agents
-would say if they saw the chief officer of their 'crack' liner talking
-to their stewardess sitting on the hotel piazza? I thought you had more
-sense."
-
-"I ain't the only fool aboard--that's straight," I said.
-
-"No; nor ashore, either--why don't you stop that hole yourself? You're
-big enough and ugly enough to stop a clock," she snapped.
-
-"Thanks!" I answered, and strode away with the kindest feelings
-imaginable for our stewardess.
-
-But strange as it may seem, that remark was what did the business. I
-would stop that hole if I had to be keelhauled myself to do it. What!
-Lay the ship up a day or two while that lady sat around in white duck
-and looked out dreamily over that beautiful harbor? Not if I knew
-myself. I'd see that the ship got away and hoped she would carry at
-least two ugly and indignant aged ladies who could and would make life
-a happy dream for that stewardess.
-
-I went back aboard with the report that there was not a diver this side
-of hell, and that if the ship would stand the expense of my funeral I
-would at least try to pass the bolts for the man from Donegal to screw
-fast.
-
-"Sink a donkey man, anyhow!" I swore, "why don't the company get
-engineers enough to run a ship properly?"
-
-"Why, indeed?" smiled Bill Boldwin.
-
-I turned to the men I needed, and with that bos'n to give them advice
-with those flippers of his, I peeled off and made ready for the work.
-The engine-room force had taken off the pipe and bolted a new flange to
-it, a strong job and proper. The affair was all ready to ship just as
-soon as we dared pull the wad of stuffing away and set it up. A frame
-had been rigged in the room to steady the affair, and the bolt holes
-had been reamed out as much as they would stand. A deck pump kept the
-water from the vicinity, the water that still leaked in around the bolt
-holes.
-
-It was necessary to get the wad of stuff away from the bolt holes in
-the flanges, for it spread out so that it made passing of bolts from
-the outside impossible. The pressure upon it from the water under the
-ship at the depth of fifteen feet was great, and I was supposed to get
-a line to it so that it might be pulled away by the men on deck after
-we slacked away the three-inch line by which we had hauled it into the
-breach. The pipe was set up true over the opening, the holes lined up,
-a few bolts inserted point downward to steady it, and all was ready for
-the man outside to get the blamed wad away and pass the bolts upward so
-that their threads would appear through the flange. I went on deck and
-gazed down over the side at the warm blue depths.
-
-"Strange that the mate has to do the dog's work," I said to Mac, who
-was waiting and watching.
-
-I had a line rigged under the bilge by passing it under the bows and
-drifting it aft until it came right on the line of the hole. It was
-slack enough to allow a handhold, so that I could pull myself down
-quickly and then let go as I pushed in a bolt.
-
-I took a light line and over I went.
-
-The water was fine. The light filtered down under the ship's bilge,
-and it was only dark after I swept well under the curve of the side.
-Still, I could see a little, and soon made out a mass which I rightly
-took to be the mattress and stuff filling the hole.
-
-I tried to get the line fast to the thing, feeling quickly, but I
-lost my breath before I got it fast and, letting go, struggled to the
-surface again.
-
-"What luck?" asked Mac, grinning over at me.
-
-I wasted no time in idle words. I recovered and grasped the line again
-and hauled myself furiously toward the opening underneath. I could not
-get the line fast, and had to come up and confess that I had failed so
-far.
-
-"Look out a shark don't get you," said some one with an idea of wit.
-
-"Give me a marline spike," I ordered that bos'n, and the beggar got
-one, handing it to me by a line. I dove again, and this time managed to
-drive the spike in between the turns of the line holding the mattress.
-The next dive I got the small line fast to it, and, coming up, told
-them to slack away on the big line inside and haul the small one
-outside and get the stuffing away. It came easy enough, and the line of
-interested faces peering over the rail above bore a different look as I
-hung with one hand and rested from the exertion.
-
-"Now for the bolts," I said, and one was handed down. I hauled under
-again and inserted it, feeling with some satisfaction the other end
-being grasped by some one inboard. Mr. Donkey Man had hold of it all
-right, and, putting on a nut, set it up without delay. This much of
-the job was not so hard, but I was now getting tired, and found that
-I could hardly get below before I wanted to get my breath again. I was
-no diver--no, not to speak of, but I thought of that woman sitting up
-there waiting, taking it easy with her insolence and white dress----
-
-Seven other inch bolts were to be inserted before the job could be
-finished inside, and the water was pouring through the bolt holes in
-streams that kept the pumps working full stroke and made working about
-the opening difficult. I came on deck, and Bill Boldwin gave me a
-noggin of rum, grinning at me all the time.
-
-"You ain't so bad for a mate--I've sailed with worse," said he.
-
-"The next time I sign on it'll be as a master submarine," I said, with
-some feeling. "Now, if I didn't have to wear these breeches I could do
-better and faster work."
-
-"Why don't you take 'em off?" he said.
-
-"But the ladies--I must wear something----"
-
-"Oh, what do you care for a lot of niggers? Strip if it does you any
-good."
-
-I was just about to take his advice when I noticed the face of Miss
-Docking passing the port along the gangway. She had been attracted by
-the crowd aboard, and had come, woman-like, out of pure curiosity, to
-see what was on.
-
-"No," I said; "I'll fix the rest, all right--gimme another noggin."
-
-I got seven of the eight bolts in place; and the donkey man, assisted
-by Mac and the entire engine-room force, set them up one at a time
-after packing the joint properly. Only one wooden plug remained
-inboard, and the water squirted straight up nearly fifteen feet with
-the pressure when that was pulled out for my last attempt. If I could
-get that bolt in, there was a job done that would save the company
-perhaps a few hundred dollars, and I would get--well, I might get
-mentioned as something better than the ordinary mate when Bill made
-his report. But that wasn't what made me do the thing; it was the
-confounded spirit that Lucy Docking stirred up within me. Oh, yes, I
-was a fool, all right. I don't deny it.
-
-The affair was getting to be something of a circus by this time, and
-the coons who were looking on were making remarks. I was about to clear
-the gangway when I thought that here was the last plug, the last bolt,
-and then for a nip and a sleep before clearing. I went over with that
-last bolt, and, as I did so, I saw Miss Lucy gazing out of a cabin
-port at me. Before I went under her face appeared above the rail and
-watched. I was so tired by this time that I had the small line, which
-was hambroline, fast about my armpits, so that Mac and his crew could
-haul me up if I gave out entirely. This was my mistake.
-
-Down I went, and as I went under I thought I heard the word "Shark!"
-muttered by some of the colored folk above. I had just shoved in the
-last bolt when a shadow passed. At the same instant there was a mighty
-pull upon the line. I was jerked bodily away, and my back scraped the
-huge barnacles which covered the ship all along in the wake of her
-engines clear to her sternpost. The razor-like edges cut and stung
-me. I felt a mighty desire to breathe, and tried to get upward. Then
-my head struck the bottom of the ship with great violence, and I was
-partly stunned. This was what probably saved my life, for I ceased to
-breathe, and the spasm passed.
-
-What really happened was this:
-
-A huge sawfish was swimming about the harbor, having just come inside
-the reef. Tropical seas are infested by many of these fish, which "fin
-out" like a shark, and which are probably of the shark species. The
-long snout, unlike the swordfish, which is a giant mackerel, is studded
-with rows of sharp teeth, put there for the Lord knows what purpose.
-This monster had come close to the ship, and the negroes had spotted
-him, and thought him a shark at a distance where his snout could not be
-seen.
-
-Some one shouted, "Shark!" and the intelligent bos'n hauled line with
-those finlike flippers of his after the manner of a sperm-whaler coming
-upon a three hundred-barrel whale. My head had struck the ship's bilge,
-and my back had been cut open with the razor-like barnacles--and then
-the fish, getting frightened at the uproar, dove below, and his teeth
-on his saw snout fouled the line.
-
-It parted, but it parted between him and the ship, and away I went in
-tow of a flying sawfish.
-
-I knew nothing about it for some time, luckily; it would have affected
-my nerves.
-
-Luckily the negroes were active in spite of their laziness. A small
-boat, lying alongside the ship, was instantly manned, and within a
-minute it was after me, with four stout blacks pulling for all they
-were worth. A man in the bow reached over and jabbed at the line with
-his boat hook and jerked it aboard. Then he lifted me in and turned me
-over to the rest in the boat, while he held on to the line and played
-the fish gamely for all the sport there was in it.
-
-I came to in that boat towing behind a sawfish, which the natives
-seemed to think was more important to catch than me getting back aboard
-and receiving proper treatment for being nearly cut in two and drowned.
-
-The line finally broke, and they rowed me sorrowfully back alongside.
-I looked up, and saw Miss Lucy Docking gazing over the side with
-some show of anxiety expressed upon her face. Also I noted Bill
-Boldwin, skipper of the _Prince Albert_, showing some interest in the
-proceedings.
-
-"Send him aboard, you black scoundrels!" screamed Miss Lucy. "How dare
-you keep that man in the boat chasing a good-for-nothing fish?"
-
-"Bring him alongside, or I'll be in there after you," roared Bill.
-
-My bos'n passed a line down, and I was quickly hoisted aboard, where I
-was laid out flat on my back, as I was still too weak to stand. Miss
-Lucy herself poured whisky down my throat and smoothed my wet hair back
-from my bleeding head.
-
-"Arnica, you lazy rascals!" she hissed, and some one went for it.
-My cuts were soaked in it, and it stung furiously, but the cuts of
-barnacles are poisonous, and I rather preferred arnica to friar's
-balsam, which I knew Bill would rub me with. Then the bos'n helped me
-to my bunk, and Miss Lucy Docking was left alone with me to attend to
-my wants.
-
-"I suppose my advice and counsel was not so good this time?" she said
-as Bill left us.
-
-"Well, it taught me one thing, all right enough," I said, "and that may
-do me some good in the future."
-
-"And how is that?" asked the lady, looking at me with some show of
-concern. She had wonderful eyes, and her hair was noticeably curly at
-the temples--and her mouth----
-
-"Well, it will teach me never, no, never, under any circumstances
-whatever, do you understand?--never to take it again," I said, taking
-her hand.
-
-"We'll see about that later on," she said, and her mouth had a peculiar
-droop at the corners that has been a constant source of dread to me
-ever since--that is, whenever I see it.
-
-
-
-
-IN THE HULL OF THE "HERALDINE"
-
-
-"I understand that you did good work in the _Prince Alfred_ in time of
-trouble," said Lord Hawkes, looking at me with approval. He was manager
-of the Prince Line, and, when he sent for any of us to tell us that we
-had done well, it was time to--well, he didn't often do that, and I
-must have shown some embarrassment.
-
-I remained silent, holding my cap in my hands and looking at Boldwin,
-my skipper, who had done me the honor to report me favorably in the log
-book.
-
-"I hear, also," continued Lord Hawkes, "that you are a good diver, a
-master workman under water----"
-
-"Pardon me, your lordship," I interrupted, "I'm but a licensed ship's
-officer, and what I don't know about diving would fill a dozen empty
-log books."
-
-"Well, at all events, you showed resource. Yes, my good Garnett, you
-are a man of infinite resource. There's no doubt about that, and that's
-what I'm coming to. You are also resolute in time of trouble, and the
-two qualities are what I need in the work I am going to send you to
-do."
-
-Bill Boldwin looked scared. He didn't want to lose his mate. He had
-simply spoken for me that I might get in the good books of the company,
-not get away from his ship.
-
-The manager of the Bay Line seemed to be studying some papers upon the
-desk before him while we two stood respectfully in front as became
-seamen in the presence of our mighty ruler. Boldwin was keen on lords.
-I hadn't associated with them to any great extent myself, but I was
-willing--no matter what might be said about them.
-
-"The _Princess Heraldine_, our Cape liner, left port August the fifth,"
-said Lord Hawkes. "She had aboard in her safe the famous Solander
-diamond, a stone nearly as large as the Cullinan and worth something
-like a round half-million dollars. Also she had about three million
-more in various stones uncut and consigned to the firm here. In running
-up the West African coast, she broke her crank shaft and drove it
-through her bottom, tearing the compartment to pieces, and forcing
-Captain Sumner to head for Lagos in the hope of beaching her before she
-sank. He managed to get her into ten fathoms on that low, sandy coast,
-and she went down about a mile or two offshore.
-
-"All the passengers were saved, but by some oversight the combination
-of the safe was lost at the time they needed it, owing to the agent,
-Grimes, being either too frightened or too ill to remember it.
-
-"Captain Sumner--the only other man aboard who knew the
-combination--was unable to either leave the bridge at the critical
-moment of her sinking, owing to the necessity of saving the passengers
-in the small boats, or tell any one before the _Heraldine_ suddenly
-settled and went down, carrying five of the crew and the entire
-contents of the safe along with her."
-
-Lord Hawkes looked up at me shrewdly as he finished and gazed into my
-eyes.
-
-I saw no necessity for a reply. There was a few minutes' silence, then
-he went on:
-
-"The wrecking company is now on the way there, but there has been some
-trouble experienced with them and with the underwriters. Therefore
-we've deemed it worth while to send a ship--one of our regular Cape
-boats on her lay-up voyage--to Lagos, and try for the safe.
-
-"The ship is a total loss, and will be covered all right, but the
-diamonds are not insured, owing, as I have said, to some disagreement
-with the underwriters lately, and it has been just our luck to lose
-them this voyage.
-
-"You are to take the _Prince John_, and go to Lagos. There you will
-find the wrecking crew waiting orders. You are to see that we get that
-safe intact--you understand? We want that safe _just as it was before
-it went to the bottom_. Your orders are here." And he handed me a
-folded document. "You will leave at once."
-
-"Aye, aye, sir," I said, somewhat bewildered, but getting the lay of
-the thing straight enough. "Is that all, sir?"
-
-"That's all. If you wish anything regarding details, you will see Mr.
-Smith of the main office. I wish again to impress you that this mission
-is important."
-
-It struck me so at once. A few millions in diamonds in ten fathoms--in
-a ten-ton safe! Yes, that was something worth looking after. It was
-important, all right. Seemed easy enough. Any one who knows anything
-about wrecking, knows that ten fathoms isn't too deep to work, although
-it's some little ways down. It depends also upon other conditions,
-which might or might not prevail. I'd get that safe easy enough--yank
-it aboard all standing, as we say at sea.
-
-Well, within two days I was standing on the bridge of the _Prince
-John_, and wondering how the poor fellows in Africa managed to keep a
-ship of her class afloat long enough to lay her up.
-
-It was the company's policy to have their African steamers laid up at
-Cape Town--helped labor, local progress, and all that sort of thing. In
-reality they got the work done for about half what it would cost them
-in England.
-
-The _Prince John_ could make ten knots under most favorable
-circumstances, but as this was her lay-up voyage, she, as might be
-imagined, was not doing her best. I think she rammed along about eight,
-most of the way down; and McDougal, the chief engineer, was working
-like a machinist from daylight till dark to get her to do that.
-
-We carried only the crew of six seamen and ten firemen, with two
-engineers, a donkeyman, a pair of mates, a cook, and galley boy. Just
-two dozen of us all told; and, while I had never commanded a ship of
-any size before, I was not suffering much from swelled cranium as I
-stood upon the bridge and gave orders.
-
-Low-powered, black-sided, with the regulation Clyde bow and round
-stern, she was no better than a tramp. We carried extra diving and
-hoisting gear for the wrecking crew that had preceded us. Our winches
-were heavy, and built for working in the African trade where a ship
-must handle her own cargo. They would be useful in the work ahead.
-
-My mates, Simpson and Dennison, were good men, and knew their little
-book all right. Simpson had a very red nose, and looked as if he
-liquored on the sly, but he never showed groggy on duty, so I had no
-chance to call him down. He would continue the voyage as captain after
-I got that safe up and on its way to England. Dennison was young and
-boyish. He was a good lad, and never slept in his watch on deck--at
-least I never caught him.
-
-The run was uneventful, and we were sooner or later close to the West
-African coast, running through an oily sea, and pointing for Lagos.
-
-One hot and stifling morning after I had worked the sight, I was
-sitting in a deck chair at the pilot-house door, thinking of Lucy
-Docking, and how I might make a saving of fifteen pounds a month out of
-a salary fixed at twelve. This mathematical problem was unfinished when
-Dennison hailed me from the bridge.
-
-"Vessel right ahead, sir, anchored about a mile and a half offshore,"
-he said.
-
-It was our friends, the wrecking crew, and we had arrived.
-
-The topmasts of the _Heraldine_ stuck clear of the oily sea. She had
-been a three-masted ship with square rig forward and fore and aft upon
-the main and mizzen. She had sails upon her spars already bent after
-the old-time style of low-powered ships. She lay easily in about ten or
-twelve fathoms, and had a slight list to port owing to her settling a
-bit upon her bilge.
-
-Being very flat and wide-bottomed, she looked almost ready to rise and
-continue her voyage lying as she did in that smooth sea, and being
-unhurt save for that gash in her bilge where the broken crank tore
-through, thrashing her life out before the engineer could shut off
-steam.
-
-I pictured for a moment the huge flail, the piston with the broken
-crank attached, the pieces not less than half a ton, whirling up and
-down under the full pressure of her cylinders with nothing to stop
-it. There must have been a wild mess in that engine room with a crazy
-hammer going full tilt like that.
-
-As in most single-screw ships, her crank must have thrown down when
-connected but a foot or two above her bilge, and when it tore loose it
-must have struck full power at each and every wild throw of the piston.
-
-My business was not to raise her, however. She was not worth it, having
-insurance, and being better as a total loss. I was after getting into
-the treasure room situated just beneath the main deck forward of the
-boilers.
-
-The room, from the drawings furnished by her builders, was an iron
-compartment ten by fifteen feet. At one end of it--the forward one--was
-built the huge safe. This was bolted down, and to the beams.
-
-It was not a new affair, having done duty for years in the African
-trade, but it had a very effective combination lock of the usual kind,
-and, as one would have to open the strong-room door before being able
-to get to the combination of the safe, it was considered perfectly
-competent to carry any amount of treasure.
-
-Mr. Haswell, of Haswell & Jones, submarine experts, came aboard from
-the powerful wrecking tug, which lay near us. He was a little man, but
-quite fat. Red hair and whiskers gave his pale face a peculiar sickly
-tint, but he was not a sickly man. He was reckoned one of the best
-deep-water workers in England, and could stand a very high pressure for
-a long time. Little pale eyes looked shrewdly at me as he presented
-his card, coming aboard as he did from a boat rowed by six sturdy
-blacks--"kroo boys," he called them. I met him at the side, and shook
-hands.
-
-"We're ready to begin whenever you say," he said. "I got the firm's
-letter, and have only just arrived myself. They told me you had the
-gear aboard with you."
-
-"Yes, I have plenty of gear, all right," I answered, "and you can
-commence work to-day if you want to. This place is too cold for me, and
-I'd just as soon get away from here the next day, if possible."
-
-"It's some hot, all right, but one don't notice it below so much. I
-suppose those derricks you've got will hold all right--what?" And he
-gazed at our hoisting gear.
-
-The thermometer was one hundred and six under the after awning, and not
-a breath of air stirring. The hot, sandy coast shone like a white band,
-fringing the blue water, and I wondered what kind of weather it was on
-that white, sandy shore.
-
-We went over the gear together, and then sat sweating and panting for
-air, while the steward brought us something cool to drink--that is,
-as cool as could be procured. Then I went with Mr. Haswell aboard the
-wrecking tug, and was introduced to the working force.
-
-Ten white men and twenty blacks were the outfit. This with what I had
-was enough to raise the ship had we so wished. Only two of the white
-men were divers--Williams, a sturdy fellow weighing nearly three
-hundred; and Mitchell, a short, powerful man, about two hundred and
-fifty. Both were under forty, and had done plenty of deep-water work.
-They looked upon the job as trifling.
-
-"We'll blow the deck off to-morrow, and then tear out a side of the
-room," said Haswell. "After that we can disconnect the safe, and you
-can get your winches to do the rest. In three days we ought to cover
-the job."
-
-The hot, oily calm continued. The night was something fierce to
-contemplate. The sun came out again like a molten ball of metal, and
-Haswell donned his suit lazily, while the air pumps, manned by four
-blacks, were started.
-
-A ladder reaching a fathom down under the sea was fastened to the tug's
-side, and Haswell lowered himself over upon it, and waited for his
-helmet. This was fastened by Williams, and then the air was started.
-
-As it whistled into the dome, the front glass was screwed on, and the
-little man was shut off from us. Slowly he went down and swung clear,
-dropping out of sight in a storm of bubbles which rose from his helmet.
-
-I took out the water glass. This was a cylindrical bucket with a glass
-bottom. By jamming one's head into the bucket and sinking the bottom of
-the affair under the sea to a depth of three or four inches, objects
-could be seen about twice as distinctly as without it--this owing to
-the fact that in the open the reflection and motion of the light upon
-the always moving sea surface, prevent the gaze from following objects
-distinctly.
-
-In order to use the water glass it was, of course, necessary to get
-close to the sea.
-
-I dropped into the small boat lying alongside the wrecking tug, and
-leaned far over the gunwale, peering down. The long, easy swell, the
-sure sign of an immense calm area of sea, came slowly from the westward
-and rolled the boat gently but enough to keep me from getting a good
-look until I caught my balance. Then I managed to get the glass down
-firmly, and hold it about four inches under with my head in the bucket.
-
-At first I could make out little or nothing. The sea was not very clear
-at the spot, owing to the close proximity of the low, sandy shore where
-the surf rolled incessantly, stirring up the bottom. Soon I could make
-out the outline of the deck below where the flying bridge rose within
-three fathoms of the surface.
-
-The _Heraldine_ was drawing about twenty-two feet when she sank, and
-her flying bridge was fully twenty-five to thirty above the sea. I
-tried to see farther, but could make out nothing at all.
-
-The lines of the diver led toward the fore part of the ship, and moved
-slightly. Williams, who tended them, sat listlessly upon the rail of
-the tug, and gave or drew in as the occasion called. I kept looking to
-see things, but could make out nothing further in the way of the wreck.
-
-A huge shadow passed under me--a long, dark shape. It was a gigantic
-shark nosing about the wreck.
-
-I called out to Williams.
-
-"No fear," he replied lazily; "they won't hurt him in that dress--might
-if he was naked."
-
-The shark passed along forward, and sank down out of sight. Then
-Haswell signaled that he was coming up.
-
-He came slowly, and I watched the lines coming in. Soon the metal
-helmet appeared, and then he climbed with seeming difficulty up the
-ladder, helped by Williams. When he came above the rail, he hung over
-it, and his front glass was unscrewed, the pumps stopped working, and
-we came close to hear the news.
-
-"Located her all right," he said. "You can fix up about twenty pounds
-of number two gelatine--better put it in a tube, and be sure to make
-the wires fast--have to pull it through some wreckage down there."
-
-"See anything of a big shark?" I asked.
-
-"Oh, yes, I gave him a poke in the stomach with a stick--he won't
-bother me in this dress--but I did get nipped by one of those poisonous
-snakes--see?" And he held out his hand, where a small trickle of blood
-ran down from the second joint of his forefinger.
-
-Williams gave an exclamation. The natives looked at him anxiously.
-
-"I'll come aboard and rest a while before going down again," said
-Haswell. And he was helped aboard, and undressed.
-
-His finger swelled while this was being done, and, by the time he stood
-in his flannels, he had a hand that was fast turning black. Williams
-said little. The poisonous water snakes that infest certain tropical
-seas close to the river mouths were known to him. Those in the Indian
-Ocean are especially dangerous.
-
-Haswell gazed at the blackening finger, and shook his head.
-
-"Better give me some whisky," he said. He drank, and sat down.
-Williams stood near, and Mitchell came up.
-
-"That's a bad bite," said Mitchell.
-
-"Well, I suppose there's no use waiting any longer--cut it off, and be
-quick," said Haswell.
-
-Mitchell, iron-nerved and steady, cut the finger off close to the hand,
-and stopped the flow of blood with a strong bandage. The swelling
-continued, and the arm began to pain greatly.
-
-"Cut away the hand," said Haswell, white and shaky, but showing an
-amazing coolness. He realized his danger. Mitchell performed another
-amputation.
-
-Within an hour they had his arm off at the elbow, and Haswell was
-turning blue all over.
-
-It was an uncanny thing--right there in that bright sunshine, a man
-done a mortal injury by some foul sea vermin that had attacked him in
-the depths. I had heard of the sea snakes that come down the African
-rivers and go well offshore, but had never seen one. Those in the
-Indian Ocean I had seen often, and remembered that they were about four
-or five feet long and a few inches in circumference.
-
-Haswell, with remarkable nerve, faced his end unflinchingly. It was
-wonderful to see him sitting there, unafraid, with his arm three times
-its natural size at the shoulder where the last bandage of Mitchell had
-been fastened.
-
-"I reckon I'll last about an hour longer," he finally said.
-"It's--no--use." His strength was leaving him, and he spoke haltingly,
-in hardly more than a whisper.
-
-They gave him more whisky, and waited. Then Williams took down his last
-words in reference to his family affairs, and Haswell laid himself down
-on a transom. Two hours later he was stone dead.
-
-That was a beginning that would have shaken the nerve of many men.
-Mitchell had his partner sewn up in canvas, and they buried him far out
-at sea, rowing off in the small boat.
-
-The next day Williams started down. He found the location of the strong
-room, and was careful to wear heavy gloves while working. Then he
-placed the charge.
-
-The crack that followed was not loud--deep down as it was. A storm of
-bubbles arose to the surface, and the sea lifted a few inches just over
-the place where the gelatine exploded. Then Mitchell prepared to go
-down and examine the result.
-
-The oily sea heaved and sank with the long swell, and there was
-nothing to indicate that there would be any trouble. Nothing could
-move the wreck. Mitchell went under at eleven that morning, and, after
-he had been down half an hour, Williams signaled him. He received no
-answer. With some anxiety, the big man started to haul line, when, to
-the horror of all, the two lines--hose and life line--came in easily
-without anything at their end.
-
-The hose showed a clean cut well down near the helmet, and the life
-line showed a ragged cut or break which stranded it out a full foot.
-Mitchell was left below, cut off from us as clean as if he had been
-left upon the moon.
-
-Williams strove with all haste to get into another suit, but it was
-a good ten minutes before he did so. He went down with a man of his
-outfit holding line for him, and came back in ten minutes with a white
-face and staring eyes.
-
-"Whole side of the room fell on him," he said; "cut his hose and--and
-left him there. Give me a line, I'll get him out."
-
-"Dead?" I whispered.
-
-He looked up at me from the circular hole in the helmet, and seemed to
-think me mad.
-
-"Dead? Of course, he's dead--a ton or two of iron on top of him, and no
-air--sure he's dead. We'll have to put the line to the winch to haul
-him out from under it."
-
-We buried Mitchell as we had Haswell, hauling him from under the
-wreckage by a line to our steam winch, and afterward carrying him well
-out to sea, where he was weighted and sunk. It was bitter work, and all
-the time that hot sun shone down upon us until the seams of the decks
-warped and the tar ran out of the lanyards.
-
-Williams was shaken. The next day he refused to go down, and pleaded a
-rest necessary. His men were silent and awed. I could say nothing to
-urge them on, as I felt that they had endured enough for a few days, at
-least.
-
-Then Williams was taken with the African fever, and there was no one
-left who would go below for any amount of money offered. The horror of
-the thing had shaken the nerves of the entire outfit. There might be
-millions below there, but no man of that crew would touch them just
-at present, and we were lying there in that oily sea, eating up the
-company's money and cursing at the strange chance that had made our
-expedition so fatal.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the end of a week Williams was so bad that I gave him up as a factor
-to help us. At times he was delirious, and raved horribly. His men
-were for abandoning the work, and putting into Lagos, and from there
-clearing for home.
-
-I refused to hear of such a thing, although I was a bit worked up at
-the outcome of what had at first appeared to be an easy job. To send
-North for more divers was to delay the work months. To await the coming
-of the next coast steamer meant delay of at least three weeks--and
-even then there was no certainty of help from her. She didn't carry
-divers, and, although she would naturally give me any aid in her power,
-belonging to our company as she did, I felt that I would rather not ask
-anything from her skipper until the last act.
-
-A man named Rokeby of the tug's working crew offered to tend line for
-me if I chose to go down. He assured me that the pressure at fifty
-or even sixty feet would not injure me. I might suffer some from the
-splitting headache natural to the pressure, but that was all. I could
-blow open the safe or get chains fast to it, or cut it adrift somehow.
-
-I thought over the matter while Williams raved and rolled in his
-sweltering bunk, and the sun shone down upon that dead ocean full of
-crawling life and hidden treasure.
-
-"Gimme the gloves and plenty of air," I finally said, after waiting
-three days, hoping that some of the wrecking crew would get their nerve
-back.
-
-They all showed willingness to work if I went down, and I was soon
-incased in the suit of Williams.
-
-If you think I was not nervous, you should have had an inside photo
-of my mind as I stood there upon the rounds of the ladder waiting for
-Rokeby to screw fast the front glass. I would have given it up but for
-the looks of the men. They seemed to gaze upon me with a sort of awe
-and amazement, but they made no comment whatever.
-
-The kroo boys swung the pump handles with a will, and when I heard
-the hiss of the air I must say my heart gave two jumps and came near
-landing overboard--at least, it felt that way; but I would have died
-rather than let those men see that I was afraid. Such is the ego, the
-vanity of us all.
-
-"Shall I screw her on, sir?"
-
-The voice was Rokeby's, and it aroused me from the contemplation of the
-thing to do. I tried to look bored and annoyed.
-
-"Yes, screw it down--mind the lines tenderly, and pull me right up if I
-give the signal," I said.
-
-"Aye, aye, sir," he answered, and he screwed in the front glass.
-
-The air whistled into the helmet back of my head, and the noise aroused
-me to a sense of the danger should it suddenly cease. I put one foot
-and then another upon the ladder rungs, and went down until I swung off.
-
-It seemed as if I was about to fly off into space, and for a few
-moments I almost lost my balance. Then my heavy leaden shoes sank me
-straight down, and I dropped slowly until my feet touched something.
-
-The light had gradually faded as I left the surface, and where I now
-stood it seemed to be pitch dark. The pressure of the air appeared to
-swell my head, and a roaring was in my ears. Then I determined to do
-something, and bent forward to see if I could.
-
-Gradually the dim outline of the ship's deck took form before the
-glass--that is, the deck in my immediate vicinity. I could make out the
-rail, and began pulling myself along by it. Soon I came to the pilot
-house forward, and recognized it by feeling the panels of the glass
-front with my hands.
-
-I knew that I was just about right in regard to position, and started
-for the rail to get over the side and down to the place where the
-blow-out had been made. I carefully swung one leg over and then
-another, amazed at the ease with which I lifted the immense leaden
-shoes. Then guiding my air hose and line clear of the rail, I slipped
-off, and dropped down to the bottom far below.
-
-In spite of the fact that I had now been under several minutes, I could
-not make out objects well enough to do anything; but determined to try
-to feel for the opening to the safe. After ten minutes spent groping
-about, I felt an immense hole in the ship's side, my fingers going
-carefully around the edges where the torn plates told of the force of
-the blast.
-
-I entered and felt for the sides of the room within where the blast
-had torn out the iron and held it hanging to drop upon the unfortunate
-Mitchell. I now saw I could do nothing without more light, and
-carefully made my way out to the sea floor, where I signaled to haul me
-up.
-
-I came slowly, and as I did so my brain appeared swelling until it
-seemed no longer possible to hold it within my skull. The pain was
-intense, and I hardly noticed the growing light until I was at the foot
-of the ladder. Then I climbed up, being dragged bodily by my life line.
-The front was taken off my helmet, and I spoke.
-
-"It's all right," I panted, "get the lamp out, and stand by to send me
-down the tools I'll need."
-
-Rokeby gave me a small drink of whisky, and the rest soon had the
-electric lamp ready. I went below again. This time I had no trouble in
-finding my way, for the light from the spark penetrated the sea for
-several feet about me.
-
-In the watery darkness I made out the hole, and saw the damage done by
-the charge. The entire wall of the compartment had been blown in, and,
-in going into the room, Mitchell had gotten under it so that he had
-dislodged an immense piece of plate which had fallen upon him, and cut
-off his air and line.
-
-I went forward cautiously, and poked the lamp ahead of me. It seemed
-a long way to the safe, but I finally came up against it, and made out
-its outline in the lamplight. Its edge stood out sharply. Beyond was
-the inky blackness of a tomb.
-
-I saw that it would be necessary for me to blow it loose from the
-beams, as I was not good enough workman to cut or loosen the bolts.
-Making a hasty but pretty good examination of the bottom and sides,
-I determined to go back aboard and study it out. A little powder
-underneath would loosen the floor bolts, and then, with a stout chain
-about it, we might start the winches to haul it through the opening,
-which I saw would have to be enlarged at the bottom. I came up, and was
-satisfied for the day.
-
-The next morning I had recovered my nerve to a great extent, and was
-eager to get to work. The men were also better pleased at the prospect.
-My head had bothered me all night, but now eased up, as I donned the
-rubber.
-
-So far I had seen neither fish nor crawling reptile. The bottom was not
-very soft, however, and was so covered with weed and sea growths that
-it may have harbored many things not visible to the eye at that depth.
-I kept to the gloves, not daring to risk my hands after Haswell's fatal
-ending.
-
-The first shot tore the bottom off the compartment, and left the safe
-hanging by the bolts against the bulkhead. The second shot broke away
-these, and, when I went down again, I found the safe had dropped down
-to the deck below, the powder, or rather nitrogelatine, having torn
-the deck away for the space of fifteen feet or more, leaving ragged
-splinters of deck planking sticking forth.
-
-The electric lamp showed the mass below me as I stood at the edge of
-the hole, and I very carefully drew my line and air so that they would
-not foul when I dropped over. Then I went down and found the safe
-intact, but in a very difficult position to handle.
-
-The next blast required a large charge, in order to blow the side out
-down to the lower deck, as it was impossible to drag that safe up
-through the hole. I placed fifty pounds of gelatine in two charges just
-abreast the safe on the outside of the hull, and blew away the plates
-until a trolley car could almost have entered the hole in the ship's
-side.
-
-I was all ready now for getting slings upon the treasure, and I could
-hardly wait until the next day.
-
-The wreck was in very bad shape below from the effects of the blasts,
-but I was nearly done now. Another day might find the diamonds upon the
-deck of the old ship above me. I managed to pass turns of a heavy chain
-around the safe, and stop them up so that they could be hocked to the
-fall. Then I got the tackle down, and by means of a whip to the tug
-started the mass of metal outboard.
-
-It came along all right, and I thought it would go clear. Then
-something suddenly stopped it below, and I had to go down again to
-clear it. It was fast in the hole, having jammed against the edge so
-that no amount of pulling would break it clear.
-
-I lost no time getting another tackle to it, and rigged it to lift it
-end up, and turn it over, then the first fall would pull it out and
-clear. I was getting pretty well used to being below by this time, and
-the headache was lessening. I found that I could remain under fully
-half an hour now, and work most of that time.
-
-The last time I went below I had a premonition that all was not as
-it should be down there, and I went along very carefully. I made my
-way into the ship's hull, and was just getting the new tackle set up
-taut and ready, when the whole ship heeled suddenly to port. The safe
-slewed sideways and slid down the now slanting deck, blocking the hole
-entirely across, but leaving my lines and tackle clear.
-
-I signaled to come up at once. Then my line jerked, hauled me close up
-to the opening, and there I jammed, stuck so I could not get back. I
-signaled frantically for help, and they pulled me with all their might.
-But they might as well have tried to lift the wreck itself. I was
-caught.
-
-During the next few minutes I thought a great deal. The horror of my
-situation dawned upon me. I was fast below there--not a chance for
-getting out. There seemed nothing to do, but wait placidly for the end.
-
-The next few minutes were hours to me. I could signal with the line,
-but that was all. They knew I was alive, and they knew something must
-have happened by the heeling of the sunken wreck.
-
-The blasting had probably blown away the sandy bottom under her, and
-she had simply cast over and slid the stuff to leeward.
-
-There was plenty of room to take that safe out endways, but it was now
-so fixed that some one would have to slew it around before that could
-be done. My lamp was still burning, and the blackness lost some of its
-terrors in that pitiful light.
-
-I was in the hull of a lost ship, and I felt that I was indeed a lost
-man. Memories came and went with lightning-like rapidity. I thought of
-Lucy Docking, and wondered how she would take my death. Then I began to
-feel the effects of the pressure, and my head grew flighty.
-
-I dreamed of beautiful blue skies and green fields, the shore, the
-mountains; and all the time Lucy was with me, going from place to
-place. I was not unhappy. There was a feeling of contentment with the
-woman I had chosen, and it was all real, so real that I only awoke
-under the vicious pulling upon my life line by the men above.
-
-Then the horror of my situation came back to me, and the roaring in my
-ears told me of my predicament. I gazed out of the front glass into the
-dark medium about me, the rays of the lamp making sharp outlines and
-shadows.
-
-I remembered the safe. It lay jammed across the hole, and, while I
-was too feeble to take great interest, I recall watching it with a
-sort of fascination. I felt its sides, its edges. Then the combination
-attracted me, shining as it did in the dim light, like a bit of white
-in the surrounding blackness. I lazily turned the knob, whirled it
-about. And all the time they were pumping air to me under the pressure
-of fifty feet of water.
-
-I felt at the aperture above where the edge of the safe shut off the
-opening. There was nearly a foot of clear room, but this was not enough
-for my figure, incased as it was in the suit. It was ample for the life
-line and hose to pass through without any interruption at all, and all
-I had to do was to live long enough for them to get that safe away.
-Surely some one would come down, and try to sling it again properly.
-
-I lay with my front glass to the opening, and held the lamp so that
-the rays would shine outside. There I watched and tried to control the
-thoughts that kept coming with a surging feeling of dread that made my
-heart thump all the harder. Drowsiness would come, and the whirling
-in my brain would get me back again to the land and beautiful dreams.
-Then the jerking and hauling, and trying to dislodge me would arouse me
-again, and I would come back to the present.
-
-I remember watching through the opening, and seeing forms passing.
-These must have been fish, or denizens of the sea. They flitted through
-the range of the lamp like sudden ghosts, the light striking their
-bodies, and then disappearing into the blackness without.
-
-The lamp suddenly went out.
-
-I was seized with the wildest terror at the inky blackness about me.
-The full horror of it all now came with greater force. That tiny
-spark had kept me up wonderfully. It had seemed like a ray of hope.
-I put out my hands with muscles shaking and trembling, feeling that
-inexorable edge of iron that shut me off from life.
-
-Would Rokeby try it? Would he try to save me?
-
-That was the final thought. I tried to put myself in his place. I would
-do much for a man dying by inches--dying where he might be saved if one
-would take a little risk. He might get below in time yet. He might get
-a whip upon that safe, and, with the powerful wrecking tug working her
-winches, upset the huge square of steel, and drag it out of the way.
-
-But if he was coming down, he should have come hours ago. As a matter
-of fact, I had already been down half an hour, and I could stand it
-for at least twice that long yet. But it seemed to me that I had been
-abandoned, that they were too cowardly to try to save me. My whirling
-brain and roaring ears told me a story of days of suffering, of
-interminable torture.
-
-Would Rokeby try it?
-
-I remembered how it struck me when Mitchell's line came up cut off
-from him. I knew what that poor fellow had gone through; what he had
-suffered, at least, for a few moments down there.
-
-No, I would hardly blame Rokeby for not trying it. It was too dangerous
-for any one to try. And yet----
-
-That latent hope, that feeling that there would be something at last,
-kept me from dying. The air was still coming down, and I was in no
-immediate danger.
-
-I tried to make myself think that I was in no danger at all; that all
-would be well when Rokeby came down, and got a hold of the safe. But I
-knew in my heart that the men above, the whole general crew, were not
-the men to help.
-
-As a record of fact, the men above were awed at the disaster, and
-only Rokeby's steadiness saved my life. He had the pumps kept going,
-and finally decided that he would have to take a chance down there,
-or let me die like a hooked fish. He was man enough to overcome the
-nerve-shaking dangers that had beset us, and he put on another suit.
-Then, with his breath fairly gone from fright, he went down to help me.
-
-He had never gone below before, except under most favorable conditions
-and in very shallow water. Still, he knew what to do, and he managed
-to get a good man above to tend line for him. He found things in bad
-shape at the opening, but lost no more time than he could help getting
-a purchase to the end of that safe, and the winches started. In half
-an hour they had dragged it clear of the ship, and I was hauled aboard
-insensible, but still alive.
-
-Before I had regained my senses, they had the safe fast aboard the old
-hooker, and I had the satisfaction of staggering on deck to view it.
-
-There it was, all right, perfectly intact. I had saved the company
-several millions, and it had cost the lives of two men, and nearly my
-own.
-
-There was not a moment lost in getting away from that hot, unhealthy
-coast. We got under way that very evening with Williams still stricken
-with the fever, and myself too weak to sit up, but I would not stop a
-minute.
-
-"Get her under way at once," I said, and the mates needed no urging.
-
-The wrecking tug, under full steam, came alongside, and the safe was
-slung carefully over to her deck, where it was bolted down and made as
-fast as a sailor could make it. I put a metal line about it, and sealed
-it up, not even willing to trust to the safe combination that had
-withstood the blasts and the sea.
-
-"Good-by, and a pleasant voyage to the Cape for you," I said to my
-former shipmates. They steamed away to the southward to lay the old
-ship up for repairs, and we, in the mighty wrecker, _Viking_, under
-full power and making fifteen knots the hour, stood back for old
-England, where we arrived safe enough a short time later.
-
-
-
-
-A TWO-STRANDED YARN
-
-PART I.
-
-
-"Captain Gantline?" The words escaped me like a shot from a gun.
-
-"Sure as eggs--'n where did you come from?" said that stout seaman. He
-stood at the bar of Bill's place on Telegraph Hill, drinking rum. His
-eyes, crinkled up at the corners like the ripples of a ship's cutwater
-in a smooth sea, were bloodshot and liquor-soaked. Old man Gantline was
-broad of beam and shorter than myself--no real good seaman is tall--and
-he raised his empty glass and hammered upon the bar with it.
-
-"Gimme another drink," said he to the barkeeper. Then he turned to me.
-"So it's you fer sure, old man--well, well, what a small world it is,
-after all! Take a nip--I'm sure glad to see you--an' how'd it happen?"
-
-I saw that old Gantline was getting drunk. It was a shame. The old
-skipper was a crack packet skipper. I was amazed at him, for he was not
-a drinking man. I wondered what made him do it. The barkeeper was now
-opening another bottle, and I knew the old sailor had drunk much.
-
-"I blew in from New York around the Cape last week," I said.
-
-"Must 'a' been blowin' some, hey, then--kinder quick passage--what?"
-
-"Oh, I don't mean I made the run in a week--we were one hundred and
-sixty days--but I've been here in Frisco a week. And I've spent all the
-money I saved from the munificent owners of the British ship _Glenmar_,
-who rated me as second mate at thirty per--or, rather, five pun ten a
-month. I tried to eat something since I came in to make up for what
-I didn't get at sea. Those Englishmen are sure on short commons, all
-right--but I haven't been drinking. I don't drink."
-
-"I do," said Gantline.
-
-"I see it," I answered; "but it don't seem to do you any good, though
-it isn't for me to tell you so, I know. A drink or two don't hurt any
-one much, but pour it in, and come with me, and listen to my tale of
-woe. I need some one who knows something to listen to me--I'm broke."
-
-"Well, I dunno as I might jest as well," sighed Gantline. "I'll take a
-couple more noggins--then you can come down to the ship with me."
-
-"Sure, that's just what we'll do--go down aboard--hurry up and poison
-yourself sufficiently," I said, and waited until he had soaked down a
-few more drafts of liquid fire. Then, as he was growing unsteady, I
-linked his arm in my own, and we went slowly down Market Street until
-we came to the water front.
-
-"That's her layin' out there--_Silas Tanner_--four masts--or are they
-five? Sink me if I kin count 'em, Clew! You count 'em for me--seems
-like there's more'n half a dozen sticks risin' outen her--hey? Maybe
-Slade's stuck more in her, thinkin' four ain't enough----"
-
-"What? A schooner? You in a schooner--how'd you come to go in a
-fore-and-after, Gantline? You, an old square-rigger!"
-
-"That's hit, thash hit, Clew--me, an old seaman, in a coaster--for'n
-aft--Chinks for passengers--cabin, too--ladies aft--I'm clear drunk,
-Clew--an' I don't care 'f 'am--nuff to make a man drunk," mumbled
-Gantline.
-
-It was high time to get him to his ship. I hailed a small boat, and got
-him aboard, and then we went out to the _Tanner_--four-masted schooner,
-now riding at anchor off Market Street, San Francisco, waiting for a
-tide and something I could not guess as yet.
-
-She was heavily loaded, all right, and I wondered at the old man's
-conduct the more. The idea of him forgetting himself at the last
-minute! It was too much. And with a mate like Slade--Slade, who had
-sailed in several ships with me, the best mate I had known for many a
-year. We drew alongside.
-
-"Lower down the side ladder--the skipper's coming up," I sang out, and
-a head came to the high rail. It was the mate's.
-
-"Christopher Columbus! How'd this happen?" asked Slade. "And how--how'd
-you turn up? I'm glad to see you, old man--pass him up--look out he
-don't fall overboard."
-
-We managed to get the skipper on deck, and then below to his bunk,
-Slade questioning me all the time, and asking about times gone by.
-Then, after we had the old man safely stowed, we came on deck together,
-and Slade told me the trouble.
-
-"Bound out for Guam with cargo and fifty coolies--Chinks--for labor
-there. We got a passenger's license, and take out several first class
-to Manila, besides. Loaded down with general cargo, and two safes full
-of silver for circulation at Agaña--about ten thousand dollars."
-
-"Well, what's the trouble?" I asked.
-
-"The old man don't like the coolie idea," Slade went on. "He hates
-Chinks. We got all loaded up, and then the owners sent word that we
-must provide quarters for fifty men--Chinamen, too, at that--and the
-old man threw a fit. He'd have quit the ship, but he's bought into
-her, and can't do it. We had to clear out the alleyways under the
-poop, knock ports in the sides, and build up a line of shelves for
-'em to sleep on--twenty-five on a side, and right next the after
-saloon---couldn't get them below--see the doors we cut in the bulkhead?
-Lets 'em out on deck. It's a government contract, and it's good pay,
-all right--but them dirty coolies! It's a shame to make an old fellow
-like Gantline carry them--he hates' em so."
-
-"Who's second under you?" I asked.
-
-"Nobody--thought you'd come for it. Isn't that what you're here for?"
-
-"Not that I know of," I answered. "But I'll take it if the old man says
-so, all right, all right. I've been ashore long enough--broke, too."
-
-"Sure thing," said Slade. "You're as good as signed on right now--soon
-as he gets over it he'll ask you to go--never saw the old man like that
-before, and it's a pity, too. 'Never thought I'd run a slaver,' says
-he--and I don't much blame him, either."
-
-"I'll send down my dunnage in the morning," I said. "How about the
-crew?"
-
-"Well, we'll get them, all right. Whisky Bill's attended to it--we'll
-get ten men--all we need with the engine for handling line."
-
-I hastened ashore to settle my affairs and get my dunnage down to the
-ship.
-
-In payment for my last week's board I gave my landlord a whale's
-tooth, carved prettily--or, rather, I left it behind for him to accept
-gracefully, and before daylight in the morning I was aboard the
-_Tanner_. Gantline was so glad to see me come that he almost forgot his
-headache. I signed for the voyage and went on duty.
-
-The decks of the schooner were somewhat disordered that morning she was
-to leave. Honolulu was her first stop, and there was much to go on deck
-for that shorter run. The crimp had just brought down the men, and we
-mates upset each seaman's bag of dunnage, and scattered the contents
-about the gangway. We searched for hidden liquor and firearms, well
-knowing a sailor's habits, and we knocked things about a little hunting
-for them. The poor, half-sober devils could separate their belongings
-afterward as best they might.
-
-The result of the search was that, after the mate had confiscated a few
-bottles of stuff and a couple of out-of-date revolvers and ammunition,
-the general pile divided up among the men was enough to refill each bag
-again, the effort of sorting personal belongings at that moment being
-entirely too laborious to entertain.
-
-Slade took two bottles, and managed to secrete them upon his person
-while the eye of the skipper was diverted to a passenger who had just
-appeared. Slade was slanting toward the forward cabin with the goods,
-closely followed by his emulating second officer, when the voice of the
-old man roared out orders for me to see to getting the baggage of the
-passengers below without delay. I turned, somewhat disappointed, just
-as Slade entered the door of the saloon and winked slowly and meaningly
-at me.
-
-With some small encomiums pronounced upon the untimely work cut out
-for me, I turned to the gangway, and ordered up a few men in tones and
-language I should hate to repeat.
-
-As I did so I suddenly came face to face with the passenger who had
-come from behind a cab and started down the gangway plank to the ship's
-deck. She put her lorgnette up to her eyes and gazed smilingly at me.
-Then she was joined by a younger woman, a girl about twenty, who took
-the older woman's arm, led her down the plank to the deck, and went
-right into the door of the forward cabin, leaving me staring as though
-I had seen a ghost.
-
-"I don't got no good eyes, den, if dat ain't de purtiest gal I ever
-see," said a Dutchman who was waiting to hear further orders from me.
-Another man, with a loose lip, looked up and scratched his head.
-
-"Get, you squareheads--get a move on before something happens to you,"
-I growled.
-
-"I do love to hear them swear so," said the elder lady, as she reached
-the door. "They're such romantic fellows--so bold--oh, dear, just hear
-what that man----"
-
-"Come along, auntie, come back where the captain is. I never heard such
-language before, and I don't think it a bit romantic--no, not at all.
-It's all dreadfully vulgar, and all that--but that man--well, well, he
-does say some amusing things, even if they are not what they should be."
-
-Miss Aline MacDonald led her aunt aft, and I breathed easier. That she
-had flung me a sort of compliment was certain. I knew it. I had more
-queer ways of cussing out a Dutchman than any Yankee mate afloat--I
-knew that--but----
-
-Gantline met them as they entered, and extended his hand.
-
-"Come aft, ladies, come aft, and I'll have the stewardess show you your
-rooms at once--hope they'll suit you--best in the ship. Of course, we
-don't compete with the steamers, but a voyage in this schooner will be
-worth two in a steamer as a health restorer. If things ain't the way
-you like them, sing out--I'll do the best I can." And he led the way
-aft to where a Kanaka woman took them in charge. Then I ducked into the
-mate's room, and joined Slade for a few minutes. He had already pulled
-a cork.
-
-"Ain't adverse none to passengers," said he, pouring out the liquor,
-"but you may sink me if that old un don't come near the limit--you hear
-me?"
-
-"Give me a drink and shut up about passengers," I grinned. "The old
-one's all right. She appreciated my education--sort of goo-gooed at me
-while I was laying out some language--quick with the booze, before the
-old man gets wise to it."
-
-We hurried back on deck in time to take charge of things, and we were
-soon ready and waiting for the coolies, who were to come aboard from
-the tug that would tow us out to sea.
-
-The tug _Raven_ took our towline and we warped out, swung around, and
-were headed for the open sea within a few minutes. The engineer had
-steam up in the donkey, and the winches turned. Our crew were used to
-fore-and-aft canvas, and Slade took the turns as the halyards came to
-the revolving drums, being helped, as I may say, by his second mate,
-who held the peak as he held the throat.
-
-We snatched stoppers upon them as the sails came to the mastheads, and
-in less time than it takes to tell we had all save the headsails on
-the _Tanner_, and were standing out. The tug dropped back, and came
-alongside, taking her lines.
-
-"Stand by fer yore passengers," bawled a red-headed fellow, grinning
-from the pilot house.
-
-I now saw a crowd of yellow-tails gathering on the tug's deck.
-Fifty-seven of them, all told, led by a giant yellow man in a skullcap
-and long, braided cue. A chattering babble of Chink talk, and the big
-fellow hustled the crowd to the rail, up the schooner's side, and on
-deck in less than a minute.
-
-Bundles, packages, clothes, came with them, and Slade gave up the
-premeditated job of searching them in a few moments as he saw the
-yellow men gather up their belongings and crowd about the break of the
-poop, jamming in a mass right under the edge from where Gantline leaned
-over and gazed down at them in sour amazement and distrust.
-
-"Me makee dem tlake-a down, down," cooed the giant leader in a
-sing-song voice, pointing with his hand at the crowd of Chinamen.
-
-"Yes, git below--git out an' be quick about it," snarled the old man
-from above him. "You're blockin' the decks--slam 'em in the alleyways,
-git 'em out the way," he continued to Slade and myself.
-
-"No lika men high, a-a-h, aye, makee down, down," sang the giant, with
-a glint in his little slits of eyes.
-
-He was an ugly animal. Talk about your Oriental being a degenerate!
-Well, that fellow was nothing degenerate physically. He was six
-feet four, and about half as wide across the hulking shoulders. A
-thin-lipped mouth ran clear across his face; his nose was flat, like an
-African's. A whitish-blue scar had ripped his pleasing features from
-eye to chin on the starboard side, and his head was enormous.
-
-The hair was shaved close up to the limits of that skullcap of black
-silk, and from under its lower end there dropped a cue about a fathom
-long, all done up with silk cords and stuff, until a pretty little
-black tassel was plaited into the end, surmounted by a Matthew Walker
-knot and a couple of Turks' heads.
-
-He was something to notice, all right, and his voice was grand.
-Nothing of the nervous squeak of the coolie about it. It sang along
-with flutelike notes that bristled full of "I's" and "Ah's," until you
-thought he was singing it to his men in a sort of deep bass or baritone.
-
-Understand him? Did you ever know any white man who could understand a
-Chink if that fellow didn't talk for him to understand it? No, we took
-it for granted that the "boss" coolie was on the level, and was arguing
-with the herd to corral them into the alleyways where they belonged. He
-understood the skipper right enough.
-
-A stout yellow man edged from the press about the door of the forward
-house, and came to the big man's side. A soft gabble, then a yell, then
-the herd took the alleyways on the jump, and inside of ten seconds
-there was not a yellowskin on deck.
-
-"Got 'em trained, all right enough," said Slade, with a grin. "The old
-man needn't worry about 'em if the big one goes at it that way."
-
-"Fifty-seven Chinks on a dead man's chest--and I'll bet my month's pay
-they've a bottle of rum--maybe a hundred," I ventured. "What's the big
-cheese's name?"
-
-"Sink me, if I know! The old man called him 'Yaller Dog,' and he's
-that, all solid. Let it go at that. I'd sure like to have him in my
-watch. What a man he'd make on a earing in a blow!"
-
-"Shall we deal them their rice raw or cooked?" I asked. "I suppose they
-won't eat it if it's cooked in the galley, and then they'd be trying to
-build fires under the cabin or in the lazaret to boil it."
-
-"No; let 'em eat it or throw it overboard. What do you care? Turn the
-men to, and choose the watch, and then I'll go below for a rest."
-
-I did so, and soon the Farallones were disappearing in the east astern.
-
-The first two days out there was so much to do aboard that I hardly
-had time to observe things. The decks were lumbered up with all kinds
-of gear, and a load of stuff for Honolulu, which took all our time to
-secure. The men were under the union scale of the West Coast--that is,
-thirty dollars per month--and there was nothing off on account of our
-going deep-water in her, for we were not by any means coasting at all,
-as our course lay directly across the Pacific Ocean, and the itinerary
-took in a voyage of seven thousand miles.
-
-I hated the fore-and-aft canvas. I knew its value on short runs and in
-smooth seas, but when it comes to deep water and a rough old ocean,
-with a twenty-five-knot wind increasing to fifty, give me the square
-canvas with double topsails, that men can handle.
-
-However, we were very fast. The _Tanner_ could do fifteen knots free
-on a wind that would jam a square-rigger close and by. Her four masts
-were of the usual type, all the same, and her gaff-topsails were high
-on the hoist, giving her a tall appearance.
-
-The first day under all sail, with the wind abeam, she rolled off
-thirteen and fourteen knots an hour, and kept her decks awash under
-a perfect torrent of foam, dragging her rail through a solid mass of
-suds. She simply ran, shoved her sharp nose out through it, and slipped
-over the long, smooth, rolling swell with a plunging lift that felt
-good.
-
-The steam winches for handling line were good. With drums turning,
-all one had to do was to snatch the halyard in the deck block, grab a
-turn on the drum, and up went anything that could go. Then a stopper
-on the line, and to the belaying pin--and all was done. There was no
-hee-hawing, no singing of sailor's chanteys, no sailoring of the type
-we had known in our earlier days; but I am free to admit that I would
-rather have had the steam winches--especially when it came on to blow
-and we had to reef her down.
-
-The Chinks were allowed on deck from eight bells in the morning until
-eight at night; and they were always getting in the way.
-
-Miss MacDonald and her aunt came on deck most of the time, and sat
-wrapped in rugs near the wheel, where the old man entertained them with
-tales of the sea. They were greatly interested in the Chinamen.
-
-I found my watch on the poop not at all disagreeable during daylight,
-for Miss Aline was good to look at. She was of medium height, with
-brown hair that curled in spite of the sea wind, and she was solidly
-and strongly built, her figure having lines that told of sturdiness
-rather than delicate beauty. But although she was not what one would
-call fat, or even stout, she was certainly not thin, and her rounded
-face was rosy with health.
-
-Her mouth had a peculiar gentleness of expression, and when she showed
-her white teeth to me and flushed a bit upon recognizing the master
-handler of fluent oaths, I thought her about as good as they come. I
-was a bit embarrassed, but I was only second greaser, and as such could
-not sit at the table with her, so I said little.
-
-I told Slade, however, that his hands were unfit to pass salt junk to
-a lady--and, for a wonder, he washed them in fresh water before going
-below! He was mate, and could sit in with the skipper, while I walked
-the deck above and made mental comments upon the irony of fate that
-shoved in a fellow like him to entertain a girl that he could not speak
-to without stammering like a drunken man, while I-----
-
-It was in my watch during dinner that I had the first real chance
-to see our coolie boss. The second week, after things had settled
-themselves, and the routine of the ship took the place of the frantic
-scramble to get things shipshape, I stood at the break of the poop,
-which in the _Tanner_ was very low--not more than four feet above
-the deck, as is the case in many schooners--and as I stood there up
-popped Yellow Dog, the giant Chink, from the door of the alleyway to
-starboard. The beggar was so tall that he was almost on a level with
-myself, in spite of the difference in the decks, and I found his eyes
-close to mine as he turned and saw me.
-
-"Have any trouble in the passageway?" I asked him, thinking he might
-have been a bit mixed in straightening out that gang below in the
-narrow space.
-
-He gave me a look, a slanting glance from the corners of his little,
-screwed-up eyes, and then he turned his back upon me as if I had been
-bilge water, and offended his senses.
-
-"Hey, Yellow Dog! What's the matter with you? Are you tongue-tied?
-Don't you know enough of ship's etiquette to answer an officer when he
-speaks?" I spat at him.
-
-"I tlakee captain man--not you," he sang, in his musical voice, and he
-forthwith strode to the galley, where a Kanaka cook was busy with the
-dinner.
-
-"You great big Yellow----" But there is no use of telling what I
-remarked to him as he went along that deck. As the officer in command
-at the moment, I was not a little offended by this high-handed way of a
-common Chink, more especially as I was inquiring for the welfare of his
-men.
-
-The cook heard my note of temper, and refused the giant admittance
-to his galley's sacred precincts, whereupon Yellow Dog seized him by
-the scruff of the neck, and tossed him into the lee scuppers. He was
-about to pitch a pot of hot water on top of him, but I interposed an
-objection to this action in the shape of a belaying pin which, flung
-by my right arm under full swing, struck Yellow Dog fairly upon the
-skull-cap, and, bounding off, flew overboard.
-
-The giant staggered, caught himself from falling, then he stood very
-straight, and gave me a look that for cold fury expressed more than I
-had ever dreamed possible in a Chink.
-
-"Killee you fo' that," he hissed.
-
-"Go on, do your killing, Yellow Dog," I snapped. "But take care you
-don't get something yourself--and the next time I speak to you aboard
-here, if you don't answer at once you'll find something else bounding
-off your dome that you'll remember for a long time. Now send your mess
-kids to that galley, and the cook will hand you out your rice and
-long-lick."
-
-The men of my watch stopped work where they were, and grinned at the
-big Chinaman. Their contempt for the race was more than my own, and I
-knew I had the hearty approval of the sailors. At the same time I was
-sorry that the thing had happened, for the Chinamen who were already
-on deck passed the word along, and by the time I had finished talking
-the whole gang of them were standing about, with looks upon their faces
-that told of trouble.
-
-It was a bad beginning for a long voyage.
-
-Gantline came on deck as soon as he could finish his dinner, and wanted
-to know what the trouble was about, but that was all he said. He
-found no fault with my remarks nor with my actions. A ship's officer
-must maintain discipline, and discipline cannot be maintained without
-respect.
-
-Miss MacDonald came up with her aunt, and I went below to my dinner.
-As I passed the door of the forward house leading into the cabin, the
-stout Chink who seemed to be a close chum of the big leader glared
-at me. He had a sinister face, with little slits of eyes that looked
-slantwise, like the eyes of a wolf.
-
-His moustaches were thin and straight along his lip, until they reached
-the corners of his wide mouth, then they suddenly dropped straight
-down, and hung like the tusks of a walrus, two thin, black points
-of hair about six inches long. They gave him the appearance of some
-carnivorous animal, fierce, saturnine and dangerous.
-
-Instead of slamming him for his insolence, I pretended not to see him,
-and passed in, yet the look stayed with me, and I remembered it at
-intervals. He was a wolf, all right, a human wolf--but I was to find
-that out later.
-
-"What do you think of our passengers--the coolies?" I asked Jack, the
-steward, who sat at my mess next the carpenter, Oleson.
-
-"Watch them, Mr. Garnett, watch them," he warned. "I've seen some
-mighty bad Chinks leaving the coast lately. These men belong to
-tongs--hatchet men--and if you'll take my word for it you will
-find plenty of long, black-barreled guns tucked somewhere in their
-dunnage. But the hatchet is their game for those they have a grudge
-against--hatchets don't make a noise at night."
-
-"They won't get about the decks in my watch, to use any hatchets, or
-guns, either, for that matter," I answered. "I'll tuck them in snug to
-bed at eight bells."
-
-"Hatchet's a bad thing at night," put in Oleson. "I'll put a heavy
-staple on their door after they turn in."
-
-In my watch below I read ancient magazines until I fell asleep. In my
-dreams I saw that stout Chinaman's face with the pointed whiskers and
-slant eyes peering down over me. In his hand was a little, thin-bladed
-hatchet, like a tomahawk, and as I reached up for him I awoke with a
-start, shivering in spite of the heat.
-
-The door of my cabin was closed, and my window, or port, was but half
-open, sliding as it did upon sills about five feet above the main deck.
-
-A shadow passed even as I looked up, but when I sprang out of my bunk
-and slammed the glass open, there was nothing near the opening.
-
-Just twenty or thirty feet distant forward two of the crew were working
-on some gear, and the light was still strong enough to recognize them
-as Jim and Bill, of Slade's watch. Then the bells of the dogwatch
-struck, and I went on deck, swearing at myself for a nervous fool.
-
-I refused to take a gun which hung over my bunk, hating the idea of
-doing such a thing, for guns always spelled trouble in all ships I had
-ever been in, and I hated the idea of using one. I went on the poop,
-and Miss MacDonald was sitting there with her aunt, chatting with the
-old man.
-
-"Keep her steady as she goes--sou'west half west," said Gantline, as I
-came up.
-
-"Aye, aye, sir," I answered, and was about to go aft to the wheel, when
-the young lady spoke to me.
-
-"I have just asked the captain to allow me to read a chapter from the
-Bible to those Chinamen," she said, "and, if you will assist me, we
-will gather them close together on the deck there"--pointing to the
-main deck. "I can stand upon the edge and see them better. You don't
-know whether they can speak or understand English, do you?"
-
-"I think they understand me at times," I ventured, "but I'm a bit
-doubtful about the kind of talk you will toss them."
-
-"Toss them? What do you mean?" she asked.
-
-"Why, I mean--well, they understand the kind of English we use at
-times--I don't know how to explain--it isn't a written language----"
-
-"I should sincerely hope not," said Miss MacDonald meaningly.
-
-"Yes, but, my dear, it is so expressive--I heard you talking to them
-during dinner to-day," interrupted her aunt.
-
-I blushed a little. "Well, then, that's what I mean," I said. "I don't
-want to say that I think you are wasting time reading to them--you know
-they have a religion of their own--one that antedates ours--they won't
-take it right."
-
-"That's a question we won't discuss at present," said Miss MacDonald.
-"There are many Christianized Chinamen at home, and they seem to
-appreciate it very much."
-
-"Always, if there's a pretty woman to teach them," I snapped.
-
-There was a silence after this. I had been rude, I suppose, but I was
-only telling the truth. I went to the break, or edge, of the schooner's
-poop, and called the watch, which had been mustering on deck.
-
-"Get the coolies aft to the mast," I ordered.
-
-The men passed the word along, and two or three Chinks who understood
-English as well as I did came slouching aft. Gradually about two
-dozen stood or congregated near enough to hear, but Yellow Dog and
-his slant-eyed chum of the walrus mustaches seemed to decline the
-invitation.
-
-"Couldn't you get the large man, their leader, to come also?" asked the
-lady.
-
-"Not without dragging him lashed fast," I protested.
-
-"Very well," she said, with just a bit of temper in her voice.
-
-Gantline had gone below, and I was in charge of the deck until supper
-was over. The reading would not take long, and the steward was already
-bringing the cabin mess aft along the gangway. The young lady read
-calmly, and with a peculiarly sweet voice, that attracted the attention
-of the men, but not of the coolies.
-
-The Chinks stood about, and some gazed out over the sea, some grinned
-openly up at her, with a smile that told of tolerance for an imbecile.
-Miss MacDonald, senior, went below to prepare for supper.
-
-Before the girl had finished, Yellow Dog came aft, and gazed at her in
-open admiration. He made some remark to his stout friend, and they
-both smiled sardonically, but their attitude was not particularly
-offensive.
-
-I found some business at the spanker sheet, and when I came forward to
-where the girl stood, she was finishing.
-
-"There is only one way to treat heathen, Mr. Garnett," she said, "and
-that is to be always kind, universally even-tempered, and gentle with
-them. They have had a hard road for many generations, and take to
-kindness, as all lower creatures do. They will only get stubborn if you
-use hard words and roughness. I know something about their habits, for
-I've taught the school at home, where we had twenty pupils, all grown
-men."
-
-At this I protested. I confess I was hot.
-
-"If you are kind to them they will think you're afraid of them," I
-declared. "If you mule-lick them, hog-strap them, and generally beat
-the devil out of them, they'll do as you tell them--not otherwise. I'm
-not running a school aboard here, if you please, and while I will give
-you any assistance you want or can get, I go on the log right now that
-as far as we handle these men, we must beat them and lick them into
-submission. There's no other way at sea. It's brutal, but the other way
-will turn out more brutal. I'm not responsible for them being in this
-ship--but I'll see they get to their port of discharge, all right, if I
-have to flay them alive!"
-
-"I think you are perfectly horrible--perfectly, brutal to say such
-things," said Miss MacDonald. "Are all seamen brutes? Does the captain
-stand for such things aboard here?"
-
-"There is only one way to do with cattle of this sort," I insisted.
-"I don't want the job--I'd rather run in a bunch of snakes. But a
-ship's bound to be run the way ships are run. There isn't any new way
-to run a ship, believe me. It's all been tried out hundreds of years
-before you were born. Perhaps some day, when we don't need ships, the
-brotherly-love racket will work all right; but not these days."
-
-"I don't believe it, anyhow," said the lady, "and I'm amazed that a man
-of apparent intelligence should say such things. You should do unto
-others as you would have them do unto you--always."
-
-"Quite so," I assented, somewhat nettled at the idea that a young lady
-should give me points on running a ship. "I always do, always do unto
-the crew or those coolies the same as I would expect them to do to
-me--if I was the same kind of rascal they are--and if our places were
-exchanged. There can be only one man in charge of the deck, the watch
-officer, and he's responsible for everything that happens. And if I
-would be so bold as to give you a bit of advice, I should say to you,
-for God's sake don't try any foolishness on those yellow-skins while
-they are under my charge. It'll only make trouble, and there'll be
-enough of that, anyhow, by the way things look."
-
-"What do you mean?" asked Miss Aline.
-
-"I mean that Yellow Dog, as the skipper calls him, that big Chink, is
-not liking ship's discipline already. If you will go near the door
-of the alleyway when they open it you will smell the fumes of opium
-strong enough to knock you down. They don't pretend to obey orders, and
-the company makes us carry them and take care of them like they were
-babies. We can't even search them or offer any kind of protest--they'd
-refuse to come if the contract was not drawn that way."
-
-"Well, be kind to them, be always lenient with them," said Miss Aline,
-in a tone so different, so pleading that I gave up. "Don't yell at them
-like I heard you to-day. It isn't dignified, it isn't right--you will
-be good to them, now, won't you?--just try it and see if it don't work."
-
-"Ho, well, I'll try to do the best I can, of course," I answered,
-thinking of the stout pirate with the hangers. "Yes, I'll try to
-be just as kind as I possibly can--of course, I'll promise you
-that--that's the skipper's orders, you know."
-
-The steward had already brought the mess things for the cabin, and
-the lady went below to join her aunt and the old man--and Slade. The
-mate was not standing for my line of talk, as I could see by the way
-Miss Aline spoke, and it made me warm to think that a mate of Slade's
-attainments should be so mushy as to snicker and grin when I told him
-how things stood.
-
-"'Keep solid with the passengers'--that's one of the old rules in the
-express steamers, you know--'keep right with the ladies,'" he said,
-grinning at me when I mentioned the missionary work the young lady
-had undertaken. "And, by the way, lend me a couple of your clean
-collars--you won't need them right away, and I do."
-
-"I'll do nothing of the kind," I answered shortly.
-
-"Oh, don't get rattled because I've got the inside route. Don't be mad,
-old man, because I've gained the weather of you. All's fair in the
-game. And between you and me, if the Chink gets gay with you, bang him
-on the nut for fair, and I'll slip in with you--if it's dark. But you
-don't want to queer me below. Now, be sane, and come across with those
-collars. I'm young and single--and mate, see?"
-
-"Go to the devil!" I answered, but I knew Slade would go to my room,
-instead, and nail those white-laundered collars I had kept clean.
-
-That night, when I turned in, I found that, indeed, Slade had been
-below, and had rummaged my things about most unkindly, taking my linen.
-I turned in with a feeling of resentment at his luck in position, but
-I dismissed the feeling quickly as the absurdity of the affair dawned
-upon me, for, after all, I was not thinking of women at all, and had no
-right to under the present high salary I was drawing.
-
-Rolling into my bunk, I was instantly asleep. In my dreams I saw that
-walrus-looking Chink. His long black feelers hung down over me, the
-points piercing my vitals like tusks. I gave a yell and awoke!
-
-The lamp was burning dimly, as it always did in my room at night, ready
-for the sudden call to the deck, and I could see everything distinctly
-the moment I opened my eyes. A face was just leaving the glass of my
-window. I sprang out of the bunk, and peered out through the glass. At
-that instant there was a heavy rat-tat-tat upon the door, and the voice
-of Jim Douglas, of Slade's watch, called to me that it was eight bells,
-and time to turn out. I threw open the door.
-
-"Did you look in through my window?" I asked him.
-
-"No, sir; I wouldn't do anything like that, sir," said the seaman.
-
-He was a good-looking young Scotchman of twenty-four, tall and strong,
-with an honest face. I knew he was telling the truth.
-
-"That's all," I said, and he went on his way.
-
-I looked at the gun that hung over my shelf at the bunk head. It was
-one I took off a dago named Louis, of my watch, and it was a heavy gun,
-forty-five caliber, and long in the barrel.
-
-"Perfectly absurd to think of it," I muttered to myself. I pulled on my
-coat, and started for the deck, when something, some instinct, told me
-to take the weapon.
-
-"Sentiment be hanged!" I said out loud, and tucked the revolver in a
-rear pocket. Then I made the deck, and found Slade standing at the
-mizzen waiting for me.
-
-"We'll raise the land before morning," said he. "She's been running
-like a scared rat all night. Keep a lookout, and when you sight
-anything sing out to the old man--he'll be on deck probably, but he's
-been acting queer lately, and you better watch him. We'll heave her to
-for a pilot, and you know the rest."
-
-"All right," I answered.
-
-The soft, damp air of the trade wind made the decks soaking wet. The
-low hum through the rigging added to the murmuring of the side wash.
-The creaking of sheet blocks and slight straining of the gear were
-the only noises that broke the stillness of the peaceful night. The
-schooner was running along rapidly, heeling gently to the wind, and
-everything drawing. The rolling motion was slight, for the wind was
-strong enough to hold her steady.
-
-The voices of the watch forward sounded above the murmuring, and I
-could see the glow of a pipe belonging to some one who disregarded the
-ship's discipline sufficiently to smoke while on duty. I took my place
-at the mizzen rigging to con the vessel, and stood there silently for a
-long time watching the foam rushing past her, now and then gazing far
-ahead to see if I could raise the lights of Pearl Harbor. The wind was
-almost astern, and the headsails were consequently not doing much work.
-I listened to the slatting, and then sang out:
-
-"Haul down the jib topsail and roll it up."
-
-"Aye, aye, sir," came the response, and the men went to the forecastle
-head.
-
-Aft at the wheel the shadow of a man holding the spokes was the only
-sign of life on deck. I took my place again at the weather rigging, and
-waited for the report from forward.
-
-A heavier swell than usual rolled the schooner, and I turned to look
-aft. At that instant something whizzed past my ear, and struck with a
-chugging sound into the backstay. My ear stung sharply, and something
-warm ran down my neck. I saw a form vanish behind the mast, and called
-out.
-
-I knew I had been struck, and drew my gun, springing toward the figure,
-which dashed silently across the deck as I gained the mast. I fired
-at it without hesitation, and the fellow let out a scream, gained the
-rail, and plunged over the side.
-
-I was at the rail in an instant, but saw nothing in the foam. A
-moment's silence followed, and then a sound of steps and a rising
-murmur of voices told me of the alarm.
-
-Gantline was on deck in less time than it takes to tell it, and he
-roared out: "What's the matter?"
-
-Slade sprang from the door of the forward cabin, calling out that he
-was coming. Men from forward rushed aft. Then, from out of the doors
-of the alleyways, a stream of figures poured forth, flowing like a
-black tide onto the main deck. A sudden roar of voices followed, and I
-recognized the high-pitched tones of our coolies.
-
-"All hands--help! All hands aft--quick!" I yelled, and fired into the
-black figures who swarmed up the poop and crowded upon me.
-
-As I fired, I heard the shrill screams of the elder Miss MacDonald,
-and then there was indiscriminate firing. I yelled to Slade, and he
-answered once. The crowd surged over me, and I was down, with a dozen
-panting heathens on top of me. In a minute it was all over. Some one
-passed a line about my arms, and, kick as I might, they soon had me
-snug and fast. Gantline roared out orders from the wheel, and I heard
-the crack of a pistol at rapid intervals. Then a roaring, surging mob
-rolled over him--and there was the schooner luffing to under full sail,
-her head sheets thrashing and the canvas thundering in the stiff breeze.
-
-They had taken her. We were overpowered, all right. The men forward
-stood it out but a moment longer, and surrendered.
-
-When I could see again I noticed the giant form of Yellow Dog standing
-near the wheel, and two of his men at the wheel spokes. He sang out
-orders in his musical bass voice, and the sheets were quickly trimmed
-in. The schooner now headed well up with the wind abeam, and pointed
-away across the Pacific, far to the northward of Hawaii. Yellow Dog had
-taken her easily.
-
-I was hauled below, and tossed into the forward cabin. Here I found
-Slade lashed fast, like myself. He was hurt by a bullet that had torn
-his thigh, and was bleeding. Upon a transom lay Gantline, trussed from
-head to foot in line, and the old skipper was swearing fiercely at the
-ill fortune that had overtaken his ship.
-
-I noticed a few Chinks standing near the door of the after cabin, and
-they looked at us casually, seeming to regard us not at all. Then I
-heard the soft voice of Miss Aline pleading with Yellow Dog. But of
-course she might have pleaded with the sea with as much effect. Then
-the sounds died away, and we lay there, waiting for daylight and what
-might follow.
-
-Daylight came, and the schooner still held her way under all sail
-except the jib topsail that I had hauled down before the fracas. She
-now lay at a sharp angle, and felt the trade wind upon her starboard
-beam.
-
-Yellow Dog came into the forward cabin. He stopped a moment near me,
-then kicked me savagely, muttering strange sounds in his own language.
-I told him fluently in good seaman's English just what I thought of
-him, and if he did not understand me he was something dense, for I've
-had every kind of human under the sun on my ship's deck, and I have so
-far failed to notice any who could not understand me when I let off a
-few pieces of literature or oratory.
-
-Yellow Dog seemed rather pleased than otherwise, for he called his man,
-the walrus-mustached one, and grinned while they held a confab. I took
-it that something choice would be handed me within a very short time.
-
-When I had a chance to ask the skipper, he told us we were within forty
-miles of Pearl Harbor. From the way we nosed into the breeze, the
-schooner was now heading northwest across the ocean, giving the harbor
-a wide berth.
-
-"What'll they do?" I asked him.
-
-"Sink her, with us aboard--take the ten thousand dollars in the safe,
-and make a get-away with it. They'll turn up ashore in some deserted
-place, and that'll be about all. Then they'll divide the swag,
-separate, and Yellow Dog will go his way--probably back to China. It's
-not much money when you think of it for a white man, but it's a whole
-heap for a Chink."
-
-After the day had well advanced we heard noises on deck. The foresail
-was lowered, or, rather, let go by the run, the noise of tearing gear
-sounding plainly. Topsails, staysails, and everything forward except
-the jib were cut away. Then the spanker was lowered, and left threshing
-about, half up, with the sheet hauled amidships. The jib was hauled
-to the mast, and the schooner lay hove to in the trade swell, riding
-easily upon the sea, and remaining very steady.
-
-We heard them getting out the boats, and there was much noise from aft
-where the safe was fast to the deck in the captain's cabin. Finally a
-terrific explosion took place there, and after that the noises died
-away.
-
-"Blew it," said Slade.
-
-A smell of smoke now began to be apparently in the confined air of the
-cabin.
-
-"Good Lord! Are they going to fire us?" asked the mate.
-
-"Safest way, I suppose. Knock a hole in her bottom first, set her on
-fire, and then get out," I said.
-
-"But the girl?" asked Slade.
-
-"Oh, Yellow Dog will take care of her--probably take her along with him
-in the boats."
-
-"Not if I know it. Man, do you know what that means?" he panted,
-straining at his wrist lashings.
-
-"Well, it's a mighty bad outlook, but if you can stop it, sing out;
-I'll help," I said.
-
-The smoke grew more dense in the confined space. The noise of hoisting
-gear died away, and the shouts of men from a distance told that they
-already had the small boats over, and were alongside.
-
-Slade strained away at his lines, and I did, also, but we were fast.
-Gantline muttered on the transom, and began to choke with the smoke.
-Suddenly a form burst into the room. It was Oleson, the carpenter. He
-slashed at our lashings with a heavy knife, and in a moment we were
-free.
-
-We dragged ourselves out on deck, crawling to keep below the rail, so
-that we could not be seen from the small boats. Two forms lay right in
-front of a door--two of our men who had been killed. Not a sign of a
-wounded Chink, or dead one, either. They had taken them along if there
-were any.
-
-"I cut loose," said Oleson; "rubbed the lashings on a broken bottle
-they left on deck near me. They've knocked a few holes in her, and
-it's up to us to stop them up before the schooner sinks. She's on
-fire forward--whole barrel of oil poured over her decks and lit up
-before----"
-
-"Looks like they have her either way, then," said Gantline. "But we'll
-try the fire first, and take a chance at her settling under us."
-
-I peeped over the rail and saw the boats--three of them--about a
-mile distant. Then Slade and I ran below aft. The two passengers had
-apparently gone with them, and the cabin was empty. Gantline, with
-Oleson and six men left alive aboard, fought the fire, and we joined
-them.
-
-Half an hour's work and we had the fire out, but it had played the
-mischief with the running gear, having burned up plenty of line that
-lay on the deck. Oleson and Slade went below forward, while Gantline
-and I went after to find where they had knocked holes in her bottom.
-
-The sound of rushing water told us the position of the leak almost
-before we reached the lower deck. They had not done much of a job,
-having cut squarely into her just below the water line, trusting to the
-fire to finish their work for them.
-
-Calling all hands, we jammed a mattress into the hole, and then passed
-a tarpaulin down on the outside. Oleson spiked planks over the wad,
-and we had a fair stopper on the place. Then we set to work to get the
-canvas on her.
-
-Yellow Dog, finding that the schooner was not burning quickly, put back
-in his boat to see what the trouble was. We were then at the gear, and
-he soon saw us. His men sent the boat along with a will, and they drew
-close aboard in a few minutes.
-
-We were now without arms, and he seemed to be satisfied that he would
-get us without trouble. It was blowing fresh, and the schooner was
-drifting bodily to leeward.
-
-We crammed the oil-soaked stuff from her decks into the donkey boiler,
-and as the fire was already burning, and steam was almost up, we
-waited, while some of us hoisted the headsails and swung her head off
-before the wind. The mizzen was swayed up, and in a few minutes the
-schooner was under good headway, sliding along at four or five knots,
-and keeping the boat at a distance.
-
-"Now, then, my hearty, we'll soon fix you," said Gantline.
-
-Between moments of desperate work we had a chance to see that the other
-boats were also coming back after us. At the present rate we were
-holding our own, and Yellow Dog stood no chance to catch us, but he
-kept on, and managed to get within a couple of hundred yards.
-
-From here he opened fire upon us with the heavy six-shooters, and we
-heard the spat of the lead in the canvas, but for ourselves we kept
-below the rail, and the power of a revolver was not enough to bother us
-exceedingly.
-
-Soon Oleson announced that we could put the halyards to the winches,
-and we sent the foresail and mainsail up in no time. Then we set the
-spanker and had all the lower canvas on her.
-
-The schooner lay well over under the pressure, and we sent her along a
-good ten knots, while we cleared up the gear and made things shipshape.
-The boats were soon black specks in the sunshine.
-
-"Now, then, let's get to work on that yellow boy right," said the old
-man.
-
-"No, don't let him get too far away from us," said Slade. "The two
-ladies are in that boat with the big Chink, and we better attend to it
-first."
-
-We hauled our wind and began reaching back, the boat with Yellow Dog
-being kept right under the jibboom end.
-
-"I reckon I'll take the wheel and you go forward, Mr. Garnett," said
-Gantline.
-
-"Will you run him down?" I asked.
-
-"Without any mistake at all--if you'll give me the course right when he
-gets in close," said the captain.
-
-"But the ladies, the passengers?" said Slade.
-
-"We'll do the best we can for them--just as well to get killed that way
-as to get away with those fellows, isn't it?"
-
-The men took to the idea at once, and we grouped close under the
-shelter of the windlass, watching the schooner run. She was going a
-full ten, and rising and falling with a rhythmic motion, her side,
-where the patch was, being almost clear of the sea.
-
-Yellow Dog saw us, and knew what we intended to do. He swung his boat
-around and pulled dead into the wind's eye, knowing that if we missed
-him we would not get a chance to strike again until we beat well up
-to windward of him. He would make it warm on deck as we came close,
-and Gantline took the precaution to place a few boards against the
-binnacle, so that he could crouch behind them when the firing began. I
-was to wave my hand which way he should steer, and he was to keep me in
-sight readily.
-
-We drew rapidly up to the boat. Yellow Dog stood up in the stern, and
-held a long, black-barreled revolver in his hand.
-
-We crouched lower, and the schooner bore down upon the boat. I waved
-my hand to starboard, and Gantline gave her a few spokes. Yellow Dog
-backed water, and the boat would have gone clear of the cutwater, but
-at that instant a heavier puff of wind heeled the schooner over, and
-she luffed to a trifle, her cutwater rising upon a swell.
-
-Then, with the downward plunge, she shored through the small boat,
-striking it fairly amidships.
-
-I was so taken up with the affair that I poked my head too far over the
-rail, and a bullet ripped my cheek open, knocking me head over heels
-with the shock.
-
-I scrambled to my feet, furious with the pain and excitement. The
-fragments of the small boat drifted alongside, the after part going to
-leeward, and dragging along the channels. I saw Slade spring upon the
-rail for an instant, and then plunge overboard.
-
-Holding my bleeding face with one hand, I ran to the forechannels, and
-saw Yellow Dog grasp the chains as they washed past. He had a mighty
-grip, and that hand hold of his was a wonder. He drew himself into the
-chains, and, without waiting, clambered up and over the rail, springing
-to the deck right in front of me as I backed away.
-
-Oleson saw him coming, and so did a seaman named Wales. The three of us
-closed on him, and dragged him down, and we rolled in the lee scuppers,
-a fighting, snarling pile of humanity, while Gantline let the wheel go,
-and ran to help us.
-
-Yellow Dog tossed the three of us off with the ease of a man throwing
-aside children, and would have taken charge in another moment, but
-Gantline, running up behind him with a handspike, swung the bar down
-with full force upon that little skullcap, and the giant Chink
-stretched out harmless. We had him trussed before the schooner had
-stopped her headway into the breeze.
-
-Then we ran to the side, and looked for Slade. He was swimming easily
-about a hundred yards astern, holding the form of Miss Aline with one
-hand, and keeping her head clear of the water. All about were the forms
-of swimming Chinamen.
-
-Quickly backing the headsails, we sent the schooner astern, drifting
-down upon the mate. I made a line fast to a life buoy, and flung it far
-out. After what seemed a long time, we finally had the mate fast to it,
-and were hauling him in. Soon he was taken aboard, and Miss MacDonald
-was carried below. Then we went to work trying to pick up the Chinks.
-
-Many of these refused to come aboard, preferring to die in the sea.
-Some we caught and dragged up forcibly. We caught most of them, and
-then hauled our wind for the two boats that were now almost out of
-sight.
-
-Within a couple of hours we had the first alongside, and she
-surrendered. In it was Miss Aline's aunt, and she was passed below
-insensible. The other boat took longer to get, but we finally got
-her alongside, and the men out of her. Forty-seven Chinks stood the
-muster. We had lost ten of them and two of our men in the fracas. Miss
-MacDonald came out of her faint, and from her room, where she had
-locked herself. She fell into the arms of her niece.
-
-"Oh, the brave men, those romantic sailors, those heroes!" she cried,
-in an ecstasy of joy, and she gave me a look worth millions.
-
-"Hush!" said Miss Aline. "Perhaps if those heroes had been a little
-more gentle there would have been no trouble--but I am glad we are
-saved. Mr. Slade risked his life for me."
-
-The Kanaka cook crawled from the lower hold, where he had hidden at
-the first outcry, and the stewardess came from the lazaret. We came
-into Honolulu that evening with the police flag flying, and turned the
-big Chink over to the authorities for treatment. His lieutenant of the
-walrus mustaches was missing.
-
-Miss Aline came on deck to look around. She saw Slade, and went to him.
-What she said to him was none of my business, but Slade was a good man
-and a good mate. Afterward she came to the mizzen where I stood like a
-bandaged soldier.
-
-"I suppose you'll not make the rest of the voyage with us?" I asked.
-
-"Why not?" she asked.
-
-"Oh--er--I don't know; maybe you don't care so much for the heathen.
-Brotherly love and kindness--fine theory, all right, but we're not just
-ready to put it in practice--willing to wait, you know, until it comes
-our way--perhaps a bit afraid----"
-
-"You are very much mistaken, sir," she broke in. "You will find out
-your error, too, I think, before we get through. I am firmly convinced
-that your own actions with that poor heathen are as much at fault as
-his, and that if you had not treated him so roughly he would never have
-done what he did."
-
-I grinned. I couldn't help it. Slade was winking at me from the door
-of the forward house. Oh, well, here was a good woman gone wrong in
-her theories, and I would not be insolent enough to disagree with her.
-I let it go at that. I was willing to wait until she had finished the
-voyage--for Slade's sake. He was a sly dog, that Slade.
-
-We found about two thousand dollars of the money taken among the men
-captured. The rest was a total loss, and Gantline bemoaned his fate, as
-it fell upon him to a certain extent.
-
-We cleared, leaving the big Chinaman to stand trial with two others as
-accessories, and the police absolved me absolutely from all blame in
-the matter.
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-
-"No loafing around the ship," I called to the little yellow chap who
-was sitting near the spring line which held the schooner _Tanner_ to
-the wharf at Honolulu. The man paid not the slightest attention to me.
-
-"Hey, there, sonny! Move out! Beat it; make a getaway, you savvy?" I
-bawled in a louder tone.
-
-Then he arose, and instead of a young fellow I was amazed to find him
-at least ten years older than myself--and I had been a ship's officer
-some years. He walked slowly to the vessel's side, and gazed up at me
-where I stood near the break of the poop, holding to a backstay.
-
-She was a modern, short-poop schooner. The sallow little man was not
-a Chinaman, nor of Kanaka breed, but a full-blooded Japanese. He was
-stout, strong, yellow of skin, and his black hair was too long for his
-country's custom, sticking out from under the rim of a brown derby that
-had seen its best days. His eyes were slitlike, keen little eyes, but
-there was nothing repulsive in them. They attracted me. For one thing,
-he had an open frankness, an honest and fearless look, and his face was
-sad.
-
-"What you doin' on the dock, Togi?" I asked, eying him humorously.
-
-"If your august presence will listen, I'll tell you," he answered
-easily.
-
-"Sure, Michael, let her go, and don't mind my gigantic--er--august
-self," I sniggered.
-
-"In the first place," he said, "I'm not sonny, being, if your honorable
-temper allows, a man of forty. If fine schooner says so, I go with
-you as far as Tokyo. There I am the humble cousin of the Honorable
-Baron Komuri, son of a Samurai, under the former emperor. I should
-like indeed to sail with you, and will----" Here he stopped a moment,
-hesitating.
-
-"Go on, king, old man; don't let anything stop you from telling your
-yarn. Sing it out, and I'll listen if it breaks a bone."
-
-"No, no; not king, old man; just Mister Komuri--if your presence allows
-me to correct. Your humble servant is but a plain man. Better be plain
-man than dead lion, as your excellent books say. I accept plain man,
-and go that way if so ship says."
-
-"We are not going to Tokyo, but if you see the skipper he'll take you
-clear to Manila for a hundred or two yen. You savvy him yen. Must pay,
-you know."
-
-"Ah, that is of what I wish to tell your honorable self. Allow me to
-make myself so humble to tell I have not the yen you ask. I have not
-anything----"
-
-"Nothing doing, kiddo; on your way," I said remorselessly.
-
-"But I sit on dock end waiting----"
-
-"Waiting for what?"
-
-"Waiting for two hundred yen to fly up and knock me dead. I wait and no
-yen fly up to strike me on the cranium. Now I go with fine ship, and
-work like plain man."
-
-"You have a sense of humor, king," said I, "and sink me if I don't try
-to get you a job wrastling the dishes aft. How about it? Can you sling
-the pots--are you a number-one pot-wrastler?"
-
-"I never wrastle; a little jujutsu sometimes when necessary for take
-care, but I work at anything your august self tells. If honorable
-commander tells me to wrastle pots, I try him so. I pretty good with
-sword or short knife----"
-
-"Not so fast, king; this isn't a man-of-war; no fighting here. All the
-fracasing done here is done by my august self and the other mate, Mr.
-Bill Slade, both, as you say, honorable men, and some hustlers when it
-comes right down to handling cloth in a blow. What I want--honorable
-ship wants--is a man to give the eats aft--savvy? Bring in the hash
-from honorable cook in galley--see? Set dish on table, wash dish off
-table. You know."
-
-"But I am soldier--son of Samurai. I do not like dishwork; but if no
-other way, I do mean work to get to Tokyo," he said sadly.
-
-"You're on," I hastened to say. "You're on, king, but in the future you
-will be known as Koko. Savvy?"
-
-"As Mister Komuri," he interrupted, with a look from those slits of
-eyes that called my attention.
-
-"No misters aboard here but my honorable self and mate. Rules of
-honorable ship, you know. Sorry, but august skipper has discipline,
-and you are soldier. You savvy? We'll compromise on Komuri. How's
-that--just plain Komuri, steward, hash boy, hey?"
-
-"Your august self, yes; to common men, Mister Komuri, yes."
-
-"Get aboard, then," I said. "Go forward to the galley. The cook--that
-big Kanaka there--he'll give you the line. In the meantime I'll square
-it with the boss."
-
-Mister Komuri sprang over the rail, and made his way as directed. It
-was easy to see that he had been in ships before, as what Japanese
-hasn't, since they are a race of seamen.
-
-Our new member took hold without further orders, and I saw him not
-again until the land was well astern, and we were on our way to Guam,
-with forty-seven chink coolies below, and two lady passengers aft.
-
-This was the second part of our run, the first being from Frisco, where
-we had shipped the coolies under the leadership of their gigantic
-foreman, who had tried to take the ship and landed in jail for his
-pains. The few thousand dollars we now carried in the safe aft was not
-worthy of anxiety in regard to protection. Our voyage promised to be
-uneventful.
-
-Among our crew were two new hands we had shipped at Honolulu to
-help run the ship, also to take care of the Chinese we carried. Our
-experience with the coolies had taught us that being short-handed was
-not either good or safe. Our arms were now ready, being, as they were,
-riot guns full of buckshot, and reliable six-shooters of heavy caliber.
-This going out with nearly half a hundred Chinks with but three men in
-a watch was all right if the Chinks were good, but we had found they
-were not to be trusted. With the leader of the uprising in jail for
-murder, and his lieutenant killed, we hoped for an easy life.
-
-We now had four men in watch, with the engineer for the ever-ready
-steam winch bunking in his engine house with banked fires and enough
-steam always ready to handle line. We were really carrying a full crew
-for a schooner, and the expense of the engine was extra, there being
-now enough men to handle her canvas easily without the aid of the
-winches.
-
-One of the new men was a strange-looking fellow, who was neither dago
-nor Dutchman. Just what he was I don't know, except that he was crafty,
-watchful, and dodged all work possible. He had a way of looking at you
-with eyes that seemed to fathom your inmost thoughts, an affected way
-of appearing to understand, and his peculiar silences gave support to
-the look. It deceived the old man.
-
-It deceived both Slade and myself at first, but afterward we grew more
-discerning, peered deeper into his meaning, and saw--nothing. He was
-just a petty, crafty sea lawyer who was looking for trouble to carry
-back to the coast, where they love to get masters and mates mixed up in
-courts for some violation of the shipping articles.
-
-This fellow's name was Dodd--Alfred Dodd--and he was called Alf by his
-shipmates. Komuri seemed to sense danger the moment he jostled the
-seaman in the gangway the first day out. I heard the row from the deck,
-and it was short.
-
-"Hey, Jack," yelled Dodd to the regular steward we had signed on in
-Frisco, "Jack, you seem to belong to the nobility now--can't hand a man
-a pot of coffee during the mid-watch no more, hey? Let the king do it."
-
-"Not king; just plain Mister Komuri," purred our little helper, as he
-grinned.
-
-"What's the matter?" asked Dodd. "Don't four-flush at your title, hey?"
-
-"Aw, give us rest," said Jack, who was good-natured and liked the
-little yellow man, for Komuri did all his work now, and there was no
-comeback.
-
-"I don't know if honorable sailor means wrong by four-flush," said
-Komuri quietly, "but if he does the finger of Fate will point at him."
-
-"Wow! Fate will point at me! What der you think o' that?" sneered Dodd.
-"Let's hope you ain't Fate, sonny, or I might p'int my own fair hand at
-you in return."
-
-"If honorable seaman will step out to the fore end of ship I'll show
-him just what a son of Samurai means. It will take short time."
-
-"Sure, king; I'll go you that explanation, all right. Come right along
-while the watch are getting their whack. No one will notice us."
-
-Komuri jumped like a tiger without warning. He sprang upon the fellow,
-and had a strangle hold of his wrist, and twisted over his neck until
-I thought he was getting killed. I had to stop laughing to run up and
-stop the fracas. Dodd was sweating with pain, and cursing furiously,
-absolutely helpless. It was so quickly done that I wondered at it. Of
-course, a strong man might grab the small fellow and jerk him out of
-his shoes, but that was not Dodd.
-
-"Drop it!" I commanded, and the second steward let go at once, smiling.
-"Now, get below, and quit this fooling," said I, and the sailor waited
-for no further orders. "You can show me some of your tricks, you
-Japanese juggler, when we have more time," I said to the little man.
-"You interest me considerable. Get to the hash, and don't waste time
-with a fool like that."
-
-Of course, it might be expected that a man of Komuri's parts would be
-gallant, for it seems always the case when a man is able and unafraid
-that he is sure to love with more passion than discernment. Komuri was
-not an exception.
-
-Not being at the first table with the passengers, I had small
-opportunity to see how he treated Miss MacDonald, but from what Slade
-told me I was concerned. The small chap was always in attendance upon
-the ladies when they were on deck. He was politeness itself, and he
-busied himself with all kinds of little efforts to make them more
-comfortable than they were.
-
-"If honorable ladies will allow, I fix the rugs in chairs," he would
-say, and although the weather was tropical, a rug made a softer seat
-when they took the air on deck, which they did nearly all daytime while
-we ran our westing down beneath the tropic of Cancer.
-
-With a good full month or six weeks before us, and a fair wind on the
-starboard quarter all the time, we had a stretch of water to cross
-that put one in mind of steamers. The ship ran steadily day and night
-at about from eight to ten knots an hour. We seldom touched a sheet
-or halyard except to set it up, and the gentle heeling with the trade
-swell made the voyage seem like a yachting trip.
-
-Komuri had much time to devote to the comfort of the ladies, and the
-elder one seemed to like him very much indeed. He told them stories of
-the warlike Samurai, and honor and self-respect stood out plainly in
-them all. It was not a bad thing, except that he always seemed to be
-something of a hero, and no steward either second or first should be
-such a thing where there are seamen around waiting for the job.
-
-"I have always believed that you heathen were very able people," said
-Miss Aline, "and if you were treated properly you would be just as
-gentle and tractable as the European races."
-
-"Heathen," said Komuri calmly, "are those who do not accept your own
-honorable views. Who knows which is right? It is a word we never use in
-Japan."
-
-She looked at him a moment, and said: "You are quite incorrigible. I
-hope you are not really bad, after all."
-
-"Honorable lady must see by how I do--not how I talk; she judge humble
-self most true. Her heart right," said the Japanese, which I thought
-was going some for a second steward, especially when I remembered how
-Slade stood, or wished to stand, in a certain quarter. I thought it
-best to let the humble steward see he was going far enough.
-
-"Say, king, old man," I interrupted, "Jack wants you to get busy with
-the potatoes for dinner. He's waiting for the peelings."
-
-Komuri nodded to me respectfully.
-
-"At once, august mate, I go," he said, and went.
-
-"Quite a superior steward, that Japanese boy," said the elder lady to
-me.
-
-"Oh, he's a wonder, all right," I assented; "but his place is in the
-galley, and not on the quarter-deck--if I may be allowed to speak of
-it."
-
-"And I do hope you will treat him kindly--not as you did the Chinese
-man who went bad," said Miss Aline.
-
-"No fear of it--not the king. He wouldn't stand roughing--and don't
-call for it. You see, while he goes with the Chinks altogether too much
-for their own good, and talks altogether too much for his own, he is
-not a Chinaman. Oh, no; he is far removed from the coolie Chinks, as
-far as the skipper himself. He's just a plain little fighting man, that
-a good-sized mate like myself could bite in two; but I know him--just
-what he'd do."
-
-"Why, what?" asked Miss Aline.
-
-"I'd hate to tell you," I grinned.
-
-"You may be a good seaman, but you're somewhat stupid," said Miss
-Aline, and I laughed outright at her humor.
-
-"What do you think of this fine weather?" asked her aunt to change the
-conversation.
-
-"It's good as it goes, but it's the hurricane season, and we can't
-count on it lasting all the way, you know," I said. "Maybe we'll hook
-right into a typhoon before----"
-
-"Oh, you always want something rough, something bad," put in Miss
-Aline. "I never saw such a man. Why do you always look for trouble?
-Don't you find it often enough without hunting it always?"
-
-"Sure as eggs," I said; "but I'm only telling you what I believe, what
-the signs show me. I'm not trying to frighten you at all."
-
-"I think you are perfectly horrid," said the young woman.
-
-"I hope I'm wrong, at least," I answered. But as I scanned the perfect
-sky I felt that indeed I was trespassing upon the feelings of the
-passengers too much, in spite of the fact that I had a mercury glass to
-observe in Slade's room.
-
-The coolies came on deck in the daytime now, and sat in rows along the
-waterways, eating their rice and chewing some sort of stuff to fill in
-the interval between meals. They chattered a lot, and appeared not to
-feel abashed at their former behavior.
-
-At these times the old man would come on deck--it being about the time
-he'd take the noon sight--and gaze down at them dismally. He hated
-Chinks, and their presence in his ship was more than he could get used
-to.
-
-"What good are Chinks, anyway?" he would say.
-
-"Somebody's got to do the work in hot countries, and you can't always
-get the blacks. They are just like mules, carabao buffalo, or jacks.
-They'll work on ten cents a day and get fat; they don't know any
-better," I'd tell him.
-
-But he would shake his old, shaggy head and mutter:
-
-"What good, what good, anyway?"
-
-As a matter of fact, they did no harm aboard besides befouling the air
-of the alleyways with their eternal opium smoking. They had nothing at
-all to do with the men forward, and the only person who appeared to
-be able to hold intercourse with them was Komuri. He understood their
-lingo or singsong way of telling it, and he would talk to them for
-hours during the evening after the supper things were washed up, and
-Jack, the steward, had turned in.
-
-I was a bit suspicious of this, for I don't like men of the after
-guard to be intimate with either the crew or the passengers. It starts
-something before long, and the voyage across the Pacific is a long one
-if nothing else. Slade commented upon the Japanese often, and he rather
-disliked our little second steward for his untiring efforts in behalf
-of the ladies. Slade was a jealous man, although he was a seaman from
-clew to earing, and his attentions to Miss Aline were more and more
-marked as the schooner sped on her course.
-
-"Why shouldn't I get married?" he used to say to me when we had a
-chance to be together, which was seldom enough. "Why shouldn't I get a
-wife, and take up the simple life of the farmer? I've been through all
-the hardness of seagoing, and I'm tired of it. What is a man, after
-all, if he sticks to it? He gets to be a skipper of some blamed hooker
-that'll make him a couple of thousand a year when he is too old to
-enjoy spending it. Then he loses her, maybe, and then where is he? A
-fit subject, for the sailors' home. No, I'm going to marry that woman
-and get a berth ashore. You watch me."
-
-Of course, I encouraged him all I thought necessary. I even grinned
-at times when I thought of the picture he would make as a husband of a
-woman like Miss Aline MacDonald--after he had been on the beach for a
-year or two.
-
-And so we ran our westing down, and drew near the one hundred and
-sixtieth meridian to the northward of the Marshall Islands. Here the
-trade failed us for a wonder, and began to get fitful and squally. At
-times it would come with a rush, and then die away altogether, the
-squalls being accompanied by rain. A mighty swell began to heave in
-from the southeast diagonally across the trade swell, and it lumped up
-some, heaving the schooner over and rolling her down to her bearings
-when the wind failed to hold her.
-
-The glass fell, and the air became sultry, the sun glowing like a ball
-of red copper in the hazy atmosphere. The squall clouds grew heavier,
-and when the sun shone between them it sent long rays, fan-shaped,
-through the mist.
-
-The old man came on deck, and viewed the sea with a critical eye. It
-was nearly eight bells, and Slade was on watch. I came out and watched
-them take the sun for meridian altitude--both of them sometimes did
-this together--and when the bells struck off, Slade came down from the
-poop, and joined me on the main deck.
-
-"What'd you make of the weather, old man?" he asked.
-
-"Looks dirty to me; glass falling and the hot squalls coming from that
-quarter--whew! Look at it!"
-
-As I spoke a huge roller swept under the schooner, lifting her skyward,
-and then dropping her slowly down the side. It was an enormous sea--a
-hill of water full forty feet high--and it rolled like a living
-mountain, a mighty mass that made nothing of the trade swell, and told
-of some tremendous power behind it.
-
-The sea ran swiftly, with a quick, live feeling. As sure as death there
-was awful wind somewhere in that peaceful ocean, driving with immense
-force and resistless power.
-
-Slade looked askance at the topsails. As he gazed the old man sang out
-from aft:
-
-"Clew up the topsails and roll them up snug. Put extra gaskets on them!"
-
-Then came the main and mizzen along with the outer jibs, and by the
-time the watch had their dinner we were close reefing the mizzen and
-taking the bonnet out of the foresail.
-
-Miss Aline was on deck, as the sudden motion was so extraordinary that
-to remain below meant to be seasick. Her aunt came up from a hasty
-meal, and clung to the poop rail and watched us work.
-
-"Oh, those gallant men!" she murmured to her niece. "See how they climb
-like monkeys upon that awful sail. Romantic heroes! Yes, Aline, they
-are wonderful, and the way that officer talks to them is a revelation.
-Just hear him."
-
-I was at that moment holding forth to a couple of squareheads upon
-the evident virtues of passing reef points properly, and I may have
-slipped my etiquette a bit, for my language was such that I was almost
-persuaded to follow it with action. But I had heard enough. I stopped.
-The men went on lazily, growling at the work.
-
-"Reefing a ship in a dead calm," grumbled one, "ten minutes for the
-eats, and then we'll loose these here p'ints out ag'in, and take the
-sail to the winch."
-
-I was too angry to hear more. Here was an old lady putting me queer
-with men who ought to know better than talk when they were expected to
-hurry. At least they should not criticize their officers.
-
-"Get along, you Scandaluvian sons of Haman! Get those points in lively,
-or the squall'll break before you know it--an' I'll be the rain,
-thunder, and lightning!" I roared.
-
-I refused to look at the two passengers, and went to the forward end
-of the poop, and looked down at the Chinks, who were seated in the
-waterways eating their rice and long-lick--molasses. Just what to do
-with these fellows seemed to me a problem. We could hardly lock them in
-now, and if trouble came along quickly they would be in it, right in
-the middle.
-
-The old man came from below, and gazed solemnly across the misty sea,
-and I went to him.
-
-"How about it?" he asked. "Hadn't we better house them Chinks now,
-before it's too late? They'll die of suffocation in those alleyways
-with the ports shut fast--I suppose you shut the ports in, didn't you?"
-he said.
-
-"Sure. Everything is snugged in below. Komuri saw to it. He knows how
-to talk to the Mongolians--tell them they must keep the ports shut.
-But I don't like leaving them on deck, even if it is hot enough to
-roast potatoes on the deck planks. How's the glass, sir?"
-
-"Bottom dropped out of it somehow; mercury concave and 'way down.
-There's some unusual disturbance knocking about this sea. There's
-trouble ahead--typhoon season, you know. Nothing but wind moves that
-awful swell. Look at that!"
-
-A hill of water rolled majestically onward, catching us under the
-counter, and sending us along its great, smooth crest, then dropping us
-again as we had hardly steering way under the short canvas.
-
-"I'd like to know which way it's coming--lay our course to drift out
-of it, or run, but who knows--who knows before it strikes? I wish you
-would see to the gear forward. I don't want things to get loose. And
-take charge. No, sir; don't let anything out of the way happen while
-you're on deck."
-
-I saw the old man was getting nervous. The low pressure and the
-sultriness were telling on him. He knew what was coming well enough,
-and fretted under it. It was hard waiting, even for an old seaman like
-himself. Slade came on deck, and puffed carelessly at his pipe, gazing
-about, and then going aft to chat with the ladies. He was always ready
-to cheer them up. Nothing would happen--positively nothing. There
-was no use of their getting nervous at the heavy swell. It had often
-happened before--a heavy swell and no wind, 'way out here in the middle
-of the Pacific. No telling where the storm might be, but, of course it
-wouldn't be near us--oh, no.
-
-Oleson came aft to me.
-
-"Shall I lock in the Chinks?" he asked.
-
-"Yes," I answered. "Lock 'em up, put a padlock on both doors, and see
-that they don't get loose again until this is over."
-
-Oleson went to Komuri. The Jap listened to him, and then repeated the
-order, passing the word like a seaman should, without comment. The
-Chinks followed him into their quarters in the alleyways, and Oleson
-locked the doors on the outside, putting extra padlocks on them. The
-alleyways were upon the main deck, and shut off from the lazaret by a
-bulkhead.
-
-"If honorable mate will let me open those ports inside, Chinese men
-will be able to breathe better--air very hot in there," said Komuri.
-
-"All right, king; go ahead. And if she lists over and drowns them like
-rats in a trap you'll be the man to loose them--see?" I warned him.
-
-"I'll take care them, me," said Komuri. "If honorable ship, she turns
-over, me, Komuri, will see to ports. Very hot inside there."
-
-I turned away and watched the horizon. The haze was thickening, and the
-squalls were beginning to come with more force than before. A sudden
-spurt of wind sang hoarsely in the rigging, and a drift of spray flew
-upward.
-
-The men were still at work making things snug when I heard a murmuring,
-a moaning, vast, filling the air, then dying away again. It was all
-about us, seemingly upon all sides. Then again I heard a harplike note
-of great volume. The horizon disappeared in the southeast, and the
-blue-steel bank of vapor shut off the sunlight. It grew dark and gloomy.
-
-"She's coming along all right in a few minutes," said Slade, who came
-near to me and passed on to his room. He came on deck in a couple of
-minutes, with an oilskin coat buttoned fast about him, and he sweltered
-in its heat. I still stood at the weather rigging.
-
-"Go get your rain clothes on," he said, coming to relieve me.
-
-"Nix! Let her go as it is--better wet with salt water than sweat," I
-replied.
-
-The skipper came forward. He suggested that the two passengers go
-below, and Jack, the steward, with Komuri to assist him, managed to get
-them below without protest, although it was something like ninety-six
-or seven in that saloon.
-
-A white streak spread upon the sea. The squall struck, snoring away
-with a vigor that told of more coming. The spumedrift flew over us.
-Then another, and another furious blast of wind bore down upon the
-schooner, and she lay slowly over until her rail was submerged.
-
-In five minutes the hurricane was roaring over us, and the _Tanner_ lay
-upon her beam ends while we struggled with the mizzen, and held the
-wheel hard up to throw her off, the weight of the wind holding her down
-with a giant hand.
-
-Yelling and struggling, all hands now tried to get that mizzen in. It
-was a waste of time. I saw the skipper clinging to the boom and using
-his knife upon the canvas, and did likewise. With a thundering roar the
-sail split, torn to ribbons. We could not make ourselves heard in the
-chaos of sound, but waved frantically our orders and helped as only
-good seamen can.
-
-But the _Tanner_ refused to go off. She lay flat out with her
-cross-trees in the lift of the sea, and she hung there. The
-forestaysail burst with a crack that we heard aft, and vanished as if
-it had been snow in a jet of steam. The bonneted foresail held with the
-wind roaring over the top of it, spilling away, but still keeping full
-enough to keep from slatting and bursting. It was the heaviest canvas
-and brand new, and all the time squall after squall bore upon the
-straining ship, roaring, screaming with the blast of a gun as the puffs
-came and went.
-
-That wind was like a wall of something solid. To move in it was
-enough to tax the strength. It pressed one against what was to
-leeward--pressed him, held him and bore upon him like a weight of
-something solid. To let go meant to run the risk of being blown bodily
-away into the sea.
-
-We clung along the weather rail, and hung on with both hands, watching
-the white smother fore and aft, but unable to look to windward for an
-instant against the blast. The outfly and uproar was so tremendous that
-all sounds were lost in it. I found myself near Slade and the old man,
-all three clinging to the rail, and gasping for breath. The skipper's
-gray head shone bare in the blast, and the white foam flecked it, and
-dripped from his beard, his ruddy cheeks glowing red in contrast. His
-teeth were set, and he was just holding on.
-
-For a long time we three hung there, and did nothing but try to survive
-the fury of that hurricane. The forward part of the schooner was
-blotted out, and I just remember that to leeward, where I could look,
-the surge boiled and foamed clear up to the hatch coamings.
-
-I thought of the women below, and knew they were safe for the time
-being. Then I remembered the starboard alleyway, and the ports that
-Komuri had left open to give the Chinks air. The alleyway was now
-completely submerged; the ports far below the surface of the sea, the
-Chinamen were caught there like rats in a trap.
-
-The narrow space must even now be filling up, and I thought of the poor
-coolies struggling against that door the carpenter had so securely
-locked and fastened upon them. They could never break it open, for upon
-it we had placed our safety against another uprising, and the double,
-two-inch planks bolted crossways would stand more than the weight of
-the crowd that would be able to surge against it. The alleyway could
-fill entirely without any water getting below.
-
-I grabbed Slade by the arm, and pointed at the lower deck.
-
-"The Chinks--below--can't get out!" I roared against the hurricane.
-
-Slade grinned a sickly grin and nodded. Then he ducked his head
-against the wind and bellowed back:
-
-"Can't help it--can't go there--sure death!"
-
-I fancied I could hear the outcries of the imprisoned men, but the
-deep, bass undertone of the hurricane roared away overhead and swept
-away the impression.
-
-It was sickening to think of it. Fully twenty men were in that
-alleyway, and the four eight-inch ports were letting in four streams of
-sea water, for the Chinamen would not know enough to jam them full of
-clothes or anything they could get hold of, being little better than
-animals in point of intelligence.
-
-If the schooner would only pay off she would right herself and let the
-openings come above the sea level; but she hung there dead, beaten down
-by a blast so terrific that it seemed like a solid wall of something
-heavy tearing upon her and crushing her life out. It took the breath
-away, and I found myself gasping, trying to get air to breathe, sucking
-in the flying drift and spray, and choking, holding one hand over my
-nose and mouth to keep from actually drowning in the smother.
-
-It seemed as if we had already been hove down a full hour, and I was
-tiring. The schooner held doggedly broadside in the trough of the
-sea, which was now appalling in height, and was breaking solidly over
-her high rail and upturned side. We could not last much longer in the
-dangerous position, and I began to believe we were lost. Our hatches
-were closed, and no water could get below unless something gave way,
-but it was certain something would go before long under that strain.
-
-I looked hopelessly at the man at the wheel, who had passed a lashing
-upon his waist, and was straddling the shaft, clinging to the spokes
-with desperation. I wondered if he still held the wheel hard up, but
-knew that in her present knocked-down state it would make little
-difference, for she would not steer without some headsail to swing her
-out and off that mighty sea.
-
-I crawled along the rail, fighting my way hand over hand, passing the
-skipper and gaining the edge of the poop. I yelled to Douglas, who was
-the man straddling the wheel shaft, but he only shook his head and
-ducked from the squalls.
-
-While I bawled for him to tell me what helm she carried, I was aware
-of a figure crawling from the companionway to the after cabin. It
-came creeping up just under me, up the almost perpendicular deck, and
-it looked like a big monkey until it came right into me, and then I
-recognized Komuri, our little steward.
-
-Komuri was yellow, a pasty yellow, and his wrinkled face looked old and
-haggard. He was only partly dressed, and he clawed the rail frantically
-for a hand hold. He looked the worst-scared Jap I had ever seen or
-dreamed of. He climbed close to me.
-
-"Men locked in--all die--ports open," he screeched in my ear.
-
-"I know--can't help it--door under water--no tools," I yelled in
-reply, and he howled something that ended in a screech that was
-unintelligible, for over it all sounded that deep, bass roar,
-thundering, booming, vibrating into chaos all sounds.
-
-I watched him, and he climbed past me, making his way forward with
-amazing speed, considering he was crawling along a wall which had been
-the deck. He made the break of the poop, and disappeared, going in the
-direction of the forward house, although how he ever expected to get
-there was beyond reason.
-
-Something made me follow him, and soon Slade and myself were at the
-edge of the poop, and gazing down at the partly submerged door of the
-starboard alleyway. While we looked, Komuri came climbing along the
-rail of the ship, disappearing now and then under the solid water that
-swept her, but, to our amazement, still keeping hold of the pins, and
-gaining slowly toward us.
-
-In one hand he held Oleson's ax, and he was coming toward us, coming to
-do a piece of work we had already given up as impossible.
-
-No word was spoken as Komuri struggled up to where we clung and gasped
-for breath, half drowned in the rush of water.
-
-I passed the end of a line about him after a fashion, and he dropped
-off to starboard down the steep slant, and instantly went under as a
-huge sea fell over the schooner.
-
-We held the line. Then we saw him again, and he was hacking away at the
-door, chopping at the lock and staple while he swung scrambling with
-his feet against the planks. Slade thoughtfully dropped down other
-lines, and made them fast.
-
-I could see little of what was going on. The seas were breaking over
-us now with tremendous volume, and it seemed only a question of a few
-minutes before the schooner must go down, anyhow, for she couldn't lie
-on her beam ends very long without something giving way.
-
-The work of getting at those Chinks appeared to me now a useless labor.
-We would all be where there was no caste, no coolies, in a short time.
-And yet such is the habit of a seaman, he works on against certain
-failure at times, when ordinary folk would accept the verdict and quit.
-
-I held Komuri until my arms were nearly paralyzed, and I was fainting
-with exertion and lack of air. The first thing I knew of what he had
-done was when a Chink came climbing monkey fashion up one of the lines,
-followed by another and another, their yellow faces pasty and drawn,
-and their pigtails streaming after them. They clung along the weather
-side, and lashed themselves fast to whatever they could find. I saw the
-dark figures of a couple fade away in the smother to leeward, and knew
-they had gone to where all Chinks go sooner or later, but the rest came
-up and clung for life there in the strident breath of the typhoon, and
-the booming roar drowned out even their shrieks and yelps.
-
-I tried to haul Komuri up again, but could not. I howled for Slade
-to help me, but he was separated by a row of Chinks, and couldn't
-reach me. I hammered the nearest Chinaman over the head in frantic
-desperation to make him haul line and save the little Jap, but the
-fellow only ducked the blows, which were too weak to hurt much.
-
-Komuri, exhausted, could not climb back. He could no longer help
-himself; and he was trusting to me to get him up from the white smother
-beneath that was drowning him. The madness of my weakness came over
-me. I had been a bucko mate with ready hand, and could take them by
-and large as they came from the dock to the forecastle, but here I was
-weakening, holding to a line at the end of which was the bravest little
-man I had even seen, the gamest little fighter--Komuri, son of Samurai,
-the fighting class of the Japanese.
-
-And Komuri was going to his death because I couldn't help him. On and
-on I struggled with the line, bellowing curses, but I could get little
-or no line over the pin, and I was growing surely weaker and weaker.
-
-Then I stopped, and tried to see if there was any chance to help, any
-chance to save the little hero. I saw Komuri dangling in the foam, his
-face upturned to me, and a smile upon his yellow, wrinkled visage. He
-waved feebly to me, and I knew he was signaling for me to haul him
-up--and was wondering why I didn't.
-
-"Oh, my God, you poor little devil!" I howled. "It's too bad--too bad!"
-
-A gigantic sea crashed over the schooner, a mountain of water. I passed
-the line about my waist, and snatched a turn to keep from being washed
-away. That was the last I remembered for some time.
-
-When I regained my senses I was lying on the deck, and Slade was
-dragging me by the arm toward the cabin doors. The roar of the
-hurricane still boomed over us--the wild rush of the sea--but it came
-from aft now, and I knew they had at last got her off the wind, and
-were running her either to hell or safety.
-
-Ten minutes later I was struggling up the companionway again to the
-deck, where the old man was now conning her, and watching her run
-seventeen knots an hour before a series of hurricane squalls that
-simply lifted her almost bodily out of the sea.
-
-I saw we had passed the center of the cyclone, for we had the wind
-almost directly opposite from where it was when we lay knocked down. I
-got to the shelter of the mizzen, and from there watched the men at the
-wheel hold her as she ran. Some one had loosed a bit of canvas forward,
-but it had blown away, and the ribbon streamers stretched and cracked
-until they vanished in the blast.
-
-"How'd you do it?" I yelled to Slade, who clung in the lee.
-
-"Squalls let up sudden--hit the center--she righted, and then ran off
-when we hit the other side of it!" howled the mate.
-
-"Where's Komuri?" I howled.
-
-"Don't know--must have gone to leeward. Some Chinks gone, too--you came
-near going."
-
-That was all I could get from Slade. But I knew all that was
-necessary. Komuri had gone to the port of missing ships. He had died
-as a Samurai should, facing his end fearlessly, fighting to the last
-for others in the hope to save them, the ones he had tried to help by
-giving them air and leaving their ports open when they should have
-been closed. He had known his responsibility, and had done what we had
-failed to do.
-
-There were three Chinamen missing, but our own men were safe. They had
-got under the side of the engine house, where they were protected from
-both the sea and wind. They clung there until the vessel righted, and
-then turned to with a will to save the ship.
-
-We ran the _Tanner_ all that day and the following night, keeping her
-before a mighty sea that almost overran us. She steered well once she
-got off before it, and after we got canvas on her forward she was safe
-enough. It had been a close squeak for all hands, and we breathed
-easier as she ran out of the disturbance and came again upon her
-course. A week later we ran her in behind the reef of Guam, and came to
-anchor off the town of Agaña, where we were to discharge part of our
-cargo and the Chinese.
-
-In behind the barrier we ran her without further incident, and as
-the wind fell we rolled up the canvas and let her drift into fifteen
-fathoms before letting go the hook.
-
-The ladies came on deck for the first time since the typhoon, and gazed
-happily at the beautiful island crowned with green, tropical foliage--a
-welcome relief to the eye that had seen only the blue water for so
-long. They were to leave us here, and we were to go on to Manila,
-coming later to take them back upon the return voyage. It would give
-them three months on Guam.
-
-"Where is our little Jap, Kamuri--we haven't seen him for a week?"
-asked Miss Aline. "He was nice about getting our things together--we
-really must have him help us ashore."
-
-"Hasn't Slade told you?" I said.
-
-"No. What do you mean?" she asked in surprise.
-
-"Komuri is dead--lost in the typhoon--he saved the Chinks," I answered.
-
-Both women gasped their surprise.
-
-"I am so sorry!" exclaimed the younger.
-
-"And he was so good," said her aunt. "I wondered why Mr. Slade hadn't
-spoken of him before. I suppose it's because Mr. Slade feels that he is
-now to be your guardian and must protect you from all ill news--oh, I
-forgot--you hadn't heard. Yes, Mr. Slade is the man. He saved Aline's
-life, you know, and they are to be married after we get back. Strange
-he didn't tell you."
-
-I thought so, too. Slade was a sly dog--and he had used my collars,
-also, in his wooing. I was--well, I was ready to congratulate any man
-who could make up his mind to marry.
-
-But I turned away so abruptly that I thought I had to apologize to
-Slade afterward, to keep from getting in a row with him. But Slade
-understood, and squeezed my hand.
-
-"There's some of that port left over below," he said, and he led the
-way down.
-
-He filled two glasses to the brim, handing me one.
-
-"To your health--and that of Miss Aline," I said stiffly, feeling that
-there was something to say, or do.
-
-"No," said Slade slowly, thoughtfully, "to the best man."
-
-"Sure--to me, the best man at the wedding?" I said, in feigned surprise.
-
-"Oh, no," corrected the mate. "Not at all--although you are not so bad,
-old chap." He raised his eyes and looked straight into mine. "We drink
-to the best man in the ship--who was in the ship--to Komuri."
-
-And we drained our glasses.
-
-
-
-
-AT THE END OF THE DRAG-ROPE
-
-
-There were five men all told in the fishing schooner _Flying Star_.
-I had known them all well, and had been shipmate with four of them.
-Captain Johnny Sparks was a Dutchman, a "squarehead," but a good
-seaman, and he had fished on the Hatteras Banks during three bluefish
-seasons. His vessel was a Provincetown specimen--what used to be termed
-the "Gloucester fisherman" type, before the decadence of that port in
-the industry which once made it famous had ended its shipbuilding.
-
-She was a small vessel, much smaller than the modern Provincetown
-fisherman, which has a short foremast, a mainmast planted almost
-amidships, and sweeping canoe bows with overhang. No, she was of the
-old type--two sticks stuck upright in her at almost equal distances,
-marking her into three almost equal parts; a main-topmast sprung well
-forward and stayed well aft to steady the "whip" of long and continuous
-plunging into a lifting head sea. She was "chunky" in model, bows
-rather bluff, almost like a coaster, and her stern was of the old-time
-sawed-off pattern, sunk low in the water, an ugly stern for running in
-a heavy sea when the lift is quick and fast.
-
-She was not worth over two thousand dollars, but Captain Johnny owned
-half of her, and he had no criticisms to make of her behavior in heavy
-weather. With a long, straight keel and full under-body, she was an
-excellent sea craft, provided she was properly handled.
-
-I was mate of the passenger ship _Prince Alfred_ with Bill Boldwin,
-running from New York to the West Indies, and as we ran on schedule we
-often fell in with the Hatteras fishermen twice during a voyage.
-
-Johnny was fishing three miles north of the Diamond Shoal Lightship
-as we passed him on our voyage out. He stood upon his quarterdeck
-and waved to me. I was on the bridge, and bawled out I would have
-some fruit for him on the return trip. He nodded and waved his hand
-in appreciation, and his cook poked his head out of the galley and
-grinned. His boats were scattered along the shoal, all hauling up
-bluefish as fast as they could.
-
-Four other vessels from New York were on the grounds, but I recognized
-none of them. Our passengers gazed at the small boats tossing as only
-light-built dories can toss in a lively sea; and they commented on the
-fishing.
-
-As a rule, the average landsman thinks all fishing is done on the Grand
-or George's Banks. They get the idea from writers who know these waters
-well, and it never enters their heads that the northern banks are but
-a very small part of the great Atlantic fishing grounds, where the
-professional fisherman must toil to wrest his living from the salt sea.
-
-It was due to a Gloucester Yankee, though, that the great fishing
-of Campeche Bank became known. Hove-to in a vicious norther a few
-score miles off Galveston, the "cod-hauler" was driven gradually
-off shore until he was far away from the land. Suddenly from a
-fathomless gulf--he had had the perseverance to keep his lead going
-at intervals--he fetched the ground in thirty fathoms, and gradually
-shoaled his water.
-
-With a hook just above the lead, he soon began to haul up snappers, and
-he came running into port a few days later with his schooner loaded to
-her bearings with as prime fish as ever came out of the sea.
-
-Captain Johnny had fished there a year, but owing to the slowness of
-the _Flying Star_ he had given it up until the steam patrol boat had
-been put on to make the rounds and buy the fish on the grounds. It was
-Johnny who had gone into Sabine once for water when Dick Hollister was
-marshal.
-
-Hollister was a saturnine chap, who wore a heavy Colt with seven
-notches in the handle, each notch meant for some beggar he had been
-forced to perforate in the course of his strenuous career. He was
-accounted one of the most fearless and able marshals in Texas. One
-morning he visited the _Flying Star_, apparently looking for a man he
-wanted for a certain episode in horses. He swaggered about the decks
-with his Colt in full view, and caused so much interest that he
-impeded the work.
-
-Johnny spoke softly to him--he always had a soft way of speaking--and
-told him he must get ashore. The marshal turned and gazed at the little
-"squarehead" in disdain; but Captain Johnny, who was sitting on his
-hatch-combing, looked up with gentle gray eyes and pointed to the jetty.
-
-"You get avay--get oudt wid you, my friend. I don't got no time fer
-wastin' wid circus-actor mens wid funny fringes and artillery dragging
-mid dere waist belts--git!"
-
-And as the marshal didn't move, Johnny shied a coiled line at him,
-hitting him somewhat violently in the body.
-
-Instantly Hollister drew his Colt.
-
-"You blamed little shrimp! if you do that again I'll plug you," he said
-quietly, wiping the fish scales and salt water from his clothes. "Don't
-make any mistake; I'm not your friend."
-
-Captain Johnny was especially blue and sad that morning, so he gazed at
-the marshal, while his hand reached for a heavy sinker.
-
-"If you ain't my friend, fire away not; if you are mine friend, you
-shoot me, for I'm tired enough wid dis business, an' I don't vant do be
-livin' always, forever, yet. Shoot, mein dear friend, shoot--or if not
-mine friend, den take dis!"
-
-And he tossed the pound lead with such precision that it stretched
-Hollister flat upon the deck before he could take good aim to do more
-than rip the collar off Johnny's coat with his fire. When he came to,
-Johnny was bathing his head where the sinker had cut him, and pouring
-good whisky down his throat.
-
-"You are mine friend--but a poor shot--take another drink with me, and
-den go. Here's your blunderbust--you interrupts de vork on de deck--git
-oudt!"
-
-And yet there was a lot of energy in that sturdy form standing there
-upon the deck of his undermanned schooner waving his acknowledgments to
-me upon the bridge of the liner. Yes, Captain Johnny Sparks was a good
-seaman. May the deep ocean hold him gently in its eternal embrace, for
-he loved it--loved it as only a true seaman does!
-
-We made the run south, and were coming up with a full complement of
-passengers from Jamaica, when we began to notice a definite change in
-the weather. It was the hurricane season, September, and the heat was
-oppressive. The passengers lay about the decks in chairs all day and
-half the night, getting what air the ship made with her rush of fifteen
-knots an hour through the quiet sea. We ran along through the Passage,
-leaving Cape Maysi out of sight before dark, and rapidly hauling up
-under the lee of the Great Inagua Bank. Here in the smooth sea night
-fell upon the ocean, and I went on the bridge for the first watch.
-
-As I came into the pilot house to sign the order-book for my course,
-Captain Boldwin called my attention to the glass. It had fallen rapidly
-during the last few hours, and was now dangerously low.
-
-"Keep a good lookout," he said, "and call me at the first signs of a
-change." I signed the order-book, and he went below.
-
-How many times has an officer signed that order-book before even going
-on the bridge? And how many times has the said officer made an entirely
-different course from that signed for? But then steamship companies do
-not supply ships and coal for their officers to study navigation. It
-would not look well on paper. Every officer of a passenger ship is a
-licensed master, a captain; and no first-class company will ship any
-other kind of man to go on the bridge to take charge for the watch
-of four hours, for during that time the ship is absolutely under his
-command, and it is necessary that he shall be a skilled navigator,
-capable of taking the ship along just as safely should accident befall
-her commander. For this responsibility he receives from seventy-five
-to a hundred dollars per month; and half of the passengers whose lives
-he holds in the hollow of his hand for half the night look upon him as
-little better than a ship's cook!
-
-We appeared to follow the low barometer, or it to follow us, for when
-daylight came we were still running smoothly across the Atlantic with
-nothing but an oppressive heat and mugginess to warn the landsman of
-the low pressure.
-
-"There's something coming along behind us; something there astern that
-will probably make things howl," said Boldwin, as he came on deck in
-the morning.
-
-The sun was brassy in a coppery haze, but it was clear enough to get
-a good sight for longitude. I called off three good sights, took the
-note, and went below to work the longitude before breakfast. On ships
-running across the Gulf or Florida Stream from the southward, bound for
-New York or some port south of it, there is every necessity for getting
-the westing accurate. We always found that, running diagonally across
-for the Diamond Shoal Light vessel, we were set about twelve miles to
-the northeast while running at from twelve to fifteen knots. This was
-almost a regular fixed factor, but in heavy weather it was not always
-safe to run full speed inside of it.
-
-To make to the eastward of the lightship was well enough, but to fetch
-to the westward was the one thing that has always made Boldwin nervous,
-and rightly so. If he missed it going to the eastward, he would pick
-up some other landfall to the northward, if he was too far off; but if
-he missed it going to the westward in a driving gale, when it was too
-thick to see half a mile--well, we had never done so yet, and had no
-reason to pray for the experience.
-
-We were a fast liner, full of fruit and passengers, and we could not
-stop for anything on the run up. With fifty thousand bunches of bananas
-below, we must drive the ship to her destination as fast as she could
-go, and neither hurricane nor calm must stop her. The company seldom
-kept a seaman long who brought in fifty thousand bunches of ruined
-fruit, some of it twelve hands, and most of it more than eight, selling
-at retail at nearly a dollar a bunch.
-
-Two years before, Boldwin, after being hove-to for thirty-six hours
-in a gale, had brought in his ship laden with fruit he had taken under
-protest, the "yellow" being plainly in sight at the ends of more than
-half the bunches. He had docked, and a score of men had waded about
-for several days up to their hips in a mess which, once seen, causes
-all lovers of bananas to eschew that fruit forever afterward. Banana
-juice will cut the steel plates of a ship's side almost like diluted
-sulphuric acid--but they gave him another chance.
-
-It was late in the afternoon of the day we had run clear of the land,
-when the first signs of the hurricane of September 19, 1903, made its
-appearance. The swell began to roll heavily from the southeast with a
-curious cross-roll from the westward, making a peculiarly uncomfortable
-sea for a steamer running northward. It dropped away from under our
-counter, and the _Prince Alfred_ dipped her taffrail almost to the
-unruffled surface. Then she would rise upon it, and, as it lifted well
-under her underbody, she would roll to port and throw her stern so high
-that the starboard screw would race in a storm of foam at the surface,
-shaking her tremendously, and annoying the passengers who happened to
-occupy after-staterooms.
-
-When the second officer, Smith, came on duty, I made my way aft to take
-a look over things--to see that the small boats were securely lashed;
-that gratings and gear were in place, for it was evident that we were
-to have a piece of dirty weather. A large, fat, pale-faced woman poked
-her head out of window and demanded that I have the starboard engine
-stopped at once, as it was too racking on her nerves. She declared she
-had stood it as long as she could, and would lodge a complaint with
-the president of the company immediately she got ashore, if her demand
-were not complied with instantly. I started to argue the case, but she
-cut me short, exclaiming that "they never did such things on the French
-boats."
-
-All the gear was in order aft, and I had just made my way to the
-bridge, when the Captain called my attention to a haze gathering to the
-southward.
-
-"The glass is starting down again--dropped two more tenths," he said.
-"We'll run foul of something before eight bells. Looks like it was
-following the Stream along to the northward; it usually does."
-
-A heavy, blue-black bank of cloud, smooth, and swept into an immense
-semicircle over the southern horizon, but rising fast, told of the
-beginning of trouble. Half an hour later we began to feel the squalls,
-which came suddenly and with vicious spurts of fine rain.
-
-"According to old Captain Valdes," said Boldwin, "if you place your
-back to the wind, the center of the blow is to the left, or port side,
-and a bit behind you. This breeze is coming in from the east'ard good
-and quick, and it looks like we'll fetch the center straight and fair
-the way we're heading."
-
-"Would you stop her and heave her up?" I asked.
-
-"Stop her? Not as long as she'll swim. What do you think we are--a
-sand-barge? Stop a liner running on schedule with a fortune of bananas
-lying below? Get those ventilators trimmed, and put three covers on
-the after hatch and lash them fast. We'll run her. Who do you think
-would take this packet out the next voyage if he hove her to?"
-
-As it was only too evident that it would be my chance, I said nothing.
-
-The light grew dim as the gray pall of the storm quickly overspread the
-sky. The dull gray light made the sea appear queer and dark, with the
-great heave now running quickly, as though a mighty power were working
-close behind it. The tops of the breaking combers had a peculiar lift
-to them as they met the cross-swell, and the racing of the starboard
-engine became more and more violent. A terrific squall bore upon the
-ship, seemed to almost lift her bodily before it. The roar of the wind
-whirling through the heavy standing rigging told of its velocity, and
-then we waded right into the thick of it, with the _Prince Alfred_
-lurching along eighteen knots an hour over a sea which was torn into a
-white and gray world that ended, so far as our vision was concerned, a
-few fathoms from the ship's side.
-
-Boldwin was standing on the bridge, holding to the rail, and leaning to
-the blasts as though it took his whole weight to bear up against them.
-I came close to him.
-
-"Get every one ... below! Lock in ... passengers!" I caught his words
-with my ear ten inches from his mouth. "Cover ... hatches ... all fast."
-
-I knew what he meant. When the _Prince Alfred_ closed down her cargo
-there was something unusual happening. Making my way down the bridge
-steps, I got the men of the watch together. It was tough work, for the
-sea was now ugly, and we were running our weather-rail down at each
-roll, and scooping up plenty of water which she sent across her decks
-to leeward. To stand up without holding on meant to be blown bodily
-against the lee rail at the risk of going over.
-
-It was an hour before I got back to the bridge, and when I did so, the
-squalls were becoming more frequent, and more and more violent, but
-there was no shift yet. It soon grew dark--a black dark--and we tore
-along into the blackness, unable to see two fathoms ahead. As yet we
-were outside the Stream, and consequently not in the usual line of the
-coasters, which are the dread of the liner's officers, for nothing
-is so uncomfortable as the sudden raising of the dim and sometimes
-half-extinguished lights of a schooner on a thick night while tearing
-along before a gale. Having the right of way, the sailing vessel has
-nothing to do but keep her course, while the steamship, with but a
-few seconds to spare, swings quickly to pass, sometimes missing a
-catastrophe by a few feet. A poor red light on such a night cannot be
-seen twenty fathoms.
-
-Before midnight the shift began. It came from the southward--a bad
-sign, for it told plainly that we were nearing the center of the
-disturbance; and as we were heading diagonally across the path of the
-storm, we were almost certain to bring up in its dread vortex. As chief
-officer, it would have been a bit out of place for me to suggest the
-thing the ordinary seaman would do--that is, heave to and work out of
-it. Boldwin stood on his bridge and kept her going.
-
-And yet it had to come. Before daylight the sea was terrific--the
-squalls coming with furious rushes, shifting, and hurling a frightful
-sea. A huge, lifting hill of water broke high above the taffrail, and
-roared a full fathom deep over the quarter-deck. The crash shook the
-steamer through her whole frame. It was as though she had struck a
-solid rock. The white glint of the foam showed through the blackness,
-but the dull, thunderous roar drowned all other sounds.
-
-Boldwin went to the speaking tube in the pilot house, called to the
-chief engineer to stand by to heave her to and watch the engines as she
-came into the trough.
-
-"We'll have to stop her," he said; and I nodded assent.
-
-In the pilot house the clanking of the steam steering gear sounded
-dully in the deep, sonorous undertone of the gale outside.
-
-Boldwin waited but a moment, and then gave the order:
-
-"Hard over, sir!" cried the quartermaster; and the rattling clank
-of the engine sounded the signal for me to take advantage of the
-opportunity to get outside by the lee door.
-
-If it had been blowing before while we were running, it was now a blast.
-
-The _Prince Alfred_ laid down her whole five hundred feet of steel side
-into that sea, and the crash of the mighty hill that swept her shook
-her as though she had been struck amidships by the ram of a battleship.
-The forward funnel guys parted, and I had a momentary glimpse of a
-great pillar of iron going over the side to leeward. Then she began to
-head the sea, and no human could face the storm of flying water which
-swept the bridge.
-
-With heads down, gasping for breath, Boldwin and myself gripped the
-bridge rail. The flying atmosphere tore past us. We dared not loose our
-grasp for an instant, and to get back to the shelter of the pilot house
-was impossible without following the iron rail aft.
-
-After a thunderous rush of quick and vicious squalls, there was a
-sudden lull. A giant comber showed ahead, and its white and foaming
-crest lifted clear into the night. She buried her whole forward deck,
-and, as the water cleared, we could see about us. The dull snore of a
-giant sea sounded close aboard. It was uncanny, this sudden stillness,
-full of a palpitating murmur and pregnant with an ominous power.
-
-"Right in it!" gasped Boldwin. "How does she head now?"
-
-"Southeast by south," I answered. "The next squall will probably come
-from the northwest."
-
-"Well, I guess we'll swing her while it's still--Lord, what an awful
-sea!"
-
-The _Prince Alfred_ came slowly around with her engines turning at
-half speed. The high, leaping hills of water seemed to come from all
-directions at once. They fell upon her decks and shook her up a
-bit, but did no damage. Five, ten, fifteen minutes passed. A distant
-murmuring sounded over the torn sea.
-
-"Which way?" asked Boldwin nervously.
-
-A puff of cool air blew straight in our faces; we had not noted how
-sultry it was, for we were soaking wet and exhausted. The puff blew to
-a breeze. Then came a spurt of rain and a faint flash of lightning. In
-a minute we were facing furious squalls, and the _Prince Alfred_, with
-a full head of steam, had all she could do to keep steering way with
-her nose pointed straight into the blast from nor'-nor'-west.
-
-It was in the gray of the early morning, while Boldwin and I were still
-on the bridge, and the second and third officers were in charge of the
-saloons quelling the panic, that we sighted something dead ahead. The
-squalls were still whirling over us with longer intervals between, but
-with still undiminished vigor. The great sea began to show in front now
-through the dim light, and it was all the full-powered liner could do
-to hold her own head to it. To swerve to either side meant falling off
-into the dangerous trough, with the hazard of not being able to regain
-her course. Even as it was, we had to more than once slow the port or
-starboard engine to enable her to point her nose straight into the
-hurricane.
-
-Upon the crest of a giant hill of water something showed black. It was
-a momentary glimpse, but Boldwin and I saw it instantly. It was close
-aboard and, as we yelled to each other and strained our eyes ahead,
-we made out the thin line of a mast. Boldwin dropped on his hands and
-knees and was blown to the pilot-house door. I waved my hand to ease
-her to starboard a little. Just then a sea struck us heavily upon the
-starboard bow, and held her with its rush. The next moment the shape
-ahead was high upon the crest of a mighty sea, and I recognized the
-stern of a vessel outlined against the gray pall.
-
-I looked over the side. The foam was lying dead with us, showing we
-were not going ahead more than a knot or two. Boldwin saw it also, and
-knew that to slew his ship now would mean to get struck a blow in the
-side which in that sea would probably prove fatal. He thought of his
-passengers. They must be considered first. Whatever was ahead was going
-to hit us, and it was due to those we had aboard that it must strike
-us as fairly upon the stem as we could land it. God help them, we must
-save our own!
-
-We plunged headlong into the trough, and right above us upon the
-following crest rose the stern of that sailing vessel. She was plainly
-in view now; so close that I recognized the sawed-off shape of an
-old-time fishing schooner. Upon her main a bit of rag like a trysail
-showed white. She was heading the sea at the end of her sea anchor, a
-long drag-rope, and as her deck showed, I saw she had been badly swept.
-
-There was no one in sight. She was going astern fast, much faster than
-we thought, for even while Boldwin tried to edge to starboard, and did
-all he could to swing his ship without getting his head thrown off with
-the sea, the stern sank just ahead of us in the hollow of a sea, and
-our stem rose above. I leaned forward and held my breath. The _Prince
-Alfred_ fell headlong into the hollow, and just as we struck I read the
-name _Flying Star_ painted large and white right across the transom.
-
-A dull grinding thud, which shook the _Prince Alfred_ but slightly, was
-all that came to us. A sea swung the wreck to port, and as she heeled
-and settled, I saw Johnny Sparks spring from the companionway, followed
-by several men. The next instant a great comber roared over them and
-the schooner disappeared, leaving nothing above the foam to show where
-she had floated a moment before. Something caught in my throat. I shut
-my eyes, and held my head down for I don't know how long.
-
-We came into port four days later with Boldwin on the bridge, his face
-lined and haggard. Below, thirty thousand dollars' worth of bananas
-slushed about in a ghastly mess, in spite of the pens and shorings. But
-the passengers were happy. Women in gay dresses came on deck and smiled
-and chatted, and children romped and played. The captain did not look
-at me--he had not since the collision--but he spoke to me for the first
-time.
-
-"See that everything is shipshape when we dock," said he, "and then
-meet me at the company's office at four o'clock. I'll probably not take
-her out next voyage--take a lay-off for a while--understand?"
-
-
-
-
-PIRATES TWAIN
-
-
-At last I was back in the regular liners of the Prince ships. My work
-on the _Heraldine_ had been appreciated by Lord Hawkes, the manager,
-and his lordship was no piker.
-
-He refused Boldwin my company when that worthy but thirsty skipper
-asked to have me back in the old _Prince Alfred_, where a certain lady
-whom I admired greatly was stewardess.
-
-The new _Prince George_, twenty-five thousand tons and a
-twenty-two-knot vessel, was wanting a first officer, and old man Hall
-was somewhat disposed to give me "a chance," as the saying is at sea
-when an officer applies for a berth.
-
-"You may report to the captain to-morrow at the dock," said his
-lordship, and our interview was at an end. Boldwin looked sour, for I
-had been a good mate to him, and he wanted me badly, but the manager's
-word was law.
-
-I found the giant liner all that modern improvements could make her.
-From her six-hundred-foot keel to her four immense funnel tops, she was
-a beauty.
-
-It would take a week to describe her many qualities, and I must admit
-it gave me a feeling of responsibility when I stepped upon her flying
-bridge and looked her over.
-
-There I would be in command every four hours, and when I gazed over her
-immense length and breadth it seemed indeed that I must be a person of
-some small ability to hold the job.
-
-No flippant remarks here, no joking about the passengers or the
-company. It was silence and dignity.
-
-How I stood it at first is more of a wonder to me, when I look back
-at the time, than the actual work, for really a ship's officer is not
-considered a mighty position, even though he does hold the lives of a
-couple of thousand folks in his keeping during his watch on deck.
-
-But I was not too old, and had ambition, for some day I wanted to have
-a little farm of my own and raise chickens and hogs--the true ambition
-of every seaman I ever met--and I wanted to ask a certain lady to run
-the said farm for me, or rather do the cooking, which is probably the
-same thing.
-
-Our crew was shipped by the agents. Old man Hall had nothing whatever
-to do but act as overseer of the navigators, which same were myself and
-a second officer named MacFarland.
-
-Mac was a good seaman, although he had never been in sail, but had
-risen from the apprentice school of officers established by the company
-to train men for its ships--and they were of course all steam.
-
-I must admit he knew more of express ships than I, but I had ten years
-more sea duty done, and I was something of a windjammer in my time.
-This gave me the rating with the older men who had served the same way
-in the old sailing vessels.
-
-We knew each other, and could depend always upon certain things in each
-other that no school could develop the same way. I sat at the head of
-the chief officers' table, and I bought a book of table etiquette to
-get the lay of the whack just right.
-
-It taught me many things I hadn't learned in a ship's forecastle, and
-soon I was able to speak to the prosperous-looking passengers without
-feeling that my tongue was in the way of my teeth.
-
-We carried three hundred first-class--that was some when you think
-of it--and we often herded fifteen hundred to two thousand in the
-steerage. Four hundred seconds added sometimes put our total complement
-over three thousand souls, counting, of course, our crew, stokers, and
-waiters.
-
-You will realize at once the inability of a chief mate getting even the
-slightest acquaintance with hundreds of the people who used the _Prince
-George_ for transportation across the ocean, and, if I could not get
-a line on them, it was equally impossible for the pursers, pursers'
-clerks, and stewards to do so.
-
-Mr. Samuels, the head purser, had a memory that was said to be
-infallible. He said he never forgot a face. Of the million or two
-people he came in contact with during his runs, he boasted that he
-could always tell if he had ever seen one of them before.
-
-I didn't believe it, of course; but, then, pursers have a way that
-many seamen can't understand, anyhow.
-
-Being an express ship, and carrying the first-class mail, we also had
-an express safe. This was built into the body of the vessel, and was
-like the new bank safes, with solid steel doors and time locks.
-
-Two watchmen took charge, alternating night and day, and the massive
-doors were not to be opened by any one alone. In that safe we often
-carried three or four million dollars in solid gold bars or gold coin.
-
-Sometimes the banking houses of the United States shipped as much as
-two million at a time in coin. Precautions were of the modern banking
-sort, and the giant safe caused no comment.
-
-The other safes of the purser and captain were just plain, every-day
-affairs, and seldom held more than a few thousand dollars. These were
-very different from the "through" safe.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I had been in the ship four months before I noticed a man who sat at
-my table. He had made a voyage with us the first run I made, and I
-remembered him as a clergyman who had relatives abroad in Europe, but
-who was himself an American.
-
-He was a very dignified man, about fifty-five years of age, and he
-knew a great deal. I enjoyed talking to him, for he told me of many
-places and events that were most interesting. But he never at any time
-discussed religion, or even spoke of subjects relating to it.
-
-Once on his second trip over, he came to my room, and presented me
-with a box of fine Havana cigars and, although it was against custom, I
-asked him in, and he came.
-
-We smoked while I should have been sleeping, but I was not by any means
-overworked, and I rather enjoyed his society, flattered of course that
-a man of such vast experience and learning should single out the chief
-officer for a companion.
-
-But then I knew many folks looked upon a master navigator as a likely
-person to know, and was not very much surprised, setting it down to his
-good taste and discernment--for I had gone a mile or two myself in my
-day, and had seen a few things both ashore and afloat.
-
-Once I remember he talked of finance and the great gold shipments that
-were disturbing the country. He had followed the administration in its
-effort to curb a panic that was threatened, and spoke of the money we
-carried in gold coin that was for the purpose of staying a run at that
-time upon a banking house that had many foreign affiliations.
-
-"The express safe is generally full, is it not, during times like
-these?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, we carry millions every voyage now," I answered, and noticed that
-the Reverend Mr. Jackson made a peculiar grimace as if amused at the
-news.
-
-The conversation immediately drifted off to Cape Town, where the
-minister had lately spent much time, and he soon left me to my slumber
-and cigars.
-
-I noticed that he had remarkable hands, immensely strong, as though he
-had done much hard work, and afterward I wondered at a small tattoo
-mark on his wrist just beneath the edge of his cuff. He had powerful,
-hairy wrists, and the blue mark showed very indistinctly through the
-black hair, but it caused me to think of him as a strange man.
-
-I asked him about it the next day when at the table, but he made an
-evasive answer, smiling at my compliment to his strong physique.
-
-"I was something of an athlete in my younger days," he finally
-admitted, "and you must not think that because of my profession I live
-a sedentary life. I work very hard among my parishioners, and play golf
-a great deal. Of course, you, as a seaman, would hardly appreciate the
-mysteries of this manly game."
-
-"I confess that it seems rather tame," I admitted; "seems like a poor
-sort of 'shinny' we used to play in America when I was a lad."
-
-"My wife plays it also, and she is very strong and agile from the
-exercise," said Mr. Jackson; "I hope you will meet her next month when
-I return, as she will probably go to London with me."
-
-I expressed pleasure at the thought, and noticed that Doctor Jackson
-was really quite a good-looking man, and there was no reason in the
-world why he should not possess a very pretty wife.
-
-His clean-shaven face, lined, it is true, as though he had spent much
-time at physical exertion of the heavier sort, was handsome enough. A
-large, high nose, not badly shaped, set in between two steel-blue eyes,
-wide apart, and his mouth, although thin-lipped and hard-looking, was
-not ugly, and his teeth were large, even, and snow-white.
-
-Altogether he was a man of strength and character from his appearance,
-and I remembered him for his kindness--and cigars.
-
-Three weeks later, upon the return voyage, he came aboard and told me
-he would bring his wife aboard the next morning, and was just then
-seeing to his room, which was amidships, and upon the lower or main
-deck, just above the express room and over the steel safe.
-
-He asked me if I thought the noise from below would disturb them, his
-wife being a nervous woman and irritable. I knew no sounds of any
-consequence would penetrate the deck, which was steel, and assured him
-that the voyage would be most pleasant, as the time of year was fine
-upon the western ocean.
-
-The next day I was too busy to notice the couple, but when we were at
-sea and had made our departure, allowing me to go below to dinner, I
-found that Doctor Jackson and his wife were seated at my table about
-midway down the row of seats.
-
-The minister nodded to me, and his wife smiled pleasantly. Her back
-was to the ports, and the light was bad, but I saw that she was about
-thirty, and very masculine in her appearance.
-
-She had a very good complexion, rosy and healthy, but her face had a
-peculiar hardness, a settling about the corners of the mouth that boded
-ill for any one who crossed her temper. I made up my mind to feel sorry
-for the doctor. Her voice I could hear very indistinctly, but it had a
-sort of hardness, a suppressed tone of assumed smoothness which I did
-not like.
-
-At eight bells that night when the day's work allowed me to get my time
-below, I met them as I left the bridge. The doctor introduced me to
-the lady, who stood tall and commanding in the darkness. She murmured
-something indefinite, but acknowledged me without offering her hand.
-
-I believed this coldness was more cultivated than natural, but, as I
-had learned since being in express ships that ladies did, or did not
-shake hands, according to their training, I passed it up for what it
-was worth.
-
-Doctor Jackson seemed a bit annoyed at the strained feeling, but I saw
-no reason why a woman, a wife of a minister, should find much in common
-with a seaman, even if he did happen to be the chief mate of the liner.
-
-Our ways would naturally be different. Her topics of conversation would
-not fit in with mine, and I was mortally afraid of offending her by
-some sailor's slip in my tongue.
-
-I really was glad when they left me to go to my room, and I hoped that
-I would not have to entertain them any more than the rules of the
-liner's etiquette called for.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The next day the doctor informed me that his wife had succumbed to the
-rigors of the sea and the motion had made her deathly ill. I saw her no
-more, and it was the fifth day out when the steward came to my room at
-night and asked to speak to me privately.
-
-"The couple in Room Sixty-two will not allow their bed to be made up
-nor any one to enter. Doctor Jackson said to see you and it would be
-all right; but you know, sir, it's against the rules not to allow
-inspection. If you will attend to the matter, it will take the weight
-off the old man--he tried to enter, but he was told he could not, owing
-to the lady's indisposition."
-
-"Aw, they're all right," I said. "Tell the captain I know the old
-sky-pilot well, and that he's a minister who has been across twice
-before with us. I'll go down there myself to-morrow and inspect. Give
-the doctor my compliments and tell him I'm sorry the rules make the
-inspection necessary."
-
-"There's a strong smell of whisky, alcohol, sir, all the time, coming
-from the room--don't know what it can be, but I'm afraid of fire. It's
-probably some of those patent traveling stoves they use for heating
-certain medicines or something."
-
-"Well, cut it out--I'll go down in the morning--that's all," I said,
-and then I turned in and forgot all about the incident.
-
-The next day when I went below, I found the doctor and his wife waiting
-for me. The lady had her face wrapped up in towels, and the doctor was
-reading, sitting near the bed, which was a brass one, bolted to the
-deck.
-
-I excused myself, and was just on the point of leaving when I noticed
-the smell of alcohol. It was mixed with one similar to the heated odor
-of a red-hot stovepipe, burning metal.
-
-"Have any trouble with the lights?" I asked.
-
-"Oh, no, everything is all right--one of the electrics broke and made a
-little smell--no, all is as comfortable as one could wish, thank you,"
-said the doctor.
-
-"I suppose you'll go the route all the way up?" I asked.
-
-"No, we'll transship at Queenstown--there's a yacht waiting for me
-there, and we'll take her for the rest of the way to the African coast,
-by way of Gibraltar. You might help us with our luggage to-morrow--our
-little trunk is very heavy, you see." And he tried to raise one end of
-a small steamer trunk that was allowed in the room.
-
-"Oh, that will be all right--the steward will fix you up--I'll see you
-before you go," I said, turning away.
-
-"I hope so," returned the doctor, with a most peculiar intonation in
-his voice that made me look at him. But he was now turning the leaves
-of the book again, and a moan from the bed made me hesitate no longer.
-
-I left them, and sent word to the head steward to see to my friends
-getting ashore in the morning.
-
-As we entered the Channel, the passengers who were to go ashore came on
-deck. Doctor Jackson and his wife appeared at the gangway, and waited
-quietly for the boat.
-
-The lady was now wrapped up in shawls, and her face was heavily veiled.
-The clergyman himself seemed a bit nervous, but they finally went over
-the side with their luggage all right.
-
-What he had told about that steamer trunk was no joke. Two assistant
-stewards could hardly lift it.
-
-Bound with iron and stoutly strapped, it seemed as though it would
-burst of its own weight before it was placed in the lugger that
-would take it ashore or rather to the small schooner that lay a few
-miles distant and which the doctor had pointed out as the vessel he
-had chartered as a yacht to take them on their summer cruise to the
-beautiful Mediterranean.
-
-I waved my hand, and then went below to turn in, for the last night is
-always a bad one for the chief mate when making the land.
-
-"Bang, bang, bang," came blows upon my door, followed by a yell from
-without. I expected to find the ship in collision, and leaped from my
-bunk half asleep. The express messenger stood without, accompanied by
-four assistants and the steward, the purser, and the second officer.
-
-"Safe blown, sir!" yelled the messenger. "It's bloomin' well half
-empty, sir! Nearly a quarter of a million gone. Party from above--you
-knew them, the steward says!"
-
-I ran with them to Room Sixty-two, and burst in where the captain stood
-gazing at a hole in the deck. He turned to me, but said nothing. The
-rug which had been placed over the opening was thrown aside, and there
-lay a hole eighteen inches wide right in the floor.
-
-Upon the sides the charred wood told of some fierce heat to which it
-had been exposed. The heavy steel plate beneath had been melted and
-burned as if the blast of a volcano had seared it.
-
-Ragged-edged, melted, and bent lay the plate, and beneath it again
-lay the hole in the express safe right in the treasure room beneath.
-Down and through all led the seared hole. Some mighty heat had melted,
-burned, and blown away the plates of hard steel.
-
-I leaned over, and gazed down into the room where the gold had been
-packed in the short, stout boxes of the bank. It was scattered about,
-thrown all around in confusion as though the robbers had at last given
-up all hope of getting more out.
-
-They had taken all that two men could lift or carry for a few rods,
-stopping only at the limit of their endurance; and, though the amount
-was not so large as the express messenger had at first stated, it ran
-well over one hundred thousand dollars.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For a moment I stood staring from the hole to Captain Hall and back,
-too amazed to speak, while the old man looked at me keenly.
-
-"Nice little job," he commented dryly.
-
-"The doctor and his wife--do you think?" I asked. I was beginning to
-see light.
-
-"Wife, thunder! That was a young man of tremendous strength," snarled
-the express messenger. "Look how he used that electric burner--look how
-he bent and tore at the plate--he was a giant--had the current on his
-hot chisel all day--that's the smell you noticed. Probably the two
-most expert safe-crackers alive, and our outfit gave them the chance
-to work the hot knife, burn their way in where they never could have
-blown. They connected with the light--got current enough to work with,
-and covered up with the rug----"
-
-"Well, we won't waste time seeing how it was done; we'll get a move
-after them", said the old man. "Jump on deck, and blow the siren--blow
-the alarm for fire, police--set the signals----"
-
-I was gone before he had finished, and by the time the uproar was well
-under way I had time to gaze toward the little schooner the doctor had
-marked out as his yacht.
-
-She was still lying at anchor, but beyond her and about five miles
-distant lay a fishing schooner with very tall spars and a very able
-look. She was hoisting her foresail, and I could just make out that she
-was getting under way at once.
-
-I waited no longer. Jumping to the upper deck, I yelled for the crew
-of the first cutter, boat number one, and gave the signal for her men.
-They came scrambling as to the drill, and as they came I yelled to
-young Smith, the third officer, to get arms and join me.
-
-He dashed into his room, and came back with a heavy revolver. The
-express messenger came up while we were lowering away, and handed me
-another.
-
-"We'll go with you," he said.
-
-"No! No use loading her down with men," I replied; "we want to get some
-speed on her--row six oars double banked, and that'll fill her up--you
-can come, you, Smith, and myself--it won't take a ship's crew to get
-them--lower away," I called, and the boat dropped.
-
-We followed, and in less time than it takes to tell it we were going
-through the sea at seven knots an hour with the best-drilled boat in
-the ship. Three men aft armed, and that was all.
-
-It was a bright summer morning, with almost no wind, and I was certain
-that we would soon overhaul the runaways. The schooner lifted her
-anchor, and stood out to the westward and southward, and soon appeared
-to be making good headway.
-
-"By Jupiter, she's got a motor in her!" said Smith.
-
-She was going ahead, almost straight in the eye of the wind, just close
-enough to keep her sails full, and she was moving a good five knots.
-She was a good four miles distant, and we would have to do some fine
-rowing to catch her.
-
-I looked my men over, and wondered if they could stand it. They pulled
-steadily, and the boat went along swiftly, but even a heavy ship with
-an engine has a distinct advantage over oars.
-
-The schooner's motor was but an auxiliary, to be sure, but five or six
-knots under motor was something desperate to catch by rowing when we
-were so far astern.
-
-At the end of another mile I was getting anxious. Our bearings were not
-changed to any extent, and the third officer looked askance at me.
-
-"Give it to her, bullies--there's a hundred apiece if we get them," I
-said, and swung my body with the stroke of the oars. This had an effect
-upon the men. A hundred dollars was more than three months' pay.
-
-They put their weight upon the ash, and the boat fairly lifted under
-the strain. The sweat began to pour down their faces, and the wind died
-away, until the swell ran oily and smooth.
-
-"Give it to her," I cried again, as we gained a little.
-
-The two men at the bow oar swung mightily upon it. There was a sharp
-crack. The bow oar snapped off at the rowlock, and the boat eased up
-her speed, leaving two good men idle.
-
-"Great snakes!" howled Smith, and the express messenger looked at me in
-despair.
-
-"We can't catch her now," he muttered.
-
-I knew it was true. We were now dropping back, and I kept on only
-because I felt that it would not do to give up. I scanned the sea for
-signs of a boat.
-
-There were some fishing to the northward, and it was our only chance. I
-swung her around toward them.
-
-"We've got to try for one--maybe there's one with a good motor in her,"
-I said. In a quarter of an hour we were up to one boat, and saw she was
-not fit. We swept past without slowing up.
-
-"Any boat about here with a strong motor?" I asked, as we came close.
-
-A fisherman waved his hand to the northward.
-
-"Boat up there--_Seawave_--she's fast; what's the matter?" he replied.
-
-But we were gone without further words, and soon came to the boat. She
-was long and narrow, built like a seiner, only not so heavy. Two men
-sat in her with lines out I hailed them as we came up.
-
-"Want to catch that schooner out there," I yelled, pointing to the
-vessel. "Give you a hundred dollars if you land us alongside--quick."
-
-"Got the money?" asked the man who appeared to own her.
-
-We came alongside without delay, and I felt rather foolish for a
-moment. But the express messenger had the cash with him. He handed it
-over without a word, and the fisherman turned quickly to his engine.
-
-The other man pulled up the anchor at once, and in half a minute we
-were under way, with the motor roaring out its glad sound in a series
-of rapid shots that were like the discharges of a rapid-fire gun.
-
-"Take the boat and follow," I called to the men, and then Smith, the
-messenger, and myself were away in the wake of the schooner that was
-now a good five miles off and going steadily seaward. It would be a
-chase for fair.
-
-"Can you make it?" I asked the owner, who sat in his oilskins at the
-engine.
-
-"Sure t'ing we make 'em--'bout two, three hours, if the gas holds out."
-
-We were now going along at eight knots and running steadily. After
-all, there's nothing like machinery to get things done.
-
-"This is something like," said Smith. "There'll be some shooting inside
-of an hour if the signs hold."
-
-The messenger said nothing. The men of the boat had not asked a
-question. They had taken us at our word, and were doing what they could
-to put us alongside.
-
-Perhaps it would be different when we came to close quarters. We had
-better tell them what our errand was before they stopped the motor
-at the beginning of hostilities. They might take us for what we were
-after--burglars, and spoil our chance to make a catch.
-
-We drew near the schooner after two hours' chase. The land was lost
-astern, and we had run fully fifteen miles off shore.
-
-The breeze began to freshen, but not enough to give the schooner her
-full, or even half, speed. She plugged along steadily at about five
-knots, and we drew up close enough to see a man at the wheel and no one
-else on deck.
-
-Smith and the messenger told our skipper how matters stood, and the
-fisherman seemed to hardly relish the game after he knew it. There was
-certain to be trouble.
-
-"Schooner ahoy!" I yelled, as we drew near enough to hail.
-
-The man at the wheel paid no attention until I had repeated it several
-times. Then he turned and asked us what we wished in no pleasant tone.
-
-"You stop your engine and let us board," I yelled. "You have two
-robbers aboard, and we want them in the name of the law."
-
-"Who are you?" asked the man, spitting over the rail. "Go away--I don't
-know you."
-
-"Run alongside--we'll jump her," I said to the skipper. The messenger,
-Smith, and myself drew our revolvers, and stood ready as the small
-craft came up to the main channels. The schooner kept right along. We
-sprang aboard without meeting resistance, and gained the deck.
-
-"Where're your passengers? Don't fool with us," I snapped. "There's an
-old man and a young one dressed as a woman."
-
-"Oh, Doctor Jackson and the young feller--they're down below--asleep.
-What do you want with them?"
-
- * * * * *
-
-We wasted no time talking. All three jumped down the companionway and
-into the little cabin. Doctor Jackson was in a bunk, apparently fast
-asleep, and a young man, whom I instantly recognized as the "wife," lay
-reclining upon a transom.
-
-"Well, what's the row--what's up?" asked the young fellow, rising at
-the sight of three armed men.
-
-"We want you--you know what for," said the messenger quietly. "Don't
-make any trouble--we won't stand it--come right along back with us, you
-and the other fellow there."
-
-The doctor awoke, and sat up, seemingly amazed. He expostulated, was
-dumfounded at the charge, couldn't understand it--we must all be
-crazy. Two men came from forward and joined our group. It was all
-hands, just three men and two passengers--five in all to work the ship.
-
-"Stop the engine," I ordered, "and either come with us or turn the
-schooner back, and we'll go with you."
-
-They turned her around, and stood back toward the shore. On the way,
-while one of us stood guard over the two, the rest searched the
-schooner for the treasure, for the trunk. There was not a sign of gold
-anywhere aboard her.
-
-We took turns, but found nothing, leaving not a bolt hole unsearched.
-It was disheartening, and looked like we had lost, after all.
-
-"Well, what do you make of it?" I asked the messenger.
-
-"Looks like they got us right, after all," he said; "we haven't the
-slightest clew to the money, and won't get it after they once get in to
-the police. They'll buy their way out, for there's not the slightest
-evidence they did the job, although I know it was them as well as they
-themselves."
-
-"Plant it, you think?"
-
-"Sure as death, they dropped it somewhere, and they only know just
-where. They'll take a chance at going up for a spell, doing their bit,
-and then getting the cache. It's on the course out somewhere, but just
-where who knows? We're out of sight of land now, and it'll take a
-wizard to locate it on the schooner's course."
-
-"That's right enough," I asserted, "but how about trying them for a
-confession?"
-
-"Go ahead," he replied gloomily.
-
-I put it right up to the doctor. I promised him complete immunity if he
-would just tell where they had dropped that four hundred and odd pounds
-of gold.
-
-The pair simply grinned in amusement. It seemed to tickle them
-immensely.
-
-"And so you'd be a party to a felony?" asked the doctor, with great
-regret in his tone. "I didn't think that of you, captain--you surely
-disappoint me greatly. Now, if I knew where the gold lay, I should
-tell you at once, but warn you not to touch it, for I don't believe in
-mixing up with things of this sort. The men you are after must surely
-have taken the stuff on the previous voyage--or some other time----"
-
-"All right," I interrupted, "if you want it that way, you'll get it. We
-have enough evidence to send you up for twenty years at least--direct
-evidence."
-
-"I hate to hear you take on in this terrible manner, my dear captain,
-but I don't see what I can do about it. What makes you think I had
-anything to do with that gold?"
-
-It was of no use. They would not talk about it. I began to study the
-schooner's course and try to figure out where in that vast area of
-sea they could have let the stuff go overboard with the certainty of
-getting hold of it again.
-
-In a short time we met our own boat being rowed rapidly after us, and
-then we took her in tow and dismissed our motor boat, which had been
-dragging along at the main channels. The men had earned their hundred,
-and they departed, highly pleased at their luck, which represented more
-than a month's profits fishing.
-
-As our boat came alongside, we were hailed joyfully by Jim Sanders, the
-coxswain, during my absence, and he held up a long line, at the end of
-which was fastened a small buoy. The other we saw was fast to the small
-trunk.
-
-"We found it all right", said Jim. "We was rowing along fast after
-you, an' suddenly my eye catches sight o' this here float. I grabs it,
-and up comes that trunk fast to the other end in about ten fathoms of
-water. That trunk is sure some heavy, and I reckon it's got the stuff
-in it."
-
-"Very good, very good indeed," cried the messenger. "Now things look
-better."
-
-"Yes," said the third officer, "this is what we are looking for--no
-mistake."
-
-"Hoist it right on deck," I said, and a line was passed to it. It was
-all two men could do to get it aboard. When it was safe on the deck, I
-went below and saw the doctor.
-
-"We have the trunk with the gold all safe--now, what have you to say?"
-I said.
-
-"Indeed?" asked the doctor, in surprise.
-
-"Not really, say not so," remarked the younger man, in mock alarm.
-"Why, then you seem to have what you've been after, what you are
-looking for. If that is all, you better let us turn the ship about
-and continue our journey. Why didn't you say you were looking for that
-trunk?"
-
-A yell from the deck told me something was not right. I came up the
-companion, and looked out, holding my pistol ready for trouble. The
-messenger was standing at the side of the trunk. So also was Smith.
-
-Two men had just opened it, and had dumped a lot of old iron and bolts
-onto the deck, where they lay in a pile of rusty, wet junk.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For a moment I gazed in amazement at the littered deck. Then I smiled.
-
-"Do you suppose we could have made a mistake by any possible means?" I
-asked the express messenger.
-
-"Not by any chance, not a chance. This is a plant--why should they sink
-this trunk with a line and buoy to it? It proves beyond all doubt they
-have got the stuff somewhere. They dropped it, hoping we would stop and
-haul it up, and they'd gain just so much time by the device."
-
-"Then where in Davy Jones is the swag? Where could they have hidden it?"
-
-"That's for us to find out--I don't know."
-
-As we came in, a dozen boats came to meet us. The police took charge,
-and the two prisoners were ironed and taken ashore. The schooner was
-put in charge of detectives, and no one allowed aboard her.
-
-We went back to the ship in our boat, and reported the capture of the
-men, but the loss of the money. Whereat Captain Hall was so angry that
-he would not speak to me that day. I felt that I had done what I could
-and that I was not at fault.
-
-I could do no less--nor no more, for that matter. I went below, and the
-ship went on to her dock, the passengers were sent ashore, and the dull
-routine of the lay-up began.
-
-I had some time now to myself, and studied the situation carefully.
-It would be a month before the trial, and we would have made another
-voyage before then. I was served, however, with a subpoena to appear
-as a principal witness, and I put the paper away and took up the study
-of the case with vigor.
-
-The three men aboard the schooner who had acted as crew were not in the
-game. That was evident, for they proved to be just plain fishermen who
-had chartered their craft to the doctor upon an agreement made on his
-former voyage. He had planned the coup, and made the vessel ready for
-the getaway. That was certain. The men were discharged.
-
-Every portion of the schooner capable of hiding a gold piece was
-thoroughly probed. Even her masts were bored at intervals, and she was
-hauled out and her keel searched for a hollow that might contain the
-treasure. Everything that men could do was apparently done. But not a
-sign of gold.
-
-The two men, the doctor and his accomplice, were sent to trial, and had
-the best lawyer in England to defend them, a man who did not work for
-small amounts. I noted that fact and waited.
-
-They were sent up for two years each solely on the circumstantial
-evidence that they had occupied the room above the safe on that voyage
-and that if any one had committed the theft upon a former voyage it
-must necessarily have been discovered, as the safe was thoroughly
-cleaned and refilled with a new cargo of gold for that single trip.
-
-The schooner was sold at auction by the fishermen who owned her, as
-they were afraid to run her under the continual scrutiny which the
-company put upon her. She was broken up and her gear sold for junk.
-That was the end of her.
-
-It was thoroughly believed that the treasure was planted somewhere on
-the course we had taken during the chase, and many fishermen dragged
-the sea on that line in the hope of reward. But nothing came of it, and
-a year passed.
-
-The time came for the doctor and his pal to get out, for the law which
-cut the prison term to one-half for good behavior was now in force. I
-watched the papers, and tried to keep posted, but nothing was printed
-about the convicts.
-
-One day the doctor and his partner came aboard just as we were leaving,
-and spoke pleasantly to me. They had taken second class and return to
-New York. It was pure nerve, I thought, but the regulations allowed
-them the privilege, as they might not, under the "undesirable-citizen"
-act, be allowed to land in the States.
-
-They took no pains at all to hide their identity, and greeted me most
-cordially when I met them on deck the first day out. I asked them about
-their sojourn in Dartmoor, and they talked freely, telling of the
-rigors of prison life.
-
-"But it is all over now," said the doctor. "We will live our lives as
-we always have, clean, honest, without fear and without reproach. We
-were innocent, as you know."
-
-"Perhaps so--but what became of the gold?" I asked cynically.
-
-"Ah, yes, the gold," murmured the doctor. "To be sure there was some
-doubt about the--what shall I call it?--the disposition of the treasure
-that the robbers worked so hard for. That will always be a mystery."
-
-I thought differently. I had by the process of elimination long ago
-come to the conclusion that the gold never left the ship in Europe.
-
-The strange way they had taken their baggage ashore, their ostentatious
-manner of taking out the heavy trunk and lowering it over the side in
-full view of all was evidently meant for a purpose.
-
-Why had they taken so much trouble to let all see its weight? Why had
-they dragged it with them when, after all, it contained apparently
-nothing but old iron? That it was to cover up the real effort of
-disposition was growing more and more plain to me, but, then, where
-could they have planted the heavy weight of gold?
-
-They could not have dropped it in mid-ocean--that was absurd. It did
-not occur to me for a long time that the hour down the bay from New
-York out to the lightship might suffice to enable them to cut into the
-through safe, which, of course, would not be opened until the other
-side was reached.
-
-It was upon a return voyage that an incident occurred that started my
-line of research upon the American channel.
-
-I noticed that in going down the bay we were forced--owing to the great
-length of the ship--close to the Southwest Spit Buoy. The turn here
-is abrupt, and, while the tide runs swiftly, there is a certainty of
-position always for a large ship.
-
-A smaller vessel might swing well out, but a vessel of the _Prince's_
-size could not. Then the idea of the buoys marking the line at close
-intervals came to me. It was just what they would desire for marking
-their cache.
-
-They could make a note of position, and drop their swag so closely
-to an established position that there would be no trouble at all in
-picking it up, even after a year's submersion.
-
-The trunk must have carried the hot-chisel outfit, the electrical tools
-for cutting, and these the burglars had tossed into the sea at the
-first opportunity, afterward filling the trunk with junk for a blind,
-feeling sure we would think it held the treasure.
-
-I had studied the process of cutting with an electrical jimmy, the
-melting of the plates, and I soon came to the conclusion that the job
-was done, finished before the ship left soundings off Sandy Hook.
-
-The pair were seemingly not well supplied with money, and I determined
-to watch them after they got ashore. By some strange freak the
-inspectors passed them, and they disappeared in the city, leaving no
-trace.
-
-"I want a two-weeks' leave of absence," I said to the old man that
-night, "and I want it right away--I'll get the gold we lost or lose my
-job. I'll take the third mate with me. Smith knows them."
-
-There was some trouble getting officers to fill our berths on such
-short notice, but the old man had some faith in me, and let us go.
-I drew a hundred dollars in pay, and we went right to Brooklyn and
-chartered a fast and powerful launch.
-
-Then we ran over the course the ship always steered on her run out the
-main ship channel, going close to the Southwest Spit Buoy.
-
-We did not come back to town again, but remained in the boat for two
-days and nights, coming in only to get gasoline and supplies, and then
-keeping right on the run in and out to sea.
-
-It was lonesome work, and we passed many small boats daily, but none
-had the men we hoped for in them.
-
-The third evening, just about dark, we noticed a launch running for the
-red buoy at the turn of the channel near Sandy Hook. We both were much
-disguised, being rigged with false beards and uncouth clothes.
-
-In daylight no one would have recognized us thirty feet distant, and at
-night we might have talked to our best friends without detection.
-
-As we came in, running very slow, we noticed a boat with two men in her
-near the Southwest Spit Buoy. The boat had stopped, and the men were
-doing nothing. They seemed to be waiting for something.
-
-We came past, sitting well below the gunwales of our craft, but
-watching the other boat. When we came within fifty feet Smith sank
-below the coamings.
-
-"That's them all right," he whispered.
-
-I watched the pair from the corner of my eye, and headed away from the
-vicinity, keeping well down in our boat, and showing nothing but the
-back of an old battered hat.
-
-It was the doctor and his pal, and they were at work. They stood back
-and forth across the channel a few times, and one of them held a line
-towing astern. It was evident that they were dragging a grapnel over a
-certain part of the channel marked by the buoy and bearings upon Sandy
-Hook.
-
-Before we were half a mile away, they were hauling in the drag, both at
-it with all their strength, and we knew they had struck something.
-
-It was necessary to decide at once what to do. If they had the cache,
-we would find it; if they had hold of something else or were simply
-playing to throw any one off the scent, they would keep their secret.
-We decided to take the chance.
-
-I swung the launch around, and opened her up to the limit. In an
-instant we were flying toward them at fifteen miles an hour, and
-within two minutes were in hailing distance. They saw us coming, and
-hesitated. That hesitation made me sure of our game. They would not let
-go the cache unless something dangerous was about to happen, the danger
-of losing it altogether being too great. Smith jumped up, revolver in
-hand, as the launch came tearing up.
-
-"Hands up--stop that drag," he yelled. "We've got you, Doctor Jackson."
-
-A flash flicked the gloom, and a sharp "pop" sounded, followed by
-another and another. Smith dropped his gun, and fell into the bottom of
-the boat.
-
-"They got me," he gasped.
-
-Then he raised himself upon his knees and, while I headed the flying
-craft straight for them and opened fire, Smith rested his revolver upon
-the coamings, and shot the doctor through the head.
-
-Then the launch crashed into their craft, going at full speed, and her
-sharp nose cut straight in a full foot and a half before she stopped.
-
-The young man who had shot my third mate was snapping an empty gun at
-me as he went over the side into the sea. I stopped the engine, and
-jumped for him.
-
-He dived, but as he came up I hit him over the head with a boat hook
-that lay handy, and before he sank I had caught the hook into his
-collar and dragged him alongside.
-
-Then I lifted him into our boat, and as his face came close to mine I
-recognized him as the former "wife" of the doctor, the robber who had
-masqueraded as a woman and who was evidently the electrical expert of
-the pair.
-
-I passed a lashing upon him quickly, and then went to Smith. My poor
-friend and shipmate was gasping in pain, lying upon the boat's bottom.
-I examined him, and found two wounds, one through his arm and another
-through his chest, both bullets being from a high-powered automatic and
-having passed cleanly through.
-
-In a few minutes I had anchored the wreck of the launch which had
-swamped to the gunwales, and was running for the fort at the Hook,
-where I arrived fifteen minutes later, with Smith unconscious.
-
-Here I turned him over to the surgeon and, getting help from the
-officer in charge, I ran quickly back to the buoy. The dead body of the
-doctor was still lying in the swamped boat, and the men removed it.
-
-Then I got a pull upon the drag line, and was not surprised to find it
-caught to something very heavy. Three men helped me haul it in, and it
-came slowly.
-
-A bight of chain appeared upon the surface. We caught hold of this,
-and hove it in also. At each end were iron boxes weighing at least two
-hundred and fifty pounds each. In spite of our misfortunes I gave a
-yell. It was the gold at last.
-
-Young Simpson told how it was done after he had been turned over to the
-authorities. He had already been sentenced for the crime, and would
-therefore not have to suffer again, having served his term.
-
-He told glibly how they had done the job during the two hours they
-had after the treasure room was closed and the ship warping out and
-down the channel. The time had been ample, and the rest of the voyage
-was just to cover up, to throw us off the track. They had the cutting
-outfit in the trunk that had weighed so heavy, and had taken it away to
-throw overboard, which they did long before we came near them in the
-schooner.
-
-They had kept the trunk, but when they saw we were after them they
-had sunk it with a buoy, knowing that we would probably see it in the
-smooth sea and were aware of the old smuggler trick of sinking treasure
-down at the end of a fine line and small mark.
-
-Then they had decided to make no resistance, believing rightly that
-the easiest way was the best. They had taken their sentence based upon
-the circumstantial evidence in the case, and they were just about to
-get their treasure when we nabbed them. They had originally intended
-to get it in their schooner at their leisure, but we had stopped that.
-The location of the buoy at the turn of the channel marking the run to
-sea was a safe place to drop anything. It would hardly be disturbed for
-some time.
-
-The heavy, small iron boxes had been made purposely for the work, and
-the chains connecting them had been long enough to cover fifty feet, or
-cross enough space to insure picking it up without delay when dragged
-for.
-
-The old man smiled when I reported for duty, but was sad at the thought
-of our young third officer, who would be an invalid for many days.
-
-"They are going to give him the first mate's berth in the new ship to
-be out next season," said he, "and I'm mighty glad of it--he deserves
-something."
-
-"That's correct--he sure does, he worked hard, and took risks--and
-Smith is a good man anywhere, a good navigator also. But did you hear
-anything about me?" I asked.
-
-"Sure; you're to stay right on here--chief officer, but they're going
-to hand you one thousand dollars for taking one hundred and twenty-five
-from the bottom--don't that satisfy you?"
-
-"Mighty well indeed--mighty well indeed," I replied. "Shake, captain."
-
-
-
-
-THE JUDGMENT OF MEN[A]
-
-
-I had rowed in for fresh beef. The weather was cold, the water rough
-and when Wilson asked permission to go up town to get tobacco, I let
-him go and made my own way to the ship-chandler's, where we men of the
-sea usually bought our supplies and sometimes spent an hour or two
-discussing primage freights and other things pertaining to shipping.
-
-There were two big five-masters lying just outside of us in the
-channel and their masters were known to me. One of them had picked me
-up at sea from a derelict and the other was Bull Simpson, well known
-on the coast. Simpson was much given to gregariousness. Johnson was
-companionable, but quiet, and I knew they would be in Jackson's store
-that morning, for they would clear the next day.
-
-The day was in midwinter. The gloomy sky whipped by the nor'wester
-showed signs of snow. How one hates snow at sea! The nasty white stuff
-making the decks like glass, hiding everything from view. The harbor
-was white with the scrape of the cold wind, and the salt water froze
-where it struck in spray. Yes, I would go to Jackson's store. The
-shipping looked too gloomy to contemplate any longer. I thought of the
-frozen fingers handling canvas stiff as tin.
-
-The stove, a ship's bogie, was red hot in the back room. Simpson was
-there, long, lean and solemn. So was Johnson there, but he was smiling,
-smoking and so glad to be in harbor that it stuck out all over him.
-Captain Cone, master of a tramp steamer, sat near and warmed his fat
-toes, his pudgy hands red with frost.
-
-"Go back, they're all there," grinned Jackson to me, as I passed the
-desk. "Thought you'd gone to sea--sech fine wedder--for gulls--what? Go
-back an' set in, Cap; I'll come back for your order presently."
-
-"Hello, you look cool," said Johnson, smiling up at me from his chair.
-
-"Glad to see you--set in," said Simpson, making room for a chair near
-the bogie. "Shake hands with Captain Cone of the _Prince Albert_--Cone
-has a good tea-kettle for this weather--don't you wish you ran a tramp?
-Please? No, I didn't hear that last----"
-
-I bowed to the Captain. A captain of a tramp was something new to us.
-We seldom had any but sailormen in the group and British skippers
-were always looked upon as a rarity. Still they were always welcome.
-Cone stuck out his pudgy hand. I squeezed the fat fingers until he
-winced and withdrew them. I never cared for pudgy-handed seamen--just
-prejudice, a meanness, but it couldn't be helped. We can't help
-everything, we must be human, and Cone took it good-naturedly--was way
-above such things. He showed it by spitting voluminously at the bogie
-and remarking it was very cold to go to sea.
-
-Simpson didn't like it at all. He showed it, grumbled something about
-Yankees and stiff-necked folks, then subsided while I lit up and gazed
-complacently at Johnson. We talked of various things until Cone rose,
-buttoned his coat and went into the office to fill his order. Simpson
-glared at me for a moment.
-
-"What's the use of being so damned short with the Britisher? What's he
-done?" he asked.
-
-"It's what he hasn't done I object to," I answered. "Stupid, heavy
-brute----"
-
-Captain Cone came back and extended his hand. "Good-by,
-Simpson--good-by, gentlemen--hope you'll have better weather of it
-to-morrow."
-
-I noticed that he held out his left hand; it was the left hand that was
-so pudgy, so fat and soft. His right hand was gloved and the fingers of
-the glove were stiff, straight.
-
-"Good day," I said, rising, "and good luck to you." Johnson nodded also
-and the stranger withdrew, followed by Jackson who saw him to the door.
-
-"Wake up," I said to Simpson. "Don't think I meant anything, but these
-Britisher tramp skippers are the limit. High ideals! lots of feeling!
-Human as a beef and twice as heavy--after dinner. Where did he blow in
-from?"
-
-"He came in for coals to take him to Brunswick--he'll load for lumber
-there and go back home--hope he'll get a better reception than he got
-here--he's a member of the English Masters' Association; you might have
-been kind to him," said Simpson.
-
-"Was he the man they fired from the Association last month? Seems to me
-I heard of a Cone--seems like he was accused of brutality or something,
-lacks humanity--looks like it, anyway," said Johnson.
-
-"Yes, he was fired--yes--by God, he was," snapped Simpson, "and it
-was just such judgment that gets lots of good men into trouble.
-'Lacked human sentiment'--lacked human sentiment--well, that's a
-charge for you! Hell! you fellows get narrower and narrower--I
-happen to know Cone, knew him years ago--he was fired for losing the
-_Champion_--'lacked human sentiment,' bah! Oh, now you remember him,
-heh?"
-
-"Yes, we remember him--the man who lost a fine ship in collision in a
-clear night," said I, with something of a sneer. "But that wasn't the
-worst of it----"
-
-"Yes, you read the damned papers--you got a fine idea of it all,"
-snapped Simpson. The old seaman turned and spat viciously at the bogie
-as if the poor old stove, red-hot, had done him some grievous wrong.
-Then he turned scornfully to Johnson.
-
-"You remember the _Champion_? You know something about her, you ain't
-so damned stuck about yourself. I happened to be aboard of her the day
-she sailed, talking to Redding, her chief mate--Redding, that was lost
-in the _Arctic_--yes, Redding was as straight as a string--and he told
-me the details of that accident after he came from the hospital--too
-late. He was nearly a year in the insane ward from a blow that smashed
-his head, but he told me about Cone.
-
-"Yes, it was Cone who left his wife--so they said--left her, deserted
-her and the children. It was Cone who acted in every disgraceful way
-the old women tell about, Cone who raised hell and paid the devil
-wherever he went, Cone who only got command of the _Champion_ after
-pulling shares and playing the game for all it was worth--no, don't
-tell me--don't, I say--I don't want to hear about what he did. I'll
-tell you how he lost the ship, and you say you'll believe anything poor
-Redding said--so would I. If there was truth in any man it was in Dan
-Redding--poor devil."
-
-"Yes," I assented, "Redding was all right."
-
-Simpson scorned to notice me. He talked at Johnson, or rather talked
-at me through Johnson, over him, and--Simpson could talk, talk like an
-Admiralty lawyer with two noggins of rum under his ribs. Jackson came
-in and took Cone's vacated chair. He rubbed his hands. Cone had been a
-good buyer, had needed plenty of stuff--and he got it at the highest
-rates. Jackson approved of Redding also, approved of him for the sake
-of memory--Redding had always paid a full bill--never asked rake-off,
-_pourboire_, "graft," or other money from him.
-
-"You heard all that stuff about Cone, too," said Simpson, sneeringly at
-Jackson; "and I dare say you believe it like a good old woman you are,
-but I'll tell you just how he lost the ship--if you believe Redding.
-
-"They cleared at daylight, bound for St. John's--had twenty passengers
-first class and about seventy second--no steerage those days. Redding
-said the weather was hell and something worse from the time they
-dropped the land, and you men know how it is on the coast in the winter
-time. The old _Champion_ came across and poked her nose into the fog
-bank off Sable Island--bad place? Well, I reckon it is. Bad because you
-can't tell where the devil you are and can't keep any kind of reckoning
-in that current. That Sable Island bank is nearly as bad as Hatteras
-for us windjammers.
-
-"Cone slowed his ship that last morning--according to Redding--slowed
-her down to a few knots, made the passengers keep off the decks in
-order to have peace and quiet aboard. One old lady didn't like it at
-all. She insisted she had a right to go where she pleased aboard--told
-the skipper so to his face and dared him to put her below. Some of the
-other women folks followed her example--did Cone do it? Well, he just
-called his quartermaster and told him to remove the objectionable old
-women, told him to carry them below if necessary--and that square-head
-did. Yes, sir, he just picked up the leader and carried her off in his
-arms while she screamed and clawed him, calling to the men to save her
-from the brutal assault.
-
-"Oh, yes, he got a nice name for that. The passengers told how
-he acted, told how he brutally made his men remove innocent and
-unoffending females--oh, what's the use? He was a brute and they made
-it out plain--it was all published in the papers.
-
-"It was along about five o'clock and the sun must have been well along
-to the nor'west horizon, tho' of course he couldn't see it in the
-fog--that a horn blared out faintly right ahead. The man on lookout
-heard it--for it was now quiet on deck--and the siren roared out its
-reply. Then he got a faint blow right off his starboard bow, a blow as
-if from a small fishing schooner. He kept along blowing regular blasts,
-kept along very slow.
-
-"Right out of the setting sun a bit of wind seemed to make. It lifted
-the bank enough to show him a four-masted ship standing right into him
-not two hundred feet from his bow. She was heeling with the growing
-breeze and going about six knots or better with just a white bone
-across her forefoot. Cone rang off his engines.
-
-"It is in these moments, you know, that things happen. Had Cone rang
-ahead full speed like Chambers did in the old _Lawrence_, rang and
-shoved into her full swing, he would have either gone clear or cut
-out enough to give her his stern on the turn and probably not sink
-either ship. He kept to the rules by British force of habit of abiding
-by them--and, well, the _Potomack_, under three skysails and shoving
-along with four thousand tons of cargo in her, hit him fair upon the
-side while he was swinging to port. The ship's jibboom reached over
-and drove a hole through the deckhouse first, poked right through and
-ripped off his blowoff pipe, letting the steam come roaring out of
-her, and then the heavy forefoot sunk like a wedge fair in her, right
-in the wake of her engines. It was the worst possible place to get
-it--you know that--right in the wake of the engines and close enough
-to the engine-room bulkhead to smash it so it was useless. Then it
-cut, shore down under the water line, and there he was with a hole in
-him big enough to drive in a trolley car, a hole and nothing but the
-forward bulkheads to hold him up--no, he was badly hit, hit right in
-the vitals, and the roar of the steam told him plainly that the ship
-was going to be put to it to float.
-
-"Then came the usual panic.
-
-"Cone tried to stop it, tried to stem the tide of passengers. His
-officers were good, but Redding was hit on the head by a block from the
-maingaff vang and while Cone was trusting to him to take charge aft, he
-set to work forward to get the boats out in ship-shape and seamanlike
-order. His second was a new man--Billings--a blue-nose he knew nothing
-about, but a good enough fellow to take charge. He and the third
-officer stood the crowd back for a time and got the port boats over.
-
-"You see, it was smooth and there wouldn't have been much trouble, but
-the passengers had a grouch against Cone, hated him. The women thought
-him a brute and the men had heard so much from them about his private
-life, his affairs, his general rascality, they wouldn't stand it any
-longer. They rushed it and two were shot, one fell overboard and
-another was badly hurt. These were the only casualties--strange, wasn't
-it? Only passengers hurt were those who were trying to save themselves
-from the brutal and overbearing Cone.
-
-"The _Champion_ settled quickly by the head, her nose getting well
-down. This had the evil tendency of lifting her stern so high that the
-boats couldn't be handled easily. It stopped the flow of the sea to a
-certain extent, but it was too late to do anything to help that now.
-The fireroom force came up, they were literally drowned out, forced to
-quit, and the engineers came forward and told of the useless steam--not
-enough to run the pumps. Then Cone knew it was get away while he could.
-
-"Cone stood on the port side of the flying bridge, stood there and
-roared out his orders, wondering why Redding didn't respond to the work
-cut out aft. He saw no boats going over where Redding should be tending
-to them, and when the crowd finally surged forward he had to let them
-come, had to let them get into the boats there. Oh, yes, he was charged
-with not holding them back, not being able to command his ship, but
-man, he had to let them come forward, it was only the fighting ones who
-insisted in getting first places and taking charge that got hurt.
-
-"The _Potomack_ lay to and sent in her boats, sent in four big
-whaleboats and one dinghy. The water wasn't rough--any good boat would
-live a long time--and Cone let them take off his passengers as fast
-as they could. He was well scored for it afterward; they told how he
-couldn't do it himself, and if it hadn't been for the _Potomack_ he
-would have lost all his passengers.
-
-"When the _Champion_ settled Cone was still standing there on the
-bridge, standing there and he knew what it meant to him.
-
-"'You'd better go along, sir,' said Billings, 'we're going in the next
-boat.'
-
-"But Cone just looked at him for a minute, just stood there watching
-things and saw the last passenger get away.
-
-"'You hound,' the fellow yelled, 'you cowardly rascal--you insulter of
-women!'
-
-"You see, passengers get excited in such cases, get to lose their
-heads. Cone never even looked at him, never took his eyes from the
-settling ship.
-
-"The engineer force had gone, the only men left aboard were the
-quartermasters and mates. Cone spoke to Billings.
-
-"'Get Redding and the rest--get in the boat, I'll come along in a
-moment.'
-
-"The _Champion_ was settling fast now. The roar of the steam and air
-from between decks was deafening. Billings didn't quite get the words,
-but he knew he was told to go--and he went. The third officer found
-Redding lying with a broken head and dragged him to the side, lowered
-him down and started after him. Just as he did this, there was a
-ripping noise from below. It was like a tearing sort of explosion, a
-rending. Cone had disappeared from the bridge and they waited no longer
-but shoved clear. At that instant the _Champion_ surged ahead, lifted
-her stern and dropped--she was gone.
-
-"The suction whirled about, sucked the boat first one way and then
-another, bringing her right over the foundering ship. Billings saw a
-form jammed under the topmast backstay, saw a hand clutching something
-white and he reached for it as the topmast went under.
-
-"It was Cone. It was the skipper.
-
-"They hauled him into the boat and he still clutched that thing in
-his hand. He had been drawn under, been badly strangled and he was
-unconscious, but his hand hold was firm and no one took notice of what
-he held. It was the photograph of a woman.
-
-"Billings didn't know anything about him; didn't know but what
-the tales told were true--so he took the thing away from him and
-said nothing about it; but Redding knew, Redding knew after he saw
-it--months afterward when it was shown him--too late to stop the nasty
-stories--oh, yes, it was the picture of his wife.
-
-"Of course, Cone was living alone, had many affairs--so they said--and
-it would not do to drag a woman into his ugly life. He had gone into
-his room to get it--the picture--gone in to get it with that ship
-sinking under him, the unsentimental and brutal Cone--oh, well, what's
-the use?
-
-"Yes, his hand was jammed between the backstay and the mast and
-Billings just got him clear in time--funny, is it? Well, I don't know,
-some men wouldn't have been so particular over a photograph, would have
-used both their hands to fight clear with--what? But then, that's what
-you call sentiment. No, you wouldn't expect it from Cone, wouldn't
-expect to find it in a seaman with ruddy cheeks and quiet manner, soft
-and a bit fat----"
-
-"No," said Jackson, "you wouldn't expect a thing like that from Captain
-Cone--that's right."
-
-"No, you expect sentiment from the thin, poetical, big-eyed, tender
-men, the men who slush and slobber it over at all occasions. You find
-women looking for it in the tender talkers, the soft-spoken, the
-amorous--oh, hell! did you ever see a man who looked the part--what?"
-
-"I've sometimes had my doubts concerning heroes," said Johnson, "but
-they are--the real ones--generally most common-looking, most quiet and
-unassuming; but that Cone--well, he is a hard dose to swallow, and
-that's a fact."
-
-"Well, treat him decently when he comes back," said Simpson.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Some years later I met Cone at the dinner given by the Manager of the
-Southern Fruit Company to the Captains of the West India fleet who ran
-the steamers chartered under contract to fill the winter schedule.
-There were as usual many British vessels in the trade, some Norwegian
-and a few American, including myself.
-
-Cone had passed entirely out of my ken and this time I took his hand
-with the feeling that perhaps I had done the man an injustice by the
-human judgment passed upon him. He was a very old man now and his hand
-was still in a glove to hide the deformity which the accident had
-caused. He looked very much the kindly old-time shipmaster, bright
-of eye and vigorous to the last. He sat near me and remained silent
-during the opening of the somewhat formal repast. The Manager had been
-discussing some subject, for he seemed to wish to follow it at once.
-
-"A thing's either right or wrong," said the Manager didactically, as he
-looked over the gathering. He paused for the effect of his words to be
-felt. He loved platitudes, although the leading man in his business and
-a millionaire. "A thing is either right or wrong," he repeated, "and
-a man is either right or wrong. There's a difference between them as
-plain as between black and white."
-
-Captain Cone squirmed in his chair. He had listened to this sort of
-thing before from the Manager. The Company, the greatest shipping firm
-in the whole world, had paid him his salary, given him his liner and
-here was the Manager setting forth again against the manner of trusted
-employees who should know these self-evident truths. He interrupted.
-
-"In fifty-five years spent knocking about the world upon every sea,
-I've come to a different conclusion," said he quietly.
-
-It was so different from the usual applause, the applause which
-had already started and which would follow the Manager's splendid
-appreciation of the obvious. Several diners--there were twelve at the
-table--looked up quickly and wondered at the Captain.
-
-"What--what do you mean?" asked the Manager softly, amazed at the
-interruption. He had been coming to a point where he expected to
-hurl a smashing argument against the methods of some men who handled
-millions, and here he had been held up by a Captain, an employee of
-his Company. There was a silence, awkward, impressive--and the old
-seaman felt it, causing him to blush through his mahogany tan. He had
-committed himself, and he was essentially a modest man.
-
-"I don't know exactly how to explain," said the Captain slowly. "These
-questions of human analysis are so very subtle, so elusive--I am only a
-sailorman after all, and perhaps I see things differently from the view
-taken by landsmen. There is much in the point of view. But it seems
-that I am still reasonable, still logical--and I am able to perform my
-duties even though I'm seventy."
-
-He paused, passed his brown hand across his grizzled forehead, where
-the hair still hung thickly. Then he let it drop slowly down over his
-beard and his eyes seemed to have an introspective look. He spoke very
-slowly and with considerable hesitation as one not used to the ready
-flow of language, words every one of which had a meaning.
-
-"There was a small matter," he continued, "which called my attention
-to the human judgment. I don't know how to tell it, but--well, you
-remember Jones, Captain Jones, who had an interest in the oil ships?
-Yes; well, I was thinking of him.
-
-"Jones was one of the first oil carriers. That was before the Standard
-took charge. I had sailed with him as mate long before the war.
-He got a great tank ship--lost her. Then came the squeeze of the
-Consolidated, then the death of competition--and, well, Jones lost one
-thing after another. Froze out. They made him watchman at the office,
-made him night watchman, a man who had once run a ten-thousand-ton
-oiler, a man who had made them millions by his care and industry. Then
-he sank to the gutter and on forty dollars a month he tried to wrest a
-living for seven children--four of them girls. You know the old story,
-the sordid details. Jones had to take on liquor once in a while. He
-would have gone mad without a drunk at least once a month. He figured
-that it was best to get drunk than go mad, best for his family. It's
-all well enough to talk, for the chicken-souled loafers who preach
-to their flocks and then get their living through the generosity of
-silly women, to call poor Jones a drunken reprobate, a useless loafer,
-because he drank. But the red-hearted men, the men who knew him, knew
-what he was suffering, knew what weight was pulling him down. In two
-years he never bought a suit of clothes. He never spent anything
-upon himself--except at certain times he felt that he must undergo
-relaxation, must get away from himself--then he would get drunk, very
-drunk.
-
-"His wife--oh, yes, he had his wife. She knew him, knew what he had
-gone through--she saw he got enough money for rum, helped him, stinted
-herself, slaved, worked--well, she did everything a poor, high-spirited
-woman could do."
-
-Cone paused, took a drink, a mere sip, from his glass of water,
-then pushed it from him. The looks of the guests annoyed him. A
-prohibitionist from Maine glared at him and made him uncomfortable.
-There was a half-suppressed sneer upon the lips of the Manager, but he
-was a gentleman--and a host.
-
-"Yes--I was speaking of his wife," he went on. "She helped him, held
-him up with a mighty soul, a tremendous strength for a woman. All
-through the dark and gloomy life he led, sleeping in the daytime and
-wandering about the desolate offices at night, she was always ready,
-always willing to lend a hand, steadying, guiding, always sound in
-judgment and above all ready at all times to make any sacrifice for
-either him or the children--yes, she was a great woman--may the God of
-the sea hold her gently where she lies in its bosom--dead? Oh, yes,
-she died long ago. The worst of the affair came about when Jones fell
-sick. He finally broke down under the awful strain, couldn't stand
-it--no, the liquor didn't hurt him, he was used to that. It was the
-despair, the dead weight of crushed hopes, the knowledge of an old
-man unable to make good against the tide, the tide which was sweeping
-his children down to hell. The oldest girl was twenty and forced to
-work at a place where--well, never mind, it was the same old sordid
-story of a young woman staying, sticking out at a place where it was
-impossible for her to come out as she went in. Ruin, and hell for her
-afterward--convention, we call it--but what's the use? She was the old
-man's favorite, and it hit him very hard, very hard indeed.
-
-"Yes, I remember it very well. Poor old Jones, captain of a
-ten-thousand-ton ship, owner of a quarter interest in one of the
-biggest commercial enterprises in the world--six children and a wife
-starving on forty dollars a month and the seventh child--yes, it
-was pretty bad, especially bad for Jones, for he had done nothing
-to deserve his fate, nothing but fight a combination which knew no
-mercy. The relentless, implacable cruelty of corporations is well
-enough known to you gentlemen. Their laws are like the laws of
-Nature--transgress them and you must die. The laws of life are supposed
-to be just, therefore it is probable that those of some corporations
-are so likewise--I don't know. But they had smashed Jones. Crushed him
-down--yes, there he was at forty a month, trying to forget, trying to
-do something to keep his family alive, and then under the heaviest
-strain he broke one day--broke and went down."
-
-Many of the guests at the Manager's table had now resumed their
-poise. Some at the farther end resumed conversation, overlooking the
-story-teller and wondering a little at his bad form to monopolize the
-talk of the complaisant dinner humor. But some of the men nearest
-the Manager still listened and the old Captain watched them with his
-dark bright eyes, eyes which seemed to sparkle like diamonds in the
-light. They were the eyes which had pointed the way to many millions
-of dollars' worth of cargo, many thousand passengers, and they watched
-over them through many a wild and stormy night upon the bridge of his
-ship in mid-ocean where the mind has much time to ponder over the
-methods, the ethics of the commercial human.
-
-"I found him at the hospital," went on Cone. "He was shaky, but he
-fought his weakness back and went home at the end of two weeks to find
-his wife down with pneumonia and the house full of famished children."
-
-Cone stopped speaking for a moment and gazed across the table at the
-polished buffet, seeming to see something in the mirror back of it. The
-Manager looked up, saw his gaze and spoke:
-
-"I know there's lots of hardships, Captain," said he, "and I don't lay
-it all to the drink habit. Let your glass be filled--what?"
-
-"Pardon me," said the old seaman. "I am old and forgetting my
-story--I was just thinking a bit. This is not a temperance lecture at
-all--no, no, that is not what I was thinking of." And he gazed at the
-prohibitionist across the board who was fingering his napkin.
-
-"No, the thing that I was coming to is this. Jones found things in a
-desperate condition at his home. He must have money. It was an absolute
-necessity to have medical attendance at once for his wife, and he
-dreaded the free ward of the hospitals--he had gone into one once
-himself and knew what it meant. He must have money for his children."
-
-"A man might steal under those conditions without being very bad,"
-interrupted a man sitting next to him.
-
-"That isn't what he did," said the old Captain. "He met a friend on
-the street while on his way to a pawnshop--and the friend heard his
-tale. His friend was a bank messenger, at least he was carrying the
-proceeds of a ship's cargo in a bag. You see, in those days, captains
-were allowed to collect freights at certain points, being in the
-companies, and these moneys were carried aboard the ship until she
-reached her home port. Sometimes there were many thousand dollars. This
-friend had been with Jones in the old days and he knew his history.
-The money he carried was freights from an oil ship just arrived. There
-was fifteen thousand dollars of it in gold, and it was the property of
-the very corporation which had squeezed Jones and ruined him. Well,
-the friend did the obvious, did the human thing. He opened the bag
-and gave Jones just five hundred dollars in gold and then went along
-to try and fix the matter up with the firm--it required lying--that
-is bad; it required many other things which we will not discuss here,
-but they are eminently bad, bad as they can be--and by dint of lying,
-and pilfering, and--well, the friend made good the loss without ever
-getting found out--yes, a horrible example, I admit. He made good the
-five hundred and no one ever knew he was a thief. No one knows to this
-day--except--anyway, Jones saved his wife, and at the end of the money
-the friend helped him to buy into a schooner and he got command. They
-paid twenty-five per cent. in those days and he pulled out making
-enough to save the rest from abject poverty."
-
-"But you don't mean you approve of that fellow, that thief who
-appropriated other people's money, his employers' money, do you?" asked
-the Manager in amazement. "The thing for him to have done was to have
-gone to the firm and stated the case, told of the poverty of Jones,
-told how he should be helped. No human being would have refused him."
-
-"On the contrary, the friend did just those things--afterward--and
-as I said before, corporations know no laws but their own. They are
-relentless as the laws of Nature, as implacable as the laws of health.
-Go where there is cholera, get the germ into your system, and you
-will understand what I mean. No human feeling, no sympathy--nothing
-will save you but your own powers of resistance. You will necessarily
-die unless you can stand it. Most people die. And it may be right to
-have things this way--I don't know, I don't set up as a judge; I am a
-sailor. But I am human--and I don't hate my neighbor, I don't look upon
-my friend as my enemy. Perhaps I am wrong. Still the thief in this case
-suffered much. He was for years afraid of being found out. That shows
-the whole horrible futility of it all. He suffered more than Jones,
-for Jones knew from where the money came, knew it was money which by
-his judgment should have gone to him anyway. Jones refused to pay it
-back and wanted to publish the fact that he had gotten even with the
-corporation to the extent of five hundred dollars.
-
-"Of course, he didn't do it. The friend persuaded him not to, and when
-he went into the coaster he forgot to talk about it even when under the
-effects of his drinks.
-
-"You see, it was about that time the insurance troubles came about.
-Marine insurance had a tumble owing to the loss of several heavy
-ships and other matters not worth discussing now. You were badly hit
-yourself, I believe,"--and the old Captain nodded to the Manager,
-who smiled acquiescence--"you told me at the time--if I remember
-rightly--that one more vessel gone and you would go to the wall.
-
-"The friend owned shares in that schooner, owned more than half of
-her, and he it was that let her go out, made her go to sea after
-her policies ran out. He would not stop her carrying, for it meant
-laying her up and Jones would have to go ashore again until things
-straightened out. It was the hurricane season and she had to go light
-to Cuba.
-
-"I remember something of the affair, for I happened to be on the dock
-when she sailed. Jones was standing aft giving orders, and his wife,
-with her three daughters, were below in the cabin. It was a pretty
-picture of commercial life, a picture of a man doing his work with his
-family or part of it around him, and I almost envied him his place.
-What does an old liner skipper ever have of domestic life? Never gets
-home, never sees his wife but once or twice a year, and the company
-never lets her go aboard the ship at all if they can help it. Well,
-she sailed out that August day, and the next thing we heard of him was
-that his schooner was driven ashore during a gale. She rammed up on
-one of the Bahamas, Castle Rock, I believe, and then broke up. Some of
-the crew and his daughters were saved--he and his wife went down--lost
-before they could get them ashore.
-
-"And so there it is--did the men do all that was right or did they
-do all that was wrong? That's the question. Where is the line of
-demarkation, where does the wrong leave off and right begin, or how is
-the mixture to be sifted down? We go by rules, we must play according
-to rules or the game becomes chaos. But do the rules always hold, do
-they always cover every emergency? I don't know, but I believe there is
-bad, or what is called bad, in all men, also there is good--it depends
-upon the man--not the rule."
-
-There was a long pause. The Manager gazed curiously at his guest.
-
-"You say the schooner went ashore on Castle Rock?"
-
-"I said--well, it was somewhere about there, I don't know exactly,"
-replied the old seaman, annoyed.
-
-"There never was a wreck on Castle Rock that I ever heard of," said the
-Manager, eying the old Captain curiously, "but there was the _Hattie
-Davis_ that was lost on the Great Inagua Bank--she wasn't insured, I
-believe."
-
-"Yes, she was lost on the Great Inagua," assented the Captain, leaning
-back, as though the story were closed.
-
-"You had a large interest in her, I believe," said the Manager slowly,
-"and I recollect, now, you lost all in her----"
-
-"The light was not so good as it is now," quickly put in the old
-seaman. "It used to show only in clear weather--and it's almost always
-clear through the passage--I remember how the passengers used to be
-glad when we entered the passage coming up from Cuba in the old Panama
-ships--rough in the tumble off Maysi when the wind holds nor'east for
-a spell."
-
-The Manager was gazing at the old skipper strangely. Then he suddenly
-turned and started to discuss other matters with his guests. The
-dinner went along without incident and afterward we arose to go to the
-smoking-room for our cigars.
-
-"Come along with me, Cone," said the Manager, "I have a new orchid I
-picked up I want to show you; you always liked flowers, you know."
-Afterward I passed them and overheard the Manager saying in a low
-tone--"Well, you always had a hell of a reputation, Cone, anyway,
-but under the circumstances--well, there might be some sort of
-justification. You are too full of that damned sentiment for any
-business whatever. Still, I'll admit that it isn't so much what a man
-does that matters--that is, it doesn't matter so much as _how_ it is
-done--and _who_ does it."
-
-And so this was Cone? This was the master who had earned a reputation
-for some very queer things as seamen see them. I remember the old days,
-the words of poor old Simpson who had long gone to the port of missing
-ships. Sentimental Captain Cone, stout, grizzled, bronzed, the man who
-lost his hand holding to the picture of a wife who had been false to
-him and who had accused him of many things too hard to print. It was
-strange.
-
-I suddenly felt I would like to see Simpson, to acknowledge he was not
-so far wrong after all.
-
-"The judgment of man is not good," I said in answer to some question
-relative to nothing concerning Cone, and with this platitude upon my
-lips I went home.
-
-
-
-
-ON GOING TO SEA
-
-
-We sat together upon the quarter-deck under the awning of the _Harvest
-Queen_. My own ship lay in the berth opposite, and I had come over for
-a quiet smoke with Captain Large. He sailed in the morning, and was
-bound for Frisco around Cape Horn. I would not see him again for a year
-or two--probably never; but he and I had sailed together and I had been
-his mate. We talked of things, confidences, the talk of old shipmates
-who know each other very well, and who are passing to know each other
-as memories. I had shipped five apprentices, two sons of prominent men
-in the shipping circles of New York, and I wondered at the outcome.
-
-"I never take them any more," said Large. "I took one out of here a few
-years ago, and--well, I don't care to repeat the job."
-
-"But the boys are good--signed on regular--what can they do?" I asked.
-
-"I don't know, but I'll tell you what one did in the _Wildwood_ when I
-took him to China. I don't know how to explain it. The strangeness of
-it all, the peculiar development that came about under seeming natural
-causes--hereditary, you will say, and perhaps that is right I have
-often studied it over, often lain awake in my bunk wondering at it all,
-what peculiar ideas grew in a brain that was almost human--almost,
-for when you think of what he did you cannot believe he was quite so,
-even though his father was the President of the Marine Association and
-had commanded the best American ships in his day." The old skipper sat
-quiet for some minutes and seemed to be thinking, studying over some
-problem. His cigar shone like a spark in the warm night, but the smoke
-was invisible. I waited. Apprentices were new to me. I had not had much
-chance to study the training of youth. My own way had been rough. I had
-at last gotten my ship after a life of strenuous endeavor and often
-desperate effort, and I wanted to learn all I could. Men I knew. I had
-handled them by and large from every part of the globe, and discipline,
-iron discipline, was a thing my ship was noted for. She had a bad name.
-
-"You see," said Large, his deep voice booming softly in the night,
-"there is something intangible that a human being inherits from his
-forbears. We look at the successful man as a target to aim at, an
-idol we point out for youth to emulate. We don't always analyze the
-greatness. A successful man is often so from the stress he puts upon
-others. He will not stay in equilibrium. He keeps going on up, up
-beyond the place his own production entitles him. He becomes predatory,
-but unlike wolves or felines he preys upon his own kind.
-
-"When President Jackson of the Bengal Line asked me to take Willie,
-his son, I did so with the feeling that it was an honor conferred upon
-me, the captain of one of the ships. Jackson had earned his position
-by his own efforts and fought his way up to the top. I remembered him
-well enough when he was a master, but he was now President of the Line.
-He had a very sinister reputation in the old ships, but that was all
-forgotten now.
-
-"Willie came aboard looking like a physical wreck. He was a slight
-youth of fifteen, stoop-shouldered, pale of face, but with the eye
-of his father, and the peculiar settling of the corners of his mouth
-noticeable in the old man. 'Be sure you bring him back safely,' said
-his father, giving me a look I long remembered. 'Be sure you take good
-care of him--and bring him back.' I didn't quite know what he meant. I
-don't yet; but I know why he said it. I began to think of it before we
-were at sea a week.
-
-"Yes, he was only a boy, a mere lad, but he was all of his father--his
-father as we remembered him in the South Sea. Degenerate? He was the
-ablest lad of his size I ever saw. He stood right there on the main
-deck the day we went out and took little or no notice of him while the
-tug had our line. He was signed on, mind you, signed on regular, so
-as not to excite the comment of 'pull.' Hell! why do they send boys
-to sea when the shore is the place to train them? He stood there and
-saw me looking at him, thinking of the words 'be sure and bring him
-back'--yes, I would.
-
-"'Say, Cap, dis is fine. Let's put de rags on her an' let her slide.
-I wants to see her slip erlong--t'hell wid towin', says me,' and he
-came up the poop steps on the starboard side to chat with me--a thing
-no one, as you know, can do aboard a ship without a reprimand. Every
-one heard him talking to me. He yelled it out in a shrill voice--yes,
-talking to me, the captain, on the poop. 'See here, young man,' I said
-to him, 'you mustn't talk to me while I'm on deck. Go down on the main
-deck, and when you want anything, you ask the mate--he will talk with
-you or get you what you want--you understand? It's not the thing to
-ever speak to the captain of a ship without permission.'
-
-"'Aw, fergit it, cully! Don't youse make no mistake erbout me. I spoke
-fair an' civil to youse, an' if youse don't want to answer you kin go
-to hell, you stuck-up old fool! D'ye git that right?' he said shrilly.
-
-"Well, you can imagine what that sounded like to the men. Twenty of
-them were grinning and both mates aghast. I was the master, a man known
-the world over as a 'driver.' There was nothing to do but take the lad
-in hand at once.
-
-"'Take him forward and rope's-end him,' I said to Bowles, the second
-officer, a man weighing two hundred pounds and a 'bucko' of the
-strongest type. You remember him, the toughest mate afloat?
-
-"But Willie looked up at me with a sneer.
-
-"'You try it, you sea loafer. I'll sweat youse fer it if youse do. You
-ain't de whole thing aboard here. Youse don't know me, I guess.'
-
-"I had to do it. The affair had gone too far. Bowles grabbed him by
-the collar and lifted him off his feet, and he let out a scream like a
-wildcat--a most unearthly shriek. Bowles whipped him good and hard,
-tanned him so he could scarcely sit down; but he just cursed and swore
-at the officer, telling him what he'd do to him afterward. He got an
-extra lick or two for this. Bowles paid no attention, but went back to
-his station to attend lines. Half an hour later he was standing at the
-rail when I saw a form shoot out of the galley door and drive a long
-knife into his back. He sank down without a word, and Willie stood over
-him ready for the finish. The mate knocked him down with a belaying pin
-before he could kill.
-
-"It was a terrible thing, an awful state of affairs beginning within
-five minutes after the tug had let go. It was uncanny. A young boy
-doing such things aboard a ship. I would have put him ashore at
-once, but remembered the articles he had signed and the words of the
-president of the line. I hesitated and the opportunity was lost----"
-
-"I would have made another," I interrupted. "I would have sent the
-young villain to prison at once. No good could possibly happen from
-such an agreement, no good come from a horrible little devil like that."
-
-"I don't know. I don't quite know yet what to make of it all.
-According to the usual rule there could be no good from a boy who
-would deliberately commit such a crime; but we men who know life, the
-real life, know that rules are not good to follow. You know that. I've
-tried to figure it all out, but there is no answer, no accounting for
-the strangeness of character that develop under certain conditions. We
-tied Willie up while he was unconscious from the blow of the pin, and
-instead of putting Bowles ashore we endeavored to bring him around. I
-took him aft and sewed up the cut. It was an awful wound, but Bowles
-was a very strong man. It took a month before he could get about the
-deck again. We had run clear to the equator.
-
-"In the meantime Willie had had another run in, and I had him brought
-aft to have a little talk with him, to try and explain to him how a
-ship must be run, the iron discipline and the custom of the master not
-to associate with any one, either boy or man, from forward.
-
-"'Aw, cut it out, cully--cut de langwidge! It don't go none wid
-me--see? I comes aboard dis ship an' gets it in de neck de foist round.
-Den I slings inter de bloke wot does the trick--'n by rights I ought
-ter take a fall outer youse, Cap--'n I've a good mind to do it, too.
-Dem sea tricks don't go none wid me.'
-
-"'But don't you know I could hang you if I wanted to? Don't you know
-my word is law here? I am in absolute command. If you don't follow the
-rules of the ship I'll have to punish you severely.'
-
-"'Nothin' doin', Bo, nothin' doin' at all. Youse kin cut all that sort
-o' talk out when youse chins wid me--see? Say, Bo, whatcher take me
-fer, anyways? Er "come on," er what? Whatcher t'ink I am, anyways,
-hey? Go tell de little choild stories to yer gran'mother--don't
-spring dem on me, don't try to hand me nothin' funny--I'm a MAN! An'
-don't youse t'ink youse kin take de call of me, neider, Bo, fer youse
-makes a mistake mixin' it wid me! I'm a fightin' MAN--me fader'll
-tell youse dat, an' dat's why he sends me wid youse when I might
-be goin' to school. De old man is a lulu, an' I am his son, Bo, a
-son of a dog--nothin' yaller in de breed; 'n if youse t'ink you kin
-razzle-dazzle me you'll sure fall down. Youse take dat from me, Bo!
-D'youse git it straight?'
-
-"'I'll turn you loose if you'll promise to do the right thing from now
-on,' I said.
-
-"'Aw, no, Bo, I don't have to promise nothin'. Youse ain't got me right
-yet. I ain't no child. What de hell's the matter wid youse, anyhow?'
-
-"'All right, then, you'll stay locked up until the end of the voyage
-and then I'll turn you over to the police, and----'
-
-"'An' you'll pay like hell fer that 'f I does. Youse see!' he snarled.
-
-"Well, what could I do? What would you have done under the
-circumstances? The boy was not afraid. I knew his breed too well. I
-knew his father. He would not suffer the smallest infringement of what
-he believed to be his rights. He would resist to the death. He had
-gone with a gang of young ruffians and had developed a certain sense
-of what he believed to be right. He saw no law but that of absolute
-equality; and there is no such thing. He was at fault. It was absurd
-for men who ran a ship whose name was 'hard' to allow a little boy to
-take charge, a little fellow not weighing a hundred pounds. I decided
-to give him a real whipping--a whipping that would make a permanent
-mark in his memory. I hated to think of it--hated to really believe
-it was necessary, for there is nothing so horrible as whipping a
-man--and the lad was a man in his own opinion. There is absolutely
-nothing so soul-killing, so fearfully degrading. I prefer the bloodiest
-fighting always to the cold-blooded lash. I have seen men lose their
-self-respect under the degrading stroke of the lash; and a man without
-self-respect had better be dead. I studied the case and remembered his
-father. He was a small man physically--I never knew a big man make a
-good seaman; but he could take charge of a ship, no matter what kind of
-creatures were forward, and he never spoke but once in giving an order.
-The father had the same idea in regard to right and wrong--he never
-forgave one, never forgot. Yet he had been a staunch friend of mine. He
-had many friends who swore by him--and he was always to be relied upon,
-you could always count upon him no matter what the cost to himself in
-any emergency. It was his idea of duty--and he feared nothing at all.
-
-"It was just a week later on a hot day when I had gone below to work
-the noon sight that I became aware of a pair of eyes looking at me from
-the top of the companionway, and as I looked up I gazed right into
-those of Willie; but it was along the blue barrel of my own forty-five
-caliber six-shooter. The gun had always been hanging close to my bunk
-head--ready for emergencies.
-
-"'Bang!' The shot came without a second's warning. The bullet tore
-through my arm. I sprang through the bulkhead into the forward cabin
-just as the second shot ripped me across the neck. I was rushing for
-the doorway to the main deck and the third shot threw splinters in my
-face as it hit the edge of the door. Willie was coming right along
-behind me, and firing as he came--and I--well, I confess it, I was
-running for my life. I heard his yell of derision, a shrill scream----
-
-"The mate heard the firing, and as Willie came through the doorway he
-kicked him in the back and knocked him over. Then he jumped upon him
-and stamped all but the very life out of him by driving his boot-heels
-into his face."
-
-I shivered with the intensity of the tale, the horror of it all. The
-old man sat silent in the gloom and the spark of light from his cigar
-end flared and faded as he drew upon it. He was thinking of the past. I
-waited.
-
-"Well, what was I to do? I was a man, a ship master, and here I was
-with my arm shattered by a heavy bullet from a mere boy--or devil! What
-could I do?
-
-"Yes, then I whipped him--whipped him until the men turned away. I will
-not tell you of it--it was too horrible.
-
-"It was four weeks before I could get about the deck from the effects
-of that pistol shot. I had little medicine aboard. There I was limping
-about with a broken arm, and there was Bowles limping about with the
-tendons of his back cut through. It was awful. The men grinned. Yes,
-the men grinned at us. I had an extra padlock put upon the stateroom
-where Willie stayed, and he was kept tight after that.
-
-"At the end of a month Willie was all but dead. The terrific heat,
-the gases from the cargo and the close confinement told upon his weak
-frame. I saw that he would not last much longer. He would die in the
-ship, and I remembered the words of his father--'bring him back; be
-sure and bring him back!' There was an old man in the crew named Jim.
-He was half fish and the rest salt and rope-yarn. He offered to take
-the boy in hand and try to train him. I let him have a chance, always
-having him close at hand to stop any trouble with a pair of irons. And
-when he turned in the boy was locked up again. But there was no talk
-of doing right, no promise to be fair or obey orders from the little
-chap. I saw he would break out at the first opportunity and refused to
-give him one. I had old Jim read the Bible to him every day to see if I
-couldn't get him interested in religion. He liked that part of the Old
-Testament where it is especially bloody and deals with the desperate
-fighting of men, but when it came to other parts he lost interest.
-
-"'Say, cull, do youse believe dat yarn erbout de whale--say? Aw, gwan!
-don't spring nothin' funny on me, Bo. Gimme some of de hot stuff or
-cut it--see? Dat kid David was de stuff! Gimme some more o' his work,
-or let it go at dat. He might have hove de rock an' hit de giant in
-de neck--but I doubts it; but maybe so, maybe so. Dat giant warn't
-no bigger'n Bowles, I reckon--'n I c'u'd do fer him easy enough, as
-youse know. Yes, I c'u'd a dun up dat giant all right wid any sort er
-weaping--knife or rock--I'm a sort o' giant killer myself----'
-
-"'You ain't got de nerve to do nothing like that, boy. Shut up and
-listen!' said Jim.
-
-"'Say, Bo, don't youse make no mistake erbout me noive. I got de whole
-gang of youse beat to a gantline. I c'u'd stick youse all back in de
-lazereet an' not half woik. Aw, say, Jimmy, youse ain't got me measure
-quite right--see? Guess onct more, old boy; but go erlong an' read some
-more of de fight to me. I likes it all right.' And so they would chat
-together and I would listen to try and fathom the boy's mind. It was
-peculiar. And yet under it all was that vast ego, that immense regard
-for the opinions of others--not alone himself--he was too young yet,
-but for himself was the greatest, the self-respect. He was a leader, a
-boy with a soul--you may laugh when you think him a fiend, a perfect
-devil, if you will, but he was all right in some things.
-
-"I was more afraid of Rose, my mate.
-
-"Rose was a quiet man, a driver, and he had struck down the boy and
-beaten him to a jelly. The boy never alluded to it, never spoke of
-it even to Jim. That's where the danger lay. I felt that they would
-finish the fight when I let the lad loose, and dared not do so for a
-long time. Once when Jim had the boy on deck I caught Rose gazing at
-him with a peculiar steady light in his eyes. He just stood looking
-at the boy for nearly a full minute--then the lad turned and looked
-right into his eyes with the same peculiar steadiness--a stare that
-was unblinking, yet not strained. Willie had those light eyes, almost
-colorless, like his father. So had Rose, and they told each other so
-plainly what was behind their eyes that I almost smiled; but it was no
-smiling work, even if there was a boy in it. Rose showed plainly that
-he would wring the boy's neck at the first outfly, and was regardless
-of consequences. Rose was not a man to trifle with, yet when you
-remember that I was shot and the second mate cut, there was reason
-for the chief to throw out all sentiment. And so I kept Willie under
-Jim's care until we reached Hong-Kong. Then the old seaman wanted to go
-ashore and take the boy with him, promising not to go near a grog-shop.
-You can't trust a windjammer ashore after a long voyage, no matter how
-good a man he is. Jim came back to the ship that night the worse for
-wear, and told a tale of the boy slipping away from him in the streets.
-The man was drunk and I had him sent down in irons. Then I sent out a
-call for the police.
-
-"They found Willie, who had wandered off while Jim was drinking. The
-boy had walked the streets all night, not caring much about the ship,
-and because a Chinaman would not cut off his queue and make him a
-present of it, the boy had jumped him with a knife he had procured and
-tried to take it by force. The interference of the police was all that
-saved the boy's life, for the man's friends helped him hold the lad,
-and they were just in the act of cutting his throat when help arrived.
-I was almost sorry for the interference, but I remembered the words of
-his father.
-
-"Jim being unable to take further care of him for the present, I locked
-him up myself and turned in, being tired from the night's work. The
-next evening I saw Mr. Rose dragging Willie aboard the ship. How he got
-adrift I don't know, but he carried in each hand an oil can, while the
-mate, holding him, forced him aboard.
-
-"'Say, Bo, whatcher think I done--hey? Just watch dat junk dere lyin'
-in de next dock--see? Aw, chee, dem Chinks is de limit. Dat feller
-what got me in Dutch last night is aboard dere, an'--well, you jest
-watch him now and tell me what youse t'ink o' me, anyways. I remembers
-him, but most all Chinks looks alike to me. Anyhow, I fire her up fer
-fair--you watch her--see? Oh, say, Bo, what a pipe----'
-
-"Even while he spoke the black smoke poured from the fated junk. She
-burned like a box of matches. She was full of camphor wood and grease,
-and she fired the entire dock, burning six other vessels and making it
-so hot we were forced to warp into the stream.
-
-"No, I didn't give the boy up. I suppose I might have done so and seen
-him hung properly. I said nothing, and Rose was a very quiet man.
-The damage he had done apparently took the lad's mind off his former
-troubles, and on the way home I let him go back to his watch. He took
-to the rigging like a monkey. I will say here he was the best sailor I
-had ever seen. There was nothing he could not learn about seamanship.
-He would always take the weather earing in a blow and no man dared to
-send him in. When Jim was on deck the old seaman kept him under his eye
-in case of trouble, and Mr. Rose was always most vigilant. The mate had
-determined to kill the lad at the first sign of danger. I tried again
-and again to win his confidence, but he seemed to look upon me as his
-enemy. He refused to take me for a friend, and my little talks were
-futile.
-
-"'Aw, tell it to yer gran'mother,' he would say to me. 'Don't try to
-stuff me, Bo. Youse had your innings at that--now fergit it before you
-git inter the soup ag'in. I knows youse, an' I ain't done wid youse
-yet, either--see? Youse done me dirt--youse done me when I first come
-in de ship. I ain't decided just what I'll do to youse yet, but youse
-better keep yer eye liftin' fer me. Don' try to razzle-dazzle me none.
-I ain't afraid of youse at all. You ain't got de noive to do me--see?
-But I got it in fer youse all hunk, now don't make no mistake erbout
-dat. I'll let youse off easier the better we gets erlong--see? If we
-gets erlong all right I may let youse down easy--if not, I'll kill you
-as sure as I breathe, an' that goes as it lays. Do youse git it right?'
-
-"Here was a boy, now sixteen, telling the master of a ship he would
-kill him if things were not to his liking. What do you think of it,
-anyway? I never could work it out I couldn't lock him up any more for
-it would have killed him--and I must not kill the lad--I don't know----
-
-"The whole affair was insane. It was grotesque. But there was my
-shattered arm, and there was Bowles limping about--that fire at
-Hong-Kong--and I must bring Willie back home. I'm telling you a true
-story. I'm telling you of a boy, an apprentice.
-
-"When we struck the rough weather of the high latitudes Willie was
-happy. He was worked out to a gantline by Jim, and he was beginning to
-run the men a bit. It was amazing and absurd to hear that kid yelling
-orders to the men aloft. Slack-away' or 'clew up,' whatever the order
-was, and he was very smart. He could beat the best of them to the royal
-yard; and he was taking pride in it. His voice was at that stage when
-it cracks and goes into a treble, and no one laughed. Even the mate
-watched it all with gloomy eyes, never saying a thing, and never even
-smiling. And it was amazing how the men obeyed him. If a man failed
-to do so, only an apology and the reception of a kick upon the stern
-would save him from a fracas, for Willie kept right after them. Yes,
-he inherited all the masterly qualities of his father. He was a wonder
-at seamanship. One day a dago didn't like the way Willie trod upon his
-feet when they were both hauling a brace. They mixed, and it was the
-closest shave for the lad. He came out with a bad cut, for the dago
-at sea takes to a knife like a babe to milk. That night, while in his
-bunk, the dago was slammed over the head with a handspike, and we had
-to keep him off duty until the ship docked.
-
-"When we came in Jim brought his charge aft to sign off, as is the
-custom, you know, for their slop chest accounts. Willie came up.
-
-"I haven't got much against you, Willie; you owe me for a couple of
-plugs of tobacco, but we'll let that go," I said.
-
-"'No, we don't, Bo; youse charge it all up right an' proper. Den I got
-a small account agin de ship--which I'll settle right now----'
-
-"But old Jim was too quick for him.
-
-"'Take him forward and keep him in irons until we get in. We'll get
-inside before dark,' I ordered. You know how it is when a ship comes
-in. The land sharks were there in swarms, but among them was old man
-Jackson waiting for his son. They went away hand in hand, the old man
-never even speaking to me--I always thought he knew.
-
-"Our cargo was valued at about half a million. It was nearly all
-Jackson's, as he owned the greatest shares in all the ships. We docked
-and were forced to lay right behind a barge loaded with dynamite,
-nearly two tons of it ready for taking out in the morning to blow Hell
-Gate rock.
-
-"Bowles had gone ashore with the rest, and Rose had stepped up the
-street for a 'first night' off. He was not due until midnight. I always
-suspected the second officer or the dago--I don't know, only neither
-of them ever showed up again. They both had seen the President of the
-line take his son, his young hopeful, away with him. They both had
-suffered much from his hands. Perhaps it was revenge--to try to get
-even with the father for the son's sins. Anyhow, I had hardly turned in
-that night, leaving old Jones, the shipkeeper, on deck, when the old
-fellow ran below and told me the ship was afire forward. I turned out
-instantly and was on deck.
-
-"The ship was burning like a beacon from the foremast to the t'gallant
-forecastle. She seemed to be spread with oil. Jones was seventy and
-unable to do much. I ran forward and yelled for help. In ten minutes
-the engines were playing a stream upon the ship and a fireboat was
-flooding her from aft. Jackson came down on the run to see his vessel
-being destroyed and his cargo vanishing in black smoke. He had had
-trouble with the insurance, and he was worried. Then while he stood
-upon the dock and spoke to me as I stood upon the rail amidships, I was
-aware of a small figure near him.
-
-"'Aw, say, Bo, youse better get away from there--cut out, see? There's
-powder to blow youse to hell and back right there in that lighter.
-Youse ain't got more'n a minute, cully. Better git gay wid de lines.'
-
-"Then I recognized Willie. He had come down to see the blaze and was
-calling attention to the thing we had forgotten for the moment.
-
-"'Call de watch, an' I'll lend youse a hand.'
-
-"I called for Jones to slack off the after lines, and then I ran as
-far as I could into the smoke and managed to cast off forward, getting
-nearly drowned with the engine water. Jackson came aboard and worked
-like mad. The stern lines were cast off, but before we could do
-anything the ship began to swing right down upon the barge. The slip
-was too narrow to get the dynamite past the vessel, and there she was
-now surging ahead upon it. She had both blocked the slip and surged
-into it. I began to yell to the men standing about to get away from the
-place before the explosion. They had crowded about as close as they
-could to see the fire, not knowing anything about what was on the barge.
-
-"Jackson rushed aft and howled to the fireboat to pass a line, as the
-wind was now blowing her slowly across the slip and right upon the
-dynamite. Every one who could understand me began to run. The dock
-cleared off quickly. Then, just as I was about to jump ashore myself, I
-heard a voice close to the rail.
-
-"'Aw, say, Bo, give me a heavin' line--I kin swim acrost the slip--den
-hurry up an' bend de hawser, youse can heave her over easy enough.
-Don't get nutty.'
-
-"I saw Willie standing there, and without further ado I threw him the
-end of a small line. He jumped in without a word and swam rapidly
-across the narrow stretch of water to the other dock. A man on the pier
-reached down and took the line from the lad. I had already bent on the
-hawser, and it went across lively. Then taking the end to the midship
-capstan, I got old Jones to hold the turns while I walked her around as
-fast as I could.
-
-"But I was not strong enough to warp a heavy ship across a slip even
-in still water. The ship surged ahead slowly in spite of all I could
-do, and Jackson grabbed a capstan bar to help. It was a poor chance at
-best, but we worked on. I caught a glimpse of a slight figure working
-upon the deck of the barge, throwing cases of powder overboard. A man
-appeared with him, but I could not take time to see much. The boxes
-were cases of about a hundred pounds each, and they were rapidly
-going overboard, and with the tide through the dock. Minutes passed,
-but nothing happened. We seemed to be getting way upon the ship, and
-Jackson swore and strove mightily to save her, with no thought of
-leaving even in the face of a terrific explosion. We would have gone
-clear all right but for the fact we had our port anchor over and
-hanging from the cathead. We had warped the ship clear of the barge,
-and her bow swung over, the line being too far aft and the fire and
-water too dangerous to work in forward. The fluke of the anchor swept a
-pile of boxes--about three hundred pounds---and then came the crash. It
-was terrific. The fluke was clear of the ship's hull by several feet,
-but it was blown through the deck, the five-thousand-pound anchor flung
-like a toy through her side. She shook from end to end. We were all
-blown flat, stunned, although we had many feet of solid vessel between
-us and the blast.
-
-"When we came around from the shock of the explosion Jackson had the
-pleasure of seeing his ship without a bowsprit, her nose blown clear
-off, but the fire was blown out. There was not even much smoke left.
-The barge had entirely vanished.
-
-"The firemen came aboard afterward, and so did many shipmasters, whose
-vessels lay in the vicinity. Jackson met them dumbly. He said nothing.
-
-"'Good thing they got the dynamite overboard quick enough,' said
-Captain Smith of the _Sunnerdun_. 'That boy, whoever he was, was all
-right. The watchman ran away just before the smash.'
-
-"'What boy?' asked a fireman.
-
-"But it was no use to tell us what boy--we knew, we felt, it all along.
-
-"Yes, that was the end of him. He had tried to save the ship, his
-father's ship--and he had done it when men failed--I don't know--I
-can't judge him. Old man Jackson left without a word, and I never saw
-him again."
-
-The old seaman paused, and the night showed his cigar end flaming
-again. I sat there thinking over the tale, the true tale of that boy,
-for I knew Large was telling me only facts. It was all very strange,
-all like a horrid nightmare the old seaman had suffered from; but it
-was not a dream, it was the truth about a boy, just a rough, tough boy
-whose ideals had been a bit peculiar. I looked over across the berth
-at my own ship, where five boys were already signed on for the voyage
-around the Cape, and I began to wonder if I had done a wise thing
-to ship them. Then I determined right there to give them some extra
-thought and study, to try to fathom what lay behind their "going to
-sea."
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[A] Copyright, 1911, by Doubleday, Page & Co.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
-
-
- Text in italics is surrounded with underscores: _italics_.
-
- Incorrect page numbers in the Table of Contents have been corrected.
-
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been retained from the original.
-
- Inconsistencies in spelling and punctuation have been standardized.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Chief Mate's Yarns, by Mayn Clew Garnett
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Chief Mate's Yarns, by Mayn Clew Garnett
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
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-
-
-
-Title: The Chief Mate's Yarns
- Twelve Tales of the Sea
-
-Author: Mayn Clew Garnett
-
-Release Date: October 9, 2017 [EBook #55723]
-
-Language: English
-
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHIEF MATE'S YARNS ***
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-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt=""/></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="center"><span class="large">TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:</span></p>
-
- <p>The title page of the original book image was modified and used as the cover for this eBook.</p>
-
- <p>Incorrect page numbers in the Table of Contents have been corrected.</p>
-
- <p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been retained from the original.</p>
-
- <p>Inconsistencies in spelling and punctuation have been standardized.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<h1>THE<br />
-CHIEF MATE'S YARNS</h1>
-
-<p><span class="xlarge"><i>TWELVE TALES OF THE SEA</i></span></p>
-
-<p><small>BY</small></p>
-
-<p><span class="large">CAPT. MAYN CLEW GARNETT</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i001.jpg" alt=""/></div>
-
-<p><span class="large">G. W. DILLINGHAM COMPANY</span><br />
-PUBLISHERS<span class="indent">NEW YORK</span></p></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1911, 1912, by</span><br />
-STREET &amp; SMITH<br />
-
-<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1912, by</span><br />
-G. W. DILLINGHAM COMPANY</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="indent2"><i>The White Ghost of Disaster</i></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2></div>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="3" summary="table">
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The White Ghost of Disaster</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Light Ahead</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Wreck of the "Rathbone"</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The After Bulkhead</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_105">105</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Captain Junard</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">In the Wake of the Engine</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_148">148</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">In the Hull of the "Heraldine"</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_172">172</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">A Two-Stranded Yarn&mdash;Part I</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">A Two-Stranded Yarn&mdash;Part II</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_234">234</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">At the End of the Drag-Rope</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_263">263</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Pirates Twain</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_279">279</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Judgment of Men</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_310">310</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">On Going to Sea</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_333">333</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">THE WHITE GHOST OF DISASTER</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>We had been sitting in at the game for more
-than an hour, and no life had entered it.
-The thoughts of all composing that little
-group of five in the most secluded corner of the
-ship's smoking room were certainly not on the
-game, and three aces lay down to fours up.</p>
-
-<p>The morose and listless ship's officer out of a
-berth, although he spoke little&mdash;if at all&mdash;seemed
-to put a spell of uneasiness and unrest on the party.
-The others did not know him or his history; but his
-looks spelled disaster and misfortune.</p>
-
-<p>At last Charlie Spangler, the noted journalist,
-keen for a story or two, threw down his cards, exclaiming:
-"Let's quit. None of us is less uneasy
-than the rest of the ship's passengers."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," chimed in Arthur Linch, the noted stock-broker.
-"We have endeavored to banish the all-pervading
-thought, 'will the ship arrive safely without
-being wrecked,' and have failed miserably.
-Cards will not do it." This seemed to express the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
-sentiments of everybody except the morose mariner,
-whose thoughts nobody could read or fathom. He
-sat there, deep in his chair, gazing at a scene or
-scenes none of us could see or appreciate.</p>
-
-<p>"Well! Since we cannot take our thoughts off
-'shipwreck,' we may as well discuss the subject and
-ease our minds," added the journalist again, still
-hot on the scent of the possible story which he felt
-that the ship's officer hoarded.</p>
-
-<p>The mariner, however, did not respond to this,
-and continued with his memories, apparently oblivious
-of our presence.</p>
-
-<p>Under the leadership of the journalist the discussion
-waxed warm for some time, until the stock-broker,
-ever solicitous for the welfare of the stock-market
-and conforming his opinions thereto, exclaimed
-loudly: "The officers and the crew were
-not responsible for the collision with the berg. It
-was an 'act of God!' and as such we are daily taking
-chances with it. What will be, will be. We cannot
-escape Destiny!"</p>
-
-<p>"Destiny be damned!" came like a thunderbolt
-from the heretofore silent mariner, and we all
-looked to see the face now full of rage and
-passion. "What do you know of the sea, you land
-pirate? What do you know of sea dangers and responsibility
-for the safety of human lives? Man!
-you're crazy. There is no such thing as Destiny at
-sea. A seaman knows what to expect when he
-takes chances. If you call that an 'act of God,' you
-deserve to have been there and submitted to it."</p>
-
-<p>The face of Charlie Spangler was glowing. His<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
-heart beat so fast when he heard this sea clam open
-up, that he was afraid it might overwork and stop.
-"Our friend is right!" he exclaimed. "I infer that
-he speaks from knowledge and experience. We are
-hardly qualified to discuss such matters properly.</p>
-
-<p>"You have something on your mind, friend. Unburden
-it to us. We are sympathetic, you know.
-Our position here makes us so," saying which,
-Spangler filled the mariner's half-empty glass and
-looked at him with sympathy streaming out of his
-trained eyes. We all nodded our assent.</p>
-
-<p>Having fortified himself with the contents of the
-glass before him, the mariner spoke: "Yes, gentlemen,
-I am going to speak from knowledge and experience.
-It was my luck to be aboard of the
-vessel which had the shortest of lives, but which
-will live in the memory of man for many a year.</p>
-
-<p>"It is my misfortune to be one of its surviving
-officers. I am going to give you the facts as they
-happened this last time, and a few other times besides.
-It is the experiences through which I have
-passed that make me wish I had gone down with
-the last one. I must now live on with memories,
-indelibly stamped on my brain, which I would
-gladly forget. Your attention, gentlemen&mdash;"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Captain Brownson came upon the bridge. It was
-early morning, and the liner was tearing through a
-smooth sea in about forty-three north latitude.
-The sun had not yet risen, but the gray of the coming
-daylight showed a heaving swell that rolled
-with the steadiness that told of a long stretch of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
-calm water behind it. The men of the morning
-watch showed their pale faces white with that
-peculiar pallor which comes from the loss of the
-healthful sleep between midnight and morning. It
-was the second mate's watch, and that officer
-greeted the commander as he came to the bridge
-rail where the mate stood staring into the gray
-ahead.</p>
-
-<p>"See anything?" asked the master curtly.</p>
-
-<p>"No, sir&mdash;but I smell it&mdash;feel it," said the mate,
-without turning his head.</p>
-
-<p>"What?" asked Brownson.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't you feel it?&mdash;the chill, the&mdash;well, it's ice,
-sir&mdash;ice, if I know anything."</p>
-
-<p>"Ice?" snarled the captain. "You're crazy!
-What's the matter with you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, very well&mdash;you asked me&mdash;I told you&mdash;that's
-all."</p>
-
-<p>The captain snorted. He disliked the second officer
-exceedingly. Mr. Smith had been sent him by
-the company at the request of the manager of the
-London office. He had always picked his own men,
-and he resented the office picking them for him. Besides,
-he had a nephew, a passenger aboard, who
-was an officer out of a berth.</p>
-
-<p>"What the devil do they know of a man, anyhow!
-I'm the one responsible for him. I'm the
-one, then, to choose him. They won't let me shift
-blame if anything happens, and yet they sent me
-a man I know nothing of except that he is young
-and strong. I'll wake him up some if he stays
-here." So he had commented to Mr. Wylie, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
-chief mate. Mr. Wylie had listened, thought over
-the matter, and nodded his head sagely.</p>
-
-<p>"Sure," he vouchsafed; "sure thing." That was
-as much as any one ever got out of Wylie. He was
-not a talkative mate. Yet when he knew Smith
-better, he retailed the master's conversation to him
-during a spell of generosity engendered by the donation
-of a few highballs by Macdowell, the chief
-engineer. Smith thanked him&mdash;and went his way
-as before, trying to do the best he could. He did
-not shirk duty on that account. Wylie insisted that
-the captain was right. A master was responsible,
-and it was always customary for him to pick his
-men as far as possible. Besides, as Wylie had
-learned from Macdowell, Brownson had a nephew
-in view that would have filled the berth about right&mdash;so
-Wylie thought&mdash;and Smith was a nuisance.
-Smith had taken it all in good part, and smiled.
-He liked Wylie.</p>
-
-<p>Brownson sniffed the air hungrily as he stood
-there at the bridge rail. The air was chilly, but it
-was always chilly in that latitude even in summer.</p>
-
-<p>"How does she head?" he asked savagely of the
-man at the steam-steering gear. The man spoke
-through the pilot-house window in a monotone:</p>
-
-<p>"West&mdash;three degrees south, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"That's west&mdash;one south by standard?" snapped
-Brownson.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sir," said Smith.</p>
-
-<p>"Let her go west&mdash;two south by binnacle&mdash;and
-mark the time accurately," ordered Brownson.</p>
-
-<p>He would shift her a bit. The cool air seemed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
-to come from the northward. It was as if a door
-in an ice box were suddenly opened and the cold air
-within let out in a cold, damp mass. A thin haze
-covered the sea. The side wash rolled away noisily,
-and disappeared into the mist a few fathoms from
-the ship's side. It seemed to thicken as the minutes
-passed.</p>
-
-<p>Brownson was nervous. He went inside the pilot
-house and spoke to the engineer through the tube
-leading to the engine room.</p>
-
-<p>"How is she going?"</p>
-
-<p>"Two hundred and ten, sir; never less than two
-and five the watch."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, she's going too almighty fast&mdash;shut her
-down to one hundred," snapped Brownson. "She's
-been doing twenty-two knots&mdash;it's too fast&mdash;too
-fast, anyhow, in this weather. Ten knots will do
-until the sun scoffs off this mist. Shut her down."</p>
-
-<p>The slowing engines eased their vibrations, and
-the side wash rolled less noisily. There was a
-strange stillness over the sea. The silence grew as
-the headway subsided.</p>
-
-<p>The captain listened intently. He felt something.</p>
-
-<p>There is always that strange something that a
-seaman feels in the presence of great danger when
-awake. It has never been explained. But all good&mdash;really
-good&mdash;masters have felt it; can tell you of
-it if they will. It is uncanny, but it is as true as
-gospel. The second officer had felt it in the air,
-felt it in his nerves. He felt&mdash;<i>ice</i>. It was danger.</p>
-
-<p>Smith stood there watching the haze that seemed
-to deepen rather than disperse as the morning grew.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
-The men turned out and the hose was started, the
-decks were sluiced down, and the gang with the
-squeegees followed. Two bells struck&mdash;five o'clock.
-Smith strained his gaze straight into the haze
-ahead. He fixed and refixed his glasses&mdash;a pair of
-powerful lenses of fifteen lines. He had bought
-them for fifty dollars, and always kept them near
-him while on watch.</p>
-
-<p>A man came up the bridge steps.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall I send up your coffee, sir?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, send it up," said Smith, in a whisper. He
-was listening.</p>
-
-<p>Something sounded out there in the haze. It was
-a strange, vibrating sound, a sort of whispering
-murmur, soft and low, like the far-away notes of a
-harp. Then it ceased. Smith looked at the captain
-who stood within the pilot-house window gazing
-down at the men at work on the deck below. The
-noise of the rushing water from the hose and their
-low tones seemed to annoy him. They wore rubber
-boots, and their footsteps were silent; but he gruffly
-ordered the bos'n to make them "shut up."</p>
-
-<p>"Better slow her down, sir&mdash;there's ice somewhere
-about here," said the second mate anxiously.
-He was thinking of the thousand and more souls
-below and the millions in cargo values.</p>
-
-<p>"Who's running this ship&mdash;me or you?" snarled
-Brownson savagely.</p>
-
-<p>It was an unnecessary remark, wholly uncalled
-for. Smith flushed under his tan and pallor. He
-had seldom been spoken to like that. He would
-have to stand it; but he would hunt a new ship as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
-soon as he came ashore again. It was bad enough
-to be treated like a boy; but to be talked to that
-way before the men made it impossible, absolutely
-impossible. It meant the end of discipline at once.
-A man would retail it, more would repeat it, and&mdash;then&mdash;Smith
-turned away from the bridge rail in
-utter disgust. He was furious.</p>
-
-<p>"Blast the ship!" he muttered, as he turned away
-and gazed aft. His interest was over, entirely over.
-He would not have heard a gun fired at that moment,
-so furious was the passion at the unmerited
-insolence from his commander.</p>
-
-<p>And then, as if to give insult to injury, Brownson
-called down the tube:</p>
-
-<p>"Full speed ahead&mdash;give her all she'll do&mdash;I'm
-tired of loafing around here all the morning." Then
-he rang up the telegraph, and the sudden vibrations
-told of a giant let loose below.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Admiral</i> started ahead slowly. She was a
-giant liner, a ship of eight hundred feet in length.
-It took some moments to get headway upon that
-vast hull. But she started, and in a few minutes
-the snoring of the bow wave told of a tearing speed.
-She was doing twenty-two and a half knots an hour,
-or more than twenty-five miles, the speed of a train
-of cars.</p>
-
-<p>The under steward came up the bridge steps with
-the coffee. Smith took his cup and drank it greedily,
-almost savagely. He was much hurt. His
-feelings had been roughly handled. Yet he had
-not even answered the captain back. He took his
-place at the bridge rail and gazed straight ahead<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
-into the gray mist. He saw nothing, felt nothing,
-but the pain of his insult.</p>
-
-<p>"Let him run the ship to hell and back," he said
-to himself.</p>
-
-<p>There was a puff of colder air than usual. A
-chill as of death itself came floating over the silent
-ocean. A man on lookout stood staring straight
-into the mist ahead, and then sang out:</p>
-
-<p>"Something right ahead, sir," he yelled in a voice
-that carried like the roar of a gun.</p>
-
-<p>Brownson just seized the lever shutting the compartments,
-swung it, jammed it hard over, and
-screamed:</p>
-
-<p>"Stop her&mdash;stop her&mdash;hard over your wheel&mdash;hard
-over&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>His voice ended in a vibrating screech that
-sounded wild, weird, uncanny in that awful silence.
-A hundred men stopped in their stride, or work,
-paralyzed at the tones coming from the bridge.</p>
-
-<p>And then came the impact.</p>
-
-<p>With a grinding, smashing roar as of thousands
-of tons coming together, the huge liner plunged
-headlong into the iceberg that rose grim and silent
-right ahead, towering over her in spite of her great
-height. The shock was terrific, and the grinding,
-thundering crash of falling tons of ice, coupled with
-the rending of steel plates and solid planks, made
-chaos of all sound.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Admiral</i> bit in, dug, plowed, kept on going,
-going, and the whole forward part of her almost
-disappeared into the wall of white. A thousand tons
-of huge flakes slammed and slid down her decks,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
-burying her to the fore hatch in the smother. A
-thousand tons more crashed, slid, and plunged down
-the slopes of the icy mountain and hurled themselves
-into the sea with giant splashes, sending torrents
-of water as high as the bridge rail. The men
-who had been forward were swept away by the
-avalanche. Many were never seen again. And
-then, with reversed engines, she finally came to a
-dead stop, with her bows jammed a hundred feet
-deep in the ice wall of the berg.</p>
-
-<p>After that it was panic. All discipline seemed
-to end in the shock and struggle. Brownson howled
-and stormed from the bridge, and Smith shouted
-orders and sprang down to enforce them. The chief
-mate came on deck in his underclothes and passed
-the word to man the boats. A thousand passengers
-jammed the companionway and strove with panic
-and inhuman fury to reach the deck.</p>
-
-<p>One man clad in a night robe gained the outside
-of the press, and, running swiftly along the deck,
-flitted like a ghost over the rail, and disappeared
-into the sea. He had gone crazy, violently insane
-in the panic.</p>
-
-<p>Brownson tied down the siren cord, and the roar
-shook the atmosphere. The tremendous tones rose
-above the din of screaming men and cursing seamen;
-and then the master called down to the heart
-of the ship, the engine room.</p>
-
-<p>"Is she going?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Water coming in like through a tunnel," came
-the response. "Nearly up to the grates now&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>That was all. The man left the tube to rush on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
-deck, and the captain knew the forward bulkheads
-had gone; had either jammed or burst under that
-terrific impact. The ship was going down.</p>
-
-<p>Brownson stood upon the bridge and gazed down
-at the human tide below him. Men fought furiously
-for places in the small boats. The fireroom
-crew came on deck and mingled with the passengers.
-The coal dust showed upon their white faces,
-making them seem strange beings from an inferno
-that was soon to be abolished. They strove for
-places in the lifeboats and hurled the weaker passengers
-about recklessly. Some, on the other hand,
-helped the women. One man dragged two women
-with him into a boat, kicking, twisting, and roaring
-like a lion. He was a big fellow with a red beard,
-and Brownson watched him. The mate struck him
-over the head with a hand spike for refusing to
-get out of the boat, and his interest in things ended
-at once and forever.</p>
-
-<p>The crew, on the whole, behaved well. Officers
-and men tried to keep some sort of discipline. Finally
-six boats went down alongside into the sea,
-and were promptly swarmed by the crowds above,
-who either slid down the falls or jumped overboard
-and climbed in from the sides. The sea was as still
-as a lake; only the slight swell heaved it. Great
-fields of floating particles of ice from the berg
-floated about, and those who were drenched in the
-spray shivered with the cold.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Admiral</i>, running at twenty-two knots an
-hour, had struck straight into the wall of an iceberg
-that reached as far as the eye could see in the haze.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
-It towered at least three hundred feet in the air,
-showing that its depth was colossal, probably at
-least half a mile. It was a giant ice mountain that
-had broken adrift from its northern home, and,
-drifting southward, had survived the heat of summer
-and the breaking of the sea upon its base.</p>
-
-<p>Smith had felt its dread presence, felt its proximity
-long before he had come to close quarters.
-The chill in the air, the peculiar feeling of danger,
-the icy breath of death&mdash;all had told him of a danger
-that was near. And yet Brownson had scoffed
-at him, railed at his intuition and sense. Upon the
-captain the whole blame of the disaster must fall if
-Smith told.</p>
-
-<p>The second officer almost smiled as he struggled
-with his boat.</p>
-
-<p>"The pig-headed fool!" he muttered between his
-set teeth. "The murdering monster&mdash;he's done it
-now! He's killed himself, and a thousand people
-along with him&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>Smith fought savagely for the discipline of his
-boat. His men had rushed to their stations at the
-first call. The deck was beginning to slant dangerously
-as the falls were slacked off and the lifeboat
-lowered into the sea. Smith stood in the press
-about him and grew strangely calm. The action was
-good for him, good for the burning fury that had
-warped him, scorched him like a hot blast while he
-had stood silently upon the bridge and taken the
-insults of his commander. Women pleaded with
-him for places in the boat. Men begged and took
-hold of him. One lady, half clothed, dropped upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
-her knees and, holding his hand, which hung at his
-side, prayed to him as if he were a deity, a being
-to whom all should defer. He flung her off savagely.</p>
-
-<p>Bareheaded now, coatless, and with his shirt
-ripped, he stood there, and saw his men pass down
-sixteen women into his craft; pass them down without
-comment or favor, age or condition. Thirty
-souls went into his boat before he sprang into the
-falls and slid down himself. A dozen men tried to
-follow him, but he shoved off, and they went into
-the sea. His men got their oars out and rowed off
-a short distance.</p>
-
-<p>Muttering, praying, and crying, the passengers in
-his boat huddled themselves in her bottom. He
-spoke savagely to them, ordered them under pain
-of death to sit down. One man, who shivered as
-he spoke, insisted upon crawling about and shifting
-his position. Smith struck him over the head,
-knocking him senseless. Another, a woman, must
-stand upon the thwarts, to get as far away as possible
-from the dread and icy element about her. He
-swung his fist upon her jaw, and she went whimpering
-down into the boat's bottom, lying there and
-sobbing softly.</p>
-
-<p>Furiously swearing at the herd of helpless passengers
-who endangered his boat at every movement,
-he swung the craft's head about and stood
-gazing at his ship. After a little while the crowd
-became more manageable, and he saw he could keep
-them aboard without the certainty of upsetting the
-craft He had just been debating which of them he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
-would throw overboard to save the rest; save them
-from their own struggling and fighting for their
-own selfish ends. He was as cold as steel, hard, inflexible.
-His men knew him for a ship's officer who
-would maintain his place under all hazards, and
-they watched him furtively, and were ready to obey
-him to the end without question.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, the monster, the murdering monster!" he
-muttered again and again.</p>
-
-<p>His eyes were fixed upon the bridge. High up
-there stood Brownson&mdash;the captain who had sent
-his liner to her death, with hundreds of passengers.</p>
-
-<p>Brownson stood calmly watching the press gain
-and lose places in the boats. Two boats actually
-overloaded rolled over under the immense load of
-human freight. The others did not stop to pick
-them up. They had enough to do to save themselves.
-The ship was sinking. That was certain.
-She must have struck so hard that even the 'midship
-bulkheads gave way, or were so twisted out of
-place that the doors failed. The chief engineer
-came below him and glanced up.</p>
-
-<p>As he did so, a tremendous, roaring blast of
-steam blew the superstructure upward. The boilers
-had gone. Macdowell just gave Brownson a look.
-That was all. Then he rushed for a boat.</p>
-
-<p>Brownson grinned; actually smiled at him.</p>
-
-<p>The man at the wheel asked permission to go.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm a married man, sir&mdash;it's no use of me staying
-here any longer," he ventured.</p>
-
-<p>"Go&mdash;go to the devil!" said Brownson, without
-interest. The man fled.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>Brownson stopped giving any more orders. In
-silence he gazed down at the press of human beings,
-watching, debating within himself the chances they
-had of getting away from that scene of death and
-horror.</p>
-
-<p>The decks grew more and more steep. The liner
-was settling by the head and to starboard. She was
-even now twisting, rolling over; and the motion
-brought down thousands of blocks of ice from the
-berg. The engines had long since stopped. She
-still held her head against the ice wall; but it would
-give her no support. She was slipping away&mdash;down
-to her grave below.</p>
-
-<p>Brownson gazed back over the decks. He
-watched the crowd impersonally, and it seemed
-strange to him that so much valuable fabric should
-go to the bottom so quickly. The paint was so
-clean and bright, the brass was so shiny. The whole
-structure was so thoroughly clean, neat, and in
-proper order. It was absurd. There he was standing
-upon that bridge where he had stood so often, and
-here below him were hundreds of dying people&mdash;people
-like rats in a trap.</p>
-
-<p>"Good Heaven&mdash;is it real?"</p>
-
-<p>He was sure he was not awake. It must be a
-dream. Then the terrible knowledge came back
-upon him like a stroke; a blow that stopped his
-heart. It was the death of his ship he was watching&mdash;the
-death of his ship and of many of his passengers.
-Suddenly Brownson saw the boat of the
-second mate, and that officer standing looking up at
-him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>The master thought he saw the officer's lips move.
-He wondered what the man thought, what he would
-say. He had insulted the officer, made him a clown
-before the men. He knew the second mate would
-not spare him. He knew the second mate would
-testify that he had given warning of ice ten minutes
-before they struck. He also knew that the man
-at the wheel had heard him, as had the steward who
-brought up the coffee, and one or two others who
-were near.</p>
-
-<p>No, there must be no investigation of his, Brownson's,
-blame in the matter. The master dared not
-face that. He looked vacantly at Smith. The officer
-stood gazing straight at him.</p>
-
-<p>The liner suddenly shifted, leaned to starboard,
-heeled far over, and her bows slipped from the berg,
-sinking down clear to her decks, clear down until
-the seas washed to the foot of her superstructure
-just below Brownson. Masses of ice fell from her
-into the sea. The grinding, splashing noise awoke
-the panic again among the remaining passengers
-and crew. They strove with maniac fury to get the
-rafts and other stuff that might float over the side.
-Two boats drew away full to the gunwales with
-people. The air below began to make that peculiar
-whistling sound that tells of pressure&mdash;pressure
-upon the vitals of the ship. She was going down.</p>
-
-<p>Brownson still stood gazing at his second mate.</p>
-
-<p>Smith met the master's eye with a steady look.
-Then he suddenly forgot himself and raised his
-hand.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>"Oh, you murdering rat, you cowardly scoundrel,
-you devil!" he roared out.</p>
-
-<p>Brownson saw the movement of the hand, saw
-that it was vindictive, furious, and full of menace.
-He could not hear the words.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled at the officer, raised his hand, and
-waved it in reply. It seemed to make the mate
-crazy. He gesticulated wildly, swore like a maniac&mdash;but
-Brownson did not hear him. He only knew
-what he was doing.</p>
-
-<p>He turned away, gave one more look over the
-sinking ship.</p>
-
-<p>"She's going now&mdash;and so am I," he muttered.</p>
-
-<p>Then he went slowly into his chart room, opened
-a drawer, and took out a revolver that he always
-kept there. He stood at the open door and cocked
-the weapon. He looked into its muzzle, and saw the
-bullet that would end his life when he pulled the
-trigger.</p>
-
-<p>He almost shuddered. It was so unreal. He
-could not quite do it. He gazed again at the second
-mate. He knew the officer was watching him, knew
-Smith would not believe he had the nerve to end the
-thing then and there. It amused him slightly in a
-grim sort of way. Why, he <i>must</i> die. That was
-certain. He could never face his own family and
-friends after what he had done. As to getting another
-ship&mdash;that was too absurd to think of.</p>
-
-<p>The form of a woman showed in the boat. She
-had risen from the bottom, where the blow of the
-officer had felled her in her frenzy. Brownson saw
-her, recognized her as his niece, the sister of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
-man he had wished to put in Smith's place. It was
-for his own nephew he had insulted his officer, had
-caused him to relax and lose the interest that made
-navigation safe, in the hope that Smith would leave
-and let his relative get the berth.</p>
-
-<p>He wondered if Smith knew. He stood there
-with the revolver in his hand watching for some
-sign from his second officer. Smith gazed at him
-in fury, apparently not noticing the girl whom he
-had just before knocked into the boat's bottom to
-keep order. She stood up. Smith roughly pushed
-her down again. Brownson was sure now&mdash;he felt
-that Smith knew all.</p>
-
-<p>But he put the revolver in his pocket. He would
-not fire yet.</p>
-
-<p>The ship was listing heavily, and the cries of the
-passengers were dying out. All who had been able
-to get away had gone, somehow, and only a few
-desperate men and women, who could not swim and
-who were cool enough to realize that swimming
-would but prolong an agony that was better over
-quickly, huddled aft at the taffrail. They would
-take the last second left them, the last instant of
-life, and suffer a thousand deaths every second to
-get it. It was absurd. Brownson pitied them.</p>
-
-<p>Many of these women were praying and talking
-to their men, who held them in a last embrace. One
-young woman was clinging closely to a young man,
-and they were apparently not suffering terror. A
-look of peacefulness was upon the faces of both.
-They were lovers, and were satisfied to die together;
-and the thought of it made them satisfied.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
-Brownson wondered at this. They were young
-enough and strong enough to make a fight for life.</p>
-
-<p>A whistling roar, arose above all other sounds.
-The siren had ceased, and Brownson knew the air
-was rushing from below. The ship would drop in
-a moment. He grasped the pistol again. He
-dreaded that last plunge, that drop into the void
-below. The thought held him a little. The ocean
-was always so blue out there, so clear and apparently
-bottomless, a great void of water. He wondered
-at the depth, what kind of a dark bed would
-receive that giant fabric, the work of so many human
-hands. And then he wondered at his own end
-there. His own end? What nonsense! It was unreal.
-Death was always for others. It had never
-been for him. He had seen men die. It was not
-for him yet. He would not believe it. He would
-awaken soon, and the steward would bring him his
-coffee.</p>
-
-<p>Then he caught the eye of Smith again in that
-boat waiting for the end out there. His heart gave
-an immense jolt, began beating wildly. The ship
-heeled more and more. The ice crashed and
-plunged from her forward. Brownson was awakening
-to the real at last. He felt it in those extra
-heartbeats; knew he must hurry it. Then he wondered
-what the papers would say; whether they
-would call him a coward, afraid to face the inevitable.
-He hoped they would not. But, then, what
-difference would it all make, anyhow&mdash;to him? He
-was dead. His interest was over. What difference<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
-would it make whether he was a coward or not?
-Men knew him for what he was, but he existed no
-longer. He was dead.</p>
-
-<p>While he stood there with these thoughts in his
-mind, his nerve half lacking to end the thing, it
-seemed to him it was lasting for an eternity. He
-was growing tired of it all. He turned away again
-and entered the chart room.</p>
-
-<p>His cat crawled from somewhere and rubbed its
-tail and side against his leg. Then the animal
-jumped to the table, and he stroked it; actually
-stroked it while Smith watched him, and swore at
-him for a cold-blooded scoundrel.</p>
-
-<p>The ship sank to her superstructure. Her stern
-rose high in the air. It was now impossible to
-stand on deck without holding on. Some of the
-remaining passengers slid off with parting shrieks.
-They dropped into that icy sea.</p>
-
-<p>Brownson felt the end coming now, and turned
-again to the doorway, looking straight at his second
-mate. Smith was trying to quell the movement
-among his crowd which was endangering his boat
-again.</p>
-
-<p>The captain clutched the door jamb and watched.
-Then the ship began to sink. He could not make up
-his mind to jump clear. There was Smith looking
-at him. He dared not be saved when hundreds
-were being killed. No, he could not make that
-jump and swim to a boat under that officer's gaze.
-And yet at the last moment he was about to try it.
-Panic was upon him in a way that he hardly realized.
-He simply could not face the black gulf he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
-was dropping into with his health and full physical
-powers still with him. It was nature to make a last
-effort for his life. Then, before he could make the
-jump overboard, he saw Smith again shaking his
-hand at him and howling curses.</p>
-
-<p>He pulled the pistol. An ashy whiteness came
-over his face. Smith saw it. He stopped swearing;
-stopped in his furious denunciation of the man
-who had caused so much destruction. He also saw
-the pistol plainly, and wondered at the captain's
-nerve.</p>
-
-<p>"You are afraid, you dog&mdash;you are afraid&mdash;you
-daren't do it, you murdering rat!" he yelled.</p>
-
-<p>The men in the boat were all gazing up at the
-chart-house door where the form of their commander
-stood.</p>
-
-<p>"He's going to shoot, sir," said the stroke oarsman.</p>
-
-<p>"He's afraid&mdash;he won't dare!" howled Smith.</p>
-
-<p>Brownson seemed to hear now. The silence was
-coming again, and the sounds on the sinking ship
-were dying out.</p>
-
-<p>Brownson gazed straight at his second officer.
-Smith saw him raise the pistol, saw a bit of blue
-smoke, saw his commander sink down to the deck
-and disappear. A cracking and banging of ice
-blocks blended with the report, and the ship raised
-her stern higher. Then she plunged straight downward,
-straight as a plummet for the bottom of the
-Atlantic Ocean. Smith knew his captain had gone
-to his end; that he was a dead man at last.</p>
-
-<p>He stood watching the mighty swirl where the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
-liner had gone under. The men in his boat were
-also looking. They had seen all.</p>
-
-<p>"Look&mdash;look!" shrieked a passenger. "The captain
-has shot himself!"</p>
-
-<p>"She's gone&mdash;gone for good!" cried another.
-"Oh, the pity of it all!"</p>
-
-<p>Smith did not reply. He was still gazing at the
-apparition he had seen in that chart-house door; the
-figure of the man shooting himself through the
-head. It had chilled his anger, staggered him. The
-awful nerve of it all, the horror&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Hadn't we better see if we can get one or two
-more in her, sir?" asked the stroke oarsman. "I see
-a woman swimming there."</p>
-
-<p>Smith did not answer. He seemed not to hear.
-Then he suddenly awoke to his surroundings. He
-was alive to the occasion, the desperate situation.</p>
-
-<p>"Give way port&mdash;ease starboard&mdash;swing her out
-of that swirl&mdash;hard on that port oar," he ordered.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Smith looked around for the other boats. The
-chief mate's was in sight, showing dimly through
-the haze. She was full of people, crowded, and it
-was a wonder how she floated with the screaming,
-panic-stricken passengers, who fought for places in
-her in spite of Wylie's oaths and entreaties. Smith
-glared.</p>
-
-<p>"The fools!" he muttered. "If they would only
-think of something besides their own hides for a
-second. But they won't. They never do. It's nature,
-and when the trouble comes they fight like
-cats."</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>He steered away from what he saw was trouble.
-He would not pick up the participants in the scuffle
-when they overturned the boat. He was full up
-now, carrying all his boat would hold. She rocked
-dangerously with every shifting of the crowd, that
-still trembled and scuffled for more comfort in her.
-Her gunwales were only a few inches above the
-sea, and it might come on to blow at any minute.</p>
-
-<p>"Sit down!" he roared to the old man, who would
-shift and squirm about in the boat, interfering with
-the stroke oarsman, who jammed his oar into the
-small of the fellow's back, regardless of the pain it
-caused.</p>
-
-<p>"Sit down or I'll throw you overboard! Do you
-hear?"</p>
-
-<p>The old man whimpered and struggled for a more
-comfortable position; and Smith reached over with
-the tiller and slammed him heavily across the shoulders,
-knocking him over.</p>
-
-<p>"If you get up again I'll kill you, you cowardly
-old nuisance!" he said savagely.</p>
-
-<p>The old man lay quiet and trembling. A young
-woman upbraided Smith for brutality and talked
-volubly.</p>
-
-<p>"Talk, you little fool!" he said. "Talk all you
-want to, but don't you get moving about in this
-boat, or I'll break your pretty neck."</p>
-
-<p>"You are a monster," said the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes; but if I'd had my way, you would have
-been safe and sound below in your room instead of
-out here in this ice," snapped Smith.</p>
-
-<p>The girl quieted down, and then spoke to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
-young woman, who lay in the bottom of the boat
-where she had fallen when Smith struck her down.
-She was the niece of Captain Brownson.</p>
-
-<p>"I never heard of such utter brutality in my life,"
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Billings, who had first found fault, agreed
-with her.</p>
-
-<p>"Was your brother aboard, Miss Roberts?" asked
-Smith.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, he was&mdash;I think he went in the mate's boat&mdash;why
-do you ask?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I was just thinking&mdash;that's all. He would
-have been second officer next voyage. That seemed
-to be fixed, didn't it?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes; and if it had, this thing would not have
-happened," said the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"No; probably it would not," said the second officer
-sadly. He spoke, for the first time, with less
-passion. He thought of the manner they had taken
-to get his berth, the insults, the infamy of the whole
-thing.</p>
-
-<p>"No; I don't suppose you knew how it was done,"
-said he, half aloud.</p>
-
-<p>The girl sat up. She had stopped whimpering
-from the blow.</p>
-
-<p>Smith watched her for a few minutes while he
-swung the boat's head for the gray mist ahead
-where he knew lay the iceberg. He thought the
-face pretty, the figure well rounded and perfectly
-shaped. He felt sorry he had used such harshness
-in making her behave in the boat. But there was
-no time for silly sentiment. That boat must be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
-manned properly and kept afloat, and the slapping of
-a girl was nothing at all. She might start a sudden
-movement and endanger the lives of all. Absolute
-trimming of the craft was the only way she could
-be safe to carry the immense load. The men rowed
-slowly and apparently without object. Smith
-headed the boat for the ice.</p>
-
-<p>A long wall of peculiar pale blueness suddenly
-burst from the haze close to them. It was the iceberg.
-He swung the boat so that she would not
-strike it, and followed along the ragged side.</p>
-
-<p>The two young women gazed up at the pale blueness
-caused by the fresh water in the ice. It was
-a beautiful sight. The pinnacles were sharp as
-needles, and they pierced the mist in white points,
-tapering down to the white-and-blue sheen at the
-base, where the ocean roared and surged in a deep-toned
-murmur. Great pieces broke from the mass
-while they gazed. Smith steered out and sheered
-the boat's head away from the dangerous wall. It
-was grand but deadly. A large block lay right
-ahead.</p>
-
-<p>"Ease starboard," he said.</p>
-
-<p>The craft swung clear. The mist from the cold
-ocean thinned a little. Right ahead was a flat plateau,
-a raised field of ice joining the berg. It sloped
-down suddenly to the sea, and the swell broke upon
-it as upon a rocky shore. A long, flat floe stretched
-away from the higher part. It was a field of at
-least a half mile in length. The huge berg reached
-a full half mile further. The whole was evidently
-broken from some giant glacier in the Arctic.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>Smith debated his chances within himself. He
-scorned to ask his men, for he had seen much ice
-before in his seagoing. To remain near the berg
-was to miss a ship possibly; but to row far off was
-to miss fresh water. He had come away without
-either food or water, owing to the furious panic.
-He knew very well that, within a few hours at
-most, the famished folk in his boat would rave for a
-drink. They must have water, at least, even if they
-must do without food.</p>
-
-<p>The iceberg lay right in the path of ships, as his
-own had proved, the liner running upon the great
-circle from New York to Liverpool. There was
-the certainty of meeting, or of at least coming close
-to a vessel shortly, for others of his line would run
-the same circle, the same course, as he had run it
-before.</p>
-
-<p>With giant liners going at twenty-five knots
-speed, they usually kept pretty close to the same line,
-for there were few currents that were not accurately
-known over that route. The Gulf Stream was a
-fixed unit almost; and in calm weather other ships
-would certainly reckon with accuracy to meet its
-set. If he rowed far off the line, then he might or
-might not meet a ship. If he did not, then there
-would soon be death and terror in that boat.</p>
-
-<p>He decided to keep close to the berg, and ordered
-his men to give way slowly while he navigated the
-field and skirted it, keeping just far enough out to
-avoid the dangerous breaks and floating pieces.</p>
-
-<p>The morning wore away, and the occupants of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
-boat began to grow restless. They had been
-cramped up for several hours now, and they were
-not used to sitting in a cold, open boat in a thick,
-misty haze without food or water. The old man
-began to complain. Several women began to ask
-for water. One woman with three children begged
-him to go ashore and get them a piece of ice to allay
-their thirst. Smith saw that the effects of the
-wild excitement were now being felt, and the inevitable
-thirst that must follow was at hand.</p>
-
-<p>He headed the boat for a low part of the field.</p>
-
-<p>"Easy on your oars," he commanded. The boat
-slid gently upon the sloping ice.</p>
-
-<p>"Jump out, Sam," he said to the bow oarsman.
-"Jump out and take the painter with you." The
-man did so, hauling the line far up the floe.</p>
-
-<p>One by one the rest were allowed to climb out of
-the boat. They gathered upon a part of the field
-that rose a full ten feet above the sea; and there
-they began trying to get small pieces of ice to eat.
-It was as salt as the sea itself, and they were disappointed,
-spitting it out. Smith took a man along
-with him and started for the berg. The boat was
-left in charge of four men, who held her off the
-floe.</p>
-
-<p>Within half an hour, the whole crowd had managed
-to get fresh-water ice. The second officer kept
-them close to the boat and watched for any signs
-of change in the weather. They were allowed to go
-a short distance and get the stiffness from their
-limbs by exercise.</p>
-
-<p>"I am very tired and cold. Can I get back into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
-the boat?" asked Miss Roberts, after she had been
-stamping her feet upon the floe for half an hour.</p>
-
-<p>Smith looked at her. The print of his hand was
-plainly marked upon her face. He felt ashamed.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, you can go aboard," he said; and then, as
-if in apology for what he had done, he explained:
-"You must keep quiet in that boat, you know. You
-must not try to walk about, for it endangers the
-whole crowd. You understand, don't you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I'll try and keep still, but my feet get so
-cold and I grow so stiff."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, you must forgive me for having used
-you roughly. I had to do it. There was no time
-for politeness in that panic." He came close to
-her. His eyes held a light she feared greatly, and
-she shrank back.</p>
-
-<p>"I hope it is not a time now for politeness," she
-said, with meaning.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I wouldn't hurt you," said Smith.</p>
-
-<p>"I hope not," said the girl.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Billings asked if she could go aboard also.
-Smith allowed her, and called the boat in.</p>
-
-<p>The two girls climbed into the boat, and the
-older women commented spiritedly upon the favors
-of youth. Smith shut them up with an oath. The
-woman with the three children huddled them back
-aboard as the ice caused them to shiver with the
-cold on their little feet. They had neglected to put
-on their shoes. The women, for the most part, were
-only half dressed, and few, if any, had on shoes.
-They had rushed on deck at the first alarm, and the
-time allowed for dressing was short. The ship had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
-gone down within fifteen minutes from the first impact
-with the berg.</p>
-
-<p>Smith walked to and fro upon the ice for some
-time. The sun shone for a few moments, but was
-quickly hidden again in the haze.</p>
-
-<p>A gentle breeze began to blow from the southward,
-and the haze broke up a little. Smith began
-to get nervous about the ice, and finally ordered
-all his people back into the boat, where they huddled
-and shivered, hungry but no longer thirsty.</p>
-
-<p>During all these hours there had been no further
-sign of the other boats. Smith knew that at least
-ten of them had gone clear of the sinking ship. The
-chief mate's boat was the one he was most interested
-in at present. He wanted to see the man who had
-indirectly caused the disaster; the man whom
-Brownson was playing up for the berth of second
-officer. The thing was a reality now since the tragedy.
-Before it, he had looked upon the matter as
-slight indeed.</p>
-
-<p>The second mate headed his boat out and kept
-clear of the drifting ice; but always under the lee
-of the berg, which offered considerable shelter from
-both wind and sea, which were rising. The danger
-of floating ice was not great during daylight, and
-he swung the small boat close and rode easily, keeping
-her dry and clear of water. He dreaded the
-plunging he must inevitably undergo in the open
-ocean with that load of women.</p>
-
-<p>With the increasing breeze, the haze lifted entirely
-until the horizon showed clear all around.
-There was no sign of the other boats. Smith knew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
-then that they had steered off to the southward to
-avoid the ice. As the sea began to grow, the masses
-of ice broke adrift with distinct and loud reports,
-the plunging pieces from the higher parts making
-considerable noise above the deepening roar of the
-surge upon the base.</p>
-
-<p>At three in the afternoon, Smith began to feel
-nervous. The ice was breaking up fast, and immense
-pieces were floating in the sea which bore
-them toward him. They grew more and more dangerous
-to the small craft, and the officer headed
-away from the vicinity and sought the open at last.</p>
-
-<p>By five that afternoon, when the light was fading,
-he was riding a heavy sea, that grew rapidly
-and rolled quickly, the combers breaking badly and
-keeping two men busy bailing the boat. She made
-water fast.</p>
-
-<p>The night came on with all its terrors, and the
-small boat was in great danger. Smith tried his
-best to keep her headed to the sea, which was now
-running high and strong. His men began to
-weaken under the continuous strain; and by ten that
-night they could no longer hold the boat's head to
-the sea. She fell off once or twice, and nearly filled
-when in the trough. There was little to do but
-make a last effort to hold her. The steady second
-officer came to his last resource.</p>
-
-<p>There were five oars in the boat. Four of these
-he lashed into a drag by fastening two of them in
-the shape of a cross, and then lashing the other two
-across the end of the cross. He had a spare line
-of some length in the boat; and with this bent to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
-the painter, he had a cable of at least twenty fathoms,
-which he led over the bows and to the drag.
-The drag was weighted with some chain that lay
-forward. The fifth oar he kept aboard, and used it
-himself for a sweep to hold her head as nearly as
-possible behind the drag and to the sea.</p>
-
-<p>He was tired, sore, and hungry, but he kept the
-boat's head true for hours, and his people huddled
-down in the bottom, and prayed or swore as the
-humor took them. The children wept, and some of
-the older women fainted and lay prone. These gave
-no trouble. Some of the younger ones still insisted
-on moving about, and brought the wrath of the
-mate upon them in no uncertain manner. Smith
-was making a fight for their lives, and would not
-tolerate any hysteria. He smote all who disobeyed
-with his usual impersonal and rough manner; but
-the two girls were now too much cowed to give him
-trouble. They lay in the boat's bottom and wept
-and sobbed the night long, holding to each other,
-while the boat tossed high in the air or fell far
-down the slopes of ugly seas. And all the time the
-water broke over her low gunwales as she sat well
-down under her load of living freight.</p>
-
-<p>It was about midnight when the old man, who
-had been unruly from the first, sprang upon a
-thwart and plunged over the side with a shrill
-scream.</p>
-
-<p>Smith saw him, and made, a pass to catch him
-with the oar; but the old fellow drifted out of
-reach. The second officer swung the boat as far as
-possible toward him; but still he could not reach<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
-the figure that showed floating for a few moments
-in the darkness. Then Miss Roberts, who was close
-to the stern sheets, spoke up.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, the pity of it, the pity of that old man dying
-like this! Will no one save him?" she cried.</p>
-
-<p>Her companion sat up.</p>
-
-<p>"There's no one aboard here who can do anything
-but bully us women. If we had a man here,
-we might save him. I would jump after him myself,
-but I can't swim. It's horrible to see him
-drown right alongside of us in this darkness."</p>
-
-<p>Smith heard and smiled grimly. He was tired
-out, sore, and almost exhausted, but he was full of
-pluck and fight still. To drop the steering oar might
-prove fatal if a comber struck the boat. He called
-to the stroke oarsman who took the oar. Smith
-took the stern line, gave a turn about a cork jacket
-that lay upon the seat, and then over the side he
-went, calling the men to haul him in when he gave
-the word.</p>
-
-<p>The affair had only taken a few moments, and
-the form of the old fellow was hardly under the
-surface. Smith floundered to him; but, being a poor
-swimmer, as most sailors are, he was quite exhausted
-when he finally grabbed him. Instead of
-easing on the line, he hung dead upon it, hardly
-able to keep his face out of the sea. The girls
-watched him over the gunwales, but keeping their
-places. Two men started to haul him in without
-waiting for a signal; and they hove upon the line
-with a right good will. It was old and dry-rotted,
-as most lines in lifeboats are, and it parted.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
-Smith felt the slack, and knew what it meant.
-The cork jacket held him above the surface, and he
-looked at the boat which seemed so far away in the
-darkness, but in reality was only a few fathoms.
-Yet it was too far for him to make it again. It
-meant his death, his ending.</p>
-
-<p>He tried to swim, but the exertion of the day had
-been too much. His efforts were weak and ill-directed,
-and he floundered weakly about, drifting
-farther away all the time.</p>
-
-<p>The stroke oarsman called for another line.
-There was none except that of the drag. It would
-not do to haul it in. The boat was doing all she
-could now to keep herself afloat, and to risk her
-broadside in the sea might be fatal for all hands.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Roberts begged some one to go to the officer's
-assistance. Smith seemed to hear and understand.
-He floundered with more vigor. There was
-not a man among the boat's crew who dared to go
-over the side in the night. There was nothing more
-to do but watch and hope that the second mate
-would finally make it. But he did not. He struggled
-on for many minutes. They could see him now
-and then fighting silently in the night. He still
-seemed to hold the old man with one hand.</p>
-
-<p>"It is dreadful&mdash;can no one do anything for
-him?" begged Miss Roberts.</p>
-
-<p>"I can't swim a stroke, lady," said the man at the
-steering oar.</p>
-
-<p>No one volunteered to go. Smith slowly drifted
-off as the boat sagged back upon her drag. Then
-he disappeared entirely in the darkness.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>"The brute&mdash;I didn't think it was in him," said
-Miss Billings, with feeling.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't talk that way," said Miss Roberts. "Don't
-talk that way of a man who did what he has done.
-I forgive him with all my heart&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>The morning dawned, and the sea rolled with less
-vigor. The boat was still able to keep herself clear.
-The white faces of the men told of the frantic endeavor.
-The women were now nearly all too exhausted
-to either care for anything or do anything.
-They lay listless upon the boat's bottom, and she
-made better weather for that fact. By nine o'clock
-a steamer was heading for them; and within an
-hour they were safe aboard and bound in for New
-York. They arrived a few days later.</p>
-
-<p>The chief mate's boat had kept her course to the
-southward after leaving the berg&mdash;she had gone
-ahead of Smith's. By midnight that night she was
-almost dead ahead of the second officer's boat when
-Smith jumped in to save the old man.</p>
-
-<p>Daylight showed Wylie a dark speck on the horizon;
-and at the same time he saw the smoke of the
-approaching steamer. He had made bad weather of
-it, also; but with more men and less women in his
-craft he had kept to the oars, and, when it was very
-bad, had run slowly before it for several hours.
-This had brought him from many miles in advance
-to but a few ahead of Smith's boat; and he was
-rowing slowly ahead again by daylight. He sighted
-her, and noticed there were no oars; but he saw the
-man steering, and rightly guessed that they were
-hanging onto a drag.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>Mr. Roberts, the nephew of Captain Brownson,
-sat close to the mate. He had relieved him several
-times during the night. Large and powerful, he
-was able to aid the chief mate very much.</p>
-
-<p>"I think my sister is in that boat," he said as they
-sighted her.</p>
-
-<p>"It looks like the second officer's boat, all right,"
-said Wylie.</p>
-
-<p>They rowed straight for her as the smoke of the
-steamer rose in the east. Before they came within
-a mile, they saw that the steamer would reach them
-before they could reach the boat. They then rowed
-slowly, and watched, waiting.</p>
-
-<p>"Something right ahead, sir," called a man forward.</p>
-
-<p>Roberts looked over the side. He saw something
-floating.</p>
-
-<p>"Starboard, swing her over a little," he said to
-the chief mate.</p>
-
-<p>Roberts leaned over the side. He was nervous
-at what he saw. It had the look of something he
-dreaded. Then the object came drifting along, and
-he reached for it. Long before he grasped it, he
-saw it was the form of a man holding to a cork
-jacket with one hand and the collar of a man's coat
-with the other.</p>
-
-<p>The old fellow floated high, and Smith's hand
-was clenched with a death grip in his clothes. His
-left hand was jammed through the life jacket, and
-the fingers clutched the straps. His head lay face
-upward, and his teeth showed bared from his gums.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>"Heavens! It's Smith himself!" exclaimed Roberts.
-He hauled him aboard with the help of a man.</p>
-
-<p>"It's poor Smith, all right," said Wylie sadly.
-The life jacket told a tale too plainly. Wylie knew
-what had happened.</p>
-
-<p>"It's just as well he didn't come ashore. He was
-guilty, all right," said Mr. Roberts. "A man who
-wrecks a liner and kills hundreds of passengers
-might just as well stay out here. Shall we leave
-him?"</p>
-
-<p>"Not if I know it," said Wylie, with sudden heat.</p>
-
-<p>Within fifteen minutes they were picked up by the
-steamer and were safe. The manager of the line
-welcomed Mr. Roberts gladly when that gentleman
-came to seek him.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm sorry we didn't have you that voyage, Mr.
-Roberts," he said. "I don't like to say anything
-against a dead man; but, of course, Smith was on
-duty when she struck&mdash;that is all we know."</p>
-
-<p>"And I suppose you'll want me to go into the
-other ship, now, sir?" asked the officer.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, you can report to Captain Wilson any time
-this week. How is your sister? Did she recover
-from the boat ride?"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, in a way, but she's forever talking about
-that blamed second mate, Smith, who seemed to
-have a strange sort of influence over her while she
-was with him in the boat. He struck her, too, the
-dog! It's just as well he didn't come back," said
-Roberts.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, she'll get over that all right. Smith was
-a rough sort of man; but as we knew him, he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
-a first-class sailor, a splendid navigator; and no one
-seems able to explain how he ran the ship against
-an iceberg during daylight. It's one of those things
-we'll never find out. The truth, you know, is
-mighty hard to fathom in marine disasters. It must
-have been a terrible blow to Brownson to have to
-kill himself, unable to face the shame for a mate's
-offense&mdash;but Brownson was always a sensitive man,
-a splendid fellow; and I suppose he would not go in
-a boat after what Smith had done. Brownson was
-captain, and might come under some criticism.
-Some of the men say he shot himself after upbraiding
-Smith for his crime."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes. My sister tells me they had quite heated
-words while the liner was sinking," said the new
-second mate.</p>
-
-<p>And so William Smith passed out. His name
-was never mentioned in shipping circles without
-reserve. But there are still some men who remember
-him, who knew plain "Bill" Smith, the fighting
-second officer of the liner that went to her end that
-morning off the Grand Banks. And those who
-knew Smith always think of that cork jacket. They
-made no comment. They knew him. It is not
-necessary.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">THE LIGHT AHEAD</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>"Red light on starboard bow, sir," came the
-hail from forward. The man was Jenson,
-a "square-head" of more than usual intelligence
-and of keen eyesight.</p>
-
-<p>"All right," said the mate softly, with no concern.
-He gazed steadily at a point two points off
-the starboard bow, picked up the night glass, and
-took a quick look. Then he left the pilot house
-where he had been, and walked athwartships on the
-bridge.</p>
-
-<p>He was a young man. His eyes squinted a little
-under the strain of night work and showed the
-wrinkles at their corners. His hair was black and
-curly, and his bronzed face, strong-lined and handsome,
-was full of the strength and vigor of youth.
-He had gone to sea at fifteen. He was now twenty-five
-and a chief mate in a passenger ship, a first-class
-navigator, a good seaman. And the company
-liked him. He was a favorite, a young man rising
-in the best ships. Five feet eight in his white canvas
-shoes and white duck uniform, he looked short,
-for he was very stout of limb; a powerful man who
-had gained his strength by hard work in the forecastle
-and upon the main deck of several windjam<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>mers
-whose records in the Cape trade were well
-known to all shipping men.</p>
-
-<p>It was the midwatch. Mr. James had been upon
-the bridge about half an hour only. It was the
-blackest part of the night, the time between one and
-two, in the latitude north of Hatteras. James
-rubbed his eyes once or twice, brushed his short
-mustache from his mouth with his fingers, and felt
-again for the night glass just within the pilot-house
-window, which was open.</p>
-
-<p>"How does she head?" he asked the helmsman
-softly.</p>
-
-<p>"West, two degrees north, sir," said the quartermaster
-at the steam steering wheel.</p>
-
-<p>James looked again, and, replacing the glass,
-walked to the bridge rail and stopped.</p>
-
-<p>The point far ahead to starboard was showing
-plainly. It was the red light of some steamer whose
-hull was still below the horizon. Her funnel tops
-just showed like a black dot, darker than the surrounding
-gloom. Her masthead light was very
-bright, shining like a star of the first magnitude that
-had just risen from a clear sky. He knew she was
-a long way off. Not less than twelve miles separated
-the vessels. There was plenty of time for a
-change of course. He began to hum softly:</p>
-
-<p>
-"When the lights you see ahead,
-Port your helm and show your red&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," he muttered, "it's a good old saw&mdash;poetry
-of the night. I wonder if <i>she</i> knows of the poetry
-of&mdash;of&mdash;the sea&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>His mind went back to the days ashore, the last
-days he had spent upon the beach with her.</p>
-
-<p>"And I have worked up to this for you," he had
-told her with all the feeling he could muster, the
-strong passion of a strong man asking for what he
-desired most. "I have worked up to this for you,
-just you."</p>
-
-<p>The words rang in his ears. The scene was there
-before him. The beautiful woman, the woman he
-loved more than his life. He could tell her no more
-than that&mdash;he had done all he had done just for
-her, just to be able to call her his own.</p>
-
-<p>The dead monotony of the life before him hung
-like a black pall, heavy in the night. He saw all
-the lonely years he must face, all the hard life of
-the sailor, for she had simply laughed lightly,
-looked him squarely in the eyes&mdash;and shook her
-head.</p>
-
-<p>"No," she had said gently. "No, you mustn't
-think of it&mdash;I mean it&mdash;&mdash;" And he knew that
-what he had done was as nothing to her, nothing
-at all&mdash;what was a mate to a woman like that?</p>
-
-<p>The steady vibration of the engines below made
-the steel rigging shake. The low drone of the side
-wash as the surf roared from the bows made a soft
-murmur where it reached his ears. It made him
-drowsy, dreamy, and sullen. He cared for nothing
-now. What was a mate, after all? Any corner
-groceryman was far better in the eyes of most
-women. Perhaps he had been mistaken. Perhaps
-the position he had ideals of was not much. Yes&mdash;that
-was it; he had been mistaken. And he gazed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
-steadily out into the dark future, and subconsciously
-he saw a long, dreary life of toil and trouble, without
-the woman he loved to relieve the dark solitude.</p>
-
-<p>Before him rose the lights. The red was now
-well up and rising fast. It had been but a flickering
-spark at first, showing soon after the bright headlight
-had risen. It was upon the port side of that
-vessel's bridge and high above the sea. It was
-electric, for no ordinary oil burner would show so
-far with color. The ship must be a liner of size, and
-must be going fast. Suddenly he saw a flash of
-green. It was the starboard light of the approaching
-ship. Then for an instant both side lights shone
-brightly.</p>
-
-<p>The vessel then was not crossing his bows, after
-all. The green was her starboard light, and that
-was the one she must show. It was all right then.
-He would not change the course. If she swung
-out, she must be coming almost head on now, for
-her red had shone but two points off the bow, and
-the converging courses must be drawing together.</p>
-
-<p>All right then. If they crossed before the ships
-met it was well and good. There would probably
-be a mile or more to spare, and he was even now
-crossing her course, for he saw her green light,
-which showed him he was right ahead of her, and
-his rate of speed would take him over in a few moments.
-Then her green would be upon his right or
-starboard side, showing that she was passing astern
-of him. It was simple, plain as could be. He paid
-little or no attention any longer.</p>
-
-<p>And then suddenly the green light faded and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
-red shone again. It caused the officer to stop in his
-walk, which he had begun again to keep in action.</p>
-
-<p>"Port your helm a little," he ordered as he realized
-the positions.</p>
-
-<p>"Aye, aye, sir&mdash;port it is, sir," came the monotonous
-response from the pilot-house window; and
-the clanking of the steam gear sounded faintly upon
-his ears.</p>
-
-<p>The giant liner swung slowly to starboard, swung
-just a little; and, as she did so, the loom of a monstrous
-figure rose right ahead in the night. The
-glare of the bright headlight shone close aboard.
-The red of her port light was a dangerous glare;
-and at a space to port flickered a moment the fatal
-green of the starboard side light, flickered, and
-then went out, shut off by the running board as the
-vessel swung across the bows of the ship, where the
-mate stood gazing at her.</p>
-
-<p>"Hard aport," he yelled savagely.</p>
-
-<p>"Hard aport, sir," came the response from the
-wheel, and the voice showed more or less concern
-now.</p>
-
-<p>There was an instant of suspense, a moment of
-silence, and the two giant shapes came close with
-amazing speed. The liner swung to her port helm,
-and her bows pointed clear of the light ahead. But
-the speed was awful. Both going at twenty-five
-knots an hour, making the closing speed nearly a
-mile a minute, brought the giants too close to pass
-clear.</p>
-
-<p>There was a hoarse cry from forward. The
-mate knew he was not going to clear, and the roar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
-of his siren tore the night's silence. Then the huge
-fabrics came in collision. There was a gigantic
-crash, a thundering shock, and a tearing, ripping
-sound as steel tore steel to ribbons.</p>
-
-<p>The shock made the rigging sing like a giant
-harp under the strain, and the "ping" of parting
-steel lines sounded in accompaniment to the tumultuous
-crashing of wood and iron. The cries of men
-came faintly through the uproar from forward, and
-this was followed almost instantly by frantic shrieks
-from aft as the effect of the shock was felt by the
-women passengers.</p>
-
-<p>The liner had failed to clear, and, swinging too
-late to port, had cut slantingly into the other ship's
-quarter and tore away the greater part of her stern.
-Tearing, grinding, ripping, and snapping, the huge
-shapes ground alongside for a few moments as
-their headway took them along without reducing
-speed. Too late the reversing engines, too late the
-telegraph for all speed astern. The ships had come
-in contact. The mate had run into another ship
-that had shown him her red light to starboard.
-There was no mistake about it. The cry of the seaman
-on watch had been heard by fifty persons.</p>
-
-<p>"Red light on the starboard bow, sir&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>It rang in the officer's ears. It sounded above the
-terrible din of smashing steel and beams, and even
-above the roar of the sirens telling of the death
-wound that had been given a marine monster of
-twenty-five thousand tons register.</p>
-
-<p>The awful feeling of responsibility paralyzed the
-mate. The terror of what he had done numbed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
-him; stunned him so that he stood there upon the
-bridge like a man asleep. Fifteen hundred human
-souls were sinking in that ship, which was now
-drifting off to port in the night with their cries
-sounding faintly through the blackness, even rising
-to be heard through the roar of the steam. He
-thought of it. It was ghastly. Fifteen hundred
-souls; and he knew how badly he had wounded the
-ship. He knew the terrific power of the blow he
-had delivered&mdash;shearing off the after part of that
-vessel and letting in the sea clear to the midship
-bulkhead. There was no chance for her to float.
-The wound was too deadly. It was as bad as though
-he had rammed her with a battleship's ram.</p>
-
-<p>The half-dressed form of the captain rushed to
-him&mdash;his captain.</p>
-
-<p>"What happened?" he whispered hoarsely. He
-seemed to be afraid to ask the question loudly.
-"Great Heaven, did you hit her?"</p>
-
-<p>The mate stood gazing at the huge shadow, and
-his tongue refused to answer the question. Then
-the voice beside him seemed to gain its power. It
-roared out:</p>
-
-<p>"Bulkheads, there&mdash;close them, quick!" And the
-automatic device, worked from the pilot house, was
-pulled savagely.</p>
-
-<p>The captain rushed into the pilot house. The
-man at the wheel who had left it to throw the lever
-to close the bulkheads sprang back to his post.</p>
-
-<p>"How'd you do it?" asked the master again, in a
-low voice full of passion and strained to the utmost.
-"How'd you strike&mdash;don't you know you killed at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
-least five hundred men? You murdering brute&mdash;you
-were asleep." Then he raised his voice again,
-and bawled down through the tube to MacDougal,
-the chief engineer.</p>
-
-<p>"How is she&mdash;quick&mdash;get the pumps going&mdash;collision&mdash;keep
-the firemen cool, and for God's sake
-don't let them panic&mdash;keep them at their posts until
-we see what's up. We've run down the express
-steamer <i>Blue Star</i>, of the Royal Dutch Line&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>The master turned to the pilot house again and
-looked out of the window. His chief officer was
-still standing where he had left him.</p>
-
-<p>"In Heaven's name, Mr. James, what's the matter
-with you to-night?" he broke out wildly, in passionate
-tones, almost sobbing. "It's all hands&mdash;get
-'em out quick!"</p>
-
-<p>He was a strange creature standing there in his
-undershirt and drawers, with his long gray beard
-streaming down across his breast. The man at the
-wheel even looked at him for a moment, but did
-not smile. It was tragedy, not comedy.</p>
-
-<p>"Is she full speed astern?" asked the master
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sir, full speed astern, sir," said the man.
-His face was white, and his hands shook a little
-while he held the spokes of the wheel. There was
-death for many that night, and he knew it. It
-would be hard to tell who would survive in the rush
-that was sure to come if the ship went down. Yet
-his seamanship told him that much was to be hoped
-from the forward bulkhead. It would hold her up
-if it could stand the strain.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>In two minutes there was a rush of hundreds of
-feet upon the decks below the flying bridge. The
-second officer came up half naked, dressed in shirt
-and trousers, without shoes or stockings. He was
-a powerful man and short, with a tremendous voice,
-a real Yankee bos'n voice; and he roared out orders
-for the men, who jumped to their stations automatically.</p>
-
-<p>The captain came again to the bridge and took
-command. He yelled to the boat crews below, and
-strove to quiet the crowding passengers who pushed
-and fought about the boats in spite of the after
-guard and seamen.</p>
-
-<p>"Get down there and wade into that mess, Wilson,"
-said the master to the second officer; and he
-jumped down and went bawling through the press,
-pushing and pulling, striking here and there a refractory
-passenger who would insist upon trying to
-fill the small boats.</p>
-
-<p>"There is no danger&mdash;no danger whatever,"
-roared the captain again and again from the bridge.
-The petty officers took up the cry, and gradually the
-press about the starboard lifeboats grew less. The
-boats upon the port side had been all carried away
-or smashed to bits. Ten boats were left.</p>
-
-<p>A man rushed up the bridge steps coming from
-aft.</p>
-
-<p>"She's sinking, sir," he panted, pointing to the
-dim shadow of the rammed ship drifting astern.
-The steady roar of her siren told of the danger, and
-seemed to be a resonant cry for help.</p>
-
-<p>The master gazed aft. Then he rushed to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
-pilot-house window and took up the night glass
-hanging there. He looked hard at the ship now lying
-astern and riding with her bows high in the air.
-The man was right. She was rapidly going down.
-Ten minutes at the most would tell the whole story.</p>
-
-<p>"Get the starboard boats out, Mr. James," called
-the captain in an even tone, "and let no one but the
-crews in them. The first man who attempts to get
-in will be shot. Go to the vessel and bring back all
-you can&mdash;quick&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>But the form there had vanished before he had
-finished speaking. The chief officer had awakened
-at last from his stupor. His responsibility came
-back to him with a rush of feeling. But an instant
-before he had faced the end. He had decided to kill
-himself at once, and was just about to go to his
-room for his gun. He was too ashamed to face the
-ordeal, the ordeal of the officer who has run down
-a ship in a clear night. There had been literally no
-excuse for him. He could not plead ignorance of
-the laws; his license as officer made that impossible.
-He knew what to do when raising a light to starboard
-when that light was red. The rules were
-plainly written. Every common waterman knew
-them by heart. He had disobeyed them by some
-mischance, some mistake he could not exactly define;
-but he knew that under it all was that dull,
-sullen apathy from a wrong, or fancied wrong, that
-had caused him to be negligent.</p>
-
-<p>He would not go upon the witness stand and say
-that, because a woman did not love him, he had allowed
-his ship to ram a liner with fifteen hundred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
-souls aboard her in a clear night. No! Death was
-a hundred, a thousand times better than such ignominy,
-such a miserable, cowardly sort of excuse.
-He would blow his brains out just as soon as he saw
-the finish, just as soon as he knew his vessel would
-float. Then came the captain's voice of command:</p>
-
-<p>"Get out the starboard boats and save all you
-can&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>Yes, it was his duty; his above all others. He
-was at number one boat before the master had finished
-his orders.</p>
-
-<p>Six good men were at their stations. The falls
-were run taut, the boat shoved clear, and down she
-went with a rush into the sea. Nine others followed
-within a minute, and ten boats pulled away
-into the darkness astern, where the roar of the siren
-still sounded loud and resonant&mdash;a wild, terrible
-cry of death and destruction.</p>
-
-<p>James met a boat coming toward him before he
-reached the ship. She was full. Sixty-two men
-and women filled her, and she just floated, and that
-was all, her gunwales awash in the smooth sea. The
-swell lifted her, and she rose high above him, a dark
-object against the sky. Then she sank slowly down
-into the trough, and disappeared behind the hill of
-water that ran smoothly from the northeast in long,
-heaving seas.</p>
-
-<p>The night was still fine, and the wind almost
-nothing at all. The banks of vapor rising in the
-east told of a change; but the change was not yet.
-James noticed the weather mechanically, as a good
-seaman does, from a small boat when at sea at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
-night; but he was thinking of the huge shadow
-which now drew close aboard.</p>
-
-<p>As the boat came under the port side, he could
-see the passengers crowding the rail in the waist,
-where the lifeboats were being filled and sent away
-as fast as men could work them. Seven boats were
-alongside full of human beings. Two more were
-being lowered. Three came from under the stern
-as he drew alongside.</p>
-
-<p>There was a mass of people still to be taken off.
-He saw at a glance that the liner had twenty large
-lifeboats for her complement. One was smashed.
-There was every reason to believe she would send
-out nineteen with at least a thousand people in them.
-There would be several hundred more to take besides
-these. The life rafts might do it, but he knew
-the danger of life rafts in the furious struggle in a
-sinking ship.</p>
-
-<p>The thing would be to save the passengers with
-his own boats. This he might do if the ship floated
-long enough. She was sinking fast, as he could see
-by her rising bows. She was probably even now
-hanging solely by her midship bulkhead, and that
-would most likely be badly smashed by the collision,
-for he had struck the ship far enough forward
-to do it damage, although his vessel had only
-cut into her well aft. The blow had been slanting.
-A little more time, perhaps a few seconds, and the
-ships would have swung clear.</p>
-
-<p>He came alongside and hailed the deck.</p>
-
-<p>"Send them down lively&mdash;come along now,
-quick!" he called up in his natural voice. It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
-the first time since the collision he had spoken. It
-sounded strange to hear his own tones coming natural
-again.</p>
-
-<p>In a few moments he was crowding and seating
-the women and children in his boat. Then came the
-men from everywhere. They crowded down the falls,
-jumped into the sea, and swam alongside, begging
-to be hauled aboard, or climbed over the high gunwales
-themselves. One powerful young man,
-stripped to the waist, dived clean from the hurricane
-deck, and almost instantly rose alongside. Then he
-swung himself into the boat, and stood amidships
-hauling others in until the craft settled down to
-her bearings and the men at the oars could hardly
-row.</p>
-
-<p>"Shove off&mdash;give way," ordered James.</p>
-
-<p>The boat started back slowly, the men rowing
-gingerly, poking and striking the passengers in the
-backs with the oars until the crowd settled itself.
-Then she went along slowly toward the ship, and
-the women in her prayed, the men swore, and the
-children wept and sobbed. And all the time the fact
-that he was the cause of it all impressed James
-queerly. He could not understand it, could not
-quite see why he had done it, and yet he knew he
-had. One man spoke to the athlete who had dived.</p>
-
-<p>"They should burn a man who would sink a ship
-like this on a clear night; they should burn him to a
-stake&mdash;the drunken, cowardly scoundrel&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>And James sat there with the tiller ropes in his
-hand; sat silent, thoughtful, and knew in his heart
-the man had spoken the truth. If he could only be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
-sure of the passengers&mdash;he would not give them a
-chance to say anything more. His boat came alongside
-his own ship. The crowd above cheered him&mdash;they
-did not know&mdash;he was a hero to them, the first
-boat with the rescued. How quickly they would
-change that cheer when they learned the truth! He
-almost smiled. His set face, strong-lined, bronzed,
-and virile, turned away from the people in the boat.
-He gave orders in the usual tone. The passengers
-were quickly passed aboard. Then he started back
-for another load.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the sides of his ship were crowded
-with boats. She was taking aboard over a thousand
-people, and the sea was still smooth.</p>
-
-<p>The swell heaved higher as the small boat went
-back toward the sinking steamer. James noticed it.
-The sky to the eastward was dark with a bank of
-vapor. The air had the feeling of a northeaster.
-It was coming along, and there was plenty of time,
-for it would come slowly. The last of the passengers
-would be either sunk or aboard his own
-ship before the breeze rose to a dangerous extent.</p>
-
-<p>The men rowed quickly. They were anxious.
-The horror of the whole thing had fallen upon
-them like a pall; but they strove mightily to do their
-share. James found his boat to be the last to reach
-the sinking ship.</p>
-
-<p>The liner was well down now by the stern and
-her deck was awash aft. She rose higher and
-higher as he gazed at her, her decks slanting, sloping,
-and she rolled loggily in the growing swell.
-Her siren stopped. A dull, muffled roar from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
-sea, a smothered explosion told of the end of the
-boilers. She would go in a moment. The passengers
-were clinging, grabbing to anything to hold on.
-The deck slanted so dangerously that many were
-slid off into the sea where they plunged, some silently
-and hopelessly, others screaming wildly with
-the terror of sudden death.</p>
-
-<p>James watched them. He saw many die, saw
-many go to their end. Others swam; and he strove
-to pick them up, forgetting himself in the struggle.</p>
-
-<p>He picked up sixteen in this manner, steering for
-them as they swam about in the night calling for
-help. The last one was a girl, a beautiful girl of
-twenty or less. He hauled her into the boat.</p>
-
-<p>A sudden, wild yelling caused him to look. The
-sinking liner stood upon end, her forefoot clear of
-the sea. She swung loggily to and fro for a moment,
-settling as she did so. Then, with a rush, she
-plunged stern first to the bottom, the crash of her
-bursting decks as the air blew out being the last
-sound he heard.</p>
-
-<p>The ship was very close to him. Her swing as
-she foundered brought her closer. The vortex
-sucked his boat toward her, drew the craft with a
-mighty pull. A spar, twisting, whirling in the
-swirl, struck the boat, and instantly she was a
-wreck, capsized, engulfed in the mighty hole the
-sinking liner made in the sea with her last plunge.</p>
-
-<p>James found himself smothered, drowning,
-drawn downward by a great force he could not
-fight against. The whole ocean seemed to pull down
-upon him and crush him into its black depths.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>The whole thing took such a small space of time,
-he hardly realized his position. The utter blackness,
-the salt water in his eyes and mouth, all paralyzed
-his mind for a few moments. Then he
-thought of his end. It was just as well. He was
-drowning, going to the bottom. He must soon go,
-anyhow; he could not face those wrecked passengers;
-and with the thought came a grim peacefulness,
-a satisfaction that the fight was all over. He
-could now rest at last.</p>
-
-<p>But nature within him was very strong. He was
-a powerful man. When he gave up the struggle,
-his natural buoyancy lifted him to the surface of the
-sea. He came up, his head appearing in the air,
-and he breathed again in spite of himself. Then
-the old, old fighting spirit, the desire to survive
-which is so strong within the breast of every young
-animal, took charge. No, he would not go down
-yet. He must see the finish, the end of things in
-which he was concerned.</p>
-
-<p>He swam about aimlessly. The swell heaved him
-high up, dropped him far down; and he noticed that
-now the sea was running, the small combers rising
-before a stiff breeze. These burst upon his face
-and head and smothered him a little. He turned
-his back to them, and swam on, on, and still on into
-the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>He saw nothing. The ship, the boats had all
-gone. Once he was about to cry for help; but the
-thought was horrible, distasteful to the last degree.
-He had no right to call for help. He would not.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
-But he swam and tried to see something to get
-upon.</p>
-
-<p>Something struck him heavily upon the head.
-Stars swam before his eyes. He reached upward
-with his hands, and they met a solid substance.
-Then he sank slowly down, down&mdash;and the blackness
-came upon him.</p>
-
-<p>The object that had hit him was a small boat. In
-it were a man and a girl, the girl James himself had
-picked up from the sea a short time before. The
-man was a seaman, and he heard the boat strike.
-He reached over the side, caught the glimpse of a
-human form as it struck the boat's side and sank.</p>
-
-<p>The seaman took up the boat hook and was about
-to poke the body away. He was sick of dead men,
-sick of seeing corpses floating about. He had met
-half a dozen already that night. But this one
-seemed to move, and the hook caught in his clothes.
-He pulled the body up, and saw the man was not
-dead, but dazed, moving feebly in a drunken way.
-Then he pulled James into the boat.</p>
-
-<p>James regained his senses after half an hour; and
-during that time the boat ran before a stiff squall
-of wind and rain that swept it along before it into
-the darkness. The seaman steered with an oar, and
-kept the boat's head before the wind. The mate
-opened his eyes, and in the gray of the early dawn
-he saw a man he did not know, a seaman from the
-sunken liner, steering the boat calmly before the
-gale that was now coming fast with the rising sun.
-Near him in the bottom of the boat lay the girl huddled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
-up and moaning with cold and fright, and
-fatigue.</p>
-
-<p>James arose and staggered aft.</p>
-
-<p>"How'd I get here?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I pulled you in, sir," said the sailor. "Are you
-from the ship that sank us?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes. I'm the mate, the chief officer."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, if I'd 'a' know'd it, I mightn't have taken
-the trouble," said the seaman.</p>
-
-<p>James said nothing. There was nothing for him
-to say. He knew the sailor was right. He knew
-the officers of his ship were men to scorn, to hate&mdash;but
-he would not say it was himself alone who had
-done the terrible deed. Something stopped him. It
-might have been sheer shame&mdash;or fear. He looked
-at the girl. Then he went to her and raised her,
-placing her upon a seat and trying to cheer her up.</p>
-
-<p>"We'll be picked up soon&mdash;don't worry about it.
-Our ship will stand by and hunt for all the missing&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"But I'm dreadfully cold," said the girl, with
-chattering teeth.</p>
-
-<p>"Put my coat on, then," said James; and he took
-off his soaked coat and made her put it on.</p>
-
-<p>The man grinned in derision.</p>
-
-<p>"Say," he said, "who was on watch when you hit
-us?"</p>
-
-<p>James took no notice. He would not answer the
-question. Then the girl spoke up.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, whose fault was it? You belong to the
-other ship, you'll know all about it. They ought
-to hang the man who is responsible for this awful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
-thing&mdash;my poor mother and father&mdash;oh&mdash;&mdash;" And
-she broke into a sob.</p>
-
-<p>The man at the steering oar smiled grimly.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, miss, that's right, they sure ought to hang
-the officer who runs down a liner on a clear night
-when he's bound to see the lights plainly. I don't
-make no excuses for him&mdash;it's more'n murder."</p>
-
-<p>"You were on watch, on duty&mdash;you are dressed?"
-said the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I knowed it when I first seen you," snarled
-the seaman. "I reckon you're the man who did it&mdash;what
-was the matter? Couldn't you keep awake,
-or what?" The tone was a sneer, an insult, yet the
-sailor did wish to find out how so unusual a thing
-could happen as the running down of a ship on a
-clear night when her lights could be seen fifteen
-miles or more.</p>
-
-<p>James tried to defend himself. It was instinctive.
-The contempt of the sailor was too much. On other
-occasions, he never allowed the slightest insolence
-from the men of his own vessel. But now the officer
-was numb, paralyzed. He was guilty&mdash;and he
-knew it.</p>
-
-<p>For hours they sat now in silence, the seaman
-holding the boat steady before the northeaster,
-which grew in power until by nine in the morning it
-was blowing a furious gale, and the sea was running
-strongly with sweeping combers. There was
-nothing to do but keep the boat before it. To try
-to head any other way meant to risk her filling from
-a bursting sea. The exertion of steering was great.
-The seaman, with set face, held onto the oar, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
-James could see the sweat start under the constant
-strain, but he said nothing&mdash;he waited.</p>
-
-<p>"You'll have to take her, sir&mdash;a while&mdash;I'm getting
-played out," panted the man.</p>
-
-<p>"All right," said James, "give her to me&mdash;now&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>He took the oar during the backward slant as she
-dropped down the side of the sea that passed under
-her. He was ready for the rush as she rose and
-shot forward again upon the breaking crest of the
-following hill. The exercise did him good. It
-made him think clearly, it took his mind from the
-hopelessness of his life.</p>
-
-<p>All that day the two men took turns keeping the
-small boat before the sea; and they ran to the southward
-a full half hundred miles before the gale let
-up. Both were too exhausted to talk, too thirsty to
-even speak&mdash;and there was neither water nor food
-in the boat. Her ration of biscuit and water had
-been lost when she had been drawn down by the
-sinking liner.</p>
-
-<p>The sailor had righted the boat after great effort,
-aided by the sea; and owing to the smoothness of
-the swell at the time he had managed to get her
-clear of water. Then he had picked up the girl
-who had been floating about, swimming and holding
-onto fragments of wreckage since James' boat
-had gone under.</p>
-
-<p>The mate noticed that, although the girl had not
-spoken to him again after knowing he had caused
-the disaster, she still wore his coat. He studied the
-matter, the inconsistency of women, and he thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
-it strange. The sun shone for a moment before it
-set that evening; and in the glowing light James
-gazed steadily at the woman. She was very beautiful.
-She had not made a complaint since the
-morning. The sea was still running high, although
-the wind was going down with the sun, yet the girl
-had not been seasick, nor had she shown any suffering.</p>
-
-<p>"How do you feel now?" he whispered, as he
-waited his turn at the oar.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm all right, thank you. Do you think we will
-get picked up?" she said.</p>
-
-<p>"We'll be picked up to-morrow&mdash;sure," said the
-officer. "We are now right in the track of the West
-India ships, and will sight something by daylight
-when we can set a signal. Are you very thirsty?"</p>
-
-<p>"Tell me first, how did this accident occur? Were
-you really asleep, or just what? I can stand the
-thirst, and I'm warm enough now. This water is
-like milk in comparison with the air, it's so warm."</p>
-
-<p>"We are in the Stream," said James; "the Gulf
-Stream, and that is about eighty along here&mdash;it's
-better than freezing in the high latitudes."</p>
-
-<p>"You haven't answered my question," said the
-girl.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know&mdash;I don't remember what it was. I
-must have lost my head&mdash;been asleep&mdash;or something&mdash;yes,
-I was on duty, on watch&mdash;it was my fault entirely.
-I saw your ship, saw her red light to starboard&mdash;the
-right, you know. She had the right of
-way under the rules. I intended to swing off, waited
-a few minutes to see her better&mdash;then her green<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
-light showed&mdash;and&mdash;then it was too late. I went
-hard aport, did my best&mdash;but hit her&mdash;we were going
-very fast&mdash;both ships were going twenty-five
-knots&mdash;making the approaching speed fifty miles
-an hour&mdash;nearly a mile a minute&mdash;I must have lost
-my head just a moment&mdash;maybe I was dreaming&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"I know you are not to blame," said the girl, placing
-her hand in his. "You have told me the truth,
-a straight story&mdash;but yet I don't see how it all happened.
-I'm not a sailor, anyhow; perhaps I couldn't
-understand. But I feel you didn't do it on purpose&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"No, no," whispered James. "How could a man
-do a thing like that on purpose?" He could not tell
-her the truth. He was ashamed to mention a
-woman, to say he was sullen, depressed, stupefied
-at the loss of a love he bore a woman.</p>
-
-<p>He took his place at the oar for the last time that
-night. The sea was no longer dangerous. They
-spoke of rigging a drag with the oar and thwarts,
-making a drag by the aid of the painter or line,
-which still was fast to her forward. They had
-finished this before dark, and then they lay down,
-exhausted. The girl stood watch. In the dim dawn
-the girl gave out. She had stood watch all night,
-and she was exhausted.</p>
-
-<p>"I understand," she muttered to herself, "this
-poor fellow, this officer was tired out&mdash;he slept&mdash;I
-don't blame him at all, it was not his fault."</p>
-
-<p>The sun shone upon the three sleeping, the boat
-riding safely and dry to the drag made of the oar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
-and thwarts. James aroused himself first, awakening
-dimly with the warmth of the sun. He sat
-up. The two others slept on. The girl was breathing
-loudly, almost panting, and her parted lips were
-blue. Yet she was beautiful. James knew it. She
-was exhausted, and help must come soon for her.</p>
-
-<p>He sat and gazed at the horizon, and when the
-sea lifted the boat, he stared hard all around to see
-if anything showed above the rim. Hours passed
-in this fashion. The girl moaned in her sleep. The
-sailor shifted uneasily, and grunted, snored, and
-murmured incoherently. They were all very thirsty.</p>
-
-<p>It was about ten o'clock in the morning that
-James saw something to the northward. It was
-just a speck, just a tiny dot on the rim of sea; but
-he knew it was a ship of some kind, a vessel passing.
-The minutes dragged, and he was about to
-rouse the sailor to get him to help watch. Then he
-remembered how the fellow had striven so manfully
-the day before when they rode out the gale. No, he
-would let them sleep.</p>
-
-<p>By noon, the vessel was close aboard and coming
-slowly with the wind upon her port beam. She
-was a schooner bound south. James could see the
-lumber on her decks. Her three masts swung to
-and fro in the swell, and she made bad weather of
-the sluggish sea. The foam showed white under
-her forefoot, and told of the speed being at least a
-few knots an hour. James called the sailor.</p>
-
-<p>"Get up&mdash;turn out&mdash;there's a schooner alongside,"
-he said. The man moved slightly, and slept
-on. James shook him roughly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>"Lemme alone," muttered the seaman.</p>
-
-<p>"Ship ahoy!" yelled the mate as the schooner
-came within a quarter of a mile and headed almost
-straight for them. He stood up and waved his
-arms. Nothing came of it. The girl awoke. She
-sat up and realized the position. In a moment she
-had taken off her skirt and handed it to the mate.
-He waved it wildly; and his yelling finally awoke
-the exhausted seaman. The man stood up and bawled
-loudly. Then he washed his mouth with salt water,
-and yelled again and again. James swung the skirt.
-The girl prayed audibly.</p>
-
-<p>The schooner stood right along on her course.
-She had not noticed the boat. Passing a few hundred
-fathoms from them caused all three to become
-frantic. The men bawled, cursed, and begged the
-schooner to take them in.</p>
-
-<p>The captain of the vessel, coming on deck, happened
-to look in their direction. He spoke to the
-man at the wheel, who for the first time seemed to
-take his eyes from the compass card. Then, taking
-his glass, the captain saw that three living souls
-were in the small boat. The next instant he was
-bawling orders, and the schooner hauled her wind
-and came slatting into the breeze.</p>
-
-<p>Six men appeared on her deck. James saw them
-working to get the small boat clear from her stern
-davits. Then they seemed to realize that this was
-unnecessary, and the schooner, flattening in her
-sheets, worked up to them slowly, rising and falling
-into the high swell. She stood across to wind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>ward,
-and then came about, easing off her sheets
-and drifting slowly down upon the boat.</p>
-
-<p>She drew close aboard.</p>
-
-<p>"Catch a line," yelled the captain from her deck.</p>
-
-<p>James waved his hand in reply, and a heaving
-line flaked out and fell across the boat's gunwales.</p>
-
-<p>In another moment they were being hauled
-aboard.</p>
-
-<p>Explanations came at once. The master of the
-schooner was bound for South America.</p>
-
-<p>"Of course, I'll put you all aboard the first homeward-bound
-ship I fall in with," said he.</p>
-
-<p>"But you surely will put us ashore at once," said
-the girl, after she had drunk tea and changed her
-clothes. They were eating gingerly of ship's food
-and drinking water ravenously.</p>
-
-<p>"That I cannot do, miss," said the captain. "I'm
-bound to Valparaiso with cargo, and I must take it
-there."</p>
-
-<p>"But we will pay you to take us ashore&mdash;pay you
-anything, for I am very rich," said the girl.</p>
-
-<p>The master smiled sadly. The effects of the forty
-hours in the open boat were evidently having their
-effect upon the young woman.</p>
-
-<p>"No," he said, "you go below, and the steward
-will give you all you want to eat, and your clothes
-will be dry enough to put on again before night.
-We might fall in with a ship bound north any time
-now. Then you'll have a chance."</p>
-
-<p>James knew the man was within his rights, of
-course. He was glad to be in the schooner. The
-sailor didn't seem to mind where he went. One<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
-ship was very much like another to him. The consul
-would be bound to ship him home, anyway. The
-girl was given a stateroom in the after cabin; and
-she soon slept the sleep of the exhausted.</p>
-
-<p>The mate stayed on deck. The whole thing had
-a strange look to him. He had decided to kill himself.
-He dared not go back to the States, anyhow,
-to face the charges that would be made against him.
-He might slip overboard any night on the run down,
-and no one would be the wiser.</p>
-
-<p>The fact that the schooner was bound to South
-America seemed to give him a respite. There was
-no hurry to commit the desperate act that he felt
-he must, in all honor and decency, do. He might
-live a month at least before dying.</p>
-
-<p>After the awful struggle through the gale and
-shipwreck, he felt a desire to live more than before.
-The whole affair was more distant, almost effaced.
-And now he was not going back, anyhow.</p>
-
-<p>The captain asked him few questions regarding
-his wreck, seeming to feel a certain delicacy about
-it. The day passed, and the next and the next, and
-no ship was sighted going north. They were now
-drawing out of the track of vessels, and a strange
-hope arose with the mate that they would not meet
-one.</p>
-
-<p>The girl sat with him often, and they talked of
-other things than shipwreck. She was beautiful&mdash;there
-was no question about it. The glow of returning
-strength made her more lovely. James
-found himself wondering at her. She had been the
-only human being so far that would condescend to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
-speak to him without contempt. He was lonely,
-very lonely, and the girl seemed to feel he needed
-some one to cheer him up. She did not realize his
-weakness. He was very strong to her; a strong man
-who had suffered from an accident, due, perhaps,
-to his carelessness, but not to criminal negligence.
-But he knew, he knew, and could not tell.</p>
-
-<p>The days passed, and the terror of the thing he
-had in his mind began to fade slightly. He knew
-he must die. The sailor, his shipmate who had been
-picked up with him, had told every one in the
-schooner that he, James, was on watch and was
-responsible for a terrible disaster, the death of a
-great number of persons. James saw it in their
-looks. He knew he would never get a ship again,
-never hold a place among white men. Yes, he
-must die.</p>
-
-<p>It gave him a sort of grim satisfaction to feel
-that he was just to live a certain length of time,
-that he would cut that short at the last moment.
-He wondered how a prisoner felt when the sentence
-of death was pronounced upon him. He had pronounced
-it upon himself. It was a genuine relief,
-for the vision of those terror-stricken, drowning
-passengers was always with him night and day, except
-when he was in a dreamless sleep. That sleep
-seemed to be portentous of what he would face.</p>
-
-<p>The days turned to weeks and the weeks to
-months. The voyage was long and the winds light.
-They were ninety days to the latitude of the Falklands
-when they struck a furious "williwaw" from
-the hills of Patagonia. The schooner was in a bad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
-fix. She was lightly manned; and, in spite of the
-addition of James and the seaman from the wreck,
-she held her canvas too long.</p>
-
-<p>The struggle was short but terrific. The fore-topsail
-blew away and saved the mast; but the main
-held, and the topmast buckled and finally went by
-the board. The headsails had been lowered, but
-they blew out from the gaskets, and the jibboom
-snapped short off under the tremendous threshing
-of flying canvas. The maintopmast, hanging by the
-backstays, fell across the triatic stay, and the steel
-of the backstays cut into the spring until it finally
-parted under the jerks, and the mizzen was left to
-stand alone. It went by the board, and the great
-mast, snapping short at the partners, went over the
-side, and smashed and banged there at each heave
-of the ship.</p>
-
-<p>There was desperate work to do to save the vessel.
-Her master did wonders and showed his skill;
-but the most dangerous and deadly task of going to
-leeward to cut adrift the lanyards was left to James.
-No one else would go.</p>
-
-<p>James was a powerful man, and had won his way
-to an officer's berth by endeavor, not by nepotism.
-His hope was that he might be killed in the struggle.
-He dared anything, tried to do the impossible&mdash;and
-did it. How he succeeded in clearing away the
-wreck of that mast remains a mystery to those who
-watched him. He was almost dead when dragged
-back and the schooner floated clear.</p>
-
-<p>The girl had seen the whole affair from the glass
-of the companionway. She had held her breath,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
-almost fainted again and again at the sight of
-James in that fight for life. To her it was simply
-grand, tremendous&mdash;she had never been touched by
-a man's heroism before.</p>
-
-<p>When it was all over and the schooner, dismantled
-and storm-driven, lay riding down the giant seas
-that swept around the Horn in the Pacific Antarctic
-Drift, she watched over and attended the officer as
-he lay in his bunk with a broken arm, a cut across
-the head, and the toes of one foot gone. She knew
-that there was something behind the will to do as
-James had done. But she could not fathom it, could
-not tell why he was unresponsive. He lay silent
-mostly, and seldom looked at her. Yet he was sane
-in his conversation, not delirious in any way. It
-worried her. It caused that peculiar thing that is
-in every woman to make the man she admires responsive.
-And the more she showed her feelings,
-the less he seemed to care. It ended the way it
-usually does under such conditions. She fairly worshiped
-him.</p>
-
-<p>After that storm the weather grew very calm.
-The dark ocean seemed to be at rest for a spell.
-The schooner was now to the south'ard of the Falklands,
-and the captain decided that he would not
-venture around the Horn in the desperate condition
-he was in. Stanley Harbor was under his lee, and
-he bore away for it. Then, with the perversity of
-the southern zone, the wind hauled to the eastward
-and blew steadily for a week; blew right in their
-faces.</p>
-
-<p>James came on deck before they were within a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
-hundred miles of the land. He sat about in the
-cold of the evening wrapped up in rugs, and the
-girl waited upon him, brought him anything he
-wished. In the long hours of daylight&mdash;for it was
-light enough to read until midnight&mdash;they sat near
-the taffrail. The captain said nothing; he would
-not notice. He liked the man who had saved his
-ship. The girl was sympathetic, and James often
-held her hand. She did not attempt to withdraw it.</p>
-
-<p>But he would not tell her he cared for her. That
-was absurd. He had already sacrificed his life. He
-was as good as dead. Yet he wondered at the passion
-that had brought him into such desperate
-trouble and had caused so much ruin and death.
-He pondered silently, and now often watched the
-girl furtively.</p>
-
-<p>Into the beautiful harbor, the great fiord of Port
-Stanley, they came, the schooner making fairly good
-way in spite of her crippled condition. Her arrival
-was greeted with joyous acclaim by the land sharks,
-who smelled the wound and saw the damage. They
-would make a good haul. Ships didn't come often&mdash;but
-when they did, well, they paid.</p>
-
-<p>The governor was notified of the arrival. He
-was told everything but the relation of the passengers
-to the ships to which they originally belonged.
-The master was generous; and, besides, it
-was not America they were now in. It was an outlying
-foreign colony at the edge of the world, a
-place where one seldom went or heard from. They
-might go ashore if they wished. The seaman asked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
-to remain aboard. He was allowed to do so, and
-consequently did not go ashore and talk too much.</p>
-
-<p>James passed that last night in high spirits. He
-was going out on his last voyage. He was going
-to die, going to leave the woman who he knew
-loved him, who had been so sympathetic, so lovable.
-They were on deck a long time that evening, and
-the captain, being wise and old enough to understand,
-did not molest them.</p>
-
-<p>"Good night," she said finally. "Good night. I'll
-see you to-morrow before we go ashore. We can
-take the ship across to the straits, and meet the regular
-liner as she comes through from Punta Arenas.
-We'll be home again in a few weeks."</p>
-
-<p>"Good-by," he said simply. That was all. She
-went below.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after four bells&mdash;two o'clock in the morning&mdash;James,
-with set face and grim resolution, stole
-on deck. He gazed up at the Southern Cross for a
-few moments, at the beautiful constellation that he
-would see for the last time; then at the grim, barren
-hills back of the settlement.</p>
-
-<p>It was a farewell look, his farewell to things in
-this world. He was determined not to be disgraced.
-He would die like a man, as he could no longer live
-like one.</p>
-
-<p>Then he dropped softly over the side, and sank
-down&mdash;down into the quiet waters of Stanley
-Harbor.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The instinct of woman is often more certain than
-her reason. The girl had noticed something strange<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
-in the man's behavior. She had woman's instinct
-to divine its cause. She had not gone to bed
-that night, but waited to see just what might
-happen to the man who owned her very soul. She
-had not realized before that she loved this officer,
-this man who had confessed partly to his disgrace.
-The realization awakened her wits. She would see
-what he meant.</p>
-
-<p>At the slight splash, she was on deck in an instant.
-Her first thought was to call for help. Then
-she knew to do so was to call for an explanation;
-and she realized the disgrace that would follow instantly
-upon the explanation. She seized a life buoy
-always hanging upon the taffrail, and with it
-dropped over the side.</p>
-
-<p>She swam silently toward a spot that showed disturbed
-water rapidly drifting astern with the tide.
-Within a minute she had reached the form of James,
-who had not placed enough weights in his clothes
-to insure quick sinking. He was lying silently upon
-his back, waiting&mdash;waiting for the end that must
-come shortly.</p>
-
-<p>"Swim with me," she pleaded. "You must&mdash;come
-with me&mdash;we'll swim ashore together."</p>
-
-<p>Before the morning dawned, the pair were upon
-the beach, several miles distant from the schooner.
-James saw he was doomed to life. He could not even
-die. Then the beauty of the woman, the sympathy,
-the love he could not deny, had its way with him,
-and they decided to vanish into the country, to disappear
-together.</p>
-
-<p>This might or might not have been hard to do in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
-the islands where every one is well known. But it
-happened that Captain Black, of the whaling station
-situated near the entrance of the fiord, was on deck
-that morning. He saw an amazing thing, a woman
-and a man swimming together, and finally making
-the land near the point.</p>
-
-<p>Calling a couple of men, he started for them in
-his whaleboat, and caught up with them before they
-had gone more than a few fathoms from the shore.
-They were chilled through, cold and exhausted. He
-took them aboard the whaling steamer, and soon
-saw that he had a seaman of parts in Mr. James.
-Men were hard to get. All of his crews were convicts
-or ticket-of-leave men; and the addition of a
-man even with a wife was something to be taken
-advantage of.</p>
-
-<p>He took James aside and asked him a few questions.
-He was satisfied that he would not get into
-trouble by giving the officer a billet; and he forthwith
-made him one of the company in charge of a
-small boat. The affair would be kept secret, and
-the governor would be told nothing. He probably
-would not ask too many questions, anyhow.</p>
-
-<p>"I shall ship you both to the north'ard station,
-fifty miles up the coast. You can have a shack
-there&mdash;plenty of peat for fires and good grub&mdash;I'll
-inspect you once a month. Johnson will be in
-charge of the station. You can take this letter to
-him. Your wife can go with you if you wish."</p>
-
-<p>James looked at the girl. She nodded her head.</p>
-
-<p>"Is there a priest about here?" asked James.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes. Why?" asked Black.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>"Well, if you'll kindly send for him, he can marry
-us before we start."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Back of the northward station, on the ramp that
-rises sheer back from the beach like a table-land,
-there are a few cottages. These are occupied by the
-crews of the whaling station and their families. In
-one of them is a handsome woman with two little
-tots&mdash;happy-faced and smiling she is. But she
-seems a bit out of place in her surroundings. Mrs.
-James Smith they call her, and she is apparently
-very happy, very happy indeed, in spite of it all.</p>
-
-<p>James Smith is the best gun pointer in the fleet,
-the best harpooner with the gun-firing harpoon. He
-is a sober, quiet, steady man, who has nothing now
-of the ship's officer about him. He never talks of
-wrecks. If some one starts a conversation regarding
-them&mdash;and they are much hoped for in the
-Falklands&mdash;he goes away.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes in Jack's saloon down at Stanley, he
-has been known to sit and stare out over the dark
-ocean, to sit and often mutter:</p>
-
-<p>"Was it right, after all&mdash;was it worth while&mdash;was
-it?"</p>
-
-<p>But he is a sober, quiet, industrious man, who
-goes about his duties without enthusiasm, without
-effort.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">THE WRECK OF THE "RATHBONE"</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>"Eight bells, sir," came the voice from without,
-following the <i>rap</i>, <i>rap</i> upon the door
-of my room. I had just five minutes to
-dress myself and get out, and I rolled over, listening
-to the sounds on deck. As I had only taken off my
-sea boots, I was in no hurry to turn to. My sou'wester
-hung upon a peg, but my oilskin jacket was
-still buttoned up close about my neck, where it had
-been during my sleep; and the oilskin trousers
-scraped noisily as I slid my legs to the edge of the
-bunk.</p>
-
-<p>I had slept three hours and forty minutes, and
-must go out and relieve Slade, the second mate,
-who had, in turn, relieved me at the end of the mid-watch.
-It was now just five minutes of four in the
-morning, a cold, snowy nor'easter blowing, and the
-brig running wildly into the thick of it.</p>
-
-<p>We had cleared from New York for Rio, and
-were trying to run out into the warm Gulf Stream
-before the gale overblew us and forced us to heave
-to, to ride it down. January at sea on the coast
-was hard, indeed.</p>
-
-<p>I swore at the hard luck, for my sleep had seemed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
-just an instant, just a second's unconsciousness, and
-I was stiff and soaked with sea water; so cold that
-I had to keep on my oilskins to sleep at all. I had
-finally steamed my body, incased as it was, into
-some sort of warmth, and the first movement sent
-the chills running down my spine. I threw off my
-blankets and stood shivering, trying to jam my feet
-into the wet boots as the bells struck off, and I was
-due on deck.</p>
-
-<p>Slade stood with his shoulders hunched to his
-ears at the break of the poop, holding to the rail
-to steady himself as the brig plunged and tore along
-under a reefed fore-topsail and close-reefed spanker,
-with the wind abaft the beam. The gray light of
-the winter morning had not come yet, and the snow
-beat upon my face, as if some invisible hand hurled
-it from the utter blackness to windward.</p>
-
-<p>The dull, snoring roar of the wind under the feet
-of the topsail told of the increasing velocity of the
-squalls; and the quick, live jerk of the ship as she
-went rushing along the crest of a roller for an instant,
-and then slid along the weather side, dropping
-stern foremost into the trough, with a heave to
-windward, indicated that we were doing all we
-could.</p>
-
-<p>"Southeast b'south!" yelled Slade into my ear.
-"You'll have to watch her."</p>
-
-<p>I knew what he meant. She was steering hard,
-and might broach to in any careless moment.</p>
-
-<p>"Call the old man if there's any change," he
-added, and stumbled down the poop steps to the
-main deck, where the watch were huddled under the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
-lee of the deck house. Then he disappeared aft,
-and the night swallowed him up.</p>
-
-<p>I made my way to the wheel. Bill, a strong West
-Indian negro, was holding her steady enough, meeting
-her as she came to and swung off. He was assisted
-by Jones, a sturdy little fellow with a big
-shock head. I could just make out their faces in
-the light from the binnacle, which burned, for a
-wonder, in spite of the gale. It generally blew out
-in spite of all we could do to keep the lamps lit.
-Beyond was a hopeless blackness.</p>
-
-<p>I went to the weather rail and tried to see to
-windward. A fleeting glimpse of a white comber
-caught my gaze close aboard; but beyond a few
-fathoms I could see nothing at all. Aft under the
-stern the torrent of dead water boiled and roared,
-showing a sickly flare from the phosphorus. We
-were going some, probably twelve or fifteen knots
-an hour; and right ahead was nothing&mdash;that is,
-nothing we could see; just a black wall of darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Vainly I tried to make out the light of the coming
-morning; but the snow squalls shut off everything.
-Pete, sharp-eyed fellow of my watch, was
-on lookout on the forecastle head. I knew Pete's
-eyes were the best ever, but he could see nothing
-in that wild gale of snow and sleet and inky darkness.
-I went to the break of the poop again, and
-hailed the deck below.</p>
-
-<p>"Keep a sharp lookout ahead, there," I said, bawling
-the words out to reach through the storm. Then
-I stood waiting, for there was nothing else to do.</p>
-
-<p>Two bells came&mdash;five o'clock&mdash;and the watch reported<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
-all well and the lights burning brightly. Our
-starboard and port&mdash;green and red&mdash;lights were
-none too bright at any time, yet they were well
-within the law, and had served the ship for five
-years or more.</p>
-
-<p>I answered the hail, and stood trying again to
-see something over the black hills of water that
-were rushing to the southwest under the pressure
-of the gale. Something made me very nervous. I
-began to shiver, and the snow struck my face and
-melted enough to run down my neck, making me
-miserable, indeed. I still stood gazing right ahead
-into the night, hoping for the dawn which was now
-due in another hour, when I heard a yell from the
-forecastle head.</p>
-
-<p>"Light dead ahead, sir," came the hail.</p>
-
-<p>I looked and saw nothing, but took Pete's word
-for it.</p>
-
-<p>"Keep her off all she'll go," I roared to the wheel.</p>
-
-<p>And just as I felt her swing her stern to the following
-sea, I saw close to us the green light of a
-steamer, and above it her masthead light. Then
-the thing happened.</p>
-
-<p>A wild cry from forward, followed by the loom
-of a gigantic object in the gloom ahead. We were
-upon the vessel in a moment.</p>
-
-<p>A tremendous crash, grinding, tearing, splintering.
-The brig staggered, seemed to stop suddenly,
-and then the deep, roaring note of the gale smothered
-the rest.</p>
-
-<p>We struck, fairly head on, swung to, glanced
-along the ship's side, and were lying dismasted in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
-the trough of the sea, our foremast over the side,
-and nothing but the lower main mast standing. The
-seas tore over us, and we lay like a log, while the
-shadow of the steamer passed slowly astern.</p>
-
-<p>The old man was on deck before I knew just
-what had happened. So also was Slade. The
-smashing and grinding of the wreckage alongside
-told of the spars; but we were too stunned to think
-of them.</p>
-
-<p>Was the hull split open with that furious impact?
-That was the thought in our minds. Ours was a
-wooden vessel&mdash;little, light, and very strong. Did
-we ram our plank ends in? If so, we were lost
-men, all of us.</p>
-
-<p>It was fully a half minute before we spoke of
-it. We knew just what to do, but we were stunned
-for a few moments. Then we made for the main
-deck, and tried the pumps. The water was coming
-in lively.</p>
-
-<p>"All hands on the pumps!" came the skipper's
-order; and we manned the brakes with the feeling
-that it was just a respite, just a little time to lose.
-The men took to them with a will, however; but I
-had a sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach,
-and I worked half-heartedly for a few minutes, until
-I brought myself around with a jerk. I was mate.
-I had the responsibility. And more than that&mdash;it
-had happened in my watch on deck. I was the one
-who must do the most.</p>
-
-<p>"Come along, bullies&mdash;get a couple of axes!" I
-roared, and made my way to the weather fore channels,
-where the rigging of the topmast and lower<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
-mast held the wreckage alongside, being drawn taut,
-as it were, across the deck, the spars to leeward, and
-banging and pounding against the ship with each
-surge. "Get into those lanyards!" and they chopped
-away in the gray light of the morning, cutting
-everything they could, and clearing the weather rigging
-of the strain.</p>
-
-<p>The wreckage now hung by the lee rigging, and
-drifted farther aft. The wheel was lashed hard
-down, and a bit of spanker raised again upon the
-mainmast, the halyards still being intact, although
-the boom had been broken by the shock. We soon
-had canvas on her aft, and she headed the sea, dropping
-back from the wreckage to a mooring hawser
-bent to the standing rigging of the foremast. We
-got a lashing to the foot of the mast, and she
-dragged the mass broadside, making a lee of it, and
-riding easily to the heavy seas, which now took her
-almost dead on her bows.</p>
-
-<p>When I had a chance to look about me again,
-the light of the morning had grown to its full
-height, and we were able to see around us.</p>
-
-<p>The gray light made things look almost hopeless
-for us. The pumps worked full stroke, and the
-water gained rapidly on us. There had been three
-feet made during the first half hour. We were settling,
-and the brig was riding more heavily, taking
-the seas over her head with a smothered feeling that
-told of what was coming.</p>
-
-<p>I had a chance to breathe again, and I looked out
-over the gray ocean, where the white combers rolled
-and the heavy clouds swept along close to their tops.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
-A large, black object showed to the westward of us,
-and we recognized her as a steamer. She was very
-low in the water, and upon her rigging floated the
-signal, "<i>We are sinking.</i>" She was the one we had
-run down.</p>
-
-<p>The old man stood gazing at her as I came on
-the poop. He was trying to make her out; and
-this he did finally, when the wind stretched her flag
-in a direction so that we could see it plainly. She
-was one of the Havana steamers bound up from
-Cuba, and was about five thousand tons. Her number
-was that of the <i>William Rathbone</i>.</p>
-
-<p>"No better fix than we are," snarled the skipper.
-"What was the matter? Didn't you see him? He's
-big enough."</p>
-
-<p>"Too dark," I said. "You know what kind of a
-night it was&mdash;look at it now. We might do something
-if we were sure of floating ourselves&mdash;no boat
-would live in this sea five minutes; but it'll smooth
-out, maybe&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Maybe blow a hurricane!" howled the old man,
-his voice rising above the gale. "Get the boats ready,
-anyhow&mdash;get the steward to put all the grub he can
-get in them&mdash;too bad, too bad," he went on.</p>
-
-<p>While Slade helped to get the boats ready for
-leaving the brig, I went to the bow and tried to see
-just what damage we had done ourselves. It was
-dangerous work, as the seas came over in solid
-masses, and more than once I came near getting
-washed overboard. Splintered plank ends, a crushed
-stem showed through the wreck of the bowsprit,
-which still hung by the bobstays and shrouds,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
-jammed foul of the catheads, so that only the end
-swung, and struck us a blow now and then. It
-was a hopeless mess.</p>
-
-<p>A great sea rose ahead, with its crest lifting for
-a break, and I ducked behind the windlass, holding
-on with both hands. The solid water swept over
-the bows, and I was almost drowned; but I held on.
-There was nothing I could do forward, and no men
-could work there. The steady grind of the pumps
-took the place of desperate rushing about the decks.
-The men stood in water to their knees as the seas
-swept her, but they still kept it up. As fast as one
-man gave out another took his place, regardless of
-watch; and the waiting ones chafed under the shelter
-of the mainmast.</p>
-
-<p>The boats were on booms over the forward house,
-where the seas could not wash them away; and
-Slade had them all ready to leave, although it was
-a study how to get them overboard in that sea with
-nothing forward to raise them with. The mainstay
-still held, and the mainmast was strong enough;
-but there was nothing forward at all above them.
-I went aft and waited.</p>
-
-<p>Old Captain Gantline was still standing at the
-poop rail watching the steamer. Our drift was
-about equal to hers, and we sagged off to leeward
-together, keeping about a mile apart. The steamer
-was settling.</p>
-
-<p>"Of course, he ought to have gone clear of us!"
-howled the old man as I came up. "I don't blame
-you, Mr. Garnett; I don't blame you&mdash;but you certainly
-swung us off at the last minute when you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
-knew the law was to hold your course, and let him
-get out of our way."</p>
-
-<p>"But he was dead ahead, sir. I saw his lights
-right aboard. To luff meant to come to in that sea,
-and that would have been just as bad, for he'd
-have struck us aft&mdash;probably cut us in two."</p>
-
-<p>I really had done nothing out of the way. The
-steamer had not seen us, that was certain. I was
-supposed, under the law, to hold on until the last
-moment, and I had done so. I had only swung her
-off a little; tried to clear when I saw he would not.
-I knew the law well enough, and had followed it
-up to the moment of striking. Our swing off had
-made our bows fetch up against the steamer, and
-had probably caused him serious damage. But it
-had saved us from being cut down by her sharp
-steel stem, which would have gone through our
-wooden side as if through butter.</p>
-
-<p>No, I did not feel guilty; although there were
-evidently some hundred passengers and crew of that
-ship in dire peril and sore put to it. The old man
-knew I had done the best thing I could for us, and
-there was no possible way of avoiding a collision
-in a wild, thick night like the last when the ships
-were invisible but a few fathoms distant.</p>
-
-<p>We waited, and the brig settled slowly, while the
-wind still held from the northeast, and the sea still
-ran strong and high. There was apparently no
-chance for launching a small boat. The scud
-flew fast and the gray wind-swept ocean looked
-ugly enough, the surface covered with white. The
-steamer was slowly sinking, like ourselves, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
-it was only a question whether either would go
-through the day or not. I hoped that it would not
-come in the night. There's something peculiarly
-nerve-racking in wild night work in a sinking ship.
-The very absence of light lends terror to the already
-awful situation, and the wild rush of the wind
-and seas makes chaos of the blackness about.</p>
-
-<p>The day dragged slowly. It was like waiting for
-the end of the world. The vessels drifted apart but
-another mile or two, and we were still close enough
-to exchange signals. We had long ago run ours up,
-telling that the same state of affairs existed aboard
-the brig. If some passing coasting steamer came
-along, all might still be well with the passengers
-and crews of both of us. But not a sign of anything
-showed above the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>At five o'clock&mdash;two bells&mdash;that evening, the brig
-was well down in the water; and she was taking the
-seas nastily over her. The main deck was all but
-impossible to remain upon, and the men at the
-pumps had to lash themselves to keep there. It
-would be only a question of a few hours now. The
-drawn faces told of the strain. Slade, the second
-mate, came to me.</p>
-
-<p>"All over but the shouting," he said. "How'll we
-ever get them boats clear in this sea?"</p>
-
-<p>"Better start now before it's too late," I said, and
-went to the old man for orders.</p>
-
-<p>"All right, get them over," said the old man, in
-answer to my question; and we started on the last
-piece of work we were to do in that brig.</p>
-
-<p>Bill, the West Indian negro; Wilson; Peter, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
-Dutchman; and Jones were to row; and, with myself
-at the steering oar in command, made the working
-crew. Besides these men we had three others,
-making eight men all told for our boat. Slade went
-with the old man, dividing the little crew up evenly.</p>
-
-<p>We had a good crew. Long training in that little
-ship had made them good men. But for their steadiness
-we would never have got those boats clear. It
-was desperate work getting them over the side without
-smashing them. With a tackle upon the main,
-however, we managed to lift them clear and let
-them swing aft, lifting and guying them out by
-hand. Then we dropped them over the quarter, and
-let them tow astern to the end of a long line, and
-they rode free, being lighter than the ship and pulling
-dead to leeward.</p>
-
-<p>I was the first to leave, as became my place. The
-old man, as captain, must be the last. I hauled the
-boat up, and we climbed in, jumping the now short
-distance as she took the seas and rose close to the
-taffrail. The brig was very low, and settling fast.</p>
-
-<p>"Go to the steamer first," said the old man; "then
-head westerly until you get picked up or get ashore.
-We are not more than one hundred and fifty miles
-off&mdash;good-by."</p>
-
-<p>I dropped over, and the line was cast off, letting
-the boat drift slowly back, but still heading the sea
-so that she rode almost dry, in spite of the combers.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Rathbone</i> was in view about three miles distant,
-and by the weight upon the four oars we held
-her so that she drifted off bodily in that direction,
-while still heading well up to the wind. There was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
-plenty of light left yet, but there was a night coming,
-and I hoped we would get a chance to board
-the big vessel before it was black dark. Perhaps
-she was not so dangerously hurt as she looked.</p>
-
-<p>I saw the old man's boat come away and take the
-general direction of our own; but the seas were too
-high to see her often. She was evidently making
-good weather of it, and I thanked the lucky stars
-that we had whaleboats for our business, and not
-the tin things they use for lifeboats in steamers.</p>
-
-<p>By keeping the boat's head quartering to the wind
-and sea, she drifted bodily off toward the <i>Rathbone</i>,
-and before dark we drew close aboard.</p>
-
-<p>There was much action taking place on her decks
-as we came close enough to see. Passengers ran
-about, and forms of seamen dashed fore and aft.
-It was evident that they were hurrying for some
-purpose, and that purpose showed as we noted the
-list to starboard the ship had. She was very low
-forward, and seemed to be ready to take the final
-plunge any moment.</p>
-
-<p>Our boat had been pretty badly smashed getting
-her overboard, and she was leaking badly from the
-started seams. In that strong, rolling sea she had
-all she could do with the crew in her; and I fervently
-hoped that I would not be called upon to take
-passengers. Four rowing and three for relief was
-all right, but a dozen more would swamp her.</p>
-
-<p>We came close under the <i>Rathbone's</i> lee. She lay
-broadside to the sea, and her high stern, raised as it
-were by her sinking head, shut off the sweep of the
-combers.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>"Steady your oars," I commanded, as we came
-within a few fathoms. A man in uniform rushed
-to the ship's rail and hailed us through a megaphone.
-He was followed by several passengers.</p>
-
-<p>"Can you come aboard and help us?" he bawled.
-"We're sinking&mdash;all the boats gone to starboard&mdash;captain
-killed and chief mate knocked on the head
-by wreckage."</p>
-
-<p>"Men have refused duty," howled a man standing
-near him. "Mutiny aboard, and we're going down&mdash;come
-aboard and help us."</p>
-
-<p>While they hailed, I noticed the boats to port
-going over the side. One had already gone down,
-but she had fouled her falls, and had dropped end
-up, smashing against the ship's side and filling.
-Struggling men tried to clear her, but the sea was
-too heavy. A life raft was pushed over the rail,
-and fell heavily close to us, held by a line. It
-surged in the lee, and, as the ship drifted down, it
-struck her heavily, smashing the platform.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't go, sir," said Jake, in a voice that barely
-reached me.</p>
-
-<p>"We'll have troubles enough of our own," said
-another.</p>
-
-<p>"Shut up, there are passengers&mdash;don't you see the
-women?&mdash;we've got to help them," I said.</p>
-
-<p>I looked for the other boat. It was not in sight.
-The forms of two women came to the rail, one a
-young girl.</p>
-
-<p>"Throw me a line," I yelled to the man in uniform.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>A small line came sailing across the boat. I seized
-it, and went forward.</p>
-
-<p>"Jake and you, Bill, come with me, the rest lie
-by&mdash;keep her clear whatever you do," I said, and
-waved my hand to those above to haul away. With
-the bowline under my arms, I was soon on deck.
-Then I helped to haul my two men up.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm the second," said the man in uniform; "but
-I can't make 'em do anything. Just stretched one
-out when the rest knocked me over and took to the
-boats."</p>
-
-<p>Without delay we made our way along the port
-rail to amidships, where the boats were being lowered.
-Men crowded around them, and fought for
-places. The fireroom crew, white-skinned and partly
-clothed, their pale faces dirty with coal dust, stood
-around the nearest boat, and worked at the lashings,
-cursing, swearing, and shoving each other in the
-suppressed panic of men who are hurrying from
-death.</p>
-
-<p>The canvas covering was ripped off, and four
-men sprang into her, the rest shoving her bodily
-outboard. The men at the falls howled and swore,
-slacked off without regard to consequences, and the
-craft dropped a few feet, then swung off, and came
-with a crash against the side.</p>
-
-<p>"Fine discipline," I said to the second mate, who
-was close to me.</p>
-
-<p>A form touched my elbow. I turned, and saw a
-young girl.</p>
-
-<p>"Aren't they going to take us along with them?"
-she asked quietly, but with a voice full of pleading.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>I looked at her. She was not over twenty, and
-very pretty. Her big eyes were looking right into
-mine.</p>
-
-<p>"Sure, lady, you shall go," I said.</p>
-
-<p>Jake and Bill stood right behind me.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you a gun?" I asked the officer.</p>
-
-<p>"No; haven't got a thing&mdash;let's hoof 'em."</p>
-
-<p>"Avast slacking that boat down," I roared, rushing
-in.</p>
-
-<p>"Tell it to George," snarled a big fireman, shoving
-me aside.</p>
-
-<p>I hooked him under the jaw with all my strength,
-and he staggered back. Jake slammed the next man
-in the stomach, while the second officer waded in
-now, striking right and left in the press.</p>
-
-<p>"Get back&mdash;stand back!" we roared; and, for a
-wonder, forced our way along the ship's side, taking
-the falls.</p>
-
-<p>"Get a line below the block hook. Hold her off,"
-came the order, and some one passed a line at the
-after fall, while a man in the boat pushed manfully
-against the ship's side to steady her.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, then, slack away together," I yelled; and
-Bill, who had the forward fall, slacked off with me,
-and the craft went rushing down just as the ship
-rolled to leeward. She struck the sea, the block unhooked;
-and, as the sinking ship rolled up, she fell
-clear, and hung to her painter. We had got one
-down all right. The men then rushed.</p>
-
-<p>Four of us fought back with all our might; but
-the weight of frantic men was too heavy for us.
-We were forced back and down, struggling under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
-the crush of fighting firemen and seamen, who
-trampled, struck, and then tore loose to slide down
-the hanging boat falls or jump over into the sea,
-to climb in the floating craft below. The men below
-in the boat saw they would be swamped by numbers,
-and cut the painter. She drifted off, then crashed
-up against the ship's side, and finally swept around
-the stern, where she met the sea. That was the last
-I saw of her.</p>
-
-<p>With my clothes half torn off, oilskins hanging
-in rags, my face bleeding, and utterly exhausted, I
-got to my feet, and we made for the next boat.
-The press about her was not so great, and we managed
-to make way against it. It was the last boat,
-and the remaining few men left aboard were not
-enough to hold us. Among them were some passengers,
-whom we got aboard&mdash;four of them&mdash;and
-then finally sent the boat down clear. I looked
-around for the girl. Two women were in the boat,
-and the second officer said there was another
-aboard. I was out of breath, and stood panting a
-few moments, gazing aft through the bloom of the
-evening trying to see what had become of that girl.
-She was not in sight. I remembered she was near
-the other boat.</p>
-
-<p>"I'll run aft and try to find her," I yelled, and
-rushed down the deck.</p>
-
-<p>At the door of the saloon I saw a form huddled
-up on a transom just inside.</p>
-
-<p>"Come," I called roughly; "come along, quick&mdash;the
-boat's waiting."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, it's you," she said; and I saw it was the girl<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
-I was looking for. She sat up. "Did you ever see
-such brutes?"</p>
-
-<p>"Never mind that now. Get a move on&mdash;the boat
-won't wait."</p>
-
-<p>As I spoke, I felt the ship drop suddenly forward.
-I turned quickly, and gazed forward. It was almost
-dark now; but I could see the white surge burst
-over the forecastle head.</p>
-
-<p>"She's going," I yelled, and grabbed the girl.</p>
-
-<p>A great sea crashed against the house, bursting
-it in, roaring, smashing, and pouring like a Niagara
-into the saloon. The deck forward had gone
-under, the stern was rising high in the air, and the
-slanting deck told me there was not a second to lose.</p>
-
-<p>The girl sprang up, and we dashed together to
-the taffrail, which was now fully twenty feet above
-the sea. There was nothing below but that life raft,
-the boats had gone to leeward to keep clear. Without
-a moment's hesitation, I dropped the girl into
-the sea, and sprang after her.</p>
-
-<p>Hampered with my ragged clothes and oilskins,
-I could hardly swim a stroke. A rushing comber
-struck me, and I felt myself going down, unable to
-fight any longer. My breath was gone.</p>
-
-<p>When I came to I was lying upon the life raft,
-and the girl was clinging to me with one hand, and
-passing one of the lashings of the raft with the
-other. It was black dark. Only the rushing seas
-about me told of our whereabouts; and the wild
-flings of the raft as it swept along with the rush
-made me aware of the present. I tried to see, raised
-my head, and felt very weak.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>"How'd we get here?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I grabbed you and pulled you up," she said
-simply. "You were hit on the head by it&mdash;better
-tie yourself fast with that piece of cord, I can't hold
-you any longer."</p>
-
-<p>I took a few turns of the side lashings of the
-raft about our bodies, and, as the seas washed us, I
-noticed that the water felt so much warmer than
-the air. We were clear of the sea a few inches,
-but each comber dashed over and soaked us, washing
-so heavily that it was necessary to hold one's
-head up in order to breathe freely.</p>
-
-<p>"Did you see the boats?" I asked. "They'll pick
-us up presently."</p>
-
-<p>"No; I couldn't see anything. I had all I could
-do to pull you on the raft. You're pretty heavy, you
-know. Then I had to hold you for what seemed
-an hour, but maybe was only a few minutes. Do
-you think they'll find us?"</p>
-
-<p>"Sure. They wouldn't leave us. Ship went
-down, didn't it&mdash;rather sudden, and they had to let
-go. My men will stand by if it takes all night," I
-said.</p>
-
-<p>"I sincerely hope you are right about it. I don't
-much fancy this raft for a place to spend the night.
-Will we be drowned on it, do you think?"</p>
-
-<p>"No fear; we're all right. It can't sink. All we
-have to do is to keep a lookout for a boat and sing
-out for help. Why, there's five boats altogether,
-counting ours. Five boats, and it's just dark, not
-after six or seven o'clock at the most."</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>"How far from land are we?" she asked, seemingly
-cheered but still somewhat doubtful.</p>
-
-<p>"Not far," I lied. I thought of a hundred and
-fifty miles of floating to get in&mdash;if the boats didn't
-pick us up. I began to experience that sinking feeling
-that comes to many when the outlook seems
-pretty bad.</p>
-
-<p>The girl was silent for some time after this, and
-seemed to be thinking of her troubles, for once she
-gave a little gasp of complaint.</p>
-
-<p>"Cheer up," I said; "don't give way to it yet.
-We'll be all right soon."</p>
-
-<p>As the hours passed and no boat come near, I began
-to feel very nervous. I could see but a few
-fathoms distant, and knew the chances were growing
-less and less. I hailed the blackness, bawled
-out as loud as I could, keeping it up at minute intervals.
-The wind seemed to be going down, but
-the sea still ran quickly, and was high and strong,
-lifting the raft skyward at each roll, and then dropping
-it down gently into the hollow trough. We
-felt the wind only when on the top of the seas, and
-it chilled us; but the warm edge of the Gulf Stream
-soaked us, and we could stand it for a long time.
-The sea was as warm as milk.</p>
-
-<p>How that long night passed I don't know. It
-seemed like eternity. Several times I lost consciousness,
-whether from exhaustion or from the
-blow I had received upon the head I cannot say. I
-held to the girl, and together we stood it out. Our
-lashings kept us upon the piece of platform remaining<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
-upon the two hollow iron cylinders comprising
-the raft.</p>
-
-<p>The girl lost her power of speech some time during
-the night, and seemed to faint, her head dropping
-upon the slats of the platform. I held it up
-to keep the water from her nose and mouth, and
-finally propped her head so that little water broke
-over it. It was all I could do.</p>
-
-<p>The raft swung around and around, sometimes
-with the sea on one side and then with it upon another.
-I felt for the oarlock, which is usually placed
-at either end to steer by, but it was gone. So also
-were the oars that had been placed between the cylinders
-and the platform. We simply had a float,
-that kept us bodily out of the sea, and that was all.</p>
-
-<p>After hours and hours of this wild pitching and
-rushing upon the crests of high, rolling seas, the
-motion began to get easier, and I noticed that the
-wind was rapidly falling. The crests no longer
-broke with the furious rush and tumble as formerly.
-Then the gray light of dawn came, and I began to
-see about us.</p>
-
-<p>The form of the girl lay alongside me, lashed to
-the platform. Her hair trailed into the sea in long
-tresses from her head, and her face was white as
-chalk. I thought she was dead, and shook her to
-see if there was any life to stir up. She lay limp.
-I took her hand and felt the wrist. A slight pulse
-told of the vital spark still burning. It seemed
-brutal to arouse her, to bring her back to the horror
-of her position. But I felt that it was best. I
-called to her, and she finally opened her eyes.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
-She shivered, placed one arm under her, and then
-raised herself painfully into a sitting posture.</p>
-
-<p>"Cut the cord around my wrist, will you, please?"
-she said. "I promise not to fall off."</p>
-
-<p>"Better let it stay," I said. "I'll loose it so you
-can move about a little. Seems like they missed us
-in the dark."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, do you still think they'll pick us up? See;
-it's light now, the sun is coming up. I don't know
-as I care very much. Do you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Sure I care. Why not? We'll be all right
-soon."</p>
-
-<p>She let her head fall forward, and gave a little
-sob; just a bit of a cry.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, then I'm glad I pulled you out of the
-water," she said. "Seems like we might just as
-well have gone during the night. Do you really
-think it's worth struggling for like this? Life is
-good&mdash;and I want to live&mdash;but this is too hard&mdash;too
-terrible&mdash;and my poor mother&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"We'll be picked up before breakfast, sure," I
-said. "The boats must have drifted just the same
-as ourselves. Something'll come along soon."</p>
-
-<p>And yet deep down in me I knew that this was
-a bare chance. We were out of the track of ships,
-well off shore for the coasters, and not far enough
-for the Bermuda ships, like the <i>Rathbone</i>, which
-had stopped at the island on her way north.</p>
-
-<p>The sun rose, and daylight broadened into the
-morning. The wind fell rapidly, and the sea began
-to get that easy run of the Atlantic when undisturbed.
-I loosened my lashings and stood up, gazing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
-about us. The motion of the raft was still
-severe; but I could stand, balancing myself. I
-shivered and shook with the wet and cold; but I
-now felt that with the sun shining we would soon
-be in better straits. As the raft rose upon the
-swells I looked all around the horizon. But there
-was nothing; not a thing save the sea in sight.</p>
-
-<p>"You can't see anything?" The girl's voice
-sounded strange, querulous, and pitiful. She was
-sitting with her head bowed upon her hands, which
-rested on her knees. Her wet dress clung to her,
-and she looked very frail, very delicate.</p>
-
-<p>"No; I can't see anything yet," I answered; "but
-we'll sight something before long. Tell me, were
-you from Bermuda?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes; I was visiting my aunt there," she said.
-"I just graduated from the convent of the Sacred
-Cross last month. I've never been anywhere, or
-seen anyone, until this year. My mother is the only
-other near relative I have living."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, you've made a good start seeing things,"
-said I, trying to smile at her. She turned a little
-pink, just flushed a bit; but it gave her white face
-a more natural look. She was a very pretty girl.</p>
-
-<p>"How old are you?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Eighteen. Why?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, nothing, only&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>I felt like a fool. Why should I bother this child
-about her age? She had saved my life by dragging
-me upon the raft, and I would save hers, if possible.
-It produced a feeling in me I could not quite
-understand. I liked to hear her talk, to have her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
-look at me. She was very pretty; a good, innocent
-young girl.</p>
-
-<p>"I could eat a house, roof, and foundation," I
-ventured finally, seating myself. The wash of the
-sea now hardly reached us, and we were drying out
-fast in the cool breeze and sunshine.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes; I could eat a ship, masts, and spars," I
-went on.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I suppose I'll be tough enough," she said,
-glancing at me with some show of fear in her eyes.
-"I once read of men on a raft who ate each other;
-but I never thought it would be my turn. No,
-never."</p>
-
-<p>"Don't be absurd," I said. "I don't intend to eat
-you&mdash;not yet."</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me very hard. Her eyes were
-moist; big, lustrous eyes. "No," she said seriously,
-"I don't believe you will," and she put her hand in
-mine.</p>
-
-<p>"Aw, don't be frightened, kid," I said. "I may
-look like the devil, but I'm not."</p>
-
-<p>And I sat there like an idiot holding that girl's
-hand, while the sun rose and shone warmer and
-warmer upon us, drying our garments and cheering
-us wonderfully. I had never met a girl of this
-kind before; and it was something of a problem how
-I was to keep her alive and cheerful on that raft. I
-swore fiercely at Jake, at Jones, and the rest for
-leaving us adrift. My oaths were something strange
-to the girl, for she shivered and drew her hand
-away.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>"Please don't," she said quietly. "What good
-does it do to use such language?"</p>
-
-<p>"Eases me a lot, miss. What's your name?"</p>
-
-<p>"Alice Trueman."</p>
-
-<p>I mumbled the name a few times, then relapsed
-into silence. After that there was nothing more
-said for a long time; but I saw her looking at me
-at intervals. Evidently I was an animal she was
-not used to, and I wondered at a mother who would
-bring up a girl to view a man as such a terrible
-sort of creature. I was a rough sailor; but I was
-human.</p>
-
-<p>The day advanced and the wind fell to a gentle
-breath. Then it became quite still, a dead calm,
-while the swell rolled steadily in from the eastward,
-but smoothed out into long, easy hills and hollows,
-upon which the raft rode easily and the platform
-kept clear of the sea at last.</p>
-
-<p>We took turns standing up and looking about the
-surrounding waste to see if there were any signs
-of a ship. Nothing showed upon the horizon, and
-the day wore down to evening. We were both very
-hungry and thirsty. I knew that the limit would
-soon be reached if there were nothing to eat or
-drink. The sun was now warm, and we ceased shivering
-as it settled in the west. The darkness of the
-night came on with its terrors, and still there was
-no sign of help from anywhere.</p>
-
-<p>"I really don't think I can stand it any longer,
-captain," said the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm not the captain&mdash;just the mate," I answered;
-"but you'll have to stick it out for the night."</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>Miss Alice gave a little sob. "I'm <i>so</i> hungry and
-thirsty," she wailed. And added plaintively: "I've
-never been hungry in my life before."</p>
-
-<p>"Probably not," I said, sitting close to her and
-taking her hand in mine again. She made no resistance,
-and I passed my arm about her. "You
-must remember you've seen very little of the world
-yet. I've been hungry often&mdash;expect to be again before
-I go."</p>
-
-<p>"You see, I've had everything in the world I
-wanted. My father died very rich&mdash;and I can't
-stand the things people can who are used to them,"
-she lamented.</p>
-
-<p>"Cheer up," I said. "While there's life there's
-hope, you know."</p>
-
-<p>She gave a little sigh, and let her head fall back
-upon my shoulder. And so we sat there in the
-growing darkness, together upon a raft in the middle
-of the Atlantic. As I look back upon it, there
-seems to be a bit of sentiment lacking. I felt nothing
-but pity for the girl at the time. I wasn't the
-least unhappy. I wasn't the least disturbed, except
-that hunger was gnawing at me and the fear the
-girl would die there. Personally I was not displeased
-with the position. Such is youth.</p>
-
-<p>"Alice," I said finally, "I find a lot of comfort in
-you being here with me, but I honestly believe I
-could stand it better if you were safe ashore.
-You've been a mighty brave little companion
-though."</p>
-
-<p>She gave my hand a bit of a squeeze, and sighed
-like a tired child. Then she closed her eyes.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>I was aroused by a hail.</p>
-
-<p>"Hey, there, aboard the raft!" came a yell from
-the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>"Boat, ahoy!" I howled, in desperation, hardly
-believing my ears.</p>
-
-<p>"Stand by and catch the line," came the yell
-again, and I jumped up and stared into the gloom.</p>
-
-<p>A dark spot showed close aboard. The sound of
-oars came over the water. A man's voice hailed
-again, and I recognized Jones, my bow oarsman.</p>
-
-<p>"Mr. Garnett&mdash;&mdash;Is it you?" he cried; and a
-line came hurtling across the platform, striking me
-in the face. I seized it, snatched a turn upon one
-of the slats of the platform. The boat came alongside,
-while they held her off with the oars and boat
-hook.</p>
-
-<p>"A girl&mdash;one of the passengers, hey?" asked
-Jones. "Climb aboard, sir, and we'll take her in all
-safe enough."</p>
-
-<p>Wilson and Jones sprang upon the platform, and
-helped me lift the girl to her feet. She opened her
-eyes at the motion, and gave a cry of joy.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm so glad!" she said, and fainted dead away,
-while we placed her in the stern of the whaleboat.</p>
-
-<p>"Water, in the name of Heaven!" I panted. "You
-cowards! Why did you leave us?"</p>
-
-<p>"Hunted for you, sir, all night," said Jones, getting
-at the water breaker and measuring out a full
-quart. I held it to the lips of the girl, and she revived
-enough to drink part of it. I drank the rest,
-and drew another measure, drinking it off in a gulp.</p>
-
-<p>"Grub," I said, without further ado; and, while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
-they shoved clear of the raft, I took a share of the
-ship's biscuit, eating ravenously.</p>
-
-<p>"Sit up and chew a bit of bread," I said to Miss
-Alice.</p>
-
-<p>She raised herself with an effort, and soon recovered
-sufficiently to eat something. Then she
-nestled close to me, let her head fall again upon my
-shoulder, and went to sleep like a tired child.</p>
-
-<p>We were heading almost due west for the coast
-now, and could not be very far away from coastwise
-traffic. I felt that the end would soon come,
-and that we would be picked up.</p>
-
-<p>Before midnight a light showed ahead. It was a
-steamer's headlight, and I soon made out her green
-light, showing she was heading north, inside of us.
-We would pass very close.</p>
-
-<p>"Give way strong; give way together. Let's get
-out of this," I said; and the men set to the oars.</p>
-
-<p>The light grew brighter, the green still showing.
-Soon the black form of the ship's hull showed
-through the gloom, her masthead light now looming
-high in the air, and her side light close aboard. We
-were drawing in, and I stood up and bawled out
-for help. The black bulk of her hull towered over
-us, and for an instant it seemed that she would
-run us down.</p>
-
-<p>"Hold&mdash;back water&mdash;hold hard!" I yelled, and
-the men obeyed.</p>
-
-<p>The ship tore past us, the foam of her bow wave
-splashing into the boat. I roared out curses upon
-the men above in her. Then she went on into the
-night. I howled, swore at her, called her skipper<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
-every name I could devise. The men seconded me,
-and together we called down enough curses upon
-that ship to have sunk her. Suddenly she seemed to
-slow up, to stop, and then lay dead in the gloom.</p>
-
-<p>"Row, you bullies, row for your lives!" I yelled;
-and the men gave their last spurt, putting their remaining
-strength into the pull. We drew closer,
-and a voice hailed us from the ship.</p>
-
-<p>"Ship ahoy!" I called again. "Throw us a line
-and stand by to pick us up."</p>
-
-<p>We came alongside. A line was dropped down,
-and Jones seized it, snatched a turn, and we were
-fast. The ship was wallowing slowly ahead; but
-we hung alongside safe enough.</p>
-
-<p>"Pass down a bowline," I sang out; "and be
-quick about it."</p>
-
-<p>The line came down into the boat, and I slipped
-it over the head of Miss Alice Trueman, jamming it
-under her arms.</p>
-
-<p>"H'ist away on deck," I directed; and the girl
-went aloft. The rest of us came one after the other.</p>
-
-<p>"I can't take your boat, sir," said the captain;
-"haven't any room."</p>
-
-<p>"Forget the boat. Give me something to eat and
-drink, and a place to lie down for a few weeks," I
-said, and I was led below.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Two days later we were at the dock in New York.
-I had not seen Alice since she had been turned over
-to the care of the stewardess; but I waited for her
-to come on deck. She came, pale but self-possessed.
-She was still weak, but was now nearly recovered.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
-The ship was being warped to the pier, and it would
-be a few minutes before we could leave her. I came
-up and held out my hand.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," I said, "Alice, how about it? You were
-a good companion in trouble, a brave shipmate in
-the face of terrible danger. Somehow it has drawn
-me to you. I want to see you again."</p>
-
-<p>"Always, Mr. Garnett; always will I be glad to
-see you&mdash;but do you think it wise under the circumstances?
-Don't you think we had better say
-good-by now? It will only be more difficult later
-on. You know what I mean&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>She looked up at me with moist eyes&mdash;eyes that
-told so much. I was taken all aback; but I understood.
-I was only a sailorman, a mate of a sailing
-ship. She was an heiress&mdash;a lady, as they say, educated
-and refined. She couldn't make me what she
-knew I would have to be to retain her respect and
-love, the love she would want to give. It was for
-my own good she was saying good-by. Yes, I believe
-she meant it only for that.</p>
-
-<p>"Sure, girl, I was only fooling," I said, with my
-throat choking so that the blamed ship reeled and
-swung about me.</p>
-
-<p>"Believe me, it's best so," she whispered, looking
-at me strangely with eyes now full of tears. She
-held out her hand, raised her head, put up her lips.</p>
-
-<p>"Kiss me good-by. You were awful good to me.
-Good-by."</p>
-
-<p>I felt that kiss burn my lips for many a day&mdash;yes,
-for a long time.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">THE AFTER BULKHEAD</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>After coming home from the East I had,
-like many other ship's officers, taken up
-steam. There was more in it than the old
-wind-jammers, and the runs were short in comparison.
-It was not long before I went in the Prince
-Line, as they needed navigators badly.</p>
-
-<p>I was chief mate of the liner, and it was my unpleasant
-duty to do about everything. Old Man
-Hall, captain and R. N. R. man, did little beside
-working the ship's position after we got to sea.
-Ashore, he left everything to Mr. Small and myself,
-as far as the ship was concerned, and if there were
-a piece of frayed line, a bit of paint chafed, we
-heard all about it within two hours after he came
-aboard.</p>
-
-<p>Small was second under me, while the third and
-fourth officers were hardly more than apprentices,
-both being for the first time in the ship and not more
-than twenty-one or two years of age.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Hall was nearly seventy, and somewhat
-decrepit, but he was an accurate navigator, and had
-kept his record clean, making one hundred runs
-across the Western Ocean without accident.
-Masters of merchantmen are good or bad, accord<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>ing
-to their records, according to their reputations.
-Some said Hall had excellent luck. But, anyway, he
-was a good man, a fair-minded skipper, and he always
-brought in his ship on schedule, which was
-saying a good deal, for the Prince Line steamers
-were not noted for keeping close to time&mdash;any old
-time was good enough for most of them until the
-<i>Prince Gregory</i>, of twenty thousand tons, came
-along and made the lubbers look up a bit.</p>
-
-<p>She was the largest ship of the fleet&mdash;which comprised
-ten good steamers&mdash;and she was fitted with
-all the modern conveniences, from telephones to
-wireless, had a swimming pool, barber shop, gymnasium,
-caf&eacute;, and elevators to the hurricane deck.</p>
-
-<p>With only four watch officers, and six cadets,
-who were about as useful as a false keel on a trunk,
-I had enough to do before clearing.</p>
-
-<p>The chief engineer was an American, for a wonder,
-and his six assistants, including donkey man,
-were Liverpool cockneys. They drove a swarm of
-fire rats and coal passers that would have made a
-seaman crazy in two days, but Smith took things
-easy below, and, although he had to push her to
-keep the new record, he let his assistants do the
-heavy work. That's the reason he grew so fat&mdash;grew
-fat and even-tempered, while poor Small and
-myself sweated out our lives after the usual routine.</p>
-
-<p>We had forty men in the crew, and needed more,
-for we often had a thousand emigrants in the steerage.
-Sometimes we carried bunches of those big
-chaps from the European forests, Lithuanians,
-strong, sturdy brutes, totally without sense.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>It was in December that we took over five hundred
-of them on board, and while I was polite as
-possible, I put Small wise to keep a lookout on the
-critters. They were miners, for the most part. Contract
-men, going to the mines in Pennsylvania.</p>
-
-<p>By some means a quantity of their baggage got
-below with that of the cabin passengers. We had
-a lot of cabin folks that voyage. There was a
-bunch of actors, men and women you hear at the
-opera, drummers galore, buyers who were coming
-home from the fall trading, several millionaires;
-and, among the society or upper-strata people, the
-ones without occupation to give them distinction,
-were the Lady Amadoun and her following.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Amadoun was American born, but French
-by adoption, or, rather, marriage, preferring in her
-youth the suave manners of older generations to the
-rougher ones of her own countrymen. Raoul,
-Vicomte Amadoun, her husband, had not turned out
-the soft and gentle creature he appeared before marriage.
-In fact, he had followed the usual time-worn
-game of demanding money at unusual crises, which,
-as you know, has a tendency to make intelligent
-women think twice before coming across with it.
-The Vicomtesse Amadoun, or countess, as they
-called her, was young; in fact, looked hardly twenty-five&mdash;but,
-of course, a countess has maids to fix her
-up a bit!</p>
-
-<p>You see, being first officer, and sitting at the head
-of my own table in the saloon, the countess came
-under my observation more than I intended. Old
-Hall had his own cronies, who sat with him, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
-Driggs, the steward, gave the most prominent passenger
-my right-hand seat&mdash;sort of compliment.
-Driggs was a good steward, and owed his place to
-my exertions in his behalf.</p>
-
-<p>It was about this confounded baggage that I had
-a chance to further acquaint myself with nobility,
-for the trunks of the countess&mdash;and she had about
-fifty, including those of her friends who came with
-her&mdash;got mixed with the stuff that the baggage-master
-had sent by mistake to the first-class baggage
-room&mdash;the unlovely dunnage of the human
-moles who were roosting low in the steerage, and
-paying two pounds sterling a head for the privilege.</p>
-
-<p>"I would take it as a great favor if you would
-allow me to get into my baggage by to-morrow at
-the latest," said the countess, beaming upon me from
-the adjacent seat at my table at dinner that day.
-"You see, we've been all over Europe, and while
-traveling through Russia I picked up some very
-pretty furs, which will be nice to use on deck during
-this cool sea weather."</p>
-
-<p>"Madam," said I, "I shall be at your service right
-after eight bells to-morrow, when I leave the
-bridge." So I warned the baggage man, below, to
-have the place cleaned out a mite, so that her ladyship
-could go below without getting her frock
-spoiled from contact with the steerage passengers or
-their belongings.</p>
-
-<p>To be sure that he would do my bidding&mdash;he belonged
-to the purser's force&mdash;I went below that
-morning, and looked the baggage over myself. I
-passed in through the steerage, and noted the men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
-stowed there. Two big brutes of Lithuanians sat
-upon their dunnage, and jabbered in their language.</p>
-
-<p>"Hike!" I said abruptly to the pair. "Git away
-from the baggage, and let the trunk slingers
-dig up."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, Mister Mate, Mister Chief, we have our
-trunks here, also, and want to get to them," answered
-one fellow in fairly good lingo.</p>
-
-<p>"Beat it!" I ordered. "Make a get-away as
-quick as you can. Only first-class passengers can
-take their baggage out, or get a look-in. Why, you
-lubber, if every one of you steerage rats wanted to
-get into your trunks, it would take about fifteen hundred
-stewards and baggage men to take care of
-you."</p>
-
-<p>"But it is of great importance that we see our
-things&mdash;there are some things in my trunk I must
-get at, some important things&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Try and fergit them until next Wednesday, when
-they can be dumped on Ellis Island; nuff sed&mdash;no
-more lingo&mdash;beat it!"</p>
-
-<p>The pair went away in very ugly humor, and I
-started the work of clearing that baggage room of
-their dunnage, and trying to select the trunks of the
-countess from the raffle. I managed to get about
-twenty of them, and let it go at that.</p>
-
-<p>The next day I took the countess below, and personally
-showed her over the trunks. She was accompanied
-by the count and her maid.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, Marie, which trunk was it in, <i>ma ch&egrave;re</i>?
-You must remember it very well," she said, looking
-at the mass of baggage.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>"<i>Mais oui</i>, it must be that grand affaire&mdash;that
-beeg one&mdash;see!" And the maid pointed to an immense
-Saratoga trunk, big enough to hold the
-clothes of a full man-o'-war's crew.</p>
-
-<p>The baggage master and I pulled the trunk out of
-the ruck, and the count produced a bunch of keys.</p>
-
-<p>I sauntered over to the other side of the room,
-where the gratings separated the steerage from the
-rest. The two fellows I saw there yesterday were
-watching through the slats, and did not notice me.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Deux cent</i>," said one, in a whisper.</p>
-
-<p>"Whew, <i>mon Dieu</i>&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>I knew that there was something about two hundred,
-but just what I couldn't quite log. My lingo
-goes mostly to Spanish and Chink, having sailed to
-those countries.</p>
-
-<p>The countess asked me to move the big trunk to
-the side of the ship. I did so without seeing the
-reason for the extra work, but the lady was gracious,
-and there was really no reason for not doing
-it. Two other trunks were opened, and the furs
-brought out. Then the lady went on deck again,
-after thanking me most profusely. Raoul was more
-reticent. He was not the tongue-lashing Frenchman
-he looked. He seemed preoccupied; but all
-very rich and powerful men seem that way to me,
-and after all I was but the chief officer. Perhaps
-the skipper would have drawn him out more.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing happened until we were within sight of
-the Nantucket Shoals lightship. That night the
-countess and her husband were on deck, and, the
-air being cool, they were well wrapped in furs. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
-watched them from the bridge. They kept well forward,
-near the starboard forward lifeboat. That
-was my boat under the drill orders, and I remembered
-it afterward.</p>
-
-<p>It was about two bells&mdash;nine o'clock in the evening&mdash;when
-there was a most terrific roar from below.
-The ship shook as though torn asunder. As
-I gazed aft, the deck seemed to rise and blow outboard.
-Something struck me heavily, and I was
-down and out for a few minutes. When I arose
-with ringing ears, I looked aft again, hardly realizing
-that I was awake and not dreaming. The siren
-was roaring full blast, and a throng of men and
-women were rushing forward toward the bridge.
-Old Hall came out of his room half dressed, and
-ran to me.</p>
-
-<p>"What is it&mdash;what's happened?" he yelled in my
-ear.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't know," I howled, and even then I didn't
-believe I was awake.</p>
-
-<p>The chief engineer ran up.</p>
-
-<p>"Starboard engine room full, sir&mdash;something
-blowed up below&mdash;whole side gone above water
-line&mdash;won't float ten minutes," he howled.</p>
-
-<p>"For God's sake, shut off that siren, then!" yelled
-old man Hall. Then, turning to me, he ordered:
-"Stand by the boats, and get the passengers out."</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes the roar of the steam stopped.
-Hall stood calmly upon the bridge, and gave the
-orders for the small boats, and away they went one
-after the other. The wireless was sending its call<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
-for help, but there was no time for us to listen to
-replies; we had plenty to do.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Prince Gregory</i> settled slowly by the stern,
-and raised her bows high in the air. There she
-stopped, and, for a wonder, did not fall from under
-us.</p>
-
-<p>"Get into the boat, quick!" I said to the countess,
-and she sprang with amazing ease into the stern,
-followed by her husband and the maid.</p>
-
-<p>"Nix on the men!" I yelled, and grabbed the
-count. "Come out&mdash;women first," and I dragged
-him from the boat with no show of deference. He
-struck me savagely in the face, and I stretched him
-out with the boat's tiller. Seamen tossed him aside,
-and the swarm of women crowded up and into the
-craft while I held the men back as best I could.</p>
-
-<p>I knew it was to be a close haul. Seven hundred
-men and women, and only twenty boats! The life
-rafts would be doing duty pretty soon, and no mistake.</p>
-
-<p>I saw very little of the fracas around me, as one
-never does see much if he is tending to his own
-business, and mine at that time was getting forty-five
-women into a small boat, many of them in before
-she was lowered away.</p>
-
-<p>Luckily there was no sea running at all. It was
-calm and foggy, the water like black oil.</p>
-
-<p>I slid down the falls, and when we loaded up I
-took command at the tiller, and went out a little distance
-to clear the wreck in case of trouble. We lay
-at rest a hundred fathoms distant, and watched the
-scuffle aboard. Men yelled like mad, screamed, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
-fought. I caught the flash of a gun, and heard the
-report. I knew Hall would not stand for lawless
-rushing the boats, and was doing some fierce work.
-Pretty soon the outcry died away more and more,
-and still the black hull showed plainly, her bow still
-pointing skyward, and her stern submerged.</p>
-
-<p>"God's blessing, there's no wind or sea!" I said
-to Driscoll, my stroke oarsman.</p>
-
-<p>"You're right there, cap," said he. "What wus
-ut anyway?"</p>
-
-<p>"Blessed if I knew&mdash;she's just blowed up, whole
-stern gone out of her. She can't float two hours,
-and there'll be no one out here before daybreak if
-they do get the signal."</p>
-
-<p>"You brute!" exclaimed the countess, who was
-sitting close to me. "Why didn't you let my husband
-come in this boat?"</p>
-
-<p>"If he was a man, he wouldn't have wanted to,"
-I snapped, hot at the insult.</p>
-
-<p>"I notice <i>you</i> are here, all right, you ruffian!" she
-retorted, sneering. "What do you call yourself?"</p>
-
-<p>I thought best not to answer her. Words with
-women are generally wasted, and the woman always
-gets the last one, anyhow. The countess had always
-been so courteous and gentle that I supposed
-the excitement had turned her head; and then, after
-all, I had treated her husband a bit rough. He was
-a gentleman, and I was only a mate. That made
-a difference in her point of view, although I can't
-say it did so much in my own.</p>
-
-<p>I talked to Driscoll, and watched the <i>Prince Gregory</i>
-as she lay there in the oily sea. Boats came<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
-and went toward the light vessel, and, thinking it
-would be a good thing to get rid of my cargo, I
-trailed off after the bunch, and was soon alongside
-the lightship.</p>
-
-<p>As fast as we could, we sent the women aboard,
-finding that the little ship would hold hundreds of
-passengers, in spite of her diminutive size. Inside
-of half an hour, she had fully five hundred people
-in her, and was jammed to the rails, below and on
-deck. Still, it was better than an open boat, and I
-kept bringing them by scores, until there were no
-more, save a few boatloads, and these we kept afloat
-in the lifeboats.</p>
-
-<p>During this time I thought little, or not at all,
-about the count. The ship still hung by her after
-bulkhead, and Lord knows the man who set it in her
-deserves praise enough. How it stood that strain
-is a wonder to this day. If there had been any sea
-running she would have gone down like a stone, for
-no unbraced cross-section of a ship can stand the
-surge of ten thousand tons in a seaway. It must
-have burst like blotting paper when wetted down.
-With ten men&mdash;all second-class passengers&mdash;in my
-boat besides the crew, I went back to the ship for
-the last time, and watched old man Hall as he stood
-upon the bridge. I could just make him out through
-the hazy gloom of the night, but I could hear his
-voice distinctly, as he gave orders to the few men
-who stayed with him.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you want any more help, sir?" I asked, coming
-alongside.</p>
-
-<p>"What's that&mdash;you, Jack?" he answered. "No, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
-reckon not. She'll hang on for hours, if the weather
-remains calm like this. All the passengers
-safe?"</p>
-
-<p>"All aboard the lightship, or hanging to her by
-painters&mdash;there's a line of boats half a mile long
-trailing on behind her, and they're safe enough, as
-they can't get lost as long as they hold to her. Tide
-runs hard here on the edge of the Stream, but her
-wireless is going right along, and she says two cutters
-left Boston half an hour ago, under full steam&mdash;ought
-to be here before late in the morning, anyway.
-Never lost a man, hey?"</p>
-
-<p>"No," says he, "not that I know of; and that's
-some remarkable, too."</p>
-
-<p>I thought it was, also, but said nothing more for
-a few moments, watching the half-sunken hull
-slowly rolling from side to side in the smooth swell.</p>
-
-<p>While I watched I saw the form of a man coming
-from aft, along the rail of the main deck, which
-was just awash. As every one had left the after
-part of the ship and the engine room abandoned, I
-thought this strange, and watched the figure until it
-came almost amidships. Then it disappeared in the
-cabin.</p>
-
-<p>"More men aft, sir?" I asked Hall, who still
-stood leaning upon the bridge rail, waiting for help.</p>
-
-<p>"No, no one left aboard&mdash;just Jenkins and his
-crew of four men&mdash;myself, that's all." Jenkins was
-carpenter.</p>
-
-<p>"Saw a man coming from aft, sir&mdash;must be some
-passenger overlooked. Shall I jump up, and see to
-him?"</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>"All right," came the response, and almost before
-he spoke the men who waited on their oars shoved
-the boat astern until she was almost level with the
-sunken deck. I sprang out of her, and sung to
-them to lie by and keep clear of the captain's boat,
-which lay alongside, just forward of us, waiting
-until the old man found it necessary to leave.</p>
-
-<p>I made my way in through the passageway to the
-saloon, and found the deck still clear of water, although
-the sucking roar and surge of the sea beneath
-told of the immense volume in the lower
-decks. The lights had long gone out, with the
-drowning of the dynamos, and I felt for a cabin
-door, intending to grab one of the emergency candles
-which are always in place on the bulkheads.</p>
-
-<p>I found one, and struck a light; then made my
-way along the passage in front of the lower staterooms,
-calling at intervals for any one who might
-be near and unable to realize the peril of a foundering
-ship. I admit it was some ticklish. I had my
-hair raised more than once when the ship took a
-more than usually heavy roll, and the rushing thunders
-below started with renewed force. What if
-she should drop? It was a bad thought, and not
-tending to still my pulse. I couldn't help thinking
-of the thousand fathoms or so of blue sea beneath
-my feet&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>I thought I heard a footstep crossing the passage
-in front of me. It is strange how, above the general
-thunder of rushing water, a slight sound makes
-itself evident. It was like standing upon the shore
-during the running of a heavy surf. One can almost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
-talk in a whisper while the thunder reverberates
-along the coast.</p>
-
-<p>A shadow crossed in front of me, and I hailed
-again. It was a man, and he was coming from below,
-from the sunken lower decks. He came up the
-staircase of the lower saloon, and darted along the
-passageway to port.</p>
-
-<p>"Hey, there! Stop!" I yelled.</p>
-
-<p>The man turned, and in an instant I recognized
-him. It was the Vicomte Raoul.</p>
-
-<p>He eyed me with a savage look, and waited for
-me to come up.</p>
-
-<p>"What ees it you want?" he growled.</p>
-
-<p>"Just you!" I told him. "Don't you know you
-are in danger of getting killed down here?"</p>
-
-<p>"And how does that matter interest you?" he retorted,
-with those shrugging shoulders and arched
-eyebrows he could handle so well.</p>
-
-<p>"It don't, except that, as I'm an officer, it's my
-duty to see you leave the ship under orders of the
-captain."</p>
-
-<p>"I noticed you were not so queek to have me
-leave dees sheep when I first started," he sneered,
-"and eef I go back for my jewels, my valuables, eet
-ees no affaire of yours&mdash;eh?"</p>
-
-<p>"It is only to the extent that I must see you off
-the vessel," I said.</p>
-
-<p>We were standing near the after companionway,
-and I noticed the splintered planking, where the
-force of the explosion had blown it upward. It was
-directly over the baggage room, where the trunks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
-were stowed below. This was now under six to
-ten feet of clear water.</p>
-
-<p>"If you want to get into your trunks, you will
-have to be a good diver," I said. "There's no
-chance in the world of getting below here&mdash;she's
-flooded full to the after bulkheads number four in
-the wake of the starboard engines. You couldn't
-do a thing below if you got there."</p>
-
-<p>In a more courteous tone, the count explained:</p>
-
-<p>"Eet is a matter of small valuables in my room,
-not my trunk. Go along like a good fellow, and I
-will follow instantly. I just go below to my room&mdash;I
-come with you instantly&mdash;go!"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I'll wait here if it don't take too long," I
-said. "It's against orders, and if anything happens
-to you I'll get it, all right. Hurry up, and beat it
-back&mdash;the boat's waiting, and the ship'll drop any
-minute. It's only that number four bulkhead holding
-her."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, yes, dat number four! Eet ees just at my
-stateroom door, zat number four you call heem.
-Wait, my good fellow, I come immediate," and he
-went down the companionway, which was knee-deep
-at the bottom in sea water.</p>
-
-<p>He splashed through the shallow wash, and disappeared
-along the gloomy passage, where the candlelight
-failed. I stood above and waited, holding my
-breath at times, and cursing the luck that made me
-weak enough to allow him to do such a foolish
-thing as go below for valuables. However, I had
-treated him pretty rough at the first getaway, and
-felt he had a right to some consideration.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>Suddenly I remembered that his stateroom was
-not below on that main deck! It seemed to me he
-had rooms forward and above; but the excitement
-had caused me to forget this detail, and I was so
-taken up, even at the time, that I only remembered
-it in a half-dazed way. What did he want below,
-then?</p>
-
-<p>I waited, and the minutes flew by, seeming long
-enough. The candle ran its hot grease down upon
-my hand, and burned it. I was getting sore and
-impatient at the wait. If anything happened, I
-could never be given a reprimand, for I would never
-show up to receive it. The ship would go down and
-take me with her, all right enough. I hadn't a
-chance in the world&mdash;and I was waiting there for a
-count, a man who had sprung into the mate's boat
-to get clear, when there were hundreds of women
-waiting and screaming to go!</p>
-
-<p>There was a sharp explosion from below. The
-ship shook a little, and rolled to port.</p>
-
-<p>"Just Heaven! Did that bulkhead go?"</p>
-
-<p>A form tore down the passageway, splashed
-through the water at the foot of the companion,
-and was upon me in an instant. Raoul struck me
-fairly between the eyes, and I went down to sleep&mdash;that
-was all I remember of the inside of the <i>Prince
-Gregory</i>, as she lay foundering off the Shoals.</p>
-
-<p>When I came to, I was in the boat, with Driscoll
-bending over me and pouring sea water upon my
-head. The dark stain showed me that I was bleeding
-fast, and the sailor tore off the sleeve of his
-jumper, and tied it about my forehead. I tried to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
-sit up, but everything swam and rolled about me
-horribly. Finally I managed to get my head up.</p>
-
-<p>"What's happened?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Bulkhead gave way, sir," he told me. "You
-was hit on the head by wreckage. I run in after
-you, an' jest managed to git you clear. She's gone,
-sir!"</p>
-
-<p>"What! The ship?" I cried.</p>
-
-<p>"Sure, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"And the old man&mdash;Jenkins, and the rest of
-them?"</p>
-
-<p>"All got clear just in time&mdash;seems like Jenkins
-and his gang were at the bulkhead from forrards,
-trying to shore it up, when <i>bing!</i> she went, and
-them as was left beat it&mdash;all got clear, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"See anything of a passenger&mdash;that chap we had
-a run-in with at the first getaway?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sir; one man got away in the skipper's
-boat&mdash;that's them headin' for the lightship over
-there," and he pointed to a blur that showed through
-the hazy night. I began to gather my senses again,
-but I couldn't make head or tail of it. What did
-that fellow nail me for? I had hit him, to be sure;
-but that was for a purpose. He surely intended to
-fix me, all right. About a minute more, and I would
-have gone with the ship.</p>
-
-<p>"Cowardly rat!" I whispered.</p>
-
-<p>"Who?" asked Driscoll.</p>
-
-<p>"That white-livered dog who knocked me out," I
-said, gritting my teeth at the thought.</p>
-
-<p>"Better lie quiet, sir; better keep still&mdash;you're<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
-bug a bit, but will be all right to-morrow. Does it
-hurt you much, sir?"</p>
-
-<p>"Shut up!" I commanded ungratefully, and Driscoll
-gazed at me sorrowfully, pulling away again
-at his oar, for we were now almost to the lightship.</p>
-
-<p>All that night we lay trailing astern. There was
-a long line of lifeboats reaching nearly half a mile
-back, all hanging to the taffrail of the ship.</p>
-
-<p>About daylight she got in touch with a passing
-passenger ship, bound in, and while we were busy
-shifting the hundreds of passengers the cutters
-showed up, and helped to expedite matters by towing
-the small boats. Before breakfast time we had
-all the outfit aboard and away for New York. Hall
-and myself went aboard the cutter <i>Eagle</i>. We
-waited for several hours, to see if there were anything
-more to find drifting about, and then away
-we went for home, thanking the captain of the Nantucket
-Shoals lightship for what he had done.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't understand it at all&mdash;don't seem to be
-just right," repeated Hall over and over to the captain
-of the cutter. "She just blew up&mdash;that's all
-there is to it. We had a drove of miners aboard,
-and you know how hard it is to keep those fellows
-from carrying explosives in their dunnage. You
-simply can't stop to search them. There was probably
-a couple of hundred pounds of blasting powder,
-at the least&mdash;went off like a mine blowing up a
-battleship. That bulkhead in the wake of the starboard
-engine room saved us&mdash;that's all!"</p>
-
-<p>I was out of a ship. When we got in, the manager
-laid me off for a month, and then gave me the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
-second greaser's berth on the old <i>Prince Leander</i>,
-a bum ship&mdash;and that's a fact. When I reached the
-other side again, I saw by the papers that a certain
-Frenchman had tried to collect nearly a million
-francs on his insurance for cargo and personal belongings
-in the <i>Prince Gregory</i>. It seems that he
-had shipped tons of expensive machinery and had
-insured it fully. The stuff was cased tightly, but
-one case marked for him had broken while being
-handled on the dock, and nothing but bricks fell
-out.</p>
-
-<p>The insurance companies held up the claim. I
-hurried to the consul's office, and told of the episode
-of the trunk, and how I was hit over the nut by a
-certain French gentleman during the fracas. The
-description answered to the man of machinery, and
-when I told of that last little crack I had heard below,
-the consul waited not on the order of his going,
-but ordered a cab and fairly threw me into it.
-We tore to the office of the underwriters, and I told
-my tale. Then I began to see the light, at last.</p>
-
-<p>It was the old game tried under a new guise&mdash;and
-it had nearly cost the lives of a half thousand human
-beings. The horror of it appalled me, and I
-found myself wondering if I were to be trusted
-about without a nurse again. However, I was not
-censured severely. The crook was well known to the
-police, and since then the police of many countries
-have been trying to locate a gentleman who answers
-to the description of the Vicomte Raoul de Amadoun.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CAPTAIN JUNARD</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>Captain Junard awoke suddenly from a
-sound sleep. He listened intently for a few
-moments. The steady vibrations of the
-ship's engines told of the unchecked motion, the unhindered
-rush of the ship through the sea. Yet
-something had awakened him, something had given
-him a start from a dreamless sleep, the sleep of a
-tired man. He knew that something was wrong,
-felt it, and wondered at it, while his heart began
-to sound the alarm by its increasing pulsations. He
-wondered if he were sick, had eaten something that
-might produce nightmare; but he felt very well, and
-knew he never started at trifles. His hand reached
-for the revolver at the head of his bunk. He always
-kept it there for emergencies. It was a heavy forty-five,
-with a long, blue barrel&mdash;a strong weapon that
-had stood him handily in several affairs aboard the
-steamer. The light in his room was dim, but there
-was enough of it to show him that his room was
-empty. His hand reached the spot where the weapon
-usually hung, but failed to reach it. He groped
-softly for several moments. There was nothing
-upon the bulkhead; the gun was gone.</p>
-
-<p>This fact made a peculiar impression upon him.
-He felt now that his instinct was correct, that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
-was indeed in danger. His mind cleared quickly
-from the stupor of sound sleep, and he remembered.
-He was carrying papers of peculiar importance in
-his strong box, or safe&mdash;papers relating to a deal
-in shipping connected with a revolution in a Central
-American state. A rival line had tried to stop the
-affair, which grew into political importance when
-secret agents of the United States tried to find out
-how deeply it might affect the Panama Canal. The
-concession had not been granted. The Canal Zone
-was not yet in existence, and the United States was
-sure to get it if this deal went through. The president
-had watched the affair with hungry eyes. Now
-the papers were in his&mdash;Junard's&mdash;possession,
-aboard his ship, bound for the state department in
-Washington.</p>
-
-<p>Junard started up when he found his hand missing
-the butt of that revolver. It had been a pleasant
-fancy to him when he remembered its solid grip
-and deadly accuracy, a dependable friend in the
-hours of darkness and distress. Now it was gone,
-and could not have gone without some one having
-taken it. If they took it, they took it to keep him
-from using it. The idea of its loss awakened him
-more than anything else, and sent his heart beating
-fast as with sudden quickness and energy he sprang
-from his bed. There was nothing in his room,
-nothing at all. The lamp burned low. The electrics
-had been switched off, as they gave too much light
-for him to sleep in. Junard stood wondering, studying,
-and gazing at his safe, which lay bolted to the
-deck in a corner of his room.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>The captain's room was just abaft the pilot house,
-as is usual in ships of that class. A stairway, or
-companion, of five steps led to the pilot house, but
-these were cut flush with his room and into the floor
-of the house above, so that he could shut the door.
-The door was shut now as he looked, but the sound
-of the steering gear told him that the man at the
-wheel, within a dozen feet of him, was steering and
-attending apparently to his business. The room ran
-clear across the superstructure, opening with a door
-upon either side. To starboard was his bathroom,
-to port was a closet, which adjoined the room of the
-chief officer, being separated from it by the bulkhead.
-Both these rooms led aft and opened into
-his room by doors in the bulkhead. This made his
-room a complete section of the superstructure about
-twelve feet deep and running clear through. There
-was nothing in it that could hide any one. A table,
-a couch with leather cushions, several chairs, and a
-large desk completed the furniture. His bed was a
-large double bunk let in to port and hung with curtains.
-It somewhat resembled an old four-poster
-bed.</p>
-
-<p>Junard walked quickly to the safe. It was locked.
-He smiled at himself. The absurdity of the thing
-almost made him laugh. And yet he was as nervous
-as a ship's cat when watching a strange dog. He
-opened the door leading to the pilot house. The
-man in there was standing in regulation pose, with
-his hands upon the spokes of the steam steering
-gear. The sudden rattle and clank told Junard the
-fellow was awake and alert. The dim light from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
-the binnacle made his outline plainly discernible, and
-Junard recognized him as Swan, a quartermaster of
-long service and excellent ability.</p>
-
-<p>"How's she heading, Swan?" whispered the captain.</p>
-
-<p>"No'the, two east, sir," said the man, with a
-slight start. The words had come to him from the
-gloom behind him, and he had not heard the door
-open.</p>
-
-<p>"That's right; they haven't reported the Cape
-yet?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, sir; but that's Cape Maysi, sir, I think," said
-Swan, pointing to a light that had just begun to
-show right over the port bow. Eight bells struck
-off upon the clock in the house as he spoke, and the
-cry came from forward. The chief mate, who was
-on watch, came to the pilot-house window, reached
-in, and took out the night glasses. He adjusted
-them and gazed at Cape Maysi. Captain Junard
-watched him narrowly, and noted that he took the
-bearings and made the remark in his order book.
-Mr. Jameson was a good officer and a first-class
-navigator, and Junard did not wish to appear on
-deck until he was called. It looked as if he did not
-trust the officer sufficiently. He would wait until
-the light was reported officially.</p>
-
-<p>When Junard turned to re&euml;nter his room, he
-heard a slight noise. There was a rustle, a whirl,
-and the door of the room to port clicked to. It had
-been shut when he jumped from his bunk. He
-gazed in the direction of the safe, and saw that it
-was now standing wide open, the door swinging<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
-slowly with the motion of the ship. He sprang to
-the switch and turned on the light, full power.</p>
-
-<p>In front of him was the safe, with the door open.
-In front of the safe lay a huge knife, and alongside
-of the knife lay his revolver, fully loaded, and
-cocked. Whoever had it was ready to use it upon a
-moment's notice. The intruder had fled at the
-sound of Junard's steps upon the pilot-house companion.</p>
-
-<p>Junard was a very heavy-set man. He stood but
-five feet two inches, but was at least three feet
-across the shoulders, an immense man for his
-height, his chest being as broad and hairy as a gorilla's.
-His powerful legs were set wide apart to
-steady himself to the ship's motion, and for a brief
-instant he stood there in the full light, clothed in
-his pajamas. Then, with a roar like that of a bull,
-he plunged headlong for the lattice door of his
-room, and, bursting it with a crash, reached the
-deck in full stride. He just caught sight of what
-appeared to be a skirt, switching around the corner
-of the deck house, and he leaped savagely for it.
-He reached the corner, swung around it&mdash;and saw
-no one. Down the alleyway he ran, swung about,
-and came out to port upon the deck. There was not
-a soul to be seen, and he hesitated an instant which
-way to run. Then he ran aft with prodigious speed,
-and, within a couple of seconds, reached the cabin
-companionway. The light burned at the head of the
-broad stairs, but not a soul was in sight. He dashed
-inside silently, being barefooted, and, peering over
-the baluster, he saw the steward on watch peacefully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
-snoring away in a chair near the water-cooler at the
-foot of the stairway.</p>
-
-<p>"Sam!" he called sharply.</p>
-
-<p>The man awoke with a start.</p>
-
-<p>"Aye, aye, sir!" he said, looking about him, recognizing
-the captain's voice, but not seeing him at
-once.</p>
-
-<p>"Has any one come down this way within the last
-few minutes?" asked Junard.</p>
-
-<p>"No, sir, not a soul, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"Sure?"</p>
-
-<p>"Sure, sir. I've only been dozing but a minute.
-I'd have seen 'em, sir."</p>
-
-<p>Junard slipped away quietly, leaving the under-steward
-wondering what he wanted. With amazing
-swiftness, the master rushed back to his room. He
-reached it, and went inside the broken door. The
-light was still burning, but the safe was now closed.
-He tried the combination lock, and found it had
-been locked. The gun and knife had also disappeared.
-The room was in perfect order, the light
-burning full power, and there was not a thing to
-show that there had been an entry made. The
-bursted door was the only sign of any irregularity.
-He stood gazing at the safe for a few minutes. The
-thing was almost uncanny. He began to wonder
-if he had not had a nightmare, dreamed the whole
-thing. He turned the combination of the safe, and
-opened the door again. The contents of the safe
-were apparently intact. He reached for the inner
-drawer, where the important papers had been kept.
-They were gone.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>It was not nightmare, after all. The thing was
-real. The papers had been taken from the safe, and
-they were worth perhaps a million to the finder, if
-not much more; that is, if they could be gotten out
-of the ship and into the hands of those who were
-antagonistic to the deal. He pondered a few minutes
-more, and then decided to go on deck and stand
-the next watch upon the bridge, remaining there,
-with the excuse that the cape was drawing abreast
-and he would take his departure from it. He decided
-not to say anything to either officer. The
-thing had best be kept secret, for the very existence
-of the papers might imperil his company, if that existence
-were known to certain parties. He hastily
-dressed and went on the bridge.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Dunn, the second officer, was now on watch,
-and it was about a quarter of an hour past midnight.
-The cape was drawing up, and was fast approaching
-the port beam. The ship was running
-about sixteen knots through a smooth sea, with a
-stiff northeast trade blowing almost dead ahead.</p>
-
-<p>Junard came to where the second officer stood.
-Mr. Dunn turned and spoke to him, remarking upon
-the blackness of the night and the clearness of the
-Cape Maysi light.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Junard said nothing, but watched the second
-officer narrowly, and tried to fathom his demeanor,
-looking for some sign that might show a
-knowledge of what had transpired aboard within
-the past few minutes. Dunn had been upon the
-bridge when that safe was shut, when the revolver
-had been taken away. Yet Dunn had been in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
-employ of the company for ten years, and was a
-reliable man, a sailor who had always done his duty
-without murmur. He had a fine record.</p>
-
-<p>The light drew abeam, and the ship ran close to
-the low, rocky point where it juts out into the sea.
-The high mountains a few miles back showed dimly
-in the gloom, making a huge shadow in the background.
-As the light is upon the north side of the
-low promontory and shows across to the southward,
-the land was very near as the ship steamed past it
-and laid her head for the passage.</p>
-
-<p>Junard gazed hard at the shore. He was thinking.
-Would any one try to get into communication
-with Cuba here at the cape? There was a question.
-If a small boat lay near, with lights out, she might
-get close to the ship without being observed, for it
-was quite dark, and the loom of the land made it
-darker than usual. It was nearly six hours' run to
-the next light, in the Bahamas, across the channel,
-and the Inagua Bank was too far to the eastward
-to invite shelter for a small boat. It would be either
-at the cape, or near Castle Rock, or Fortune Island,
-he believed, that an attempt might be made to get
-into communication with the ship. This he must
-stop. No one must get in communication with the
-land before daylight. Then he would search every
-passenger thoroughly, go through all rooms, and
-take a chance at the result. At Castle Rock he
-would be on watch, if nothing occurred here.</p>
-
-<p>He gazed steadily into the blackness ahead. The
-stiff trade wind blew the tops of the seas white.
-They broke in whitecaps, which showed now and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
-then through the gloom of the night. He strained
-his eyes, but nothing showed ahead. The glass
-showed a dull, dark sea; there was nothing in the
-line of vision within three miles&mdash;that is, nothing as
-large as a whaleboat. He was sure of this. There
-might be something under the dark loom of the
-land, but the glass failed to show anything.</p>
-
-<p>"You take a four-point bearing upon the light,
-Mr. Dunn, and get the distance accurate," said
-Junard. "The mate took his bearing before he left
-the deck, but you can take another&mdash;we are about
-abreast now&mdash;she's doing exactly sixteen."</p>
-
-<p>Knowing that this would take the second officer
-until the light bore four points abaft the beam,
-Junard left the bridge and went aft without notice.
-He slipped down to the main deck, and went along
-the gangway until he reached the taffrail. The
-whirl of the wheel shook the ship mightily here, the
-long, steel arm of the tiller under the gratings shook
-and vibrated with the pulsations. The chains drawn
-taut clanked and rattled in the guides and sounded
-above the low murmur of the shaking fabric. Junard
-gazed over the stern and watched the thrust of
-the screw as it tore the sea white and whirled a
-giant stream astern that showed sickly white with
-the phosphorescent glow.</p>
-
-<p>When he turned again, he was aware of some one
-watching him. A head had appeared and vanished
-from behind the end of the cabin structure. The
-captain sprang for it with a bound. He turned the
-corner in time to see a skirt disappearing into the
-alleyway leading into the saloon. He was upon it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
-with a catlike rush. He reached the saloon door
-just as it closed in his face.</p>
-
-<p>Without hesitating an instant, he plunged against
-it, and it gave way to his great weight and power.
-He burst with a crash into the saloon.</p>
-
-<p>The under steward who was on watch aft saw an
-apparition of a man in uniform coming through the
-door like a bull. He had opened his eyes in time to
-recognize the captain, who ran right across the
-cabin and out upon the deck beyond.</p>
-
-<p>Junard was swift. He made a reach for the figure
-as it flitted into a room which opened upon the
-deck nearly amidships. His iron grip closed upon
-the skirt, which stretched out in the wind behind
-the fleeing figure. Then something struck him full
-in the face, took his breath, and blinded him. He
-clung to the cloth, choking, coughing, and blinded;
-made a grab with his free hand to clutch the person&mdash;but
-his grip closed upon empty air.</p>
-
-<p>When he got the ammonia out of his eyes, which
-were almost blinded by the scorching fluid, he hurried
-to his room and bathed his head copiously in
-cold water until he regained his sight.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, it's a woman, all right," he commented.
-"We'll have her all right in the morning; she won't
-get a show to-night to get away with anything. I
-guess I've got her measure."</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes he sent for the purser.</p>
-
-<p>That individual came to the captain's room with
-fear and trembling. He had been playing draw
-poker, and breaking the rules of the ship, regardless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
-of discipline, and expected, of course, to get a
-rating.</p>
-
-<p>"Give me the passenger list," said Junard.</p>
-
-<p>It was produced. They ran over it, looking for
-the location of all the women under thirty or thereabouts
-in the ship. Junard said nothing of his adventure,
-and the purser was amazed at his appearance.</p>
-
-<p>"Had a bad night, captain?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, rather. There's a case of cholera aboard&mdash;among
-the women&mdash;I don't know which one, but
-we'll have a chance to find out to-morrow. Don't
-speak of it to any one, mind you; don't let it out
-under any conditions&mdash;you understand?"</p>
-
-<p>"Sure not," said the purser, paling a little under
-the news. "How did you come to find it out,
-sir?"</p>
-
-<p>"Never mind that now. Just keep an eye on all
-the women in this ship, and don't let any of them
-get to throwing things overboard, or trying to do
-anything foolish. Watch them, and tell me of anything
-that might happen."</p>
-
-<p>The purser, amazed, went back to his game of
-poker with certain passengers; but before doing so,
-he instructed several of his force to watch both
-gangways for the rest of the night. He did not
-know what the "old man" expected, but supposed
-that cholera patients attempted to throw things
-overboard, or tried suicide. The thought of the
-dread disease aboard made him forgetful of the
-game, and he lost heavily before morning.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
-Junard, still smarting from the ammonia thrown
-in his face, came again upon the bridge. He had
-saved his eyes by a fraction, for the fluid had struck
-him right in the nose and mouth, and only the spray
-of it had gotten into his face higher up. It had
-been squirted by a fluid "gun" of the kind commonly
-used by bicyclists for repelling angry dogs.
-Part of the skirt had remained in his grip, but the
-person had slipped away in an instant and disappeared.
-It angered him to think a woman could do
-such a thing. And yet, if it were a woman watching
-him, there was sure to be more than a woman connected
-with it. No woman, he reasoned, could have
-tried his safe. No woman would have taken his
-revolver and carried it, along with a deadly knife.
-There must have been a well-organized party to the
-affair, and they had watched him, after taking the
-papers, to see just what he would do. Of course,
-he knew they would not toss such a valuable document
-overboard in the night time without a boat being
-close at hand to pick it up. The ocean is a hard
-place to find anything at night. He knew now that
-they were aware of his watchfulness and would not
-attempt to get rid of the papers except under the
-most favorable conditions. To throw them overboard
-attached to anything small enough not to attract
-attention would be to invite sure loss. He
-reasoned this out as he stood out the rest of Mr.
-Dunn's watch, and at eight bells&mdash;four o'clock in
-the morning&mdash;the mate came again on the bridge
-without anything happening to excite him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>"I've been on deck for a short time, Mr. Jameson,"
-said Junard; "but I'm going to turn in for a
-little while. Call me when we get well up to Castle
-Rock&mdash;we'll raise it before morning, before daylight
-with the weather clear like this."</p>
-
-<p>"Aye, aye, sir; I will, sir&mdash;she's doing fine now,"
-said Jameson, as he signed the order book for his
-course during his watch.</p>
-
-<p>At two bells&mdash;five o'clock&mdash;the mate called the
-captain by going to his port door and knocking. He
-was amazed at the sight of a young woman who
-came forth from the room and whisked herself
-quickly down the deck and out of sight. Such a
-thing as a woman in the master's room at that hour
-was enough to excite Mr. Jameson. He had not
-been on the ship long, and the captain was new to
-him. Masters naturally had love affairs as well as
-sailors, but they were generally careful about being
-caught. Here Junard had asked him to call him
-when they sighted Castle Rock, and, as he knew
-they must do this by five, at least, the mate was
-puzzled to see a woman leaving the captain's room
-when he knocked. Why hadn't she left sooner? It
-was a joke he would be bound to retail to the rest
-sooner or later, and he smiled at the thought. He
-tried to get a glimpse of her face, but failed. Then
-he waited a decent length of time, and knocked
-again, louder, announcing the light ahead on the
-starboard bow.</p>
-
-<p>Junard came on deck instantly. He had been
-dressed and dozing.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>The gray light of the morning, which was now
-beginning to show things a little, enabled Junard to
-note the smile upon the face of his chief mate.</p>
-
-<p>"Anything funny doing?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"No, sir; but I seen her&mdash;I couldn't help it."</p>
-
-<p>"Seen who?"</p>
-
-<p>"I beg your pardon, sir; but she was just going
-out when I came to call you when I raised the light&mdash;your
-orders, sir, you know. I wouldn't&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Out with it! Whom did you see?" snapped the
-captain sharply, and his tone told plainly that he
-was in no mood for a joke. The mate sobered at
-once.</p>
-
-<p>"There was a lady leaving your room as I came
-to knock&mdash;that's all, sir," he said sullenly. The
-captain had a poor appreciation of humor, he
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>"What kind of looking woman was she?"</p>
-
-<p>"Medium-sized, very well built&mdash;I might say
-stocky, sir&mdash;dressed in a dark cloth dress; she didn't
-have on a hat." This last was with almost a sneer.
-It brought Junard around with a jerk.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't wish to seem foolish, Mr. Jameson, but
-you appear to presume too much. I might insinuate
-gently that you are a damn fool&mdash;but I won't, not
-until you tell me what is amusing you, and what you
-saw. I will say there was no woman in my room.
-If there was, I'd not be troubled to confess it."</p>
-
-<p>"That's all I seen, sir," said Jameson sourly.</p>
-
-<p>"Which way did she go?"</p>
-
-<p>"She went aft," said the mate, wondering at the
-captain trying to hide the obvious. It irked him to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
-think his master a fool. "She went aft, and that's
-all I seen."</p>
-
-<p>"Mr. Jameson, there's a few things you don't
-know," said Junard. "When we get abreast of
-Castle Rock, I want you to go aft and watch both
-sides of the ship carefully, you understand? I want
-you to see that not a thing is thrown overboard&mdash;not
-a single thing&mdash;and if there is anything showing
-in the wake, come to me at once&mdash;or, better still,
-ring off the engines and mark it to pick up. This is
-very important. I can't tell you right now just how
-important it is, but I will say your berth depends
-upon it. Do not let anything leave the ship without
-notice&mdash;not a thing."</p>
-
-<p>"Aye, aye, sir," said Jameson; and he went aft
-amazed at the outcome of his deductions. He wondered
-what was up. Some affair of the captain's,
-he was sure. But the severity of the master's tone,
-the earnestness of the captain's manner, disturbed
-him greatly. There was something peculiar about
-it that made him, forced him, to give his attention
-to it. And there was the threat of his own berth,
-his position, being in forfeit. He did not like that
-kind of talk from a captain. It savored of undue
-severity. He took his station aft of the superstructure
-with some misgivings. In the gray light of
-dawn, he watched both gangways, first one side and
-then the other, keeping well back of the house.</p>
-
-<p>Castle Rock light drew well upon the bow. It
-was now within a mile, and Junard noticed a small
-fishing boat riding in the fairway just ahead of the
-ship. As the water was very deep here, he knew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
-she was not anchored, but must be waiting and
-under way; yet no sail showed upon her. Perhaps
-a powerful motor lay within her. He watched her
-carefully, and walked from side to side of the
-bridge, waiting for some sign from those aboard.
-The wake was now showing white in the gray of
-morning, and a small object could soon be distinguished
-in the smooth sea to leeward of the lighthouse,
-where the heavy swell of the Atlantic was
-cut off.</p>
-
-<p>Jameson, who stood at the taffrail, saw a figure
-of a man peer from the window of a stateroom
-nearly amidships. The head was quickly withdrawn.
-The mate watched, and then walked quickly
-across the stern and watched the wake, wondering
-what might be taking place. The form of a woman
-flitted down the gangway from forward, showing
-dimly in the gloom. She came from the opposite
-side of the ship from where he had seen the head
-peer forth. Hiding behind the house, he watched
-her come quickly aft. She was carrying something
-in her hand that looked like a life buoy. Instinctively
-the mate made ready to catch her. He saw
-that life belt, and to his imagination it spelled something
-like a person going overboard. The form of
-a man came quickly behind her, and Jameson recognized
-one of the under stewards, who had been
-watching for trouble at the purser's orders.</p>
-
-<p>The woman ran at the sound of footsteps behind
-her. She came with amazing swiftness to the taffrail,
-near where Jameson stood. He gathered himself,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
-and sprang forth, clasping her in his arms just
-as she hurled the life belt over the side into the sea.</p>
-
-<p>The girl screamed shrilly, struggled frantically in
-the embrace of the officer. Jameson wondered what
-he was about&mdash;began to think he had captured a
-lunatic&mdash;when the rush of feet above caused him to
-loosen his grip. He turned in time to see Captain
-Junard take a header from the rail of the deck
-above and plunge headlong into the sea where it
-boiled and swirled from the thrust of the screw.</p>
-
-<p>Jameson was paralyzed for an instant. He distinctly
-saw his commander go overboard. It gave
-him a shock. He let go the girl and stood motionless
-for a second. Then, as the head of Junard
-arose in the white waste astern and struck out for
-an object, the life belt the girl had thrown over, he
-gathered his wits again, and dashed for the quarter
-bell pull, or telegraph, to the engine room.</p>
-
-<p>Full speed astern he threw it, and the astonished
-engineer on watch nearly fainted under the sudden
-warning. Thinking that a collision was at hand, he
-shut down and reversed under full power, opening
-the throttle wide, and giving her every ounce of
-steam in her boilers as she took the strain. The
-sudden take-up, the tremendous vibrations, and the
-slowing speed awoke many passengers. Not a
-sound of action had gone forth save the screams
-of the girl, and these were now silent as she had
-quickly flitted out of sight when the mate released
-her. Jameson rushed to the bridge and called his
-watch as he ran. Then he set the siren cord down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
-hard, and the unearthly roar awoke the quiet tropical
-morning. Men rushed about. The watch hurried
-aft.</p>
-
-<p>"Stop her!" yelled Jameson to the quartermaster.
-"Stop her&mdash;don't go astern!"</p>
-
-<p>"Stop her, sir!" came the answering cry from the
-wheel. Jameson rushed to the rail again, and cut
-loose a life buoy from its lashings. He ran aft with
-it, intending to throw it out to his captain. Junard,
-however, was but a speck, far astern, his head showing
-like a black dot in the white water of the wake.
-The mate noticed for the first time that the small
-fishing boat ahead was now standing down toward
-the ship under rapid headway, the exhaust from her
-motor sounding loud and sharp over the sea.</p>
-
-<p>"Get the quarter boat down&mdash;quick!" came his
-order.</p>
-
-<p>Then he hesitated a moment. The small fishing
-boat was nearing them with rapidity. She headed
-straight for Junard, and would reach him long before
-any rowboat from the ship could get there.</p>
-
-<p>"Hold on! Avast the boat there!" he ordered.
-"That motor boat will pick him up, all right." Then
-the thought that he was not quite right in not lowering
-down a boat for his commander, that it might
-look queer, waiting for a stranger to do his evident
-duty, came over him, and he gave the order to lower
-away. The small boat dropped into the sea. The
-steamer was now motionless, lying in the calm sea
-behind the rock, with her engines stopped. Men
-crowded the rail aft to watch.</p>
-
-<p>"What's the matter? What made him jump overboard?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
-came the question from all sides. "It's the
-captain! What's up?"</p>
-
-<p>Jameson could not quite tell. He was vaguely
-aware that his commander sprang over for some object.
-That he took a desperate chance, with the
-ship going ahead, was certain. Had he not been
-seen, the vessel would have been miles away before
-missing him, for there had been no warning from
-the bridge. The mate slid down the falls, wondering
-what he was doing.</p>
-
-<p>"Cast off&mdash;give way, port; back, starboard!"
-came his order. He stood up, to see better, and
-gazed at the fishing boat, that now approached the
-speck he knew to be the head of Captain Junard.</p>
-
-<p>"Give way together!" he said, glad to get away
-from the ship, with the inquisitive crowd gathering
-rapidly and increasing in both anxiety and numbers.</p>
-
-<p>He watched the motor boat come quickly to where
-Junard swam. The captain was not a good swimmer.
-Few seamen can swim well. Jameson saw
-the boat approach, men lean out from her side, and
-grab something, apparently trying to lift the captain
-aboard. Then there was a tremendous floundering
-and threshing about in the sea, distant shouts for
-help from the captain, and the mate grasped the
-tiller yoke with a certain grip.</p>
-
-<p>"Give way, bullies! Give way&mdash;all that's in you
-now!" he urged.</p>
-
-<p>Something was taking place that he did not quite
-understand, but he had heard that call for help.</p>
-
-<p>Junard saw the fishing boat coming toward him
-before it reached him. He waited, swimming<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
-slowly and reserving his strength, feeling that the
-occupants were hostile and were waiting for the
-papers that had been tossed overboard. It was
-about where he expected something to happen. The
-lighthouse and the shelter of the island made it a
-most convenient spot to pull off the finish of the
-affair. The light-draft fishing boat, with her motor,
-could easily evade capture from anything the ship
-could send out after her. The steamer herself could
-not enter the shoal water, and must allow the
-smaller boat to get away across the shallow parts of
-the Great Panama Bank to some distant rendezvous,
-where the papers could be put aboard a proper ship
-to take them to the conspirators. He, the commander,
-had no right to leave the ship in the manner
-he had done; but necessity called for drastic
-action, and he had plunged over the side as soon as
-he had seen the girl fling an object overboard.</p>
-
-<p>Three men in the fishing boat were watching him
-as she drew up. His own boat was a long distance
-off, but he hoped the mate would hurry.</p>
-
-<p>A man came forward in the motor boat, and
-leaned out from her side. He watched him narrowly.
-The man made a grab for Junard as the
-boat reached him, and the captain, with a sudden
-jerk, dragged him overboard. Then he yelled for
-help.</p>
-
-<p>The man's two companions in the boat sprang to
-his aid. Junard found himself engaged in a desperate
-struggle with three men, and shoved himself
-away from the side of the craft.</p>
-
-<p>He held fast to the package, a metal cylinder,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
-tightly wrapped in canvas, and at the same time
-struggled out of reach of the men above him. The
-man he had pulled overboard regained his strength,
-and, grasping the life belt with one hand, grabbed
-at the package with the other. The package tied to
-the life belt could not be gotten out of his reach,
-and Junard was struggling with one hand and fighting
-and grasping alternately at the life belt with the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>"Give it up, you scoundrel!" hissed the fellow.
-"What do you know about this package? Give it
-to me&mdash;do you hear?"</p>
-
-<p>"I hear well enough," snarled Junard, struggling
-farther out of the reach of those in the motor boat.
-"But I'm the captain of that ship there&mdash;and the
-papers are in my care. Let go, or I'll do you
-harm!"</p>
-
-<p>The man glared at him savagely. Then he turned
-to the men above him in the boat, now a dozen feet
-away.</p>
-
-<p>"Shoot, Jim&mdash;shoot quick&mdash;kill the fool if he
-won't let go!" he said.</p>
-
-<p>The man addressed was a tall, dark fellow with
-a sinister look. That he was Colombian, Junard
-knew from his accent and appearance. The other,
-who had stopped the engine, and who seemed to be
-the engineer, looked askance. He evidently did not
-like the shooting part. This man was also a Colombian,
-but his features were those of a man who
-works outdoors at a simple trade. The other two
-looked like desperate men, and Junard felt that they
-would stop at nothing to get the papers from him.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
-The man who was called Jim hesitated, and then,
-seeing the small boat approaching from the steamer,
-reached behind his back and brought forth a long,
-blue revolver. Junard waited until the barrel came
-within a line with his eye; then he ducked, and
-swung the life belt around, coming up with it in
-front of him, and raising it partly before his face.
-The pistol cracked sharply, and the bullet tore
-through the cork. Junard let go the package, and
-seized the man in the water with both hands, whirling
-him about and holding him squarely in front of
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>"Start that engine!" called the man, struggling
-vainly to get away.</p>
-
-<p>The man who had stopped it whirled the wheel
-over again, and the rumble of the motor began.
-The two waited, without throwing on the clutch.</p>
-
-<p>Junard grasped the man firmly, and forced him
-down under the sea, going under with him, and
-holding his breath to the limit of his great lungs.</p>
-
-<p>When he came up again the man was choking,
-gasping for air. Junard only waited long enough
-to fill his own lungs with a breath, and then ducked
-again, the crack of the revolver ringing in his ears
-as he went, pulling his antagonist down with him.</p>
-
-<p>The next time he came up the fellow could not
-talk, but choked and gasped for air. Junard held
-him with a giant's grip, his long, powerful arms
-encircling him like those of a gorilla. The fellow
-let go the life belt and the package. Junard took
-in more air, and dropped down again, while a bullet
-tore through his hair, cutting his scalp.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>This time when he came up the fellow was limp.
-Junard held him before him, and the man with the
-pistol was afraid to fire, as the captain's eyes just
-showed above the man's neck. The captain struggled
-farther and farther away from the boat, getting
-fully twenty feet distant. The man at the engine
-threw on the clutch, and the boat shot ahead,
-swung sharply around, and headed for the floating
-men.</p>
-
-<p>Junard saw the mate standing up in the stern of
-the ship's boat, and knew he was doing all he could
-to reach him. The shots had made him aware of
-the desperate situation, and the men were bending
-their backs with a will to the oars. Jameson yelled
-harshly, the men in the motor craft saw that to remain
-longer would mean capture. They swung off
-and headed for the steamer, leaving their companion
-in Junard's grip. The next moment the mate
-came tearing up, and, leaning over, grasped his
-commander and hauled him aboard the boat.</p>
-
-<p>Junard came over the side, and immediately
-reached for a boat hook. He stabbed at the cork
-jacket, and hauled it alongside, dragging it aboard
-before the boat lost her headway. The body of the
-exhausted man sank before either he or Jameson
-could get another hold of him.</p>
-
-<p>"To the ship&mdash;quick!" gasped the captain.</p>
-
-<p>"What's the matter? What's up?" questioned the
-mate.</p>
-
-<p>"Never mind&mdash;swing her, quick!"</p>
-
-<p>The boat turned around and headed back, the
-captain urging the men to their utmost. The fishing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
-boat, with her motor going full speed, left them
-far behind. They were unable to get near the craft.</p>
-
-<p>Junard, watching them, saw the boat come close
-under the ship's stern. A form of a woman leaped
-from the rail of the lower deck. The splash threw
-spray almost into the boat as she went past, and
-they saw the tall Colombian reach over and drag the
-girl aboard. The boat shot around the steamer's
-stern and disappeared for a few moments; and when
-Junard saw her again she was a quarter of a mile
-distant, and making rapid headway for the shoal
-water of the island. He started after her, when the
-shots from the revolver began to strike about the
-craft, and Junard ordered his men to stop rowing.
-He knew he could not capture her, unarmed as he
-was, and he had his precious papers safe in his
-mighty hands. To follow was only to invite
-trouble.</p>
-
-<p>The fishing boat ran quickly out of range, and
-Junard watched her for a few minutes. Then he
-headed his boat back to the ship.</p>
-
-<p>The rail was crowded as he came alongside, the
-purser watching him, and half the passengers were
-on deck to see what was taking place.</p>
-
-<p>"What was it? What's the matter?" asked a
-score at once.</p>
-
-<p>"Man overboard&mdash;that's all," said Jameson.</p>
-
-<p>"H'ist her up," said Junard, and he clambered up
-the swinging ladder thrown over to him, taking the
-life belt and the package under his arm.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Dunn was on deck, and Junard gave him his
-orders.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>"Full speed ahead&mdash;on her course, north to
-west," he said, and went into his room. The door
-closed behind him. Then he switched off the lights,
-for it was now broad daylight, and then he opened
-the package. The papers were all there and intact,
-the water not reaching them at all. The safe was
-opened, and they were placed within. Then Junard
-stripped and turned in for a few hours of dreamless,
-quiet sleep.</p>
-
-<p>He had saved the papers of his company, documents
-that were valued at more than a million dollars&mdash;and
-not a soul aboard knew what had really
-happened. Even Jameson was never quite sure.</p>
-
-<p>The purser asked no questions about cholera, the
-ship headed along upon her course toward New
-York, and the warm day took its routine without
-further incident. Junard appeared very happy,
-and told many interesting stories at the dinner table
-that day. He answered no questions concerning the
-affair of the night.</p>
-
-<p>He brought in his papers, delivered them in person,
-and a great political change took place without
-any one but a few select souls ever knowing how
-near the verge of revolution a prominent South
-American republic had been. Junard was offered
-a medal for risking his life trying to save that of a
-man overboard&mdash;but he refused it. The shots from
-the fishing boat were explained as signals for help.
-That was all.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">IN THE WAKE OF THE ENGINE</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>I had been transferred to the old <i>Prince Albert</i>,
-one of the freighters on the Jamaica
-run, and the skipper was Bill Boldwin&mdash;Boldwin
-who was once in the Amper Line, but who
-had a monstrous thirst and a reckless disposition&mdash;too
-reckless for first-class passengers. The
-"old man," as all captains are called, having these
-failings, had also a mighty poor education, and
-his navigation was mostly, "Let her go and trust
-to the sun."</p>
-
-<p>"Compasses?" said Bill. "How'd they get along
-before they had 'em, hey? Steer the course, or
-thereabouts; you'll git thar or somewheres nigh to
-it&mdash;if you don't fetch up."</p>
-
-<p>"But the company?" I said in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>"The company be blowed! Take life easy&mdash;it's
-short. Don't let the company worry you to any
-great extent. They'll give you a job as night
-watchman at twenty per month after they get out
-of you all there is in you."</p>
-
-<p>At the same time Bill, who was my "old man,"
-and who, by the way, was ten years younger than
-myself, would not stand for any too much carelessness
-on the part of his first officer. I was his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
-chief mate. He knew what I had to do, and hated
-to tell me. I confess I seldom gave him a chance.
-The second greaser was a little, short squarehead
-named Andersen; at least we called him that, going
-on the principle that it was a sure thing that
-if he was a squarehead he was either named Andersen
-or Johnson. There are no other names in
-Sweden, and a man naturally just has to be one
-or the other. They're good enough.</p>
-
-<p>Andersen knew his business and was an able
-seaman, learning his little book in the old sailing
-ships where they teach you something not always
-taught in steam. He had the bos'n in with him,
-and what the bos'n didn't know about handling
-the steam winches would be hard to tell. But that's
-all the bos'n knew. Not a thing else. If he had
-he wouldn't have rammed greasy rags in behind
-the ceiling of the after deck house in a hurry to
-get his grub at knock-off time.</p>
-
-<p>No, that was the failing of the bos'n; he lacked
-knowledge, and was as good a navigator as you
-might find in a young lady's finishing school. He
-had paws on him like a loggerhead's flippers,
-nearly a foot across, and each finger was a marline
-spike, and every thread of his hair, where he wasn't
-clean bald, was a rope yarn. He knew sailoring&mdash;nothing
-else.</p>
-
-<p>He was about as much afraid of anything in this
-world or the next as a hungry shark is of beef; in
-fact, he seemed to take to trouble with about the
-same sort of appetite. In six months I never had
-a chance to tell him anything except the routine.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>The chief engineer was McDougal, and the second
-was Mac something&mdash;all of our engine-room
-force went under the same name of Mac, just
-plain "<i>Mac</i>," and if they were not Scotchmen, I
-never saw one in my life. Scotchmen are born
-engine men, take to a machine like a dago does to
-a knife. The rest of the fireroom bunch were
-the old-style Liverpool Irishmen, and I'll tell you
-something, they were hard ones all right. They
-were the toughest lot of coal tossers I ever sailed
-with, and even the donkey man, O'Hare, was a
-peach of a Donegal Irishman with Galways of reddish
-hue that stuck out from under his shirt collar,
-pointing upward as if they were growing some
-husky on his throat.</p>
-
-<p>That was the principal part of our crew. There
-were some twenty others, including the cooks, galley
-boys, seamen, and quartermasters.</p>
-
-<p>We cleared for Antonio, and were soon running
-out over the Western Ocean in the lazy, tiresome
-routine of ship's duty. We were licensed to carry
-passengers and had a few waiters aboard, a steward,
-and a lady of about thirty signed on as stewardess.</p>
-
-<p>As there were no passengers this voyage out&mdash;no
-one ever went out with us if he could help it,
-but came back when there were no other ships&mdash;the
-cabin crowd had an easy time, regular yachting
-trip; and if Miss Lucy Docking had a stupid time,
-it was because she wouldn't talk to the rest.</p>
-
-<p>"Stuck-up and sassy," they said aft, but I never
-could tell, never getting a chance to talk with her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
-without a dozen or more listening. At the same
-time I didn't like to blame the girl just because she
-didn't like the set of lovers the ship furnished free
-of charge. "Let her pick her own," said I, "it's like
-enough she'll make a mistake, anyways, without
-your help." I never had a big opinion of women,
-anyhow, for the only one I ever proposed marriage
-to fell down and nearly died laughing at me, and
-that after I had been dreaming of her and thinking
-her the greatest angel in the world.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Lucy was all right with me, because I let
-her alone, except in the mid-watch, when I was
-cold and thirsty. Then she used to get me a cup
-of cocoa or chocolate or coffee, and I tell you the
-man who stands the mid-watch on the old freighters
-is earning all he gets, whether it comes by way of
-the stewardess or by way of the front office.</p>
-
-<p>We crossed the Western Ocean in the usual manner.
-I had my order book to sign, and I saw that
-the second greaser didn't get gay with it. Days
-and days of the old routine passed, and we were
-in the edge of the trade when the first thing happened
-to show what a wild lot of yaps we had in
-that ship.</p>
-
-<p>The bos'n stuffed his oiled rags in behind the
-ceiling of the after house, and it was about three
-days afterward we struck the hot weather. The
-rags promptly caught fire&mdash;they always do when
-snugged in from the air&mdash;and we hove the old
-hooker to in the teeth of the trade with the after
-deck a roaring furnace. If you think we didn't
-have a time of it putting that deck house out,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
-throwing it overboard in pieces, you should look up
-Lloyd's. Well, the way I talked to that bos'n
-would have given heart disease to most men, but
-the beggar didn't see it at all.</p>
-
-<p>"Rags is rags," he says, "and what for don't I
-put them behaind something?"</p>
-
-<p>"Because if you do it again we'll toss you overboard
-with twenty pound of kentledge to your
-feet," I told him, and it was the only reason he
-could get through his bullet head. It didn't scare
-him at all. He only looked upon the matter as
-closed, for he would not mutiny. He was too
-good a sailor for any foolishness.</p>
-
-<p>"Rags is rags," he would repeat as we chopped
-the blackened wreck away the day after, when all
-hands had been near the port of missing ships and
-were tired and nervous, having been on duty for
-fifty hours without a break. "Rags is rags, an'
-some son of a sea-cook set fire to 'em&mdash;no rags I
-ever seen ever took fire of themselves. Does a
-ship run herself, hey? Answer me that! Does a
-ship run her own engines, steer her own course,
-what? Some one of you sons of Ham did that
-dirty trick and I'll get you for it yet!"</p>
-
-<p>"But rags do fire themselves, even if a ship
-don't," said the old man, "and you are the leading
-bonehead not to know it. You don't rate a brass
-boy in anything but a coal barge, and if you don't
-look out I'll have to train you some."</p>
-
-<p>"Rags is&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>Only the size and look of the bos'n's hands prevented
-the old man from committing murder right<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
-there. But the bos'n took it out on the men. What
-he didn't do to them that voyage was never logged.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Docking stood the test well. She stayed on
-deck and watched the fracas and never turned a
-hair, so to speak, waiting for the word to take to
-the boats with as cool a nerve as anything I ever
-saw. She was billeted for my boat, Number One,
-and I confess I was somewhat disappointed when
-the blamed deck house burned to the steel and the
-danger of leaving the ship was past.</p>
-
-<p>Boldwin was always taking it easy, and he never
-even took that real hard, although it would cost
-him something to explain how he did the damage
-when the underwriters asked him.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't do it again," was all he said to me.</p>
-
-<p>"No, not until we get another deck house at
-least," I said. "Maybe I can see that they don't
-set fire to the anchor or burn up the windlass, or
-eat the coir hawser, or&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, see that you don't. That's your business&mdash;you're
-mate," he snapped back, and started for
-the chart house.</p>
-
-<p>Andersen came to me. "I tank I sign de order
-book for sou'west half sou'&mdash;here we bane running
-eastb'no'th. How I tell de truth wid sech a t'ing&mdash;hey?"
-said he.</p>
-
-<p>"If you always tell the truth in this line of packets
-you'll soon get a job hoeing potatoes in Essex!
-What's the matter with you? Do you want the
-company to get wise that we fought a fire set in
-with oiled rags by a fool of a bos'n and had to run
-the ship fifty miles off her course? Who'll pay for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
-the coal? Who'll square the old man? Who'll tell
-the passengers that we don't always have a bonehead
-bos'n to wreck us, and that if they'll promise
-to come again we'll see that it don't happen often&mdash;no,
-not often?"</p>
-
-<p>Andersen went on duty with a queer look in his
-eyes. He had seen something and it amazed him&mdash;just
-why I never could tell, for he had been in
-steamers before and ought to have known something
-of a ship's officers' duties before coming into
-the Prince Line.</p>
-
-<p>The truth in many lines is sacred. Absolutely
-sacred. Too sacred entirely to shift about the deck
-like a bag of dunnage and leave lying around for
-some fools to play with. No, never play with the
-truth in some lines of shipping. Do your duty.
-That's all you've got to do, and if it's so logged,
-why, then you're all right. If it isn't, why, then
-you better get to driving a truck or peddling peanuts.</p>
-
-<p>Well, Boldwin was a pretty good sort, as I have
-said. He mostly saw that all of us did our duty&mdash;in
-the log book, in the order book, and with the
-company officers. We went along slowly on our
-course after that, and were in the latitude of Watlings
-when bad weather came on. It was nothing
-much, just a cyclone of the usual order, coming
-as it did in the hurricane season; but we were a
-full-powered ship of six thousand tons, and it
-wouldn't have delayed us to any extent&mdash;except
-that we didn't count on the donkey man from
-Donegal.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>You see, the <i>Albert</i> had one of those underwater
-ash-chutes. The pipe came down through
-the bilge, about fifteen feet below the water line.
-It was a foot in diameter, and was supposedly
-bolted to the skin and as solid as the keel or garboards.</p>
-
-<p>The metal of the pipe was half an inch in thickness,
-and was braced and bolted so that the top
-which showed above the water line could be hove
-on and shut off in a seaway. The top had a sliding
-cover working with a lever, and when the ashes
-were to be fired out the cover was thrown back, the
-bucket dumped, and a jet of steam blew the mass
-out through the ship's bottom, making no dirt or
-dust at all, and doing away with the everlasting
-firing over the side.</p>
-
-<p>It was a good invention. It saved the company
-many dollars in paint, and it kept the ship, which
-was always short-handed, looking better than most
-vessels that used the old way over the side.</p>
-
-<p>It would have lasted forever if the man from
-Donegal hadn't been of an inquisitive turn of mind,
-and started exploring it with a monkey wrench
-the week before the storm. As it happened he
-broke several of the bolts which had rusted in the
-bottom, and the metal, having been much worn and
-corroded, the first thing Mac knew was a torrent
-of sea water pouring into the after compartment,
-coming as it did through a pipe hole about a foot
-in diameter and fifteen feet below the sea level.</p>
-
-<p>It caught the firemen unawares. The donkey
-man was with them and let out a yip that brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
-every coal passer, oiler, and fireman to the chute.
-A wild burst of water tore through that hole, and
-the compartment was flooded in less time than it
-takes to tell about it&mdash;and that compartment ran
-the whole length of the engine room and aft of it
-until it brought up in the wake of the machinery,
-where the bulkhead of the tail-shaft room shut off
-the stern.</p>
-
-<p>The donkey man managed to get out with the
-rest, and the fires in starboard boilers swamped,
-nearly blowing up the ship as the water flooded
-them. It was only because there was enough water
-to prevent the making of steam to any great extent
-that saved us from having the whole midsection
-blown in the air.</p>
-
-<p>And all the time I was holding to the bridge rail
-with a cyclone snoring down upon us at the rate
-of seventy miles an hour. Luckily the ash pipe
-stayed partly bolted to the skin of the bottom.
-That alone saved us from total loss.</p>
-
-<p>Of course I knew something was wrong the minute
-the boilers went smothered. The terrific roar
-of steam and the easing of the engines told me
-that sure enough trouble was coming, and all the
-time I had been wondering how we would hold the
-hooker up to that gale with the full power in her.</p>
-
-<p>"What's the matter&mdash;bottom blow away?"
-howled Boldwin, coming from the pilot house and
-yelling in my ear.</p>
-
-<p>"God knows&mdash;anything might happen to us after
-last week," I howled in return, but the force of the
-hurricane blew the words away, and the old man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
-went staggering and pulling himself along the rail
-until he managed to get below. For the next fifteen
-minutes on that bridge I did some small bit
-of thinking. Looked like all day with us. Not a
-sign could I get from anywhere, and of course I
-dared not leave the bridge. Once I thought she
-had blown up with powder. Next I thought the
-engines had gone through the bottom. And all
-the time I could feel her settling in that whirlwind
-sea&mdash;a sea torn white with the blast of the squalls
-that were now coming faster and faster each
-minute.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I'm mighty glad I'm not married, anyway,"
-I said to myself, for it looked like the long
-sleep coming fast. And then I somehow thought of
-that Miss Docking below there in the comfortable
-cabin waiting for the finish. It gave me a bit
-of a turn, and I tried to imagine what that cabin
-would look like in a few minutes when the sea
-water swept through it with all its transoms and
-cushions, piano and carpet&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Hard a starboard, sir," came the cry.</p>
-
-<p>It was most welcome. Anything but that standing
-there waiting for the next minute to follow the
-last. I saw that the quartermaster swung the wheel
-over quickly. It was steam steering, and the ship
-fell off in the trough of the sea in a few minutes,
-the weight of the gale driving her bodily to leeward
-and heeling her over to quite a list.</p>
-
-<p>"Heave her to," came the order passed up from
-the old man, and I put the wheel hard down and
-waited to see if she would stay without coming up.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
-She lay easily drifting off, and while I watched
-her for trouble the old man sent for me. Andersen
-came up and took my place, and I ran down, half
-blown, half crawling to the shelter of the deck
-house, and from there below to see what had happened.</p>
-
-<p>Bill Boldwin was standing at the ash chute
-swearing at the man from Donegal. The donkey
-man was trying to tell what he didn't know about
-his business, and all the time the water flowed freely
-through the one-foot pipe until it so filled the compartment
-that nothing more could come up through
-it. It was a good thing! If the whole Atlantic
-Ocean had been delegated to flow through that
-pipe, nobody was there to stop it, not a soul to say
-why not. And then I was aware of the stewardess
-standing in the press of faces, looking scared but
-cool.</p>
-
-<p>"Why don't you ram something in it?" she
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>Simple? Sure it was simple. No one had tried
-to do such a thing, but there she was asking why.</p>
-
-<p>"The pipe'll break away&mdash;you can't shove anything
-down it," said Boldwin.</p>
-
-<p>"No? But why don't you shove something from
-the outside?" said Miss Docking.</p>
-
-<p>"Go to your room," snarled the old man.</p>
-
-<p>"She's right&mdash;we'll stop it in a jiffy&mdash;from the
-outside," I yelled.</p>
-
-<p>The skipper thought I was crazy. He looked at
-me.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>"How'll you get anything over the outside in this
-seaway, you bonehead?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Get me the hand lead," I yelled to the bos'n,
-"and a stick of light wood&mdash;big piece, big enough
-to float a man."</p>
-
-<p>The bos'n ran for the stuff. That was one good
-point in that bos'n. He'd do what he was told
-even when he hadn't the slightest idea what he
-was doing. He came back in a few minutes with
-a long piece of white pine and the hand lead. I
-looked them over for a moment to judge the weight
-and floating power of the tools. Then I quickly
-hitched the lead to the piece of pine and left the
-bight of the line so that as soon as I jerked it
-hard the lead would free itself and go hell bent for
-Davy Jones, leaving the Pine line fast to the lead
-line to float up and away.</p>
-
-<p>To the end of the chute I now quickly made my
-way. The Donegal man wanted to help, and faith!
-he was a good man when it came to doing things
-he understood. He showed me where the upper
-end of that chute was in that roaring surge of filthy
-water, and the beggar actually got a hold of the
-lever that worked the cover and jammed it open.</p>
-
-<p>I instantly dropped the lead, the wood, and the
-line through, and had the satisfaction of feeling the
-line going fast to the bottom out through the hole
-in the bilge. When the line had gone about ten
-fathoms I gave the sudden jerk. Off comes the
-lead and the line stops running out.</p>
-
-<p>"Get to windward and grab that plank," I yelled,
-and even the old man followed the bunch that struggled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
-to the rail and watched the sea where we
-drifted bodily off. In a minute the bos'n saw it.
-In five more he had the plank back aboard and a
-three-inch line fast to the lead line. This I hauled
-quickly but cautiously back through the ash pipe
-until I got a good hold of the end.</p>
-
-<p>"Now," I yelled, "give me mattresses, beds, canvas,
-fearnaught, or oakum&mdash;anything so long as
-you get it here quick."</p>
-
-<p>The stewardess had already anticipated my work.
-I caught her eye back of the line of men.</p>
-
-<p>"Here they are," she said quietly.</p>
-
-<p>The bos'n got a Number Double O hatch cover.
-I wrapped the mattresses in it, and then quickly
-hitched the three-inch line carefully about the
-middle.</p>
-
-<p>"Over the side with it," I shouted. Over it went,
-and as it did so I got the line hauling through the
-pipe. Two men helped me. We hauled the plug
-jam up tight against the ship's bilge, and then
-surged upon the line and made it fast.</p>
-
-<p>"Now go ahead and pump her clear, Mac, pump
-her out&mdash;she's tight as a drum," I said, and the old
-man looked at me with a peculiar smile.</p>
-
-<p>An hour later that compartment was clear of
-water, and she leaked only a little around the stuffing,
-which was not enough to wet a man's feet.
-Another day and the starboard boilers were doing
-duty with a smoothing sea and a sun peeping out
-through the banks of trade clouds. The storm had
-long passed; the <i>Prince Albert</i> was on her way under
-full power, with nothing at all to disturb the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
-serenity of the passage, save the knowledge that
-we had a masterly crew aboard and some excellent
-specimens for manning passenger ships.</p>
-
-<p>Down the Western Ocean we ran without
-further incident, and hove to off the entrance of
-Antonio, burning flares for the pilot. You know
-the place. Narrow cut in through the reef, with
-the harbor lying like a pool of blue water in the
-surrounding hills. Not a breath of air in the place
-even when, half a mile distant, just outside, the
-trade might be blowing a twenty-knot breeze.</p>
-
-<p>The pilot came out at daybreak, and we ran in,
-tied up to the wharf, and began discharging. My
-duties were ended for the time, as I thought, and I
-took a stroll up to the hotel upon the hill. There
-was no use trying to get any sleep in the watch
-below while at the dock, for two hundred howling
-Jamaica blacks roared and surged along the gangways
-and crowded the winches, handling the cargo
-ably, while the women came down in swarms to
-chat with the crew and sell a few grapefruit and
-oranges. Boldwin let any one come aboard, and
-as the men were not supposed to handle cargo, they
-had plenty of time in spite of all we could do to
-keep them busy.</p>
-
-<p>The skipper reported the damage to the agents,
-and told of the disaster below. He was honest.
-He might have saved that bit of knowledge until
-we reached England again, but he told his tale, and
-the agents refused to allow him to sail until the
-pipe was repaired and properly bolted down into
-the bilge plates as it should be. In the smooth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
-water of that mirror-like harbor it seemed an easy
-thing to do. All that was necessary was to get a
-diver to go under the fifteen feet to the outside end
-and pass up the bolts through the flange.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Man from Donegal could then get at them
-with his monkey wrench and screw down the nuts
-upon them, clamping the pipe as fast as the keel
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>"You take a look around uptown and try to get
-hold of a diver," said the old man. "Mr. Sacks, the
-agent, says he don't know of any nearer than
-Kingston, and it'll take two days to get the one
-over there, as he's out on a wreck off the harbor.
-We can't wait two days. Got to get to Montego
-Bay and take on a lot of stuff, then get to Kingston
-for clearing and off we go."</p>
-
-<p>"Why not wait until we get to Kingston to do
-the trick?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>Bill Boldwin gazed at me in contempt.</p>
-
-<p>"Say, do you want to advertise the fact that we are
-on the bum to all the passengers the line'll carry?
-Think a minute, man, and don't ask fool questions.
-We got to get that job done right here&mdash;see? We
-don't go outside until there's something more'n a
-mattress and a bit of fearnaught between us and
-the bottom of the Caribbean."</p>
-
-<p>"But we carried it the last thousand miles all
-right," I said.</p>
-
-<p>Bill turned away in disgust.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, I didn't like the idea of trying
-to get hold of a diver in Antonio. There were
-not enough divers to go down to find the bottoms<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
-of the rum bottles ashore, let alone a ship's bilge.
-It's true, a man might do the thing naked in that
-clear water. I've seen men in the East copper a
-ship twice as deep with nothing on them but a
-hammer and a mouthful of nails.</p>
-
-<p>After a day's search I gave it up. Not a man
-knew anything about submarine work, and at the
-hotel they laughed at me when I inquired for a
-diver. I also noticed that Miss Lucy Docking looked
-well sitting upon the veranda of the joint, togged
-out as she was in white linen. She gave me a nod,
-but wasn't keen on talking when I tried to find out
-if she had made arrangements for lady passengers
-that voyage.</p>
-
-<p>"There's two on the books&mdash;that's all," she said,
-and gazed placidly out over the tops of the cocoa-nuts
-growing upon the beach below.</p>
-
-<p>"Your advice last Friday helped me a lot," I
-said, "and I appreciate it and would&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Would you like some more?" she interrupted
-suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>"Anything you might suggest," I said.</p>
-
-<p>"Beat it back to the ship, then," she answered
-without a smile.</p>
-
-<p>"Sure&mdash;if that's your advice," I snarled; "the hot
-weather has evidently soured your&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Cut it out&mdash;I'm not a guest here, and what do
-you think the agents would say if they saw the
-chief officer of their 'crack' liner talking to their
-stewardess sitting on the hotel piazza? I thought
-you had more sense."</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>"I ain't the only fool aboard&mdash;that's straight,"
-I said.</p>
-
-<p>"No; nor ashore, either&mdash;why don't you stop that
-hole yourself? You're big enough and ugly enough
-to stop a clock," she snapped.</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks!" I answered, and strode away with the
-kindest feelings imaginable for our stewardess.</p>
-
-<p>But strange as it may seem, that remark was
-what did the business. I would stop that hole if I
-had to be keelhauled myself to do it. What! Lay
-the ship up a day or two while that lady sat around
-in white duck and looked out dreamily over that
-beautiful harbor? Not if I knew myself. I'd see
-that the ship got away and hoped she would carry
-at least two ugly and indignant aged ladies who
-could and would make life a happy dream for that
-stewardess.</p>
-
-<p>I went back aboard with the report that there
-was not a diver this side of hell, and that if the
-ship would stand the expense of my funeral I would
-at least try to pass the bolts for the man from
-Donegal to screw fast.</p>
-
-<p>"Sink a donkey man, anyhow!" I swore, "why
-don't the company get engineers enough to run a
-ship properly?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why, indeed?" smiled Bill Boldwin.</p>
-
-<p>I turned to the men I needed, and with that
-bos'n to give them advice with those flippers of his,
-I peeled off and made ready for the work. The engine-room
-force had taken off the pipe and bolted
-a new flange to it, a strong job and proper. The
-affair was all ready to ship just as soon as we dared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
-pull the wad of stuffing away and set it up. A
-frame had been rigged in the room to steady the
-affair, and the bolt holes had been reamed out as
-much as they would stand. A deck pump kept the
-water from the vicinity, the water that still leaked
-in around the bolt holes.</p>
-
-<p>It was necessary to get the wad of stuff away
-from the bolt holes in the flanges, for it spread out
-so that it made passing of bolts from the outside
-impossible. The pressure upon it from the water
-under the ship at the depth of fifteen feet was
-great, and I was supposed to get a line to it so that
-it might be pulled away by the men on deck after
-we slacked away the three-inch line by which we
-had hauled it into the breach. The pipe was set
-up true over the opening, the holes lined up, a few
-bolts inserted point downward to steady it, and all
-was ready for the man outside to get the blamed
-wad away and pass the bolts upward so that their
-threads would appear through the flange. I went
-on deck and gazed down over the side at the warm
-blue depths.</p>
-
-<p>"Strange that the mate has to do the dog's work,"
-I said to Mac, who was waiting and watching.</p>
-
-<p>I had a line rigged under the bilge by passing it
-under the bows and drifting it aft until it came
-right on the line of the hole. It was slack enough
-to allow a handhold, so that I could pull myself
-down quickly and then let go as I pushed in a bolt.</p>
-
-<p>I took a light line and over I went.</p>
-
-<p>The water was fine. The light filtered down
-under the ship's bilge, and it was only dark after I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
-swept well under the curve of the side. Still, I
-could see a little, and soon made out a mass which
-I rightly took to be the mattress and stuff filling the
-hole.</p>
-
-<p>I tried to get the line fast to the thing, feeling
-quickly, but I lost my breath before I got it fast
-and, letting go, struggled to the surface again.</p>
-
-<p>"What luck?" asked Mac, grinning over at me.</p>
-
-<p>I wasted no time in idle words. I recovered and
-grasped the line again and hauled myself furiously
-toward the opening underneath. I could not get
-the line fast, and had to come up and confess that
-I had failed so far.</p>
-
-<p>"Look out a shark don't get you," said some one
-with an idea of wit.</p>
-
-<p>"Give me a marline spike," I ordered that bos'n,
-and the beggar got one, handing it to me by a line.
-I dove again, and this time managed to drive the
-spike in between the turns of the line holding the
-mattress. The next dive I got the small line fast
-to it, and, coming up, told them to slack away on
-the big line inside and haul the small one outside
-and get the stuffing away. It came easy enough,
-and the line of interested faces peering over the
-rail above bore a different look as I hung with one
-hand and rested from the exertion.</p>
-
-<p>"Now for the bolts," I said, and one was handed
-down. I hauled under again and inserted it, feeling
-with some satisfaction the other end being grasped
-by some one inboard. Mr. Donkey Man had hold
-of it all right, and, putting on a nut, set it up without
-delay. This much of the job was not so hard,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
-but I was now getting tired, and found that I could
-hardly get below before I wanted to get my breath
-again. I was no diver&mdash;no, not to speak of, but I
-thought of that woman sitting up there waiting,
-taking it easy with her insolence and white dress&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Seven other inch bolts were to be inserted before
-the job could be finished inside, and the water was
-pouring through the bolt holes in streams that kept
-the pumps working full stroke and made working
-about the opening difficult. I came on deck, and
-Bill Boldwin gave me a noggin of rum, grinning
-at me all the time.</p>
-
-<p>"You ain't so bad for a mate&mdash;I've sailed with
-worse," said he.</p>
-
-<p>"The next time I sign on it'll be as a master
-submarine," I said, with some feeling. "Now, if
-I didn't have to wear these breeches I could do better
-and faster work."</p>
-
-<p>"Why don't you take 'em off?" he said.</p>
-
-<p>"But the ladies&mdash;I must wear something&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, what do you care for a lot of niggers?
-Strip if it does you any good."</p>
-
-<p>I was just about to take his advice when I noticed
-the face of Miss Docking passing the port
-along the gangway. She had been attracted by the
-crowd aboard, and had come, woman-like, out of
-pure curiosity, to see what was on.</p>
-
-<p>"No," I said; "I'll fix the rest, all right&mdash;gimme
-another noggin."</p>
-
-<p>I got seven of the eight bolts in place; and the
-donkey man, assisted by Mac and the entire engine-room<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
-force, set them up one at a time after
-packing the joint properly. Only one wooden plug
-remained inboard, and the water squirted straight
-up nearly fifteen feet with the pressure when that
-was pulled out for my last attempt. If I could get
-that bolt in, there was a job done that would save
-the company perhaps a few hundred dollars, and
-I would get&mdash;well, I might get mentioned as something
-better than the ordinary mate when Bill made
-his report. But that wasn't what made me do the
-thing; it was the confounded spirit that Lucy
-Docking stirred up within me. Oh, yes, I was a
-fool, all right. I don't deny it.</p>
-
-<p>The affair was getting to be something of a circus
-by this time, and the coons who were looking
-on were making remarks. I was about to clear the
-gangway when I thought that here was the last
-plug, the last bolt, and then for a nip and a sleep
-before clearing. I went over with that last bolt,
-and, as I did so, I saw Miss Lucy gazing out of a
-cabin port at me. Before I went under her face
-appeared above the rail and watched. I was so
-tired by this time that I had the small line, which
-was hambroline, fast about my armpits, so that
-Mac and his crew could haul me up if I gave out
-entirely. This was my mistake.</p>
-
-<p>Down I went, and as I went under I thought
-I heard the word "Shark!" muttered by some of
-the colored folk above. I had just shoved in the
-last bolt when a shadow passed. At the same instant
-there was a mighty pull upon the line. I was
-jerked bodily away, and my back scraped the huge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
-barnacles which covered the ship all along in the
-wake of her engines clear to her sternpost. The
-razor-like edges cut and stung me. I felt a mighty
-desire to breathe, and tried to get upward. Then
-my head struck the bottom of the ship with great
-violence, and I was partly stunned. This was what
-probably saved my life, for I ceased to breathe, and
-the spasm passed.</p>
-
-<p>What really happened was this:</p>
-
-<p>A huge sawfish was swimming about the harbor,
-having just come inside the reef. Tropical seas are
-infested by many of these fish, which "fin out" like
-a shark, and which are probably of the shark
-species. The long snout, unlike the swordfish,
-which is a giant mackerel, is studded with rows of
-sharp teeth, put there for the Lord knows what
-purpose. This monster had come close to the ship,
-and the negroes had spotted him, and thought him a
-shark at a distance where his snout could not be
-seen.</p>
-
-<p>Some one shouted, "Shark!" and the intelligent
-bos'n hauled line with those finlike flippers of his
-after the manner of a sperm-whaler coming upon
-a three hundred-barrel whale. My head had struck
-the ship's bilge, and my back had been cut open
-with the razor-like barnacles&mdash;and then the fish,
-getting frightened at the uproar, dove below, and
-his teeth on his saw snout fouled the line.</p>
-
-<p>It parted, but it parted between him and the ship,
-and away I went in tow of a flying sawfish.</p>
-
-<p>I knew nothing about it for some time, luckily;
-it would have affected my nerves.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>Luckily the negroes were active in spite of their
-laziness. A small boat, lying alongside the ship,
-was instantly manned, and within a minute it was
-after me, with four stout blacks pulling for all they
-were worth. A man in the bow reached over and
-jabbed at the line with his boat hook and jerked it
-aboard. Then he lifted me in and turned me over
-to the rest in the boat, while he held on to the line
-and played the fish gamely for all the sport there
-was in it.</p>
-
-<p>I came to in that boat towing behind a sawfish,
-which the natives seemed to think was more important
-to catch than me getting back aboard and receiving
-proper treatment for being nearly cut in
-two and drowned.</p>
-
-<p>The line finally broke, and they rowed me sorrowfully
-back alongside. I looked up, and saw
-Miss Lucy Docking gazing over the side with some
-show of anxiety expressed upon her face. Also I
-noted Bill Boldwin, skipper of the <i>Prince Albert</i>,
-showing some interest in the proceedings.</p>
-
-<p>"Send him aboard, you black scoundrels!"
-screamed Miss Lucy. "How dare you keep that
-man in the boat chasing a good-for-nothing fish?"</p>
-
-<p>"Bring him alongside, or I'll be in there after
-you," roared Bill.</p>
-
-<p>My bos'n passed a line down, and I was quickly
-hoisted aboard, where I was laid out flat on my
-back, as I was still too weak to stand. Miss Lucy
-herself poured whisky down my throat and
-smoothed my wet hair back from my bleeding head.</p>
-
-<p>"Arnica, you lazy rascals!" she hissed, and some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
-one went for it. My cuts were soaked in it, and it
-stung furiously, but the cuts of barnacles are poisonous,
-and I rather preferred arnica to friar's balsam,
-which I knew Bill would rub me with. Then
-the bos'n helped me to my bunk, and Miss Lucy
-Docking was left alone with me to attend to my
-wants.</p>
-
-<p>"I suppose my advice and counsel was not so
-good this time?" she said as Bill left us.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, it taught me one thing, all right
-enough," I said, "and that may do me some good
-in the future."</p>
-
-<p>"And how is that?" asked the lady, looking at
-me with some show of concern. She had wonderful
-eyes, and her hair was noticeably curly at the
-temples&mdash;and her mouth&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Well, it will teach me never, no, never, under
-any circumstances whatever, do you understand?&mdash;never
-to take it again," I said, taking her hand.</p>
-
-<p>"We'll see about that later on," she said, and her
-mouth had a peculiar droop at the corners that has
-been a constant source of dread to me ever since&mdash;that
-is, whenever I see it.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">IN THE HULL OF THE "HERALDINE"</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>"I understand that you did good work in
-the <i>Prince Alfred</i> in time of trouble," said
-Lord Hawkes, looking at me with approval.
-He was manager of the Prince Line, and, when he
-sent for any of us to tell us that we had done well,
-it was time to&mdash;well, he didn't often do that, and I
-must have shown some embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p>I remained silent, holding my cap in my hands
-and looking at Boldwin, my skipper, who had done
-me the honor to report me favorably in the log
-book.</p>
-
-<p>"I hear, also," continued Lord Hawkes, "that you
-are a good diver, a master workman under
-water&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Pardon me, your lordship," I interrupted, "I'm
-but a licensed ship's officer, and what I don't know
-about diving would fill a dozen empty log books."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, at all events, you showed resource. Yes,
-my good Garnett, you are a man of infinite resource.
-There's no doubt about that, and that's what I'm
-coming to. You are also resolute in time of trouble,
-and the two qualities are what I need in the
-work I am going to send you to do."</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>Bill Boldwin looked scared. He didn't want to
-lose his mate. He had simply spoken for me that I
-might get in the good books of the company, not get
-away from his ship.</p>
-
-<p>The manager of the Bay Line seemed to be studying
-some papers upon the desk before him while we
-two stood respectfully in front as became seamen
-in the presence of our mighty ruler. Boldwin was
-keen on lords. I hadn't associated with them to any
-great extent myself, but I was willing&mdash;no matter
-what might be said about them.</p>
-
-<p>"The <i>Princess Heraldine</i>, our Cape liner, left port
-August the fifth," said Lord Hawkes. "She had
-aboard in her safe the famous Solander diamond, a
-stone nearly as large as the Cullinan and worth
-something like a round half-million dollars. Also
-she had about three million more in various stones
-uncut and consigned to the firm here. In running
-up the West African coast, she broke her crank
-shaft and drove it through her bottom, tearing the
-compartment to pieces, and forcing Captain Sumner
-to head for Lagos in the hope of beaching her
-before she sank. He managed to get her into ten
-fathoms on that low, sandy coast, and she went
-down about a mile or two offshore.</p>
-
-<p>"All the passengers were saved, but by some
-oversight the combination of the safe was lost at
-the time they needed it, owing to the agent, Grimes,
-being either too frightened or too ill to remember
-it.</p>
-
-<p>"Captain Sumner&mdash;the only other man aboard
-who knew the combination&mdash;was unable to either<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
-leave the bridge at the critical moment of her sinking,
-owing to the necessity of saving the passengers
-in the small boats, or tell any one before the <i>Heraldine</i>
-suddenly settled and went down, carrying five
-of the crew and the entire contents of the safe along
-with her."</p>
-
-<p>Lord Hawkes looked up at me shrewdly as he
-finished and gazed into my eyes.</p>
-
-<p>I saw no necessity for a reply. There was a few
-minutes' silence, then he went on:</p>
-
-<p>"The wrecking company is now on the way there,
-but there has been some trouble experienced with
-them and with the underwriters. Therefore we've
-deemed it worth while to send a ship&mdash;one of our
-regular Cape boats on her lay-up voyage&mdash;to Lagos,
-and try for the safe.</p>
-
-<p>"The ship is a total loss, and will be covered all
-right, but the diamonds are not insured, owing, as
-I have said, to some disagreement with the underwriters
-lately, and it has been just our luck to lose
-them this voyage.</p>
-
-<p>"You are to take the <i>Prince John</i>, and go to Lagos.
-There you will find the wrecking crew waiting
-orders. You are to see that we get that safe intact&mdash;you
-understand? We want that safe <i>just as it
-was before it went to the bottom</i>. Your orders are
-here." And he handed me a folded document.
-"You will leave at once."</p>
-
-<p>"Aye, aye, sir," I said, somewhat bewildered, but
-getting the lay of the thing straight enough. "Is
-that all, sir?"</p>
-
-<p>"That's all. If you wish anything regarding details,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
-you will see Mr. Smith of the main office. I
-wish again to impress you that this mission is important."</p>
-
-<p>It struck me so at once. A few millions in diamonds
-in ten fathoms&mdash;in a ten-ton safe! Yes, that
-was something worth looking after. It was important,
-all right. Seemed easy enough. Any one
-who knows anything about wrecking, knows that
-ten fathoms isn't too deep to work, although it's
-some little ways down. It depends also upon other
-conditions, which might or might not prevail. I'd
-get that safe easy enough&mdash;yank it aboard all
-standing, as we say at sea.</p>
-
-<p>Well, within two days I was standing on the
-bridge of the <i>Prince John</i>, and wondering how the
-poor fellows in Africa managed to keep a ship of
-her class afloat long enough to lay her up.</p>
-
-<p>It was the company's policy to have their African
-steamers laid up at Cape Town&mdash;helped labor, local
-progress, and all that sort of thing. In reality they
-got the work done for about half what it would cost
-them in England.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Prince John</i> could make ten knots under most
-favorable circumstances, but as this was her lay-up
-voyage, she, as might be imagined, was not doing
-her best. I think she rammed along about eight,
-most of the way down; and McDougal, the chief
-engineer, was working like a machinist from daylight
-till dark to get her to do that.</p>
-
-<p>We carried only the crew of six seamen and ten
-firemen, with two engineers, a donkeyman, a pair of
-mates, a cook, and galley boy. Just two dozen of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
-us all told; and, while I had never commanded a
-ship of any size before, I was not suffering much
-from swelled cranium as I stood upon the bridge
-and gave orders.</p>
-
-<p>Low-powered, black-sided, with the regulation
-Clyde bow and round stern, she was no better than
-a tramp. We carried extra diving and hoisting
-gear for the wrecking crew that had preceded us.
-Our winches were heavy, and built for working in
-the African trade where a ship must handle her
-own cargo. They would be useful in the work
-ahead.</p>
-
-<p>My mates, Simpson and Dennison, were good
-men, and knew their little book all right. Simpson
-had a very red nose, and looked as if he liquored on
-the sly, but he never showed groggy on duty, so I
-had no chance to call him down. He would continue
-the voyage as captain after I got that safe
-up and on its way to England. Dennison was
-young and boyish. He was a good lad, and never
-slept in his watch on deck&mdash;at least I never caught
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The run was uneventful, and we were sooner or
-later close to the West African coast, running
-through an oily sea, and pointing for Lagos.</p>
-
-<p>One hot and stifling morning after I had worked
-the sight, I was sitting in a deck chair at the pilot-house
-door, thinking of Lucy Docking, and how I
-might make a saving of fifteen pounds a month out
-of a salary fixed at twelve. This mathematical
-problem was unfinished when Dennison hailed me
-from the bridge.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>"Vessel right ahead, sir, anchored about a mile
-and a half offshore," he said.</p>
-
-<p>It was our friends, the wrecking crew, and we
-had arrived.</p>
-
-<p>The topmasts of the <i>Heraldine</i> stuck clear of the
-oily sea. She had been a three-masted ship with
-square rig forward and fore and aft upon the main
-and mizzen. She had sails upon her spars already
-bent after the old-time style of low-powered ships.
-She lay easily in about ten or twelve fathoms, and
-had a slight list to port owing to her settling a bit
-upon her bilge.</p>
-
-<p>Being very flat and wide-bottomed, she looked almost
-ready to rise and continue her voyage lying as
-she did in that smooth sea, and being unhurt save
-for that gash in her bilge where the broken crank
-tore through, thrashing her life out before the engineer
-could shut off steam.</p>
-
-<p>I pictured for a moment the huge flail, the piston
-with the broken crank attached, the pieces not less
-than half a ton, whirling up and down under the
-full pressure of her cylinders with nothing to stop
-it. There must have been a wild mess in that engine
-room with a crazy hammer going full tilt like
-that.</p>
-
-<p>As in most single-screw ships, her crank must
-have thrown down when connected but a foot or
-two above her bilge, and when it tore loose it must
-have struck full power at each and every wild throw
-of the piston.</p>
-
-<p>My business was not to raise her, however. She
-was not worth it, having insurance, and being better<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
-as a total loss. I was after getting into the
-treasure room situated just beneath the main deck
-forward of the boilers.</p>
-
-<p>The room, from the drawings furnished by her
-builders, was an iron compartment ten by fifteen
-feet. At one end of it&mdash;the forward one&mdash;was
-built the huge safe. This was bolted down, and to
-the beams.</p>
-
-<p>It was not a new affair, having done duty for
-years in the African trade, but it had a very effective
-combination lock of the usual kind, and, as one
-would have to open the strong-room door before
-being able to get to the combination of the safe, it
-was considered perfectly competent to carry any
-amount of treasure.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Haswell, of Haswell &amp; Jones, submarine experts,
-came aboard from the powerful wrecking tug,
-which lay near us. He was a little man, but quite
-fat. Red hair and whiskers gave his pale face a
-peculiar sickly tint, but he was not a sickly man. He
-was reckoned one of the best deep-water workers in
-England, and could stand a very high pressure for
-a long time. Little pale eyes looked shrewdly at me
-as he presented his card, coming aboard as he did
-from a boat rowed by six sturdy blacks&mdash;"kroo
-boys," he called them. I met him at the side, and
-shook hands.</p>
-
-<p>"We're ready to begin whenever you say," he
-said. "I got the firm's letter, and have only just
-arrived myself. They told me you had the gear
-aboard with you."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I have plenty of gear, all right," I answered,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
-"and you can commence work to-day if
-you want to. This place is too cold for me, and I'd
-just as soon get away from here the next day, if
-possible."</p>
-
-<p>"It's some hot, all right, but one don't notice it
-below so much. I suppose those derricks you've got
-will hold all right&mdash;what?" And he gazed at our
-hoisting gear.</p>
-
-<p>The thermometer was one hundred and six under
-the after awning, and not a breath of air stirring.
-The hot, sandy coast shone like a white band, fringing
-the blue water, and I wondered what kind of
-weather it was on that white, sandy shore.</p>
-
-<p>We went over the gear together, and then sat
-sweating and panting for air, while the steward
-brought us something cool to drink&mdash;that is, as cool
-as could be procured. Then I went with Mr. Haswell
-aboard the wrecking tug, and was introduced
-to the working force.</p>
-
-<p>Ten white men and twenty blacks were the outfit.
-This with what I had was enough to raise the ship
-had we so wished. Only two of the white men
-were divers&mdash;Williams, a sturdy fellow weighing
-nearly three hundred; and Mitchell, a short, powerful
-man, about two hundred and fifty. Both were
-under forty, and had done plenty of deep-water
-work. They looked upon the job as trifling.</p>
-
-<p>"We'll blow the deck off to-morrow, and then
-tear out a side of the room," said Haswell. "After
-that we can disconnect the safe, and you can get
-your winches to do the rest. In three days we ought
-to cover the job."</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>The hot, oily calm continued. The night was
-something fierce to contemplate. The sun came out
-again like a molten ball of metal, and Haswell
-donned his suit lazily, while the air pumps, manned
-by four blacks, were started.</p>
-
-<p>A ladder reaching a fathom down under the sea
-was fastened to the tug's side, and Haswell lowered
-himself over upon it, and waited for his helmet.
-This was fastened by Williams, and then the air
-was started.</p>
-
-<p>As it whistled into the dome, the front glass was
-screwed on, and the little man was shut off from us.
-Slowly he went down and swung clear, dropping out
-of sight in a storm of bubbles which rose from his
-helmet.</p>
-
-<p>I took out the water glass. This was a cylindrical
-bucket with a glass bottom. By jamming one's head
-into the bucket and sinking the bottom of the affair
-under the sea to a depth of three or four inches,
-objects could be seen about twice as distinctly as
-without it&mdash;this owing to the fact that in the open
-the reflection and motion of the light upon the always
-moving sea surface, prevent the gaze from
-following objects distinctly.</p>
-
-<p>In order to use the water glass it was, of course,
-necessary to get close to the sea.</p>
-
-<p>I dropped into the small boat lying alongside the
-wrecking tug, and leaned far over the gunwale,
-peering down. The long, easy swell, the sure sign
-of an immense calm area of sea, came slowly from
-the westward and rolled the boat gently but enough
-to keep me from getting a good look until I caught<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
-my balance. Then I managed to get the glass down
-firmly, and hold it about four inches under with my
-head in the bucket.</p>
-
-<p>At first I could make out little or nothing. The
-sea was not very clear at the spot, owing to the close
-proximity of the low, sandy shore where the surf
-rolled incessantly, stirring up the bottom. Soon I
-could make out the outline of the deck below where
-the flying bridge rose within three fathoms of the
-surface.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Heraldine</i> was drawing about twenty-two
-feet when she sank, and her flying bridge was fully
-twenty-five to thirty above the sea. I tried to see
-farther, but could make out nothing at all.</p>
-
-<p>The lines of the diver led toward the fore part
-of the ship, and moved slightly. Williams, who
-tended them, sat listlessly upon the rail of the tug,
-and gave or drew in as the occasion called. I kept
-looking to see things, but could make out nothing
-further in the way of the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>A huge shadow passed under me&mdash;a long, dark
-shape. It was a gigantic shark nosing about the
-wreck.</p>
-
-<p>I called out to Williams.</p>
-
-<p>"No fear," he replied lazily; "they won't hurt
-him in that dress&mdash;might if he was naked."</p>
-
-<p>The shark passed along forward, and sank down
-out of sight. Then Haswell signaled that he was
-coming up.</p>
-
-<p>He came slowly, and I watched the lines coming
-in. Soon the metal helmet appeared, and then he
-climbed with seeming difficulty up the ladder,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
-helped by Williams. When he came above the rail,
-he hung over it, and his front glass was unscrewed,
-the pumps stopped working, and we came close to
-hear the news.</p>
-
-<p>"Located her all right," he said. "You can fix
-up about twenty pounds of number two gelatine&mdash;better
-put it in a tube, and be sure to make the
-wires fast&mdash;have to pull it through some wreckage
-down there."</p>
-
-<p>"See anything of a big shark?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes, I gave him a poke in the stomach with
-a stick&mdash;he won't bother me in this dress&mdash;but I did
-get nipped by one of those poisonous snakes&mdash;see?"
-And he held out his hand, where a small trickle of
-blood ran down from the second joint of his forefinger.</p>
-
-<p>Williams gave an exclamation. The natives
-looked at him anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>"I'll come aboard and rest a while before going
-down again," said Haswell. And he was helped
-aboard, and undressed.</p>
-
-<p>His finger swelled while this was being done, and,
-by the time he stood in his flannels, he had a hand
-that was fast turning black. Williams said little.
-The poisonous water snakes that infest certain tropical
-seas close to the river mouths were known to
-him. Those in the Indian Ocean are especially dangerous.</p>
-
-<p>Haswell gazed at the blackening finger, and shook
-his head.</p>
-
-<p>"Better give me some whisky," he said. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
-drank, and sat down. Williams stood near, and
-Mitchell came up.</p>
-
-<p>"That's a bad bite," said Mitchell.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I suppose there's no use waiting any
-longer&mdash;cut it off, and be quick," said Haswell.</p>
-
-<p>Mitchell, iron-nerved and steady, cut the finger
-off close to the hand, and stopped the flow of blood
-with a strong bandage. The swelling continued,
-and the arm began to pain greatly.</p>
-
-<p>"Cut away the hand," said Haswell, white and
-shaky, but showing an amazing coolness. He realized
-his danger. Mitchell performed another amputation.</p>
-
-<p>Within an hour they had his arm off at the elbow,
-and Haswell was turning blue all over.</p>
-
-<p>It was an uncanny thing&mdash;right there in that
-bright sunshine, a man done a mortal injury by
-some foul sea vermin that had attacked him in the
-depths. I had heard of the sea snakes that come
-down the African rivers and go well offshore, but
-had never seen one. Those in the Indian Ocean I
-had seen often, and remembered that they were
-about four or five feet long and a few inches in circumference.</p>
-
-<p>Haswell, with remarkable nerve, faced his end
-unflinchingly. It was wonderful to see him sitting
-there, unafraid, with his arm three times its natural
-size at the shoulder where the last bandage of Mitchell
-had been fastened.</p>
-
-<p>"I reckon I'll last about an hour longer," he finally
-said. "It's&mdash;no&mdash;use." His strength was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
-leaving him, and he spoke haltingly, in hardly more
-than a whisper.</p>
-
-<p>They gave him more whisky, and waited. Then
-Williams took down his last words in reference to
-his family affairs, and Haswell laid himself down
-on a transom. Two hours later he was stone dead.</p>
-
-<p>That was a beginning that would have shaken the
-nerve of many men. Mitchell had his partner sewn
-up in canvas, and they buried him far out at sea,
-rowing off in the small boat.</p>
-
-<p>The next day Williams started down. He found
-the location of the strong room, and was careful to
-wear heavy gloves while working. Then he placed
-the charge.</p>
-
-<p>The crack that followed was not loud&mdash;deep
-down as it was. A storm of bubbles arose to the
-surface, and the sea lifted a few inches just over
-the place where the gelatine exploded. Then Mitchell
-prepared to go down and examine the result.</p>
-
-<p>The oily sea heaved and sank with the long swell,
-and there was nothing to indicate that there would
-be any trouble. Nothing could move the wreck.
-Mitchell went under at eleven that morning, and,
-after he had been down half an hour, Williams signaled
-him. He received no answer. With some
-anxiety, the big man started to haul line, when, to
-the horror of all, the two lines&mdash;hose and life line&mdash;came
-in easily without anything at their end.</p>
-
-<p>The hose showed a clean cut well down near the
-helmet, and the life line showed a ragged cut or
-break which stranded it out a full foot. Mitchell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
-was left below, cut off from us as clean as if he had
-been left upon the moon.</p>
-
-<p>Williams strove with all haste to get into another
-suit, but it was a good ten minutes before he did so.
-He went down with a man of his outfit holding line
-for him, and came back in ten minutes with a white
-face and staring eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"Whole side of the room fell on him," he said;
-"cut his hose and&mdash;and left him there. Give me a
-line, I'll get him out."</p>
-
-<p>"Dead?" I whispered.</p>
-
-<p>He looked up at me from the circular hole in the
-helmet, and seemed to think me mad.</p>
-
-<p>"Dead? Of course, he's dead&mdash;a ton or two of
-iron on top of him, and no air&mdash;sure he's dead.
-We'll have to put the line to the winch to haul him
-out from under it."</p>
-
-<p>We buried Mitchell as we had Haswell, hauling
-him from under the wreckage by a line to our steam
-winch, and afterward carrying him well out to sea,
-where he was weighted and sunk. It was bitter
-work, and all the time that hot sun shone down upon
-us until the seams of the decks warped and the tar
-ran out of the lanyards.</p>
-
-<p>Williams was shaken. The next day he refused
-to go down, and pleaded a rest necessary. His men
-were silent and awed. I could say nothing to urge
-them on, as I felt that they had endured enough for
-a few days, at least.</p>
-
-<p>Then Williams was taken with the African fever,
-and there was no one left who would go below for
-any amount of money offered. The horror of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
-thing had shaken the nerves of the entire outfit.
-There might be millions below there, but no man
-of that crew would touch them just at present, and
-we were lying there in that oily sea, eating up the
-company's money and cursing at the strange chance
-that had made our expedition so fatal.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At the end of a week Williams was so bad that
-I gave him up as a factor to help us. At times he
-was delirious, and raved horribly. His men were
-for abandoning the work, and putting into Lagos,
-and from there clearing for home.</p>
-
-<p>I refused to hear of such a thing, although I was
-a bit worked up at the outcome of what had at first
-appeared to be an easy job. To send North for
-more divers was to delay the work months. To
-await the coming of the next coast steamer meant
-delay of at least three weeks&mdash;and even then there
-was no certainty of help from her. She didn't
-carry divers, and, although she would naturally give
-me any aid in her power, belonging to our company
-as she did, I felt that I would rather not ask anything
-from her skipper until the last act.</p>
-
-<p>A man named Rokeby of the tug's working crew
-offered to tend line for me if I chose to go down.
-He assured me that the pressure at fifty or even
-sixty feet would not injure me. I might suffer
-some from the splitting headache natural to the
-pressure, but that was all. I could blow open the
-safe or get chains fast to it, or cut it adrift somehow.</p>
-
-<p>I thought over the matter while Williams raved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
-and rolled in his sweltering bunk, and the sun shone
-down upon that dead ocean full of crawling life and
-hidden treasure.</p>
-
-<p>"Gimme the gloves and plenty of air," I finally
-said, after waiting three days, hoping that some of
-the wrecking crew would get their nerve back.</p>
-
-<p>They all showed willingness to work if I went
-down, and I was soon incased in the suit of Williams.</p>
-
-<p>If you think I was not nervous, you should have
-had an inside photo of my mind as I stood there
-upon the rounds of the ladder waiting for Rokeby
-to screw fast the front glass. I would have given
-it up but for the looks of the men. They seemed
-to gaze upon me with a sort of awe and amazement,
-but they made no comment whatever.</p>
-
-<p>The kroo boys swung the pump handles with a
-will, and when I heard the hiss of the air I must
-say my heart gave two jumps and came near landing
-overboard&mdash;at least, it felt that way; but I
-would have died rather than let those men see that
-I was afraid. Such is the ego, the vanity of us all.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall I screw her on, sir?"</p>
-
-<p>The voice was Rokeby's, and it aroused me from
-the contemplation of the thing to do. I tried to
-look bored and annoyed.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, screw it down&mdash;mind the lines tenderly,
-and pull me right up if I give the signal," I said.</p>
-
-<p>"Aye, aye, sir," he answered, and he screwed in
-the front glass.</p>
-
-<p>The air whistled into the helmet back of my head,
-and the noise aroused me to a sense of the danger<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
-should it suddenly cease. I put one foot and then
-another upon the ladder rungs, and went down until
-I swung off.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed as if I was about to fly off into space,
-and for a few moments I almost lost my balance.
-Then my heavy leaden shoes sank me straight down,
-and I dropped slowly until my feet touched something.</p>
-
-<p>The light had gradually faded as I left the surface,
-and where I now stood it seemed to be pitch
-dark. The pressure of the air appeared to swell my
-head, and a roaring was in my ears. Then I determined
-to do something, and bent forward to see if I
-could.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually the dim outline of the ship's deck took
-form before the glass&mdash;that is, the deck in my immediate
-vicinity. I could make out the rail, and began
-pulling myself along by it. Soon I came to the
-pilot house forward, and recognized it by feeling
-the panels of the glass front with my hands.</p>
-
-<p>I knew that I was just about right in regard to
-position, and started for the rail to get over the
-side and down to the place where the blow-out had
-been made. I carefully swung one leg over and
-then another, amazed at the ease with which I lifted
-the immense leaden shoes. Then guiding my air
-hose and line clear of the rail, I slipped off, and
-dropped down to the bottom far below.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of the fact that I had now been under
-several minutes, I could not make out objects well
-enough to do anything; but determined to try to
-feel for the opening to the safe. After ten minutes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
-spent groping about, I felt an immense hole in
-the ship's side, my fingers going carefully around
-the edges where the torn plates told of the force of
-the blast.</p>
-
-<p>I entered and felt for the sides of the room
-within where the blast had torn out the iron and
-held it hanging to drop upon the unfortunate Mitchell.
-I now saw I could do nothing without more
-light, and carefully made my way out to the sea
-floor, where I signaled to haul me up.</p>
-
-<p>I came slowly, and as I did so my brain appeared
-swelling until it seemed no longer possible to hold
-it within my skull. The pain was intense, and I
-hardly noticed the growing light until I was at the
-foot of the ladder. Then I climbed up, being
-dragged bodily by my life line. The front was
-taken off my helmet, and I spoke.</p>
-
-<p>"It's all right," I panted, "get the lamp out, and
-stand by to send me down the tools I'll need."</p>
-
-<p>Rokeby gave me a small drink of whisky, and the
-rest soon had the electric lamp ready. I went below
-again. This time I had no trouble in finding my
-way, for the light from the spark penetrated the sea
-for several feet about me.</p>
-
-<p>In the watery darkness I made out the hole, and
-saw the damage done by the charge. The entire
-wall of the compartment had been blown in, and,
-in going into the room, Mitchell had gotten under
-it so that he had dislodged an immense piece of
-plate which had fallen upon him, and cut off his air
-and line.</p>
-
-<p>I went forward cautiously, and poked the lamp<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
-ahead of me. It seemed a long way to the safe,
-but I finally came up against it, and made out its
-outline in the lamplight. Its edge stood out sharply.
-Beyond was the inky blackness of a tomb.</p>
-
-<p>I saw that it would be necessary for me to blow it
-loose from the beams, as I was not good enough
-workman to cut or loosen the bolts. Making a
-hasty but pretty good examination of the bottom
-and sides, I determined to go back aboard and study
-it out. A little powder underneath would loosen the
-floor bolts, and then, with a stout chain about it,
-we might start the winches to haul it through the
-opening, which I saw would have to be enlarged
-at the bottom. I came up, and was satisfied for the
-day.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning I had recovered my nerve to a
-great extent, and was eager to get to work. The
-men were also better pleased at the prospect. My
-head had bothered me all night, but now eased up,
-as I donned the rubber.</p>
-
-<p>So far I had seen neither fish nor crawling reptile.
-The bottom was not very soft, however, and
-was so covered with weed and sea growths that it
-may have harbored many things not visible to the
-eye at that depth. I kept to the gloves, not daring
-to risk my hands after Haswell's fatal ending.</p>
-
-<p>The first shot tore the bottom off the compartment,
-and left the safe hanging by the bolts against
-the bulkhead. The second shot broke away these,
-and, when I went down again, I found the safe
-had dropped down to the deck below, the powder,
-or rather nitrogelatine, having torn the deck away<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
-for the space of fifteen feet or more, leaving ragged
-splinters of deck planking sticking forth.</p>
-
-<p>The electric lamp showed the mass below me as
-I stood at the edge of the hole, and I very carefully
-drew my line and air so that they would not
-foul when I dropped over. Then I went down and
-found the safe intact, but in a very difficult position
-to handle.</p>
-
-<p>The next blast required a large charge, in order
-to blow the side out down to the lower deck, as it
-was impossible to drag that safe up through the
-hole. I placed fifty pounds of gelatine in two
-charges just abreast the safe on the outside of the
-hull, and blew away the plates until a trolley car
-could almost have entered the hole in the ship's
-side.</p>
-
-<p>I was all ready now for getting slings upon the
-treasure, and I could hardly wait until the next
-day.</p>
-
-<p>The wreck was in very bad shape below from the
-effects of the blasts, but I was nearly done now.
-Another day might find the diamonds upon the deck
-of the old ship above me. I managed to pass turns
-of a heavy chain around the safe, and stop them
-up so that they could be hocked to the fall. Then
-I got the tackle down, and by means of a whip to the
-tug started the mass of metal outboard.</p>
-
-<p>It came along all right, and I thought it would
-go clear. Then something suddenly stopped it below,
-and I had to go down again to clear it. It
-was fast in the hole, having jammed against the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
-edge so that no amount of pulling would break it
-clear.</p>
-
-<p>I lost no time getting another tackle to it, and
-rigged it to lift it end up, and turn it over, then the
-first fall would pull it out and clear. I was getting
-pretty well used to being below by this time, and
-the headache was lessening. I found that I could
-remain under fully half an hour now, and work
-most of that time.</p>
-
-<p>The last time I went below I had a premonition
-that all was not as it should be down there, and I
-went along very carefully. I made my way into
-the ship's hull, and was just getting the new tackle
-set up taut and ready, when the whole ship heeled
-suddenly to port. The safe slewed sideways and
-slid down the now slanting deck, blocking the hole
-entirely across, but leaving my lines and tackle clear.</p>
-
-<p>I signaled to come up at once. Then my line
-jerked, hauled me close up to the opening, and there
-I jammed, stuck so I could not get back. I signaled
-frantically for help, and they pulled me with all
-their might. But they might as well have tried to
-lift the wreck itself. I was caught.</p>
-
-<p>During the next few minutes I thought a great
-deal. The horror of my situation dawned upon
-me. I was fast below there&mdash;not a chance for getting
-out. There seemed nothing to do, but wait
-placidly for the end.</p>
-
-<p>The next few minutes were hours to me. I could
-signal with the line, but that was all. They knew
-I was alive, and they knew something must have
-happened by the heeling of the sunken wreck.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>The blasting had probably blown away the sandy
-bottom under her, and she had simply cast over and
-slid the stuff to leeward.</p>
-
-<p>There was plenty of room to take that safe out
-endways, but it was now so fixed that some one
-would have to slew it around before that could be
-done. My lamp was still burning, and the blackness
-lost some of its terrors in that pitiful light.</p>
-
-<p>I was in the hull of a lost ship, and I felt that
-I was indeed a lost man. Memories came and went
-with lightning-like rapidity. I thought of Lucy
-Docking, and wondered how she would take my
-death. Then I began to feel the effects of the pressure,
-and my head grew flighty.</p>
-
-<p>I dreamed of beautiful blue skies and green fields,
-the shore, the mountains; and all the time Lucy was
-with me, going from place to place. I was not unhappy.
-There was a feeling of contentment with
-the woman I had chosen, and it was all real, so
-real that I only awoke under the vicious pulling
-upon my life line by the men above.</p>
-
-<p>Then the horror of my situation came back to
-me, and the roaring in my ears told me of my predicament.
-I gazed out of the front glass into the
-dark medium about me, the rays of the lamp making
-sharp outlines and shadows.</p>
-
-<p>I remembered the safe. It lay jammed across
-the hole, and, while I was too feeble to take great
-interest, I recall watching it with a sort of fascination.
-I felt its sides, its edges. Then the combination
-attracted me, shining as it did in the dim
-light, like a bit of white in the surrounding blackness.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
-I lazily turned the knob, whirled it about.
-And all the time they were pumping air to me
-under the pressure of fifty feet of water.</p>
-
-<p>I felt at the aperture above where the edge of
-the safe shut off the opening. There was nearly a
-foot of clear room, but this was not enough for my
-figure, incased as it was in the suit. It was ample
-for the life line and hose to pass through without
-any interruption at all, and all I had to do was to
-live long enough for them to get that safe away.
-Surely some one would come down, and try to
-sling it again properly.</p>
-
-<p>I lay with my front glass to the opening, and held
-the lamp so that the rays would shine outside.
-There I watched and tried to control the thoughts
-that kept coming with a surging feeling of dread
-that made my heart thump all the harder. Drowsiness
-would come, and the whirling in my brain
-would get me back again to the land and beautiful
-dreams. Then the jerking and hauling, and trying
-to dislodge me would arouse me again, and I would
-come back to the present.</p>
-
-<p>I remember watching through the opening, and
-seeing forms passing. These must have been fish,
-or denizens of the sea. They flitted through the
-range of the lamp like sudden ghosts, the light
-striking their bodies, and then disappearing into
-the blackness without.</p>
-
-<p>The lamp suddenly went out.</p>
-
-<p>I was seized with the wildest terror at the inky
-blackness about me. The full horror of it all now
-came with greater force. That tiny spark had kept<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
-me up wonderfully. It had seemed like a ray of
-hope. I put out my hands with muscles shaking and
-trembling, feeling that inexorable edge of iron that
-shut me off from life.</p>
-
-<p>Would Rokeby try it? Would he try to save me?</p>
-
-<p>That was the final thought. I tried to put myself
-in his place. I would do much for a man dying
-by inches&mdash;dying where he might be saved if one
-would take a little risk. He might get below in
-time yet. He might get a whip upon that safe, and,
-with the powerful wrecking tug working her
-winches, upset the huge square of steel, and drag it
-out of the way.</p>
-
-<p>But if he was coming down, he should have come
-hours ago. As a matter of fact, I had already
-been down half an hour, and I could stand it for at
-least twice that long yet. But it seemed to me that
-I had been abandoned, that they were too cowardly
-to try to save me. My whirling brain and roaring
-ears told me a story of days of suffering, of interminable
-torture.</p>
-
-<p>Would Rokeby try it?</p>
-
-<p>I remembered how it struck me when Mitchell's
-line came up cut off from him. I knew what that
-poor fellow had gone through; what he had suffered,
-at least, for a few moments down there.</p>
-
-<p>No, I would hardly blame Rokeby for not trying
-it. It was too dangerous for any one to try.
-And yet&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>That latent hope, that feeling that there would
-be something at last, kept me from dying. The air<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
-was still coming down, and I was in no immediate
-danger.</p>
-
-<p>I tried to make myself think that I was in no
-danger at all; that all would be well when Rokeby
-came down, and got a hold of the safe. But I
-knew in my heart that the men above, the whole
-general crew, were not the men to help.</p>
-
-<p>As a record of fact, the men above were awed at
-the disaster, and only Rokeby's steadiness saved my
-life. He had the pumps kept going, and finally decided
-that he would have to take a chance down
-there, or let me die like a hooked fish. He was man
-enough to overcome the nerve-shaking dangers that
-had beset us, and he put on another suit. Then,
-with his breath fairly gone from fright, he went
-down to help me.</p>
-
-<p>He had never gone below before, except under
-most favorable conditions and in very shallow
-water. Still, he knew what to do, and he managed
-to get a good man above to tend line for him. He
-found things in bad shape at the opening, but lost
-no more time than he could help getting a purchase
-to the end of that safe, and the winches started. In
-half an hour they had dragged it clear of the ship,
-and I was hauled aboard insensible, but still alive.</p>
-
-<p>Before I had regained my senses, they had the
-safe fast aboard the old hooker, and I had the
-satisfaction of staggering on deck to view it.</p>
-
-<p>There it was, all right, perfectly intact. I had
-saved the company several millions, and it had cost
-the lives of two men, and nearly my own.</p>
-
-<p>There was not a moment lost in getting away<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
-from that hot, unhealthy coast. We got under way
-that very evening with Williams still stricken with
-the fever, and myself too weak to sit up, but I would
-not stop a minute.</p>
-
-<p>"Get her under way at once," I said, and the
-mates needed no urging.</p>
-
-<p>The wrecking tug, under full steam, came alongside,
-and the safe was slung carefully over to her
-deck, where it was bolted down and made as fast as
-a sailor could make it. I put a metal line about it,
-and sealed it up, not even willing to trust to the
-safe combination that had withstood the blasts and
-the sea.</p>
-
-<p>"Good-by, and a pleasant voyage to the Cape for
-you," I said to my former shipmates. They steamed
-away to the southward to lay the old ship up for repairs,
-and we, in the mighty wrecker, <i>Viking</i>, under
-full power and making fifteen knots the hour, stood
-back for old England, where we arrived safe
-enough a short time later.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">A TWO-STRANDED YARN<br />
-PART I.</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>"Captain Gantline?" The words escaped
-me like a shot from a gun.</p>
-
-<p>"Sure as eggs&mdash;'n where did you come
-from?" said that stout seaman. He stood at the
-bar of Bill's place on Telegraph Hill, drinking rum.
-His eyes, crinkled up at the corners like the ripples
-of a ship's cutwater in a smooth sea, were bloodshot
-and liquor-soaked. Old man Gantline was
-broad of beam and shorter than myself&mdash;no real
-good seaman is tall&mdash;and he raised his empty
-glass and hammered upon the bar with it.</p>
-
-<p>"Gimme another drink," said he to the barkeeper.
-Then he turned to me. "So it's you fer sure, old
-man&mdash;well, well, what a small world it is, after all!
-Take a nip&mdash;I'm sure glad to see you&mdash;an' how'd
-it happen?"</p>
-
-<p>I saw that old Gantline was getting drunk. It
-was a shame. The old skipper was a crack packet
-skipper. I was amazed at him, for he was not a
-drinking man. I wondered what made him do it.
-The barkeeper was now opening another bottle, and
-I knew the old sailor had drunk much.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>"I blew in from New York around the Cape last
-week," I said.</p>
-
-<p>"Must 'a' been blowin' some, hey, then&mdash;kinder
-quick passage&mdash;what?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I don't mean I made the run in a week&mdash;we
-were one hundred and sixty days&mdash;but I've been
-here in Frisco a week. And I've spent all the money
-I saved from the munificent owners of the British
-ship <i>Glenmar</i>, who rated me as second mate at
-thirty per&mdash;or, rather, five pun ten a month. I
-tried to eat something since I came in to make up
-for what I didn't get at sea. Those Englishmen are
-sure on short commons, all right&mdash;but I haven't
-been drinking. I don't drink."</p>
-
-<p>"I do," said Gantline.</p>
-
-<p>"I see it," I answered; "but it don't seem to do
-you any good, though it isn't for me to tell you so,
-I know. A drink or two don't hurt any one much,
-but pour it in, and come with me, and listen to my
-tale of woe. I need some one who knows something
-to listen to me&mdash;I'm broke."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I dunno as I might jest as well," sighed
-Gantline. "I'll take a couple more noggins&mdash;then
-you can come down to the ship with me."</p>
-
-<p>"Sure, that's just what we'll do&mdash;go down aboard&mdash;hurry
-up and poison yourself sufficiently," I said,
-and waited until he had soaked down a few more
-drafts of liquid fire. Then, as he was growing unsteady,
-I linked his arm in my own, and we went
-slowly down Market Street until we came to the
-water front.</p>
-
-<p>"That's her layin' out there&mdash;<i>Silas Tanner</i>&mdash;four<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
-masts&mdash;or are they five? Sink me if I kin count
-'em, Clew! You count 'em for me&mdash;seems like
-there's more'n half a dozen sticks risin' outen her&mdash;hey?
-Maybe Slade's stuck more in her, thinkin'
-four ain't enough&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"What? A schooner? You in a schooner&mdash;how'd
-you come to go in a fore-and-after, Gantline?
-You, an old square-rigger!"</p>
-
-<p>"That's hit, thash hit, Clew&mdash;me, an old seaman,
-in a coaster&mdash;for'n aft&mdash;Chinks for passengers&mdash;cabin,
-too&mdash;ladies aft&mdash;I'm clear drunk, Clew&mdash;an'
-I don't care 'f 'am&mdash;nuff to make a man drunk,"
-mumbled Gantline.</p>
-
-<p>It was high time to get him to his ship. I hailed
-a small boat, and got him aboard, and then we went
-out to the <i>Tanner</i>&mdash;four-masted schooner, now riding
-at anchor off Market Street, San Francisco,
-waiting for a tide and something I could not guess
-as yet.</p>
-
-<p>She was heavily loaded, all right, and I wondered
-at the old man's conduct the more. The idea
-of him forgetting himself at the last minute! It
-was too much. And with a mate like Slade&mdash;Slade,
-who had sailed in several ships with me, the best
-mate I had known for many a year. We drew
-alongside.</p>
-
-<p>"Lower down the side ladder&mdash;the skipper's coming
-up," I sang out, and a head came to the high
-rail. It was the mate's.</p>
-
-<p>"Christopher Columbus! How'd this happen?"
-asked Slade. "And how&mdash;how'd you turn up? I'm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
-glad to see you, old man&mdash;pass him up&mdash;look out
-he don't fall overboard."</p>
-
-<p>We managed to get the skipper on deck, and then
-below to his bunk, Slade questioning me all the time,
-and asking about times gone by. Then, after we
-had the old man safely stowed, we came on deck
-together, and Slade told me the trouble.</p>
-
-<p>"Bound out for Guam with cargo and fifty
-coolies&mdash;Chinks&mdash;for labor there. We got a passenger's
-license, and take out several first class to
-Manila, besides. Loaded down with general cargo,
-and two safes full of silver for circulation at Aga&ntilde;a&mdash;about
-ten thousand dollars."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, what's the trouble?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"The old man don't like the coolie idea," Slade
-went on. "He hates Chinks. We got all loaded
-up, and then the owners sent word that we must
-provide quarters for fifty men&mdash;Chinamen, too, at
-that&mdash;and the old man threw a fit. He'd have quit
-the ship, but he's bought into her, and can't do it.
-We had to clear out the alleyways under the poop,
-knock ports in the sides, and build up a line of
-shelves for 'em to sleep on&mdash;twenty-five on a side,
-and right next the after saloon&mdash;-couldn't get them
-below&mdash;see the doors we cut in the bulkhead? Lets
-'em out on deck. It's a government contract, and
-it's good pay, all right&mdash;but them dirty coolies! It's
-a shame to make an old fellow like Gantline carry
-them&mdash;he hates' em so."</p>
-
-<p>"Who's second under you?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Nobody&mdash;thought you'd come for it. Isn't that
-what you're here for?"</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>"Not that I know of," I answered. "But I'll take
-it if the old man says so, all right, all right. I've
-been ashore long enough&mdash;broke, too."</p>
-
-<p>"Sure thing," said Slade. "You're as good as
-signed on right now&mdash;soon as he gets over it he'll
-ask you to go&mdash;never saw the old man like that before,
-and it's a pity, too. 'Never thought I'd run
-a slaver,' says he&mdash;and I don't much blame him,
-either."</p>
-
-<p>"I'll send down my dunnage in the morning," I
-said. "How about the crew?"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, we'll get them, all right. Whisky Bill's
-attended to it&mdash;we'll get ten men&mdash;all we need with
-the engine for handling line."</p>
-
-<p>I hastened ashore to settle my affairs and get my
-dunnage down to the ship.</p>
-
-<p>In payment for my last week's board I gave my
-landlord a whale's tooth, carved prettily&mdash;or, rather,
-I left it behind for him to accept gracefully, and
-before daylight in the morning I was aboard the
-<i>Tanner</i>. Gantline was so glad to see me come that
-he almost forgot his headache. I signed for the
-voyage and went on duty.</p>
-
-<p>The decks of the schooner were somewhat disordered
-that morning she was to leave. Honolulu
-was her first stop, and there was much to go on
-deck for that shorter run. The crimp had just
-brought down the men, and we mates upset each
-seaman's bag of dunnage, and scattered the contents
-about the gangway. We searched for hidden
-liquor and firearms, well knowing a sailor's habits,
-and we knocked things about a little hunting for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
-them. The poor, half-sober devils could separate
-their belongings afterward as best they might.</p>
-
-<p>The result of the search was that, after the mate
-had confiscated a few bottles of stuff and a couple
-of out-of-date revolvers and ammunition, the general
-pile divided up among the men was enough to
-refill each bag again, the effort of sorting personal
-belongings at that moment being entirely too laborious
-to entertain.</p>
-
-<p>Slade took two bottles, and managed to secrete
-them upon his person while the eye of the skipper
-was diverted to a passenger who had just appeared.
-Slade was slanting toward the forward cabin with
-the goods, closely followed by his emulating second
-officer, when the voice of the old man roared out
-orders for me to see to getting the baggage of the
-passengers below without delay. I turned, somewhat
-disappointed, just as Slade entered the door
-of the saloon and winked slowly and meaningly
-at me.</p>
-
-<p>With some small encomiums pronounced upon
-the untimely work cut out for me, I turned to the
-gangway, and ordered up a few men in tones and
-language I should hate to repeat.</p>
-
-<p>As I did so I suddenly came face to face with the
-passenger who had come from behind a cab and
-started down the gangway plank to the ship's deck.
-She put her lorgnette up to her eyes and gazed
-smilingly at me. Then she was joined by a younger
-woman, a girl about twenty, who took the older
-woman's arm, led her down the plank to the deck,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
-and went right into the door of the forward cabin,
-leaving me staring as though I had seen a ghost.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't got no good eyes, den, if dat ain't de
-purtiest gal I ever see," said a Dutchman who was
-waiting to hear further orders from me. Another
-man, with a loose lip, looked up and scratched his
-head.</p>
-
-<p>"Get, you squareheads&mdash;get a move on before
-something happens to you," I growled.</p>
-
-<p>"I do love to hear them swear so," said the elder
-lady, as she reached the door. "They're such romantic
-fellows&mdash;so bold&mdash;oh, dear, just hear what
-that man&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Come along, auntie, come back where the captain
-is. I never heard such language before, and
-I don't think it a bit romantic&mdash;no, not at all. It's
-all dreadfully vulgar, and all that&mdash;but that man&mdash;well,
-well, he does say some amusing things, even
-if they are not what they should be."</p>
-
-<p>Miss Aline MacDonald led her aunt aft, and I
-breathed easier. That she had flung me a sort of
-compliment was certain. I knew it. I had more
-queer ways of cussing out a Dutchman than any
-Yankee mate afloat&mdash;I knew that&mdash;but&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Gantline met them as they entered, and extended
-his hand.</p>
-
-<p>"Come aft, ladies, come aft, and I'll have the
-stewardess show you your rooms at once&mdash;hope
-they'll suit you&mdash;best in the ship. Of course, we
-don't compete with the steamers, but a voyage in
-this schooner will be worth two in a steamer as a
-health restorer. If things ain't the way you like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
-them, sing out&mdash;I'll do the best I can." And he led
-the way aft to where a Kanaka woman took them
-in charge. Then I ducked into the mate's room, and
-joined Slade for a few minutes. He had already
-pulled a cork.</p>
-
-<p>"Ain't adverse none to passengers," said he, pouring
-out the liquor, "but you may sink me if that
-old un don't come near the limit&mdash;you hear me?"</p>
-
-<p>"Give me a drink and shut up about passengers,"
-I grinned. "The old one's all right. She appreciated
-my education&mdash;sort of goo-gooed at me while
-I was laying out some language&mdash;quick with the
-booze, before the old man gets wise to it."</p>
-
-<p>We hurried back on deck in time to take charge
-of things, and we were soon ready and waiting for
-the coolies, who were to come aboard from the tug
-that would tow us out to sea.</p>
-
-<p>The tug <i>Raven</i> took our towline and we warped
-out, swung around, and were headed for the open
-sea within a few minutes. The engineer had steam
-up in the donkey, and the winches turned. Our crew
-were used to fore-and-aft canvas, and Slade took
-the turns as the halyards came to the revolving
-drums, being helped, as I may say, by his second
-mate, who held the peak as he held the throat.</p>
-
-<p>We snatched stoppers upon them as the sails came
-to the mastheads, and in less time than it takes to
-tell we had all save the headsails on the <i>Tanner</i>, and
-were standing out. The tug dropped back, and
-came alongside, taking her lines.</p>
-
-<p>"Stand by fer yore passengers," bawled a red-headed
-fellow, grinning from the pilot house.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>I now saw a crowd of yellow-tails gathering on
-the tug's deck. Fifty-seven of them, all told, led by
-a giant yellow man in a skullcap and long, braided
-cue. A chattering babble of Chink talk, and the
-big fellow hustled the crowd to the rail, up the
-schooner's side, and on deck in less than a minute.</p>
-
-<p>Bundles, packages, clothes, came with them, and
-Slade gave up the premeditated job of searching
-them in a few moments as he saw the yellow men
-gather up their belongings and crowd about the
-break of the poop, jamming in a mass right under
-the edge from where Gantline leaned over and
-gazed down at them in sour amazement and distrust.</p>
-
-<p>"Me makee dem tlake-a down, down," cooed the
-giant leader in a sing-song voice, pointing with his
-hand at the crowd of Chinamen.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, git below&mdash;git out an' be quick about it,"
-snarled the old man from above him. "You're
-blockin' the decks&mdash;slam 'em in the alleyways, git
-'em out the way," he continued to Slade and myself.</p>
-
-<p>"No lika men high, a-a-h, aye, makee down,
-down," sang the giant, with a glint in his little slits
-of eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He was an ugly animal. Talk about your Oriental
-being a degenerate! Well, that fellow was
-nothing degenerate physically. He was six feet
-four, and about half as wide across the hulking
-shoulders. A thin-lipped mouth ran clear across his
-face; his nose was flat, like an African's. A whitish-blue
-scar had ripped his pleasing features from eye<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
-to chin on the starboard side, and his head was
-enormous.</p>
-
-<p>The hair was shaved close up to the limits of that
-skullcap of black silk, and from under its lower end
-there dropped a cue about a fathom long, all done
-up with silk cords and stuff, until a pretty little
-black tassel was plaited into the end, surmounted
-by a Matthew Walker knot and a couple of Turks'
-heads.</p>
-
-<p>He was something to notice, all right, and his
-voice was grand. Nothing of the nervous squeak
-of the coolie about it. It sang along with flutelike
-notes that bristled full of "I's" and "Ah's," until
-you thought he was singing it to his men in a sort
-of deep bass or baritone.</p>
-
-<p>Understand him? Did you ever know any white
-man who could understand a Chink if that fellow
-didn't talk for him to understand it? No, we took
-it for granted that the "boss" coolie was on the
-level, and was arguing with the herd to corral them
-into the alleyways where they belonged. He understood
-the skipper right enough.</p>
-
-<p>A stout yellow man edged from the press about
-the door of the forward house, and came to the big
-man's side. A soft gabble, then a yell, then the
-herd took the alleyways on the jump, and inside of
-ten seconds there was not a yellowskin on deck.</p>
-
-<p>"Got 'em trained, all right enough," said Slade,
-with a grin. "The old man needn't worry about
-'em if the big one goes at it that way."</p>
-
-<p>"Fifty-seven Chinks on a dead man's chest&mdash;and
-I'll bet my month's pay they've a bottle of rum&mdash;maybe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
-a hundred," I ventured. "What's the big
-cheese's name?"</p>
-
-<p>"Sink me, if I know! The old man called him
-'Yaller Dog,' and he's that, all solid. Let it go at
-that. I'd sure like to have him in my watch. What
-a man he'd make on a earing in a blow!"</p>
-
-<p>"Shall we deal them their rice raw or cooked?" I
-asked. "I suppose they won't eat it if it's cooked
-in the galley, and then they'd be trying to build fires
-under the cabin or in the lazaret to boil it."</p>
-
-<p>"No; let 'em eat it or throw it overboard. What
-do you care? Turn the men to, and choose the
-watch, and then I'll go below for a rest."</p>
-
-<p>I did so, and soon the Farallones were disappearing
-in the east astern.</p>
-
-<p>The first two days out there was so much to do
-aboard that I hardly had time to observe things.
-The decks were lumbered up with all kinds of gear,
-and a load of stuff for Honolulu, which took all our
-time to secure. The men were under the union
-scale of the West Coast&mdash;that is, thirty dollars per
-month&mdash;and there was nothing off on account of
-our going deep-water in her, for we were not by
-any means coasting at all, as our course lay directly
-across the Pacific Ocean, and the itinerary took in
-a voyage of seven thousand miles.</p>
-
-<p>I hated the fore-and-aft canvas. I knew its value
-on short runs and in smooth seas, but when it comes
-to deep water and a rough old ocean, with a twenty-five-knot
-wind increasing to fifty, give me the square
-canvas with double topsails, that men can handle.</p>
-
-<p>However, we were very fast. The <i>Tanner</i> could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
-do fifteen knots free on a wind that would jam a
-square-rigger close and by. Her four masts were
-of the usual type, all the same, and her gaff-topsails
-were high on the hoist, giving her a tall appearance.</p>
-
-<p>The first day under all sail, with the wind abeam,
-she rolled off thirteen and fourteen knots an hour,
-and kept her decks awash under a perfect torrent of
-foam, dragging her rail through a solid mass of
-suds. She simply ran, shoved her sharp nose out
-through it, and slipped over the long, smooth, rolling
-swell with a plunging lift that felt good.</p>
-
-<p>The steam winches for handling line were good.
-With drums turning, all one had to do was to snatch
-the halyard in the deck block, grab a turn on the
-drum, and up went anything that could go. Then
-a stopper on the line, and to the belaying pin&mdash;and
-all was done. There was no hee-hawing, no singing
-of sailor's chanteys, no sailoring of the type we had
-known in our earlier days; but I am free to admit
-that I would rather have had the steam winches&mdash;especially
-when it came on to blow and we had to
-reef her down.</p>
-
-<p>The Chinks were allowed on deck from eight bells
-in the morning until eight at night; and they were
-always getting in the way.</p>
-
-<p>Miss MacDonald and her aunt came on deck most
-of the time, and sat wrapped in rugs near the wheel,
-where the old man entertained them with tales of
-the sea. They were greatly interested in the Chinamen.</p>
-
-<p>I found my watch on the poop not at all disagreeable
-during daylight, for Miss Aline was good<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
-to look at. She was of medium height, with brown
-hair that curled in spite of the sea wind, and she
-was solidly and strongly built, her figure having
-lines that told of sturdiness rather than delicate
-beauty. But although she was not what one would
-call fat, or even stout, she was certainly not thin,
-and her rounded face was rosy with health.</p>
-
-<p>Her mouth had a peculiar gentleness of expression,
-and when she showed her white teeth to me
-and flushed a bit upon recognizing the master
-handler of fluent oaths, I thought her about as good
-as they come. I was a bit embarrassed, but I was
-only second greaser, and as such could not sit at
-the table with her, so I said little.</p>
-
-<p>I told Slade, however, that his hands were unfit
-to pass salt junk to a lady&mdash;and, for a wonder, he
-washed them in fresh water before going below!
-He was mate, and could sit in with the skipper,
-while I walked the deck above and made mental
-comments upon the irony of fate that shoved in a
-fellow like him to entertain a girl that he could
-not speak to without stammering like a drunken
-man, while I&mdash;&mdash;-</p>
-
-<p>It was in my watch during dinner that I had the
-first real chance to see our coolie boss. The second
-week, after things had settled themselves, and the
-routine of the ship took the place of the frantic
-scramble to get things shipshape, I stood at the
-break of the poop, which in the <i>Tanner</i> was very
-low&mdash;not more than four feet above the deck, as is
-the case in many schooners&mdash;and as I stood there
-up popped Yellow Dog, the giant Chink, from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
-door of the alleyway to starboard. The beggar was
-so tall that he was almost on a level with myself, in
-spite of the difference in the decks, and I found his
-eyes close to mine as he turned and saw me.</p>
-
-<p>"Have any trouble in the passageway?" I asked
-him, thinking he might have been a bit mixed in
-straightening out that gang below in the narrow
-space.</p>
-
-<p>He gave me a look, a slanting glance from the
-corners of his little, screwed-up eyes, and then he
-turned his back upon me as if I had been bilge
-water, and offended his senses.</p>
-
-<p>"Hey, Yellow Dog! What's the matter with
-you? Are you tongue-tied? Don't you know
-enough of ship's etiquette to answer an officer when
-he speaks?" I spat at him.</p>
-
-<p>"I tlakee captain man&mdash;not you," he sang, in his
-musical voice, and he forthwith strode to the galley,
-where a Kanaka cook was busy with the dinner.</p>
-
-<p>"You great big Yellow&mdash;&mdash;" But there is no
-use of telling what I remarked to him as he went
-along that deck. As the officer in command at the
-moment, I was not a little offended by this high-handed
-way of a common Chink, more especially as
-I was inquiring for the welfare of his men.</p>
-
-<p>The cook heard my note of temper, and refused
-the giant admittance to his galley's sacred precincts,
-whereupon Yellow Dog seized him by the scruff of
-the neck, and tossed him into the lee scuppers. He
-was about to pitch a pot of hot water on top of
-him, but I interposed an objection to this action in
-the shape of a belaying pin which, flung by my right<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
-arm under full swing, struck Yellow Dog fairly
-upon the skull-cap, and, bounding off, flew overboard.</p>
-
-<p>The giant staggered, caught himself from falling,
-then he stood very straight, and gave me a look
-that for cold fury expressed more than I had ever
-dreamed possible in a Chink.</p>
-
-<p>"Killee you fo' that," he hissed.</p>
-
-<p>"Go on, do your killing, Yellow Dog," I snapped.
-"But take care you don't get something yourself&mdash;and
-the next time I speak to you aboard here, if you
-don't answer at once you'll find something else
-bounding off your dome that you'll remember for
-a long time. Now send your mess kids to that galley,
-and the cook will hand you out your rice and
-long-lick."</p>
-
-<p>The men of my watch stopped work where they
-were, and grinned at the big Chinaman. Their contempt
-for the race was more than my own, and I
-knew I had the hearty approval of the sailors. At
-the same time I was sorry that the thing had happened,
-for the Chinamen who were already on deck
-passed the word along, and by the time I had finished
-talking the whole gang of them were standing
-about, with looks upon their faces that told
-of trouble.</p>
-
-<p>It was a bad beginning for a long voyage.</p>
-
-<p>Gantline came on deck as soon as he could finish
-his dinner, and wanted to know what the trouble
-was about, but that was all he said. He found
-no fault with my remarks nor with my actions. A<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
-ship's officer must maintain discipline, and discipline
-cannot be maintained without respect.</p>
-
-<p>Miss MacDonald came up with her aunt, and I
-went below to my dinner. As I passed the door of
-the forward house leading into the cabin, the stout
-Chink who seemed to be a close chum of the big
-leader glared at me. He had a sinister face, with
-little slits of eyes that looked slantwise, like the eyes
-of a wolf.</p>
-
-<p>His moustaches were thin and straight along his
-lip, until they reached the corners of his wide mouth,
-then they suddenly dropped straight down, and hung
-like the tusks of a walrus, two thin, black points of
-hair about six inches long. They gave him the appearance
-of some carnivorous animal, fierce, saturnine
-and dangerous.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of slamming him for his insolence, I pretended
-not to see him, and passed in, yet the look
-stayed with me, and I remembered it at intervals.
-He was a wolf, all right, a human wolf&mdash;but I was
-to find that out later.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you think of our passengers&mdash;the
-coolies?" I asked Jack, the steward, who sat at my
-mess next the carpenter, Oleson.</p>
-
-<p>"Watch them, Mr. Garnett, watch them," he
-warned. "I've seen some mighty bad Chinks leaving
-the coast lately. These men belong to tongs&mdash;hatchet
-men&mdash;and if you'll take my word for it you
-will find plenty of long, black-barreled guns tucked
-somewhere in their dunnage. But the hatchet is
-their game for those they have a grudge against&mdash;hatchets
-don't make a noise at night."</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>"They won't get about the decks in my watch, to
-use any hatchets, or guns, either, for that matter,"
-I answered. "I'll tuck them in snug to bed at eight
-bells."</p>
-
-<p>"Hatchet's a bad thing at night," put in Oleson.
-"I'll put a heavy staple on their door after they
-turn in."</p>
-
-<p>In my watch below I read ancient magazines until
-I fell asleep. In my dreams I saw that stout Chinaman's
-face with the pointed whiskers and slant eyes
-peering down over me. In his hand was a little,
-thin-bladed hatchet, like a tomahawk, and as I
-reached up for him I awoke with a start, shivering
-in spite of the heat.</p>
-
-<p>The door of my cabin was closed, and my window,
-or port, was but half open, sliding as it did
-upon sills about five feet above the main deck.</p>
-
-<p>A shadow passed even as I looked up, but when
-I sprang out of my bunk and slammed the glass
-open, there was nothing near the opening.</p>
-
-<p>Just twenty or thirty feet distant forward two of
-the crew were working on some gear, and the light
-was still strong enough to recognize them as Jim
-and Bill, of Slade's watch. Then the bells of the
-dogwatch struck, and I went on deck, swearing at
-myself for a nervous fool.</p>
-
-<p>I refused to take a gun which hung over my bunk,
-hating the idea of doing such a thing, for guns always
-spelled trouble in all ships I had ever been in,
-and I hated the idea of using one. I went on the
-poop, and Miss MacDonald was sitting there with
-her aunt, chatting with the old man.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>"Keep her steady as she goes&mdash;sou'west half
-west," said Gantline, as I came up.</p>
-
-<p>"Aye, aye, sir," I answered, and was about to go
-aft to the wheel, when the young lady spoke to me.</p>
-
-<p>"I have just asked the captain to allow me to read
-a chapter from the Bible to those Chinamen," she
-said, "and, if you will assist me, we will gather
-them close together on the deck there"&mdash;pointing to
-the main deck. "I can stand upon the edge and
-see them better. You don't know whether they can
-speak or understand English, do you?"</p>
-
-<p>"I think they understand me at times," I ventured,
-"but I'm a bit doubtful about the kind of talk
-you will toss them."</p>
-
-<p>"Toss them? What do you mean?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Why, I mean&mdash;well, they understand the kind
-of English we use at times&mdash;I don't know how to
-explain&mdash;it isn't a written language&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"I should sincerely hope not," said Miss MacDonald
-meaningly.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, but, my dear, it is so expressive&mdash;I heard
-you talking to them during dinner to-day," interrupted
-her aunt.</p>
-
-<p>I blushed a little. "Well, then, that's what I
-mean," I said. "I don't want to say that I think
-you are wasting time reading to them&mdash;you know
-they have a religion of their own&mdash;one that antedates
-ours&mdash;they won't take it right."</p>
-
-<p>"That's a question we won't discuss at present,"
-said Miss MacDonald. "There are many Christianized
-Chinamen at home, and they seem to appreciate
-it very much."</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>"Always, if there's a pretty woman to teach
-them," I snapped.</p>
-
-<p>There was a silence after this. I had been rude,
-I suppose, but I was only telling the truth. I went
-to the break, or edge, of the schooner's poop, and
-called the watch, which had been mustering on deck.</p>
-
-<p>"Get the coolies aft to the mast," I ordered.</p>
-
-<p>The men passed the word along, and two or three
-Chinks who understood English as well as I did
-came slouching aft. Gradually about two dozen
-stood or congregated near enough to hear, but Yellow
-Dog and his slant-eyed chum of the walrus
-mustaches seemed to decline the invitation.</p>
-
-<p>"Couldn't you get the large man, their leader, to
-come also?" asked the lady.</p>
-
-<p>"Not without dragging him lashed fast," I protested.</p>
-
-<p>"Very well," she said, with just a bit of temper
-in her voice.</p>
-
-<p>Gantline had gone below, and I was in charge of
-the deck until supper was over. The reading would
-not take long, and the steward was already bringing
-the cabin mess aft along the gangway. The
-young lady read calmly, and with a peculiarly sweet
-voice, that attracted the attention of the men, but
-not of the coolies.</p>
-
-<p>The Chinks stood about, and some gazed out over
-the sea, some grinned openly up at her, with a smile
-that told of tolerance for an imbecile. Miss MacDonald,
-senior, went below to prepare for supper.</p>
-
-<p>Before the girl had finished, Yellow Dog came
-aft, and gazed at her in open admiration. He made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
-some remark to his stout friend, and they both
-smiled sardonically, but their attitude was not particularly
-offensive.</p>
-
-<p>I found some business at the spanker sheet, and
-when I came forward to where the girl stood, she
-was finishing.</p>
-
-<p>"There is only one way to treat heathen, Mr. Garnett,"
-she said, "and that is to be always kind, universally
-even-tempered, and gentle with them. They
-have had a hard road for many generations, and
-take to kindness, as all lower creatures do. They
-will only get stubborn if you use hard words and
-roughness. I know something about their habits,
-for I've taught the school at home, where we had
-twenty pupils, all grown men."</p>
-
-<p>At this I protested. I confess I was hot.</p>
-
-<p>"If you are kind to them they will think you're
-afraid of them," I declared. "If you mule-lick
-them, hog-strap them, and generally beat the devil
-out of them, they'll do as you tell them&mdash;not otherwise.
-I'm not running a school aboard here, if you
-please, and while I will give you any assistance you
-want or can get, I go on the log right now that as
-far as we handle these men, we must beat them and
-lick them into submission. There's no other way at
-sea. It's brutal, but the other way will turn out
-more brutal. I'm not responsible for them being in
-this ship&mdash;but I'll see they get to their port of discharge,
-all right, if I have to flay them alive!"</p>
-
-<p>"I think you are perfectly horrible&mdash;perfectly,
-brutal to say such things," said Miss MacDonald.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
-"Are all seamen brutes? Does the captain stand
-for such things aboard here?"</p>
-
-<p>"There is only one way to do with cattle of this
-sort," I insisted. "I don't want the job&mdash;I'd rather
-run in a bunch of snakes. But a ship's bound to be
-run the way ships are run. There isn't any new
-way to run a ship, believe me. It's all been tried
-out hundreds of years before you were born. Perhaps
-some day, when we don't need ships, the
-brotherly-love racket will work all right; but not
-these days."</p>
-
-<p>"I don't believe it, anyhow," said the lady, "and
-I'm amazed that a man of apparent intelligence
-should say such things. You should do unto others
-as you would have them do unto you&mdash;always."</p>
-
-<p>"Quite so," I assented, somewhat nettled at the
-idea that a young lady should give me points on
-running a ship. "I always do, always do unto the
-crew or those coolies the same as I would expect
-them to do to me&mdash;if I was the same kind of rascal
-they are&mdash;and if our places were exchanged. There
-can be only one man in charge of the deck,
-the watch officer, and he's responsible for everything
-that happens. And if I would be so bold as
-to give you a bit of advice, I should say to you, for
-God's sake don't try any foolishness on those yellow-skins
-while they are under my charge. It'll
-only make trouble, and there'll be enough of that,
-anyhow, by the way things look."</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean?" asked Miss Aline.</p>
-
-<p>"I mean that Yellow Dog, as the skipper calls him,
-that big Chink, is not liking ship's discipline already.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
-If you will go near the door of the alleyway when
-they open it you will smell the fumes of opium
-strong enough to knock you down. They don't pretend
-to obey orders, and the company makes us
-carry them and take care of them like they were
-babies. We can't even search them or offer any
-kind of protest&mdash;they'd refuse to come if the contract
-was not drawn that way."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, be kind to them, be always lenient with
-them," said Miss Aline, in a tone so different, so
-pleading that I gave up. "Don't yell at them like
-I heard you to-day. It isn't dignified, it isn't right&mdash;you
-will be good to them, now, won't you?&mdash;just
-try it and see if it don't work."</p>
-
-<p>"Ho, well, I'll try to do the best I can, of course,"
-I answered, thinking of the stout pirate with the
-hangers. "Yes, I'll try to be just as kind as I possibly
-can&mdash;of course, I'll promise you that&mdash;that's
-the skipper's orders, you know."</p>
-
-<p>The steward had already brought the mess things
-for the cabin, and the lady went below to join her
-aunt and the old man&mdash;and Slade. The mate was
-not standing for my line of talk, as I could see by
-the way Miss Aline spoke, and it made me warm to
-think that a mate of Slade's attainments should be
-so mushy as to snicker and grin when I told him
-how things stood.</p>
-
-<p>"'Keep solid with the passengers'&mdash;that's one of
-the old rules in the express steamers, you know&mdash;'keep
-right with the ladies,'" he said, grinning at
-me when I mentioned the missionary work the
-young lady had undertaken. "And, by the way,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
-lend me a couple of your clean collars&mdash;you won't
-need them right away, and I do."</p>
-
-<p>"I'll do nothing of the kind," I answered shortly.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, don't get rattled because I've got the inside
-route. Don't be mad, old man, because I've gained
-the weather of you. All's fair in the game. And
-between you and me, if the Chink gets gay with you,
-bang him on the nut for fair, and I'll slip in with
-you&mdash;if it's dark. But you don't want to queer me
-below. Now, be sane, and come across with those
-collars. I'm young and single&mdash;and mate, see?"</p>
-
-<p>"Go to the devil!" I answered, but I knew Slade
-would go to my room, instead, and nail those white-laundered
-collars I had kept clean.</p>
-
-<p>That night, when I turned in, I found that, indeed,
-Slade had been below, and had rummaged my
-things about most unkindly, taking my linen. I
-turned in with a feeling of resentment at his luck
-in position, but I dismissed the feeling quickly as the
-absurdity of the affair dawned upon me, for, after
-all, I was not thinking of women at all, and had
-no right to under the present high salary I was
-drawing.</p>
-
-<p>Rolling into my bunk, I was instantly asleep. In
-my dreams I saw that walrus-looking Chink. His
-long black feelers hung down over me, the points
-piercing my vitals like tusks. I gave a yell and
-awoke!</p>
-
-<p>The lamp was burning dimly, as it always did in
-my room at night, ready for the sudden call to the
-deck, and I could see everything distinctly the moment
-I opened my eyes. A face was just leaving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
-the glass of my window. I sprang out of the bunk,
-and peered out through the glass. At that instant
-there was a heavy rat-tat-tat upon the door, and the
-voice of Jim Douglas, of Slade's watch, called to
-me that it was eight bells, and time to turn out. I
-threw open the door.</p>
-
-<p>"Did you look in through my window?" I asked
-him.</p>
-
-<p>"No, sir; I wouldn't do anything like that, sir,"
-said the seaman.</p>
-
-<p>He was a good-looking young Scotchman of
-twenty-four, tall and strong, with an honest face.
-I knew he was telling the truth.</p>
-
-<p>"That's all," I said, and he went on his way.</p>
-
-<p>I looked at the gun that hung over my shelf at
-the bunk head. It was one I took off a dago named
-Louis, of my watch, and it was a heavy gun, forty-five
-caliber, and long in the barrel.</p>
-
-<p>"Perfectly absurd to think of it," I muttered to
-myself. I pulled on my coat, and started for the
-deck, when something, some instinct, told me to take
-the weapon.</p>
-
-<p>"Sentiment be hanged!" I said out loud, and
-tucked the revolver in a rear pocket. Then I made
-the deck, and found Slade standing at the mizzen
-waiting for me.</p>
-
-<p>"We'll raise the land before morning," said he.
-"She's been running like a scared rat all night.
-Keep a lookout, and when you sight anything sing
-out to the old man&mdash;he'll be on deck probably, but
-he's been acting queer lately, and you better watch<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
-him. We'll heave her to for a pilot, and you know
-the rest."</p>
-
-<p>"All right," I answered.</p>
-
-<p>The soft, damp air of the trade wind made the
-decks soaking wet. The low hum through the rigging
-added to the murmuring of the side wash. The
-creaking of sheet blocks and slight straining of the
-gear were the only noises that broke the stillness
-of the peaceful night. The schooner was running
-along rapidly, heeling gently to the wind, and everything
-drawing. The rolling motion was slight, for
-the wind was strong enough to hold her steady.</p>
-
-<p>The voices of the watch forward sounded above
-the murmuring, and I could see the glow of a pipe
-belonging to some one who disregarded the ship's
-discipline sufficiently to smoke while on duty. I
-took my place at the mizzen rigging to con the
-vessel, and stood there silently for a long time
-watching the foam rushing past her, now and then
-gazing far ahead to see if I could raise the lights
-of Pearl Harbor. The wind was almost astern, and
-the headsails were consequently not doing much
-work. I listened to the slatting, and then sang out:</p>
-
-<p>"Haul down the jib topsail and roll it up."</p>
-
-<p>"Aye, aye, sir," came the response, and the men
-went to the forecastle head.</p>
-
-<p>Aft at the wheel the shadow of a man holding
-the spokes was the only sign of life on deck. I
-took my place again at the weather rigging, and
-waited for the report from forward.</p>
-
-<p>A heavier swell than usual rolled the schooner,
-and I turned to look aft. At that instant something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
-whizzed past my ear, and struck with a chugging
-sound into the backstay. My ear stung sharply, and
-something warm ran down my neck. I saw a form
-vanish behind the mast, and called out.</p>
-
-<p>I knew I had been struck, and drew my gun,
-springing toward the figure, which dashed silently
-across the deck as I gained the mast. I fired at
-it without hesitation, and the fellow let out a scream,
-gained the rail, and plunged over the side.</p>
-
-<p>I was at the rail in an instant, but saw nothing
-in the foam. A moment's silence followed, and then
-a sound of steps and a rising murmur of voices told
-me of the alarm.</p>
-
-<p>Gantline was on deck in less time than it takes
-to tell it, and he roared out: "What's the matter?"</p>
-
-<p>Slade sprang from the door of the forward cabin,
-calling out that he was coming. Men from forward
-rushed aft. Then, from out of the doors of
-the alleyways, a stream of figures poured forth,
-flowing like a black tide onto the main deck. A
-sudden roar of voices followed, and I recognized
-the high-pitched tones of our coolies.</p>
-
-<p>"All hands&mdash;help! All hands aft&mdash;quick!" I
-yelled, and fired into the black figures who swarmed
-up the poop and crowded upon me.</p>
-
-<p>As I fired, I heard the shrill screams of the elder
-Miss MacDonald, and then there was indiscriminate
-firing. I yelled to Slade, and he answered once.
-The crowd surged over me, and I was down, with
-a dozen panting heathens on top of me. In a minute
-it was all over. Some one passed a line about my
-arms, and, kick as I might, they soon had me snug<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
-and fast. Gantline roared out orders from the
-wheel, and I heard the crack of a pistol at rapid intervals.
-Then a roaring, surging mob rolled over
-him&mdash;and there was the schooner luffing to under
-full sail, her head sheets thrashing and the canvas
-thundering in the stiff breeze.</p>
-
-<p>They had taken her. We were overpowered, all
-right. The men forward stood it out but a moment
-longer, and surrendered.</p>
-
-<p>When I could see again I noticed the giant form
-of Yellow Dog standing near the wheel, and two of
-his men at the wheel spokes. He sang out orders
-in his musical bass voice, and the sheets were quickly
-trimmed in. The schooner now headed well up with
-the wind abeam, and pointed away across the Pacific,
-far to the northward of Hawaii. Yellow Dog
-had taken her easily.</p>
-
-<p>I was hauled below, and tossed into the forward
-cabin. Here I found Slade lashed fast, like myself.
-He was hurt by a bullet that had torn his thigh,
-and was bleeding. Upon a transom lay Gantline,
-trussed from head to foot in line, and the old skipper
-was swearing fiercely at the ill fortune that had
-overtaken his ship.</p>
-
-<p>I noticed a few Chinks standing near the door of
-the after cabin, and they looked at us casually, seeming
-to regard us not at all. Then I heard the soft
-voice of Miss Aline pleading with Yellow Dog. But
-of course she might have pleaded with the sea with
-as much effect. Then the sounds died away, and we
-lay there, waiting for daylight and what might
-follow.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>Daylight came, and the schooner still held her
-way under all sail except the jib topsail that I had
-hauled down before the fracas. She now lay at a
-sharp angle, and felt the trade wind upon her starboard
-beam.</p>
-
-<p>Yellow Dog came into the forward cabin. He
-stopped a moment near me, then kicked me savagely,
-muttering strange sounds in his own language. I
-told him fluently in good seaman's English just what
-I thought of him, and if he did not understand me
-he was something dense, for I've had every kind of
-human under the sun on my ship's deck, and I have
-so far failed to notice any who could not understand
-me when I let off a few pieces of literature or
-oratory.</p>
-
-<p>Yellow Dog seemed rather pleased than otherwise,
-for he called his man, the walrus-mustached
-one, and grinned while they held a confab. I took
-it that something choice would be handed me within
-a very short time.</p>
-
-<p>When I had a chance to ask the skipper, he told
-us we were within forty miles of Pearl Harbor.
-From the way we nosed into the breeze, the
-schooner was now heading northwest across the
-ocean, giving the harbor a wide berth.</p>
-
-<p>"What'll they do?" I asked him.</p>
-
-<p>"Sink her, with us aboard&mdash;take the ten thousand
-dollars in the safe, and make a get-away with
-it. They'll turn up ashore in some deserted place,
-and that'll be about all. Then they'll divide the
-swag, separate, and Yellow Dog will go his way&mdash;probably
-back to China. It's not much money when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
-you think of it for a white man, but it's a whole
-heap for a Chink."</p>
-
-<p>After the day had well advanced we heard noises
-on deck. The foresail was lowered, or, rather, let
-go by the run, the noise of tearing gear sounding
-plainly. Topsails, staysails, and everything forward
-except the jib were cut away. Then the spanker
-was lowered, and left threshing about, half up, with
-the sheet hauled amidships. The jib was hauled
-to the mast, and the schooner lay hove to in the
-trade swell, riding easily upon the sea, and remaining
-very steady.</p>
-
-<p>We heard them getting out the boats, and there
-was much noise from aft where the safe was fast
-to the deck in the captain's cabin. Finally a terrific
-explosion took place there, and after that the noises
-died away.</p>
-
-<p>"Blew it," said Slade.</p>
-
-<p>A smell of smoke now began to be apparently in
-the confined air of the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>"Good Lord! Are they going to fire us?" asked
-the mate.</p>
-
-<p>"Safest way, I suppose. Knock a hole in her
-bottom first, set her on fire, and then get out," I
-said.</p>
-
-<p>"But the girl?" asked Slade.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, Yellow Dog will take care of her&mdash;probably
-take her along with him in the boats."</p>
-
-<p>"Not if I know it. Man, do you know what that
-means?" he panted, straining at his wrist lashings.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, it's a mighty bad outlook, but if you can
-stop it, sing out; I'll help," I said.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>The smoke grew more dense in the confined
-space. The noise of hoisting gear died away, and
-the shouts of men from a distance told that they
-already had the small boats over, and were alongside.</p>
-
-<p>Slade strained away at his lines, and I did, also,
-but we were fast. Gantline muttered on the transom,
-and began to choke with the smoke. Suddenly
-a form burst into the room. It was Oleson, the
-carpenter. He slashed at our lashings with a heavy
-knife, and in a moment we were free.</p>
-
-<p>We dragged ourselves out on deck, crawling to
-keep below the rail, so that we could not be seen
-from the small boats. Two forms lay right in front
-of a door&mdash;two of our men who had been killed.
-Not a sign of a wounded Chink, or dead one, either.
-They had taken them along if there were any.</p>
-
-<p>"I cut loose," said Oleson; "rubbed the lashings
-on a broken bottle they left on deck near me.
-They've knocked a few holes in her, and it's up to
-us to stop them up before the schooner sinks. She's
-on fire forward&mdash;whole barrel of oil poured over
-her decks and lit up before&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Looks like they have her either way, then," said
-Gantline. "But we'll try the fire first, and take a
-chance at her settling under us."</p>
-
-<p>I peeped over the rail and saw the boats&mdash;three
-of them&mdash;about a mile distant. Then Slade and I
-ran below aft. The two passengers had apparently
-gone with them, and the cabin was empty. Gantline,
-with Oleson and six men left alive aboard,
-fought the fire, and we joined them.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>Half an hour's work and we had the fire out, but
-it had played the mischief with the running gear,
-having burned up plenty of line that lay on the
-deck. Oleson and Slade went below forward, while
-Gantline and I went after to find where they had
-knocked holes in her bottom.</p>
-
-<p>The sound of rushing water told us the position
-of the leak almost before we reached the lower
-deck. They had not done much of a job, having cut
-squarely into her just below the water line, trusting
-to the fire to finish their work for them.</p>
-
-<p>Calling all hands, we jammed a mattress into the
-hole, and then passed a tarpaulin down on the outside.
-Oleson spiked planks over the wad, and we
-had a fair stopper on the place. Then we set to
-work to get the canvas on her.</p>
-
-<p>Yellow Dog, finding that the schooner was not
-burning quickly, put back in his boat to see what
-the trouble was. We were then at the gear, and he
-soon saw us. His men sent the boat along with a
-will, and they drew close aboard in a few minutes.</p>
-
-<p>We were now without arms, and he seemed to be
-satisfied that he would get us without trouble. It
-was blowing fresh, and the schooner was drifting
-bodily to leeward.</p>
-
-<p>We crammed the oil-soaked stuff from her decks
-into the donkey boiler, and as the fire was already
-burning, and steam was almost up, we waited, while
-some of us hoisted the headsails and swung her
-head off before the wind. The mizzen was swayed
-up, and in a few minutes the schooner was under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
-good headway, sliding along at four or five knots,
-and keeping the boat at a distance.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, then, my hearty, we'll soon fix you," said
-Gantline.</p>
-
-<p>Between moments of desperate work we had a
-chance to see that the other boats were also coming
-back after us. At the present rate we were
-holding our own, and Yellow Dog stood no chance
-to catch us, but he kept on, and managed to get
-within a couple of hundred yards.</p>
-
-<p>From here he opened fire upon us with the heavy
-six-shooters, and we heard the spat of the lead in
-the canvas, but for ourselves we kept below the rail,
-and the power of a revolver was not enough to
-bother us exceedingly.</p>
-
-<p>Soon Oleson announced that we could put the
-halyards to the winches, and we sent the foresail
-and mainsail up in no time. Then we set the
-spanker and had all the lower canvas on her.</p>
-
-<p>The schooner lay well over under the pressure,
-and we sent her along a good ten knots, while we
-cleared up the gear and made things shipshape. The
-boats were soon black specks in the sunshine.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, then, let's get to work on that yellow boy
-right," said the old man.</p>
-
-<p>"No, don't let him get too far away from us,"
-said Slade. "The two ladies are in that boat with
-the big Chink, and we better attend to it first."</p>
-
-<p>We hauled our wind and began reaching back,
-the boat with Yellow Dog being kept right under the
-jibboom end.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>"I reckon I'll take the wheel and you go forward,
-Mr. Garnett," said Gantline.</p>
-
-<p>"Will you run him down?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Without any mistake at all&mdash;if you'll give me
-the course right when he gets in close," said the
-captain.</p>
-
-<p>"But the ladies, the passengers?" said Slade.</p>
-
-<p>"We'll do the best we can for them&mdash;just as well
-to get killed that way as to get away with those
-fellows, isn't it?"</p>
-
-<p>The men took to the idea at once, and we grouped
-close under the shelter of the windlass, watching
-the schooner run. She was going a full ten, and
-rising and falling with a rhythmic motion, her side,
-where the patch was, being almost clear of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Yellow Dog saw us, and knew what we intended
-to do. He swung his boat around and pulled dead
-into the wind's eye, knowing that if we missed
-him we would not get a chance to strike again until
-we beat well up to windward of him. He would
-make it warm on deck as we came close, and Gantline
-took the precaution to place a few boards
-against the binnacle, so that he could crouch behind
-them when the firing began. I was to wave my
-hand which way he should steer, and he was to keep
-me in sight readily.</p>
-
-<p>We drew rapidly up to the boat. Yellow Dog
-stood up in the stern, and held a long, black-barreled
-revolver in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>We crouched lower, and the schooner bore down
-upon the boat. I waved my hand to starboard, and
-Gantline gave her a few spokes. Yellow Dog<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
-backed water, and the boat would have gone clear
-of the cutwater, but at that instant a heavier puff
-of wind heeled the schooner over, and she luffed to
-a trifle, her cutwater rising upon a swell.</p>
-
-<p>Then, with the downward plunge, she shored
-through the small boat, striking it fairly amidships.</p>
-
-<p>I was so taken up with the affair that I poked
-my head too far over the rail, and a bullet ripped
-my cheek open, knocking me head over heels with
-the shock.</p>
-
-<p>I scrambled to my feet, furious with the pain and
-excitement. The fragments of the small boat drifted
-alongside, the after part going to leeward, and dragging
-along the channels. I saw Slade spring upon
-the rail for an instant, and then plunge overboard.</p>
-
-<p>Holding my bleeding face with one hand, I ran
-to the forechannels, and saw Yellow Dog grasp the
-chains as they washed past. He had a mighty grip,
-and that hand hold of his was a wonder. He drew
-himself into the chains, and, without waiting, clambered
-up and over the rail, springing to the deck
-right in front of me as I backed away.</p>
-
-<p>Oleson saw him coming, and so did a seaman
-named Wales. The three of us closed on him, and
-dragged him down, and we rolled in the lee scuppers,
-a fighting, snarling pile of humanity, while Gantline
-let the wheel go, and ran to help us.</p>
-
-<p>Yellow Dog tossed the three of us off with the
-ease of a man throwing aside children, and would
-have taken charge in another moment, but Gantline,
-running up behind him with a handspike, swung the
-bar down with full force upon that little skullcap,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
-and the giant Chink stretched out harmless. We
-had him trussed before the schooner had stopped
-her headway into the breeze.</p>
-
-<p>Then we ran to the side, and looked for Slade.
-He was swimming easily about a hundred yards
-astern, holding the form of Miss Aline with one
-hand, and keeping her head clear of the water. All
-about were the forms of swimming Chinamen.</p>
-
-<p>Quickly backing the headsails, we sent the
-schooner astern, drifting down upon the mate. I
-made a line fast to a life buoy, and flung it far out.
-After what seemed a long time, we finally had the
-mate fast to it, and were hauling him in. Soon he
-was taken aboard, and Miss MacDonald was carried
-below. Then we went to work trying to pick
-up the Chinks.</p>
-
-<p>Many of these refused to come aboard, preferring
-to die in the sea. Some we caught and dragged up
-forcibly. We caught most of them, and then hauled
-our wind for the two boats that were now almost
-out of sight.</p>
-
-<p>Within a couple of hours we had the first alongside,
-and she surrendered. In it was Miss Aline's
-aunt, and she was passed below insensible. The
-other boat took longer to get, but we finally got her
-alongside, and the men out of her. Forty-seven
-Chinks stood the muster. We had lost ten of them
-and two of our men in the fracas. Miss MacDonald
-came out of her faint, and from her room,
-where she had locked herself. She fell into the
-arms of her niece.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, the brave men, those romantic sailors, those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
-heroes!" she cried, in an ecstasy of joy, and she
-gave me a look worth millions.</p>
-
-<p>"Hush!" said Miss Aline. "Perhaps if those
-heroes had been a little more gentle there would
-have been no trouble&mdash;but I am glad we are saved.
-Mr. Slade risked his life for me."</p>
-
-<p>The Kanaka cook crawled from the lower hold,
-where he had hidden at the first outcry, and the
-stewardess came from the lazaret. We came into
-Honolulu that evening with the police flag flying,
-and turned the big Chink over to the authorities for
-treatment. His lieutenant of the walrus mustaches
-was missing.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Aline came on deck to look around. She
-saw Slade, and went to him. What she said to him
-was none of my business, but Slade was a good
-man and a good mate. Afterward she came to the
-mizzen where I stood like a bandaged soldier.</p>
-
-<p>"I suppose you'll not make the rest of the voyage
-with us?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Why not?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh&mdash;er&mdash;I don't know; maybe you don't care so
-much for the heathen. Brotherly love and kindness&mdash;fine
-theory, all right, but we're not just ready to
-put it in practice&mdash;willing to wait, you know, until
-it comes our way&mdash;perhaps a bit afraid&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"You are very much mistaken, sir," she broke in.
-"You will find out your error, too, I think, before
-we get through. I am firmly convinced that your
-own actions with that poor heathen are as much at
-fault as his, and that if you had not treated him
-so roughly he would never have done what he did."</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>I grinned. I couldn't help it. Slade was winking
-at me from the door of the forward house. Oh,
-well, here was a good woman gone wrong in her
-theories, and I would not be insolent enough to disagree
-with her. I let it go at that. I was willing
-to wait until she had finished the voyage&mdash;for
-Slade's sake. He was a sly dog, that Slade.</p>
-
-<p>We found about two thousand dollars of the
-money taken among the men captured. The rest
-was a total loss, and Gantline bemoaned his fate, as
-it fell upon him to a certain extent.</p>
-
-<p>We cleared, leaving the big Chinaman to stand
-trial with two others as accessories, and the police
-absolved me absolutely from all blame in the matter.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PART II</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>"No loafing around the ship," I called to the little yellow chap who
-was sitting near the spring line which held the schooner <i>Tanner</i> to
-the wharf at Honolulu. The man paid not the slightest attention to me.</p>
-
-<p>"Hey, there, sonny! Move out! Beat it; make a getaway, you savvy?" I
-bawled in a louder tone.</p>
-
-<p>Then he arose, and instead of a young fellow I was amazed to find him
-at least ten years older than myself&mdash;and I had been a ship's officer
-some years. He walked slowly to the vessel's side, and gazed up at me
-where I stood near the break of the poop, holding to a backstay.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>She was a modern, short-poop schooner. The sallow little man was not
-a Chinaman, nor of Kanaka breed, but a full-blooded Japanese. He was
-stout, strong, yellow of skin, and his black hair was too long for his
-country's custom, sticking out from under the rim of a brown derby that
-had seen its best days. His eyes were slitlike, keen little eyes, but
-there was nothing repulsive in them. They attracted me. For one thing,
-he had an open frankness, an honest and fearless look, and his face was
-sad.</p>
-
-<p>"What you doin' on the dock, Togi?" I asked, eying him humorously.</p>
-
-<p>"If your august presence will listen, I'll tell you," he answered
-easily.</p>
-
-<p>"Sure, Michael, let her go, and don't mind my gigantic&mdash;er&mdash;august
-self," I sniggered.</p>
-
-<p>"In the first place," he said, "I'm not sonny, being, if your honorable
-temper allows, a man of forty. If fine schooner says so, I go with
-you as far as Tokyo. There I am the humble cousin of the Honorable
-Baron Komuri, son of a Samurai, under the former emperor. I should
-like indeed to sail with you, and will&mdash;&mdash;" Here he stopped a moment,
-hesitating.</p>
-
-<p>"Go on, king, old man; don't let anything stop you from telling your
-yarn. Sing it out, and I'll listen if it breaks a bone."</p>
-
-<p>"No, no; not king, old man; just Mister Komuri&mdash;if your presence allows
-me to correct. Your humble servant is but a plain man. Better be plain
-man than dead lion, as your excellent books say. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span> accept plain man,
-and go that way if so ship says."</p>
-
-<p>"We are not going to Tokyo, but if you see the skipper he'll take you
-clear to Manila for a hundred or two yen. You savvy him yen. Must pay,
-you know."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, that is of what I wish to tell your honorable self. Allow me to
-make myself so humble to tell I have not the yen you ask. I have not
-anything&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing doing, kiddo; on your way," I said remorselessly.</p>
-
-<p>"But I sit on dock end waiting&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Waiting for what?"</p>
-
-<p>"Waiting for two hundred yen to fly up and knock me dead. I wait and no
-yen fly up to strike me on the cranium. Now I go with fine ship, and
-work like plain man."</p>
-
-<p>"You have a sense of humor, king," said I, "and sink me if I don't try
-to get you a job wrastling the dishes aft. How about it? Can you sling
-the pots&mdash;are you a number-one pot-wrastler?"</p>
-
-<p>"I never wrastle; a little jujutsu sometimes when necessary for take
-care, but I work at anything your august self tells. If honorable
-commander tells me to wrastle pots, I try him so. I pretty good with
-sword or short knife&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Not so fast, king; this isn't a man-of-war; no fighting here. All the
-fracasing done here is done by my august self and the other mate, Mr.
-Bill Slade, both, as you say, honorable men, and some hustlers when it
-comes right down to handling cloth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span> in a blow. What I want&mdash;honorable
-ship wants&mdash;is a man to give the eats aft&mdash;savvy? Bring in the hash
-from honorable cook in galley&mdash;see? Set dish on table, wash dish off
-table. You know."</p>
-
-<p>"But I am soldier&mdash;son of Samurai. I do not like dishwork; but if no
-other way, I do mean work to get to Tokyo," he said sadly.</p>
-
-<p>"You're on," I hastened to say. "You're on, king, but in the future you
-will be known as Koko. Savvy?"</p>
-
-<p>"As Mister Komuri," he interrupted, with a look from those slits of
-eyes that called my attention.</p>
-
-<p>"No misters aboard here but my honorable self and mate. Rules of
-honorable ship, you know. Sorry, but august skipper has discipline,
-and you are soldier. You savvy? We'll compromise on Komuri. How's
-that&mdash;just plain Komuri, steward, hash boy, hey?"</p>
-
-<p>"Your august self, yes; to common men, Mister Komuri, yes."</p>
-
-<p>"Get aboard, then," I said. "Go forward to the galley. The cook&mdash;that
-big Kanaka there&mdash;he'll give you the line. In the meantime I'll square
-it with the boss."</p>
-
-<p>Mister Komuri sprang over the rail, and made his way as directed. It
-was easy to see that he had been in ships before, as what Japanese
-hasn't, since they are a race of seamen.</p>
-
-<p>Our new member took hold without further orders, and I saw him not
-again until the land was well astern, and we were on our way to Guam,
-with <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>forty-seven chink coolies below, and two lady passengers aft.</p>
-
-<p>This was the second part of our run, the first being from Frisco, where
-we had shipped the coolies under the leadership of their gigantic
-foreman, who had tried to take the ship and landed in jail for his
-pains. The few thousand dollars we now carried in the safe aft was not
-worthy of anxiety in regard to protection. Our voyage promised to be
-uneventful.</p>
-
-<p>Among our crew were two new hands we had shipped at Honolulu to
-help run the ship, also to take care of the Chinese we carried. Our
-experience with the coolies had taught us that being short-handed was
-not either good or safe. Our arms were now ready, being, as they were,
-riot guns full of buckshot, and reliable six-shooters of heavy caliber.
-This going out with nearly half a hundred Chinks with but three men in
-a watch was all right if the Chinks were good, but we had found they
-were not to be trusted. With the leader of the uprising in jail for
-murder, and his lieutenant killed, we hoped for an easy life.</p>
-
-<p>We now had four men in watch, with the engineer for the ever-ready
-steam winch bunking in his engine house with banked fires and enough
-steam always ready to handle line. We were really carrying a full crew
-for a schooner, and the expense of the engine was extra, there being
-now enough men to handle her canvas easily without the aid of the
-winches.</p>
-
-<p>One of the new men was a strange-looking fellow, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>who was neither dago
-nor Dutchman. Just what he was I don't know, except that he was crafty,
-watchful, and dodged all work possible. He had a way of looking at you
-with eyes that seemed to fathom your inmost thoughts, an affected way
-of appearing to understand, and his peculiar silences gave support to
-the look. It deceived the old man.</p>
-
-<p>It deceived both Slade and myself at first, but afterward we grew more
-discerning, peered deeper into his meaning, and saw&mdash;nothing. He was
-just a petty, crafty sea lawyer who was looking for trouble to carry
-back to the coast, where they love to get masters and mates mixed up in
-courts for some violation of the shipping articles.</p>
-
-<p>This fellow's name was Dodd&mdash;Alfred Dodd&mdash;and he was called Alf by his
-shipmates. Komuri seemed to sense danger the moment he jostled the
-seaman in the gangway the first day out. I heard the row from the deck,
-and it was short.</p>
-
-<p>"Hey, Jack," yelled Dodd to the regular steward we had signed on in
-Frisco, "Jack, you seem to belong to the nobility now&mdash;can't hand a man
-a pot of coffee during the mid-watch no more, hey? Let the king do it."</p>
-
-<p>"Not king; just plain Mister Komuri," purred our little helper, as he
-grinned.</p>
-
-<p>"What's the matter?" asked Dodd. "Don't four-flush at your title, hey?"</p>
-
-<p>"Aw, give us rest," said Jack, who was good-natured and liked the
-little yellow man, for Komuri<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span> did all his work now, and there was no
-comeback.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know if honorable sailor means wrong by four-flush," said
-Komuri quietly, "but if he does the finger of Fate will point at him."</p>
-
-<p>"Wow! Fate will point at me! What der you think o' that?" sneered Dodd.
-"Let's hope you ain't Fate, sonny, or I might p'int my own fair hand at
-you in return."</p>
-
-<p>"If honorable seaman will step out to the fore end of ship I'll show
-him just what a son of Samurai means. It will take short time."</p>
-
-<p>"Sure, king; I'll go you that explanation, all right. Come right along
-while the watch are getting their whack. No one will notice us."</p>
-
-<p>Komuri jumped like a tiger without warning. He sprang upon the fellow,
-and had a strangle hold of his wrist, and twisted over his neck until
-I thought he was getting killed. I had to stop laughing to run up and
-stop the fracas. Dodd was sweating with pain, and cursing furiously,
-absolutely helpless. It was so quickly done that I wondered at it. Of
-course, a strong man might grab the small fellow and jerk him out of
-his shoes, but that was not Dodd.</p>
-
-<p>"Drop it!" I commanded, and the second steward let go at once, smiling.
-"Now, get below, and quit this fooling," said I, and the sailor waited
-for no further orders. "You can show me some of your tricks, you
-Japanese juggler, when we have more time," I said to the little man.
-"You interest me considerable.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span> Get to the hash, and don't waste time
-with a fool like that."</p>
-
-<p>Of course, it might be expected that a man of Komuri's parts would be
-gallant, for it seems always the case when a man is able and unafraid
-that he is sure to love with more passion than discernment. Komuri was
-not an exception.</p>
-
-<p>Not being at the first table with the passengers, I had small
-opportunity to see how he treated Miss MacDonald, but from what Slade
-told me I was concerned. The small chap was always in attendance upon
-the ladies when they were on deck. He was politeness itself, and he
-busied himself with all kinds of little efforts to make them more
-comfortable than they were.</p>
-
-<p>"If honorable ladies will allow, I fix the rugs in chairs," he would
-say, and although the weather was tropical, a rug made a softer seat
-when they took the air on deck, which they did nearly all daytime while
-we ran our westing down beneath the tropic of Cancer.</p>
-
-<p>With a good full month or six weeks before us, and a fair wind on the
-starboard quarter all the time, we had a stretch of water to cross
-that put one in mind of steamers. The ship ran steadily day and night
-at about from eight to ten knots an hour. We seldom touched a sheet
-or halyard except to set it up, and the gentle heeling with the trade
-swell made the voyage seem like a yachting trip.</p>
-
-<p>Komuri had much time to devote to the comfort of the ladies, and the
-elder one seemed to like him very much indeed. He told them stories of
-the warlike Samurai,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span> and honor and self-respect stood out plainly in
-them all. It was not a bad thing, except that he always seemed to be
-something of a hero, and no steward either second or first should be
-such a thing where there are seamen around waiting for the job.</p>
-
-<p>"I have always believed that you heathen were very able people," said
-Miss Aline, "and if you were treated properly you would be just as
-gentle and tractable as the European races."</p>
-
-<p>"Heathen," said Komuri calmly, "are those who do not accept your own
-honorable views. Who knows which is right? It is a word we never use in
-Japan."</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him a moment, and said: "You are quite incorrigible. I
-hope you are not really bad, after all."</p>
-
-<p>"Honorable lady must see by how I do&mdash;not how I talk; she judge humble
-self most true. Her heart right," said the Japanese, which I thought
-was going some for a second steward, especially when I remembered how
-Slade stood, or wished to stand, in a certain quarter. I thought it
-best to let the humble steward see he was going far enough.</p>
-
-<p>"Say, king, old man," I interrupted, "Jack wants you to get busy with
-the potatoes for dinner. He's waiting for the peelings."</p>
-
-<p>Komuri nodded to me respectfully.</p>
-
-<p>"At once, august mate, I go," he said, and went.</p>
-
-<p>"Quite a superior steward, that Japanese boy," said the elder lady to
-me.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, he's a wonder, all right," I assented; "but his place<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span> is in the
-galley, and not on the quarter-deck&mdash;if I may be allowed to speak of
-it."</p>
-
-<p>"And I do hope you will treat him kindly&mdash;not as you did the Chinese
-man who went bad," said Miss Aline.</p>
-
-<p>"No fear of it&mdash;not the king. He wouldn't stand roughing&mdash;and don't
-call for it. You see, while he goes with the Chinks altogether too much
-for their own good, and talks altogether too much for his own, he is
-not a Chinaman. Oh, no; he is far removed from the coolie Chinks, as
-far as the skipper himself. He's just a plain little fighting man, that
-a good-sized mate like myself could bite in two; but I know him&mdash;just
-what he'd do."</p>
-
-<p>"Why, what?" asked Miss Aline.</p>
-
-<p>"I'd hate to tell you," I grinned.</p>
-
-<p>"You may be a good seaman, but you're somewhat stupid," said Miss
-Aline, and I laughed outright at her humor.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you think of this fine weather?" asked her aunt to change the
-conversation.</p>
-
-<p>"It's good as it goes, but it's the hurricane season, and we can't
-count on it lasting all the way, you know," I said. "Maybe we'll hook
-right into a typhoon before&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, you always want something rough, something bad," put in Miss
-Aline. "I never saw such a man. Why do you always look for trouble?
-Don't you find it often enough without hunting it always?"</p>
-
-<p>"Sure as eggs," I said; "but I'm only telling you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span> what I believe, what
-the signs show me. I'm not trying to frighten you at all."</p>
-
-<p>"I think you are perfectly horrid," said the young woman.</p>
-
-<p>"I hope I'm wrong, at least," I answered. But as I scanned the perfect
-sky I felt that indeed I was trespassing upon the feelings of the
-passengers too much, in spite of the fact that I had a mercury glass to
-observe in Slade's room.</p>
-
-<p>The coolies came on deck in the daytime now, and sat in rows along the
-waterways, eating their rice and chewing some sort of stuff to fill in
-the interval between meals. They chattered a lot, and appeared not to
-feel abashed at their former behavior.</p>
-
-<p>At these times the old man would come on deck&mdash;it being about the time
-he'd take the noon sight&mdash;and gaze down at them dismally. He hated
-Chinks, and their presence in his ship was more than he could get used
-to.</p>
-
-<p>"What good are Chinks, anyway?" he would say.</p>
-
-<p>"Somebody's got to do the work in hot countries, and you can't always
-get the blacks. They are just like mules, carabao buffalo, or jacks.
-They'll work on ten cents a day and get fat; they don't know any
-better," I'd tell him.</p>
-
-<p>But he would shake his old, shaggy head and mutter:</p>
-
-<p>"What good, what good, anyway?"</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, they did no harm aboard besides befouling the air
-of the alleyways with their eternal opium smoking. They had nothing at
-all to do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span> with the men forward, and the only person who appeared to
-be able to hold intercourse with them was Komuri. He understood their
-lingo or singsong way of telling it, and he would talk to them for
-hours during the evening after the supper things were washed up, and
-Jack, the steward, had turned in.</p>
-
-<p>I was a bit suspicious of this, for I don't like men of the after
-guard to be intimate with either the crew or the passengers. It starts
-something before long, and the voyage across the Pacific is a long one
-if nothing else. Slade commented upon the Japanese often, and he rather
-disliked our little second steward for his untiring efforts in behalf
-of the ladies. Slade was a jealous man, although he was a seaman from
-clew to earing, and his attentions to Miss Aline were more and more
-marked as the schooner sped on her course.</p>
-
-<p>"Why shouldn't I get married?" he used to say to me when we had a
-chance to be together, which was seldom enough. "Why shouldn't I get a
-wife, and take up the simple life of the farmer? I've been through all
-the hardness of seagoing, and I'm tired of it. What is a man, after
-all, if he sticks to it? He gets to be a skipper of some blamed hooker
-that'll make him a couple of thousand a year when he is too old to
-enjoy spending it. Then he loses her, maybe, and then where is he? A
-fit subject, for the sailors' home. No, I'm going to marry that woman
-and get a berth ashore. You watch me."</p>
-
-<p>Of course, I encouraged him all I thought necessary.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span> I even grinned
-at times when I thought of the picture he would make as a husband of a
-woman like Miss Aline MacDonald&mdash;after he had been on the beach for a
-year or two.</p>
-
-<p>And so we ran our westing down, and drew near the one hundred and
-sixtieth meridian to the northward of the Marshall Islands. Here the
-trade failed us for a wonder, and began to get fitful and squally. At
-times it would come with a rush, and then die away altogether, the
-squalls being accompanied by rain. A mighty swell began to heave in
-from the southeast diagonally across the trade swell, and it lumped up
-some, heaving the schooner over and rolling her down to her bearings
-when the wind failed to hold her.</p>
-
-<p>The glass fell, and the air became sultry, the sun glowing like a ball
-of red copper in the hazy atmosphere. The squall clouds grew heavier,
-and when the sun shone between them it sent long rays, fan-shaped,
-through the mist.</p>
-
-<p>The old man came on deck, and viewed the sea with a critical eye. It
-was nearly eight bells, and Slade was on watch. I came out and watched
-them take the sun for meridian altitude&mdash;both of them sometimes did
-this together&mdash;and when the bells struck off, Slade came down from the
-poop, and joined me on the main deck.</p>
-
-<p>"What'd you make of the weather, old man?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Looks dirty to me; glass falling and the hot squalls coming from that
-quarter&mdash;whew! Look at it!"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>As I spoke a huge roller swept under the schooner, lifting her skyward,
-and then dropping her slowly down the side. It was an enormous sea&mdash;a
-hill of water full forty feet high&mdash;and it rolled like a living
-mountain, a mighty mass that made nothing of the trade swell, and told
-of some tremendous power behind it.</p>
-
-<p>The sea ran swiftly, with a quick, live feeling. As sure as death there
-was awful wind somewhere in that peaceful ocean, driving with immense
-force and resistless power.</p>
-
-<p>Slade looked askance at the topsails. As he gazed the old man sang out
-from aft:</p>
-
-<p>"Clew up the topsails and roll them up snug. Put extra gaskets on them!"</p>
-
-<p>Then came the main and mizzen along with the outer jibs, and by the
-time the watch had their dinner we were close reefing the mizzen and
-taking the bonnet out of the foresail.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Aline was on deck, as the sudden motion was so extraordinary that
-to remain below meant to be seasick. Her aunt came up from a hasty
-meal, and clung to the poop rail and watched us work.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, those gallant men!" she murmured to her niece. "See how they climb
-like monkeys upon that awful sail. Romantic heroes! Yes, Aline, they
-are wonderful, and the way that officer talks to them is a revelation.
-Just hear him."</p>
-
-<p>I was at that moment holding forth to a couple of squareheads upon
-the evident virtues of passing reef points properly, and I may have
-slipped my etiquette<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span> a bit, for my language was such that I was almost
-persuaded to follow it with action. But I had heard enough. I stopped.
-The men went on lazily, growling at the work.</p>
-
-<p>"Reefing a ship in a dead calm," grumbled one, "ten minutes for the
-eats, and then we'll loose these here p'ints out ag'in, and take the
-sail to the winch."</p>
-
-<p>I was too angry to hear more. Here was an old lady putting me queer
-with men who ought to know better than talk when they were expected to
-hurry. At least they should not criticize their officers.</p>
-
-<p>"Get along, you Scandaluvian sons of Haman! Get those points in lively,
-or the squall'll break before you know it&mdash;an' I'll be the rain,
-thunder, and lightning!" I roared.</p>
-
-<p>I refused to look at the two passengers, and went to the forward end
-of the poop, and looked down at the Chinks, who were seated in the
-waterways eating their rice and long-lick&mdash;molasses. Just what to do
-with these fellows seemed to me a problem. We could hardly lock them in
-now, and if trouble came along quickly they would be in it, right in
-the middle.</p>
-
-<p>The old man came from below, and gazed solemnly across the misty sea,
-and I went to him.</p>
-
-<p>"How about it?" he asked. "Hadn't we better house them Chinks now,
-before it's too late? They'll die of suffocation in those alleyways
-with the ports shut fast&mdash;I suppose you shut the ports in, didn't you?"
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>"Sure. Everything is snugged in below. Komuri saw to it. He knows how
-to talk to the Mongolians&mdash;tell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span> them they must keep the ports shut.
-But I don't like leaving them on deck, even if it is hot enough to
-roast potatoes on the deck planks. How's the glass, sir?"</p>
-
-<p>"Bottom dropped out of it somehow; mercury concave and 'way down.
-There's some unusual disturbance knocking about this sea. There's
-trouble ahead&mdash;typhoon season, you know. Nothing but wind moves that
-awful swell. Look at that!"</p>
-
-<p>A hill of water rolled majestically onward, catching us under the
-counter, and sending us along its great, smooth crest, then dropping us
-again as we had hardly steering way under the short canvas.</p>
-
-<p>"I'd like to know which way it's coming&mdash;lay our course to drift out
-of it, or run, but who knows&mdash;who knows before it strikes? I wish you
-would see to the gear forward. I don't want things to get loose. And
-take charge. No, sir; don't let anything out of the way happen while
-you're on deck."</p>
-
-<p>I saw the old man was getting nervous. The low pressure and the
-sultriness were telling on him. He knew what was coming well enough,
-and fretted under it. It was hard waiting, even for an old seaman like
-himself. Slade came on deck, and puffed carelessly at his pipe, gazing
-about, and then going aft to chat with the ladies. He was always ready
-to cheer them up. Nothing would happen&mdash;positively nothing. There
-was no use of their getting nervous at the heavy swell. It had often
-happened before&mdash;a heavy swell and no wind, 'way out here in the middle
-of the Pacific. No telling where the storm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span> might be, but, of course it
-wouldn't be near us&mdash;oh, no.</p>
-
-<p>Oleson came aft to me.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall I lock in the Chinks?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," I answered. "Lock 'em up, put a padlock on both doors, and see
-that they don't get loose again until this is over."</p>
-
-<p>Oleson went to Komuri. The Jap listened to him, and then repeated the
-order, passing the word like a seaman should, without comment. The
-Chinks followed him into their quarters in the alleyways, and Oleson
-locked the doors on the outside, putting extra padlocks on them. The
-alleyways were upon the main deck, and shut off from the lazaret by a
-bulkhead.</p>
-
-<p>"If honorable mate will let me open those ports inside, Chinese men
-will be able to breathe better&mdash;air very hot in there," said Komuri.</p>
-
-<p>"All right, king; go ahead. And if she lists over and drowns them like
-rats in a trap you'll be the man to loose them&mdash;see?" I warned him.</p>
-
-<p>"I'll take care them, me," said Komuri. "If honorable ship, she turns
-over, me, Komuri, will see to ports. Very hot inside there."</p>
-
-<p>I turned away and watched the horizon. The haze was thickening, and the
-squalls were beginning to come with more force than before. A sudden
-spurt of wind sang hoarsely in the rigging, and a drift of spray flew
-upward.</p>
-
-<p>The men were still at work making things snug when I heard a murmuring,
-a moaning, vast, filling the air, then dying away again. It was all
-about us,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span> seemingly upon all sides. Then again I heard a harplike note
-of great volume. The horizon disappeared in the southeast, and the
-blue-steel bank of vapor shut off the sunlight. It grew dark and gloomy.</p>
-
-<p>"She's coming along all right in a few minutes," said Slade, who came
-near to me and passed on to his room. He came on deck in a couple of
-minutes, with an oilskin coat buttoned fast about him, and he sweltered
-in its heat. I still stood at the weather rigging.</p>
-
-<p>"Go get your rain clothes on," he said, coming to relieve me.</p>
-
-<p>"Nix! Let her go as it is&mdash;better wet with salt water than sweat," I
-replied.</p>
-
-<p>The skipper came forward. He suggested that the two passengers go
-below, and Jack, the steward, with Komuri to assist him, managed to get
-them below without protest, although it was something like ninety-six
-or seven in that saloon.</p>
-
-<p>A white streak spread upon the sea. The squall struck, snoring away
-with a vigor that told of more coming. The spumedrift flew over us.
-Then another, and another furious blast of wind bore down upon the
-schooner, and she lay slowly over until her rail was submerged.</p>
-
-<p>In five minutes the hurricane was roaring over us, and the <i>Tanner</i> lay
-upon her beam ends while we struggled with the mizzen, and held the
-wheel hard up to throw her off, the weight of the wind holding her down
-with a giant hand.</p>
-
-<p>Yelling and struggling, all hands now tried to get<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span> that mizzen in. It
-was a waste of time. I saw the skipper clinging to the boom and using
-his knife upon the canvas, and did likewise. With a thundering roar the
-sail split, torn to ribbons. We could not make ourselves heard in the
-chaos of sound, but waved frantically our orders and helped as only
-good seamen can.</p>
-
-<p>But the <i>Tanner</i> refused to go off. She lay flat out with her
-cross-trees in the lift of the sea, and she hung there. The
-forestaysail burst with a crack that we heard aft, and vanished as if
-it had been snow in a jet of steam. The bonneted foresail held with the
-wind roaring over the top of it, spilling away, but still keeping full
-enough to keep from slatting and bursting. It was the heaviest canvas
-and brand new, and all the time squall after squall bore upon the
-straining ship, roaring, screaming with the blast of a gun as the puffs
-came and went.</p>
-
-<p>That wind was like a wall of something solid. To move in it was
-enough to tax the strength. It pressed one against what was to
-leeward&mdash;pressed him, held him and bore upon him like a weight of
-something solid. To let go meant to run the risk of being blown bodily
-away into the sea.</p>
-
-<p>We clung along the weather rail, and hung on with both hands, watching
-the white smother fore and aft, but unable to look to windward for an
-instant against the blast. The outfly and uproar was so tremendous that
-all sounds were lost in it. I found myself near Slade and the old man,
-all three clinging to the rail, and gasping for breath. The skipper's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
-gray head shone bare in the blast, and the white foam flecked it, and
-dripped from his beard, his ruddy cheeks glowing red in contrast. His
-teeth were set, and he was just holding on.</p>
-
-<p>For a long time we three hung there, and did nothing but try to survive
-the fury of that hurricane. The forward part of the schooner was
-blotted out, and I just remember that to leeward, where I could look,
-the surge boiled and foamed clear up to the hatch coamings.</p>
-
-<p>I thought of the women below, and knew they were safe for the time
-being. Then I remembered the starboard alleyway, and the ports that
-Komuri had left open to give the Chinks air. The alleyway was now
-completely submerged; the ports far below the surface of the sea, the
-Chinamen were caught there like rats in a trap.</p>
-
-<p>The narrow space must even now be filling up, and I thought of the poor
-coolies struggling against that door the carpenter had so securely
-locked and fastened upon them. They could never break it open, for upon
-it we had placed our safety against another uprising, and the double,
-two-inch planks bolted crossways would stand more than the weight of
-the crowd that would be able to surge against it. The alleyway could
-fill entirely without any water getting below.</p>
-
-<p>I grabbed Slade by the arm, and pointed at the lower deck.</p>
-
-<p>"The Chinks&mdash;below&mdash;can't get out!" I roared against the hurricane.</p>
-
-<p>Slade grinned a sickly grin and nodded. Then he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span> ducked his head
-against the wind and bellowed back:</p>
-
-<p>"Can't help it&mdash;can't go there&mdash;sure death!"</p>
-
-<p>I fancied I could hear the outcries of the imprisoned men, but the
-deep, bass undertone of the hurricane roared away overhead and swept
-away the impression.</p>
-
-<p>It was sickening to think of it. Fully twenty men were in that
-alleyway, and the four eight-inch ports were letting in four streams of
-sea water, for the Chinamen would not know enough to jam them full of
-clothes or anything they could get hold of, being little better than
-animals in point of intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>If the schooner would only pay off she would right herself and let the
-openings come above the sea level; but she hung there dead, beaten down
-by a blast so terrific that it seemed like a solid wall of something
-heavy tearing upon her and crushing her life out. It took the breath
-away, and I found myself gasping, trying to get air to breathe, sucking
-in the flying drift and spray, and choking, holding one hand over my
-nose and mouth to keep from actually drowning in the smother.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed as if we had already been hove down a full hour, and I was
-tiring. The schooner held doggedly broadside in the trough of the
-sea, which was now appalling in height, and was breaking solidly over
-her high rail and upturned side. We could not last much longer in the
-dangerous position, and I began to believe we were lost. Our hatches
-were closed, and no water could get below unless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span> something gave way,
-but it was certain something would go before long under that strain.</p>
-
-<p>I looked hopelessly at the man at the wheel, who had passed a lashing
-upon his waist, and was straddling the shaft, clinging to the spokes
-with desperation. I wondered if he still held the wheel hard up, but
-knew that in her present knocked-down state it would make little
-difference, for she would not steer without some headsail to swing her
-out and off that mighty sea.</p>
-
-<p>I crawled along the rail, fighting my way hand over hand, passing the
-skipper and gaining the edge of the poop. I yelled to Douglas, who was
-the man straddling the wheel shaft, but he only shook his head and
-ducked from the squalls.</p>
-
-<p>While I bawled for him to tell me what helm she carried, I was aware
-of a figure crawling from the companionway to the after cabin. It
-came creeping up just under me, up the almost perpendicular deck, and
-it looked like a big monkey until it came right into me, and then I
-recognized Komuri, our little steward.</p>
-
-<p>Komuri was yellow, a pasty yellow, and his wrinkled face looked old and
-haggard. He was only partly dressed, and he clawed the rail frantically
-for a hand hold. He looked the worst-scared Jap I had ever seen or
-dreamed of. He climbed close to me.</p>
-
-<p>"Men locked in&mdash;all die&mdash;ports open," he screeched in my ear.</p>
-
-<p>"I know&mdash;can't help it&mdash;door under water&mdash;no tools," I yelled in
-reply, and he howled something that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span> ended in a screech that was
-unintelligible, for over it all sounded that deep, bass roar,
-thundering, booming, vibrating into chaos all sounds.</p>
-
-<p>I watched him, and he climbed past me, making his way forward with
-amazing speed, considering he was crawling along a wall which had been
-the deck. He made the break of the poop, and disappeared, going in the
-direction of the forward house, although how he ever expected to get
-there was beyond reason.</p>
-
-<p>Something made me follow him, and soon Slade and myself were at the
-edge of the poop, and gazing down at the partly submerged door of the
-starboard alleyway. While we looked, Komuri came climbing along the
-rail of the ship, disappearing now and then under the solid water that
-swept her, but, to our amazement, still keeping hold of the pins, and
-gaining slowly toward us.</p>
-
-<p>In one hand he held Oleson's ax, and he was coming toward us, coming to
-do a piece of work we had already given up as impossible.</p>
-
-<p>No word was spoken as Komuri struggled up to where we clung and gasped
-for breath, half drowned in the rush of water.</p>
-
-<p>I passed the end of a line about him after a fashion, and he dropped
-off to starboard down the steep slant, and instantly went under as a
-huge sea fell over the schooner.</p>
-
-<p>We held the line. Then we saw him again, and he was hacking away at the
-door, chopping at the lock and staple while he swung scrambling with
-his feet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span> against the planks. Slade thoughtfully dropped down other
-lines, and made them fast.</p>
-
-<p>I could see little of what was going on. The seas were breaking over
-us now with tremendous volume, and it seemed only a question of a few
-minutes before the schooner must go down, anyhow, for she couldn't lie
-on her beam ends very long without something giving way.</p>
-
-<p>The work of getting at those Chinks appeared to me now a useless labor.
-We would all be where there was no caste, no coolies, in a short time.
-And yet such is the habit of a seaman, he works on against certain
-failure at times, when ordinary folk would accept the verdict and quit.</p>
-
-<p>I held Komuri until my arms were nearly paralyzed, and I was fainting
-with exertion and lack of air. The first thing I knew of what he had
-done was when a Chink came climbing monkey fashion up one of the lines,
-followed by another and another, their yellow faces pasty and drawn,
-and their pigtails streaming after them. They clung along the weather
-side, and lashed themselves fast to whatever they could find. I saw the
-dark figures of a couple fade away in the smother to leeward, and knew
-they had gone to where all Chinks go sooner or later, but the rest came
-up and clung for life there in the strident breath of the typhoon, and
-the booming roar drowned out even their shrieks and yelps.</p>
-
-<p>I tried to haul Komuri up again, but could not. I howled for Slade
-to help me, but he was separated by a row of Chinks, and couldn't
-reach me. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>I hammered the nearest Chinaman over the head in frantic
-desperation to make him haul line and save the little Jap, but the
-fellow only ducked the blows, which were too weak to hurt much.</p>
-
-<p>Komuri, exhausted, could not climb back. He could no longer help
-himself; and he was trusting to me to get him up from the white smother
-beneath that was drowning him. The madness of my weakness came over
-me. I had been a bucko mate with ready hand, and could take them by
-and large as they came from the dock to the forecastle, but here I was
-weakening, holding to a line at the end of which was the bravest little
-man I had even seen, the gamest little fighter&mdash;Komuri, son of Samurai,
-the fighting class of the Japanese.</p>
-
-<p>And Komuri was going to his death because I couldn't help him. On and
-on I struggled with the line, bellowing curses, but I could get little
-or no line over the pin, and I was growing surely weaker and weaker.</p>
-
-<p>Then I stopped, and tried to see if there was any chance to help, any
-chance to save the little hero. I saw Komuri dangling in the foam, his
-face upturned to me, and a smile upon his yellow, wrinkled visage. He
-waved feebly to me, and I knew he was signaling for me to haul him
-up&mdash;and was wondering why I didn't.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, my God, you poor little devil!" I howled. "It's too bad&mdash;too bad!"</p>
-
-<p>A gigantic sea crashed over the schooner, a mountain of water. I passed
-the line about my waist, and snatched a turn to keep from being washed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
-away. That was the last I remembered for some time.</p>
-
-<p>When I regained my senses I was lying on the deck, and Slade was
-dragging me by the arm toward the cabin doors. The roar of the
-hurricane still boomed over us&mdash;the wild rush of the sea&mdash;but it came
-from aft now, and I knew they had at last got her off the wind, and
-were running her either to hell or safety.</p>
-
-<p>Ten minutes later I was struggling up the companionway again to the
-deck, where the old man was now conning her, and watching her run
-seventeen knots an hour before a series of hurricane squalls that
-simply lifted her almost bodily out of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>I saw we had passed the center of the cyclone, for we had the wind
-almost directly opposite from where it was when we lay knocked down. I
-got to the shelter of the mizzen, and from there watched the men at the
-wheel hold her as she ran. Some one had loosed a bit of canvas forward,
-but it had blown away, and the ribbon streamers stretched and cracked
-until they vanished in the blast.</p>
-
-<p>"How'd you do it?" I yelled to Slade, who clung in the lee.</p>
-
-<p>"Squalls let up sudden&mdash;hit the center&mdash;she righted, and then ran off
-when we hit the other side of it!" howled the mate.</p>
-
-<p>"Where's Komuri?" I howled.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't know&mdash;must have gone to leeward. Some Chinks gone, too&mdash;you came
-near going."</p>
-
-<p>That was all I could get from Slade. But I knew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span> all that was
-necessary. Komuri had gone to the port of missing ships. He had died
-as a Samurai should, facing his end fearlessly, fighting to the last
-for others in the hope to save them, the ones he had tried to help by
-giving them air and leaving their ports open when they should have
-been closed. He had known his responsibility, and had done what we had
-failed to do.</p>
-
-<p>There were three Chinamen missing, but our own men were safe. They had
-got under the side of the engine house, where they were protected from
-both the sea and wind. They clung there until the vessel righted, and
-then turned to with a will to save the ship.</p>
-
-<p>We ran the <i>Tanner</i> all that day and the following night, keeping her
-before a mighty sea that almost overran us. She steered well once she
-got off before it, and after we got canvas on her forward she was safe
-enough. It had been a close squeak for all hands, and we breathed
-easier as she ran out of the disturbance and came again upon her
-course. A week later we ran her in behind the reef of Guam, and came to
-anchor off the town of Aga&ntilde;a, where we were to discharge part of our
-cargo and the Chinese.</p>
-
-<p>In behind the barrier we ran her without further incident, and as
-the wind fell we rolled up the canvas and let her drift into fifteen
-fathoms before letting go the hook.</p>
-
-<p>The ladies came on deck for the first time since the typhoon, and gazed
-happily at the beautiful island crowned with green, tropical foliage&mdash;a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
-welcome relief to the eye that had seen only the blue water for so
-long. They were to leave us here, and we were to go on to Manila,
-coming later to take them back upon the return voyage. It would give
-them three months on Guam.</p>
-
-<p>"Where is our little Jap, Kamuri&mdash;we haven't seen him for a week?"
-asked Miss Aline. "He was nice about getting our things together&mdash;we
-really must have him help us ashore."</p>
-
-<p>"Hasn't Slade told you?" I said.</p>
-
-<p>"No. What do you mean?" she asked in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>"Komuri is dead&mdash;lost in the typhoon&mdash;he saved the Chinks," I answered.</p>
-
-<p>Both women gasped their surprise.</p>
-
-<p>"I am so sorry!" exclaimed the younger.</p>
-
-<p>"And he was so good," said her aunt. "I wondered why Mr. Slade hadn't
-spoken of him before. I suppose it's because Mr. Slade feels that he is
-now to be your guardian and must protect you from all ill news&mdash;oh, I
-forgot&mdash;you hadn't heard. Yes, Mr. Slade is the man. He saved Aline's
-life, you know, and they are to be married after we get back. Strange
-he didn't tell you."</p>
-
-<p>I thought so, too. Slade was a sly dog&mdash;and he had used my collars,
-also, in his wooing. I was&mdash;well, I was ready to congratulate any man
-who could make up his mind to marry.</p>
-
-<p>But I turned away so abruptly that I thought I had to apologize to
-Slade afterward, to keep from getting in a row with him. But Slade
-understood, and squeezed my hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>"There's some of that port left over below," he said, and he led the
-way down.</p>
-
-<p>He filled two glasses to the brim, handing me one.</p>
-
-<p>"To your health&mdash;and that of Miss Aline," I said stiffly, feeling that
-there was something to say, or do.</p>
-
-<p>"No," said Slade slowly, thoughtfully, "to the best man."</p>
-
-<p>"Sure&mdash;to me, the best man at the wedding?" I said, in feigned surprise.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, no," corrected the mate. "Not at all&mdash;although you are not so bad,
-old chap." He raised his eyes and looked straight into mine. "We drink
-to the best man in the ship&mdash;who was in the ship&mdash;to Komuri."</p>
-
-<p>And we drained our glasses.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">AT THE END OF THE DRAG-ROPE</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>There were five men all told in the fishing schooner <i>Flying Star</i>.
-I had known them all well, and had been shipmate with four of them.
-Captain Johnny Sparks was a Dutchman, a "squarehead," but a good
-seaman, and he had fished on the Hatteras Banks during three bluefish
-seasons. His vessel was a Provincetown specimen&mdash;what used to be termed
-the "Gloucester fisherman" type, before the decadence of that port in
-the industry which once made it famous had ended its shipbuilding.</p>
-
-<p>She was a small vessel, much smaller than the modern Provincetown
-fisherman, which has a short foremast, a mainmast planted almost
-amidships, and sweeping canoe bows with overhang. No, she was of the
-old type&mdash;two sticks stuck upright in her at almost equal distances,
-marking her into three almost equal parts; a main-topmast sprung well
-forward and stayed well aft to steady the "whip" of long and continuous
-plunging into a lifting head sea. She was "chunky" in model, bows
-rather bluff, almost like a coaster, and her stern was of the old-time
-sawed-off pattern, sunk low in the water,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span> an ugly stern for running in
-a heavy sea when the lift is quick and fast.</p>
-
-<p>She was not worth over two thousand dollars, but Captain Johnny owned
-half of her, and he had no criticisms to make of her behavior in heavy
-weather. With a long, straight keel and full under-body, she was an
-excellent sea craft, provided she was properly handled.</p>
-
-<p>I was mate of the passenger ship <i>Prince Alfred</i> with Bill Boldwin,
-running from New York to the West Indies, and as we ran on schedule we
-often fell in with the Hatteras fishermen twice during a voyage.</p>
-
-<p>Johnny was fishing three miles north of the Diamond Shoal Lightship
-as we passed him on our voyage out. He stood upon his quarterdeck
-and waved to me. I was on the bridge, and bawled out I would have
-some fruit for him on the return trip. He nodded and waved his hand
-in appreciation, and his cook poked his head out of the galley and
-grinned. His boats were scattered along the shoal, all hauling up
-bluefish as fast as they could.</p>
-
-<p>Four other vessels from New York were on the grounds, but I recognized
-none of them. Our passengers gazed at the small boats tossing as only
-light-built dories can toss in a lively sea; and they commented on the
-fishing.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule, the average landsman thinks all fishing is done on the Grand
-or George's Banks. They get the idea from writers who know these waters
-well, and it never enters their heads that the northern banks are but
-a very small part of the great Atlantic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span> fishing grounds, where the
-professional fisherman must toil to wrest his living from the salt sea.</p>
-
-<p>It was due to a Gloucester Yankee, though, that the great fishing
-of Campeche Bank became known. Hove-to in a vicious norther a few
-score miles off Galveston, the "cod-hauler" was driven gradually
-off shore until he was far away from the land. Suddenly from a
-fathomless gulf&mdash;he had had the perseverance to keep his lead going
-at intervals&mdash;he fetched the ground in thirty fathoms, and gradually
-shoaled his water.</p>
-
-<p>With a hook just above the lead, he soon began to haul up snappers, and
-he came running into port a few days later with his schooner loaded to
-her bearings with as prime fish as ever came out of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Johnny had fished there a year, but owing to the slowness of
-the <i>Flying Star</i> he had given it up until the steam patrol boat had
-been put on to make the rounds and buy the fish on the grounds. It was
-Johnny who had gone into Sabine once for water when Dick Hollister was
-marshal.</p>
-
-<p>Hollister was a saturnine chap, who wore a heavy Colt with seven
-notches in the handle, each notch meant for some beggar he had been
-forced to perforate in the course of his strenuous career. He was
-accounted one of the most fearless and able marshals in Texas. One
-morning he visited the <i>Flying Star</i>, apparently looking for a man he
-wanted for a certain episode in horses. He swaggered about the decks
-with his Colt in full view, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span> caused so much interest that he
-impeded the work.</p>
-
-<p>Johnny spoke softly to him&mdash;he always had a soft way of speaking&mdash;and
-told him he must get ashore. The marshal turned and gazed at the little
-"squarehead" in disdain; but Captain Johnny, who was sitting on his
-hatch-combing, looked up with gentle gray eyes and pointed to the jetty.</p>
-
-<p>"You get avay&mdash;get oudt wid you, my friend. I don't got no time fer
-wastin' wid circus-actor mens wid funny fringes and artillery dragging
-mid dere waist belts&mdash;git!"</p>
-
-<p>And as the marshal didn't move, Johnny shied a coiled line at him,
-hitting him somewhat violently in the body.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly Hollister drew his Colt.</p>
-
-<p>"You blamed little shrimp! if you do that again I'll plug you," he said
-quietly, wiping the fish scales and salt water from his clothes. "Don't
-make any mistake; I'm not your friend."</p>
-
-<p>Captain Johnny was especially blue and sad that morning, so he gazed at
-the marshal, while his hand reached for a heavy sinker.</p>
-
-<p>"If you ain't my friend, fire away not; if you are mine friend, you
-shoot me, for I'm tired enough wid dis business, an' I don't vant do be
-livin' always, forever, yet. Shoot, mein dear friend, shoot&mdash;or if not
-mine friend, den take dis!"</p>
-
-<p>And he tossed the pound lead with such precision that it stretched
-Hollister flat upon the deck before he could take good aim to do more
-than rip the collar off Johnny's coat with his fire. When he came<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span> to,
-Johnny was bathing his head where the sinker had cut him, and pouring
-good whisky down his throat.</p>
-
-<p>"You are mine friend&mdash;but a poor shot&mdash;take another drink with me, and
-den go. Here's your blunderbust&mdash;you interrupts de vork on de deck&mdash;git
-oudt!"</p>
-
-<p>And yet there was a lot of energy in that sturdy form standing there
-upon the deck of his undermanned schooner waving his acknowledgments to
-me upon the bridge of the liner. Yes, Captain Johnny Sparks was a good
-seaman. May the deep ocean hold him gently in its eternal embrace, for
-he loved it&mdash;loved it as only a true seaman does!</p>
-
-<p>We made the run south, and were coming up with a full complement of
-passengers from Jamaica, when we began to notice a definite change in
-the weather. It was the hurricane season, September, and the heat was
-oppressive. The passengers lay about the decks in chairs all day and
-half the night, getting what air the ship made with her rush of fifteen
-knots an hour through the quiet sea. We ran along through the Passage,
-leaving Cape Maysi out of sight before dark, and rapidly hauling up
-under the lee of the Great Inagua Bank. Here in the smooth sea night
-fell upon the ocean, and I went on the bridge for the first watch.</p>
-
-<p>As I came into the pilot house to sign the order-book for my course,
-Captain Boldwin called my attention to the glass. It had fallen rapidly
-during the last few hours, and was now dangerously low.</p>
-
-<p>"Keep a good lookout," he said, "and call me at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span> first signs of a
-change." I signed the order-book, and he went below.</p>
-
-<p>How many times has an officer signed that order-book before even going
-on the bridge? And how many times has the said officer made an entirely
-different course from that signed for? But then steamship companies do
-not supply ships and coal for their officers to study navigation. It
-would not look well on paper. Every officer of a passenger ship is a
-licensed master, a captain; and no first-class company will ship any
-other kind of man to go on the bridge to take charge for the watch
-of four hours, for during that time the ship is absolutely under his
-command, and it is necessary that he shall be a skilled navigator,
-capable of taking the ship along just as safely should accident befall
-her commander. For this responsibility he receives from seventy-five
-to a hundred dollars per month; and half of the passengers whose lives
-he holds in the hollow of his hand for half the night look upon him as
-little better than a ship's cook!</p>
-
-<p>We appeared to follow the low barometer, or it to follow us, for when
-daylight came we were still running smoothly across the Atlantic with
-nothing but an oppressive heat and mugginess to warn the landsman of
-the low pressure.</p>
-
-<p>"There's something coming along behind us; something there astern that
-will probably make things howl," said Boldwin, as he came on deck in
-the morning.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was brassy in a coppery haze, but it was clear enough to get
-a good sight for longitude. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span> called off three good sights, took the
-note, and went below to work the longitude before breakfast. On ships
-running across the Gulf or Florida Stream from the southward, bound for
-New York or some port south of it, there is every necessity for getting
-the westing accurate. We always found that, running diagonally across
-for the Diamond Shoal Light vessel, we were set about twelve miles to
-the northeast while running at from twelve to fifteen knots. This was
-almost a regular fixed factor, but in heavy weather it was not always
-safe to run full speed inside of it.</p>
-
-<p>To make to the eastward of the lightship was well enough, but to fetch
-to the westward was the one thing that has always made Boldwin nervous,
-and rightly so. If he missed it going to the eastward, he would pick
-up some other landfall to the northward, if he was too far off; but if
-he missed it going to the westward in a driving gale, when it was too
-thick to see half a mile&mdash;well, we had never done so yet, and had no
-reason to pray for the experience.</p>
-
-<p>We were a fast liner, full of fruit and passengers, and we could not
-stop for anything on the run up. With fifty thousand bunches of bananas
-below, we must drive the ship to her destination as fast as she could
-go, and neither hurricane nor calm must stop her. The company seldom
-kept a seaman long who brought in fifty thousand bunches of ruined
-fruit, some of it twelve hands, and most of it more than eight, selling
-at retail at nearly a dollar a bunch.</p>
-
-<p>Two years before, Boldwin, after being hove-to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span> for thirty-six hours
-in a gale, had brought in his ship laden with fruit he had taken under
-protest, the "yellow" being plainly in sight at the ends of more than
-half the bunches. He had docked, and a score of men had waded about
-for several days up to their hips in a mess which, once seen, causes
-all lovers of bananas to eschew that fruit forever afterward. Banana
-juice will cut the steel plates of a ship's side almost like diluted
-sulphuric acid&mdash;but they gave him another chance.</p>
-
-<p>It was late in the afternoon of the day we had run clear of the land,
-when the first signs of the hurricane of September 19, 1903, made its
-appearance. The swell began to roll heavily from the southeast with a
-curious cross-roll from the westward, making a peculiarly uncomfortable
-sea for a steamer running northward. It dropped away from under our
-counter, and the <i>Prince Alfred</i> dipped her taffrail almost to the
-unruffled surface. Then she would rise upon it, and, as it lifted well
-under her underbody, she would roll to port and throw her stern so high
-that the starboard screw would race in a storm of foam at the surface,
-shaking her tremendously, and annoying the passengers who happened to
-occupy after-staterooms.</p>
-
-<p>When the second officer, Smith, came on duty, I made my way aft to take
-a look over things&mdash;to see that the small boats were securely lashed;
-that gratings and gear were in place, for it was evident that we were
-to have a piece of dirty weather. A large, fat, pale-faced woman poked
-her head out of window and demanded that I have the starboard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span> engine
-stopped at once, as it was too racking on her nerves. She declared she
-had stood it as long as she could, and would lodge a complaint with
-the president of the company immediately she got ashore, if her demand
-were not complied with instantly. I started to argue the case, but she
-cut me short, exclaiming that "they never did such things on the French
-boats."</p>
-
-<p>All the gear was in order aft, and I had just made my way to the
-bridge, when the Captain called my attention to a haze gathering to the
-southward.</p>
-
-<p>"The glass is starting down again&mdash;dropped two more tenths," he said.
-"We'll run foul of something before eight bells. Looks like it was
-following the Stream along to the northward; it usually does."</p>
-
-<p>A heavy, blue-black bank of cloud, smooth, and swept into an immense
-semicircle over the southern horizon, but rising fast, told of the
-beginning of trouble. Half an hour later we began to feel the squalls,
-which came suddenly and with vicious spurts of fine rain.</p>
-
-<p>"According to old Captain Valdes," said Boldwin, "if you place your
-back to the wind, the center of the blow is to the left, or port side,
-and a bit behind you. This breeze is coming in from the east'ard good
-and quick, and it looks like we'll fetch the center straight and fair
-the way we're heading."</p>
-
-<p>"Would you stop her and heave her up?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Stop her? Not as long as she'll swim. What do you think we are&mdash;a
-sand-barge? Stop a liner running on schedule with a fortune of bananas
-lying below? Get those ventilators trimmed, and put<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span> three covers on
-the after hatch and lash them fast. We'll run her. Who do you think
-would take this packet out the next voyage if he hove her to?"</p>
-
-<p>As it was only too evident that it would be my chance, I said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>The light grew dim as the gray pall of the storm quickly overspread the
-sky. The dull gray light made the sea appear queer and dark, with the
-great heave now running quickly, as though a mighty power were working
-close behind it. The tops of the breaking combers had a peculiar lift
-to them as they met the cross-swell, and the racing of the starboard
-engine became more and more violent. A terrific squall bore upon the
-ship, seemed to almost lift her bodily before it. The roar of the wind
-whirling through the heavy standing rigging told of its velocity, and
-then we waded right into the thick of it, with the <i>Prince Alfred</i>
-lurching along eighteen knots an hour over a sea which was torn into a
-white and gray world that ended, so far as our vision was concerned, a
-few fathoms from the ship's side.</p>
-
-<p>Boldwin was standing on the bridge, holding to the rail, and leaning to
-the blasts as though it took his whole weight to bear up against them.
-I came close to him.</p>
-
-<p>"Get every one ... below! Lock in ... passengers!" I caught his words
-with my ear ten inches from his mouth. "Cover ... hatches ... all fast."</p>
-
-<p>I knew what he meant. When the <i>Prince Alfred</i> closed down her cargo
-there was something unusual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span> happening. Making my way down the bridge
-steps, I got the men of the watch together. It was tough work, for the
-sea was now ugly, and we were running our weather-rail down at each
-roll, and scooping up plenty of water which she sent across her decks
-to leeward. To stand up without holding on meant to be blown bodily
-against the lee rail at the risk of going over.</p>
-
-<p>It was an hour before I got back to the bridge, and when I did so, the
-squalls were becoming more frequent, and more and more violent, but
-there was no shift yet. It soon grew dark&mdash;a black dark&mdash;and we tore
-along into the blackness, unable to see two fathoms ahead. As yet we
-were outside the Stream, and consequently not in the usual line of the
-coasters, which are the dread of the liner's officers, for nothing
-is so uncomfortable as the sudden raising of the dim and sometimes
-half-extinguished lights of a schooner on a thick night while tearing
-along before a gale. Having the right of way, the sailing vessel has
-nothing to do but keep her course, while the steamship, with but a
-few seconds to spare, swings quickly to pass, sometimes missing a
-catastrophe by a few feet. A poor red light on such a night cannot be
-seen twenty fathoms.</p>
-
-<p>Before midnight the shift began. It came from the southward&mdash;a bad
-sign, for it told plainly that we were nearing the center of the
-disturbance; and as we were heading diagonally across the path of the
-storm, we were almost certain to bring up in its dread vortex. As chief
-officer, it would have been a bit out of place for me to suggest the
-thing the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>ordinary seaman would do&mdash;that is, heave to and work out of
-it. Boldwin stood on his bridge and kept her going.</p>
-
-<p>And yet it had to come. Before daylight the sea was terrific&mdash;the
-squalls coming with furious rushes, shifting, and hurling a frightful
-sea. A huge, lifting hill of water broke high above the taffrail, and
-roared a full fathom deep over the quarter-deck. The crash shook the
-steamer through her whole frame. It was as though she had struck a
-solid rock. The white glint of the foam showed through the blackness,
-but the dull, thunderous roar drowned all other sounds.</p>
-
-<p>Boldwin went to the speaking tube in the pilot house, called to the
-chief engineer to stand by to heave her to and watch the engines as she
-came into the trough.</p>
-
-<p>"We'll have to stop her," he said; and I nodded assent.</p>
-
-<p>In the pilot house the clanking of the steam steering gear sounded
-dully in the deep, sonorous undertone of the gale outside.</p>
-
-<p>Boldwin waited but a moment, and then gave the order:</p>
-
-<p>"Hard over, sir!" cried the quartermaster; and the rattling clank
-of the engine sounded the signal for me to take advantage of the
-opportunity to get outside by the lee door.</p>
-
-<p>If it had been blowing before while we were running, it was now a blast.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Prince Alfred</i> laid down her whole five hundred feet of steel side
-into that sea, and the crash of the mighty hill that swept her shook
-her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span> as though she had been struck amidships by the ram of a battleship.
-The forward funnel guys parted, and I had a momentary glimpse of a
-great pillar of iron going over the side to leeward. Then she began to
-head the sea, and no human could face the storm of flying water which
-swept the bridge.</p>
-
-<p>With heads down, gasping for breath, Boldwin and myself gripped the
-bridge rail. The flying atmosphere tore past us. We dared not loose our
-grasp for an instant, and to get back to the shelter of the pilot house
-was impossible without following the iron rail aft.</p>
-
-<p>After a thunderous rush of quick and vicious squalls, there was a
-sudden lull. A giant comber showed ahead, and its white and foaming
-crest lifted clear into the night. She buried her whole forward deck,
-and, as the water cleared, we could see about us. The dull snore of a
-giant sea sounded close aboard. It was uncanny, this sudden stillness,
-full of a palpitating murmur and pregnant with an ominous power.</p>
-
-<p>"Right in it!" gasped Boldwin. "How does she head now?"</p>
-
-<p>"Southeast by south," I answered. "The next squall will probably come
-from the northwest."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I guess we'll swing her while it's still&mdash;Lord, what an awful
-sea!"</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Prince Alfred</i> came slowly around with her engines turning at
-half speed. The high, leaping hills of water seemed to come from all
-directions at once. They fell upon her decks and shook her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span> up a
-bit, but did no damage. Five, ten, fifteen minutes passed. A distant
-murmuring sounded over the torn sea.</p>
-
-<p>"Which way?" asked Boldwin nervously.</p>
-
-<p>A puff of cool air blew straight in our faces; we had not noted how
-sultry it was, for we were soaking wet and exhausted. The puff blew to
-a breeze. Then came a spurt of rain and a faint flash of lightning. In
-a minute we were facing furious squalls, and the <i>Prince Alfred</i>, with
-a full head of steam, had all she could do to keep steering way with
-her nose pointed straight into the blast from nor'-nor'-west.</p>
-
-<p>It was in the gray of the early morning, while Boldwin and I were still
-on the bridge, and the second and third officers were in charge of the
-saloons quelling the panic, that we sighted something dead ahead. The
-squalls were still whirling over us with longer intervals between, but
-with still undiminished vigor. The great sea began to show in front now
-through the dim light, and it was all the full-powered liner could do
-to hold her own head to it. To swerve to either side meant falling off
-into the dangerous trough, with the hazard of not being able to regain
-her course. Even as it was, we had to more than once slow the port or
-starboard engine to enable her to point her nose straight into the
-hurricane.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the crest of a giant hill of water something showed black. It was
-a momentary glimpse, but Boldwin and I saw it instantly. It was close
-aboard and, as we yelled to each other and strained our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span> eyes ahead,
-we made out the thin line of a mast. Boldwin dropped on his hands and
-knees and was blown to the pilot-house door. I waved my hand to ease
-her to starboard a little. Just then a sea struck us heavily upon the
-starboard bow, and held her with its rush. The next moment the shape
-ahead was high upon the crest of a mighty sea, and I recognized the
-stern of a vessel outlined against the gray pall.</p>
-
-<p>I looked over the side. The foam was lying dead with us, showing we
-were not going ahead more than a knot or two. Boldwin saw it also, and
-knew that to slew his ship now would mean to get struck a blow in the
-side which in that sea would probably prove fatal. He thought of his
-passengers. They must be considered first. Whatever was ahead was going
-to hit us, and it was due to those we had aboard that it must strike
-us as fairly upon the stem as we could land it. God help them, we must
-save our own!</p>
-
-<p>We plunged headlong into the trough, and right above us upon the
-following crest rose the stern of that sailing vessel. She was plainly
-in view now; so close that I recognized the sawed-off shape of an
-old-time fishing schooner. Upon her main a bit of rag like a trysail
-showed white. She was heading the sea at the end of her sea anchor, a
-long drag-rope, and as her deck showed, I saw she had been badly swept.</p>
-
-<p>There was no one in sight. She was going astern fast, much faster than
-we thought, for even while Boldwin tried to edge to starboard, and did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
-all he could to swing his ship without getting his head thrown off with
-the sea, the stern sank just ahead of us in the hollow of a sea, and
-our stem rose above. I leaned forward and held my breath. The <i>Prince
-Alfred</i> fell headlong into the hollow, and just as we struck I read the
-name <i>Flying Star</i> painted large and white right across the transom.</p>
-
-<p>A dull grinding thud, which shook the <i>Prince Alfred</i> but slightly, was
-all that came to us. A sea swung the wreck to port, and as she heeled
-and settled, I saw Johnny Sparks spring from the companionway, followed
-by several men. The next instant a great comber roared over them and
-the schooner disappeared, leaving nothing above the foam to show where
-she had floated a moment before. Something caught in my throat. I shut
-my eyes, and held my head down for I don't know how long.</p>
-
-<p>We came into port four days later with Boldwin on the bridge, his face
-lined and haggard. Below, thirty thousand dollars' worth of bananas
-slushed about in a ghastly mess, in spite of the pens and shorings. But
-the passengers were happy. Women in gay dresses came on deck and smiled
-and chatted, and children romped and played. The captain did not look
-at me&mdash;he had not since the collision&mdash;but he spoke to me for the first
-time.</p>
-
-<p>"See that everything is shipshape when we dock," said he, "and then
-meet me at the company's office at four o'clock. I'll probably not take
-her out next voyage&mdash;take a lay-off for a while&mdash;understand?"</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">PIRATES TWAIN</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>At last I was back in the regular liners of the Prince ships. My work
-on the <i>Heraldine</i> had been appreciated by Lord Hawkes, the manager,
-and his lordship was no piker.</p>
-
-<p>He refused Boldwin my company when that worthy but thirsty skipper
-asked to have me back in the old <i>Prince Alfred</i>, where a certain lady
-whom I admired greatly was stewardess.</p>
-
-<p>The new <i>Prince George</i>, twenty-five thousand tons and a
-twenty-two-knot vessel, was wanting a first officer, and old man Hall
-was somewhat disposed to give me "a chance," as the saying is at sea
-when an officer applies for a berth.</p>
-
-<p>"You may report to the captain to-morrow at the dock," said his
-lordship, and our interview was at an end. Boldwin looked sour, for I
-had been a good mate to him, and he wanted me badly, but the manager's
-word was law.</p>
-
-<p>I found the giant liner all that modern improvements could make her.
-From her six-hundred-foot keel to her four immense funnel tops, she was
-a beauty.</p>
-
-<p>It would take a week to describe her many qualities, and I must admit
-it gave me a feeling of responsibility<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span> when I stepped upon her flying
-bridge and looked her over.</p>
-
-<p>There I would be in command every four hours, and when I gazed over her
-immense length and breadth it seemed indeed that I must be a person of
-some small ability to hold the job.</p>
-
-<p>No flippant remarks here, no joking about the passengers or the
-company. It was silence and dignity.</p>
-
-<p>How I stood it at first is more of a wonder to me, when I look back
-at the time, than the actual work, for really a ship's officer is not
-considered a mighty position, even though he does hold the lives of a
-couple of thousand folks in his keeping during his watch on deck.</p>
-
-<p>But I was not too old, and had ambition, for some day I wanted to have
-a little farm of my own and raise chickens and hogs&mdash;the true ambition
-of every seaman I ever met&mdash;and I wanted to ask a certain lady to run
-the said farm for me, or rather do the cooking, which is probably the
-same thing.</p>
-
-<p>Our crew was shipped by the agents. Old man Hall had nothing whatever
-to do but act as overseer of the navigators, which same were myself and
-a second officer named MacFarland.</p>
-
-<p>Mac was a good seaman, although he had never been in sail, but had
-risen from the apprentice school of officers established by the company
-to train men for its ships&mdash;and they were of course all steam.</p>
-
-<p>I must admit he knew more of express ships than I, but I had ten years
-more sea duty done, and I was something of a windjammer in my time.
-This gave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span> me the rating with the older men who had served the same way
-in the old sailing vessels.</p>
-
-<p>We knew each other, and could depend always upon certain things in each
-other that no school could develop the same way. I sat at the head of
-the chief officers' table, and I bought a book of table etiquette to
-get the lay of the whack just right.</p>
-
-<p>It taught me many things I hadn't learned in a ship's forecastle, and
-soon I was able to speak to the prosperous-looking passengers without
-feeling that my tongue was in the way of my teeth.</p>
-
-<p>We carried three hundred first-class&mdash;that was some when you think
-of it&mdash;and we often herded fifteen hundred to two thousand in the
-steerage. Four hundred seconds added sometimes put our total complement
-over three thousand souls, counting, of course, our crew, stokers, and
-waiters.</p>
-
-<p>You will realize at once the inability of a chief mate getting even the
-slightest acquaintance with hundreds of the people who used the <i>Prince
-George</i> for transportation across the ocean, and, if I could not get
-a line on them, it was equally impossible for the pursers, pursers'
-clerks, and stewards to do so.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Samuels, the head purser, had a memory that was said to be
-infallible. He said he never forgot a face. Of the million or two
-people he came in contact with during his runs, he boasted that he
-could always tell if he had ever seen one of them before.</p>
-
-<p>I didn't believe it, of course; but, then, pursers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span> have a way that
-many seamen can't understand, anyhow.</p>
-
-<p>Being an express ship, and carrying the first-class mail, we also had
-an express safe. This was built into the body of the vessel, and was
-like the new bank safes, with solid steel doors and time locks.</p>
-
-<p>Two watchmen took charge, alternating night and day, and the massive
-doors were not to be opened by any one alone. In that safe we often
-carried three or four million dollars in solid gold bars or gold coin.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes the banking houses of the United States shipped as much as
-two million at a time in coin. Precautions were of the modern banking
-sort, and the giant safe caused no comment.</p>
-
-<p>The other safes of the purser and captain were just plain, every-day
-affairs, and seldom held more than a few thousand dollars. These were
-very different from the "through" safe.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I had been in the ship four months before I noticed a man who sat at
-my table. He had made a voyage with us the first run I made, and I
-remembered him as a clergyman who had relatives abroad in Europe, but
-who was himself an American.</p>
-
-<p>He was a very dignified man, about fifty-five years of age, and he
-knew a great deal. I enjoyed talking to him, for he told me of many
-places and events that were most interesting. But he never at any time
-discussed religion, or even spoke of subjects relating to it.</p>
-
-<p>Once on his second trip over, he came to my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span> room, and presented me
-with a box of fine Havana cigars and, although it was against custom, I
-asked him in, and he came.</p>
-
-<p>We smoked while I should have been sleeping, but I was not by any means
-overworked, and I rather enjoyed his society, flattered of course that
-a man of such vast experience and learning should single out the chief
-officer for a companion.</p>
-
-<p>But then I knew many folks looked upon a master navigator as a likely
-person to know, and was not very much surprised, setting it down to his
-good taste and discernment&mdash;for I had gone a mile or two myself in my
-day, and had seen a few things both ashore and afloat.</p>
-
-<p>Once I remember he talked of finance and the great gold shipments that
-were disturbing the country. He had followed the administration in its
-effort to curb a panic that was threatened, and spoke of the money we
-carried in gold coin that was for the purpose of staying a run at that
-time upon a banking house that had many foreign affiliations.</p>
-
-<p>"The express safe is generally full, is it not, during times like
-these?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, we carry millions every voyage now," I answered, and noticed that
-the Reverend Mr. Jackson made a peculiar grimace as if amused at the
-news.</p>
-
-<p>The conversation immediately drifted off to Cape Town, where the
-minister had lately spent much time, and he soon left me to my slumber
-and cigars.</p>
-
-<p>I noticed that he had remarkable hands, immensely strong, as though he
-had done much hard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span> work, and afterward I wondered at a small tattoo
-mark on his wrist just beneath the edge of his cuff. He had powerful,
-hairy wrists, and the blue mark showed very indistinctly through the
-black hair, but it caused me to think of him as a strange man.</p>
-
-<p>I asked him about it the next day when at the table, but he made an
-evasive answer, smiling at my compliment to his strong physique.</p>
-
-<p>"I was something of an athlete in my younger days," he finally
-admitted, "and you must not think that because of my profession I live
-a sedentary life. I work very hard among my parishioners, and play golf
-a great deal. Of course, you, as a seaman, would hardly appreciate the
-mysteries of this manly game."</p>
-
-<p>"I confess that it seems rather tame," I admitted; "seems like a poor
-sort of 'shinny' we used to play in America when I was a lad."</p>
-
-<p>"My wife plays it also, and she is very strong and agile from the
-exercise," said Mr. Jackson; "I hope you will meet her next month when
-I return, as she will probably go to London with me."</p>
-
-<p>I expressed pleasure at the thought, and noticed that Doctor Jackson
-was really quite a good-looking man, and there was no reason in the
-world why he should not possess a very pretty wife.</p>
-
-<p>His clean-shaven face, lined, it is true, as though he had spent much
-time at physical exertion of the heavier sort, was handsome enough. A
-large, high nose, not badly shaped, set in between two steel-blue eyes,
-wide apart, and his mouth, although thin-lipped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span> and hard-looking, was
-not ugly, and his teeth were large, even, and snow-white.</p>
-
-<p>Altogether he was a man of strength and character from his appearance,
-and I remembered him for his kindness&mdash;and cigars.</p>
-
-<p>Three weeks later, upon the return voyage, he came aboard and told me
-he would bring his wife aboard the next morning, and was just then
-seeing to his room, which was amidships, and upon the lower or main
-deck, just above the express room and over the steel safe.</p>
-
-<p>He asked me if I thought the noise from below would disturb them, his
-wife being a nervous woman and irritable. I knew no sounds of any
-consequence would penetrate the deck, which was steel, and assured him
-that the voyage would be most pleasant, as the time of year was fine
-upon the western ocean.</p>
-
-<p>The next day I was too busy to notice the couple, but when we were at
-sea and had made our departure, allowing me to go below to dinner, I
-found that Doctor Jackson and his wife were seated at my table about
-midway down the row of seats.</p>
-
-<p>The minister nodded to me, and his wife smiled pleasantly. Her back
-was to the ports, and the light was bad, but I saw that she was about
-thirty, and very masculine in her appearance.</p>
-
-<p>She had a very good complexion, rosy and healthy, but her face had a
-peculiar hardness, a settling about the corners of the mouth that boded
-ill for any one who crossed her temper. I made up my mind to feel sorry
-for the doctor. Her voice <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>I could hear very indistinctly, but it had a
-sort of hardness, a suppressed tone of assumed smoothness which I did
-not like.</p>
-
-<p>At eight bells that night when the day's work allowed me to get my time
-below, I met them as I left the bridge. The doctor introduced me to
-the lady, who stood tall and commanding in the darkness. She murmured
-something indefinite, but acknowledged me without offering her hand.</p>
-
-<p>I believed this coldness was more cultivated than natural, but, as I
-had learned since being in express ships that ladies did, or did not
-shake hands, according to their training, I passed it up for what it
-was worth.</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Jackson seemed a bit annoyed at the strained feeling, but I saw
-no reason why a woman, a wife of a minister, should find much in common
-with a seaman, even if he did happen to be the chief mate of the liner.</p>
-
-<p>Our ways would naturally be different. Her topics of conversation would
-not fit in with mine, and I was mortally afraid of offending her by
-some sailor's slip in my tongue.</p>
-
-<p>I really was glad when they left me to go to my room, and I hoped that
-I would not have to entertain them any more than the rules of the
-liner's etiquette called for.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The next day the doctor informed me that his wife had succumbed to the
-rigors of the sea and the motion had made her deathly ill. I saw her no
-more, and it was the fifth day out when the steward<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span> came to my room at
-night and asked to speak to me privately.</p>
-
-<p>"The couple in Room Sixty-two will not allow their bed to be made up
-nor any one to enter. Doctor Jackson said to see you and it would be
-all right; but you know, sir, it's against the rules not to allow
-inspection. If you will attend to the matter, it will take the weight
-off the old man&mdash;he tried to enter, but he was told he could not, owing
-to the lady's indisposition."</p>
-
-<p>"Aw, they're all right," I said. "Tell the captain I know the old
-sky-pilot well, and that he's a minister who has been across twice
-before with us. I'll go down there myself to-morrow and inspect. Give
-the doctor my compliments and tell him I'm sorry the rules make the
-inspection necessary."</p>
-
-<p>"There's a strong smell of whisky, alcohol, sir, all the time, coming
-from the room&mdash;don't know what it can be, but I'm afraid of fire. It's
-probably some of those patent traveling stoves they use for heating
-certain medicines or something."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, cut it out&mdash;I'll go down in the morning&mdash;that's all," I said,
-and then I turned in and forgot all about the incident.</p>
-
-<p>The next day when I went below, I found the doctor and his wife waiting
-for me. The lady had her face wrapped up in towels, and the doctor was
-reading, sitting near the bed, which was a brass one, bolted to the
-deck.</p>
-
-<p>I excused myself, and was just on the point of leaving when I noticed
-the smell of alcohol. It was <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>mixed with one similar to the heated odor
-of a red-hot stovepipe, burning metal.</p>
-
-<p>"Have any trouble with the lights?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, no, everything is all right&mdash;one of the electrics broke and made a
-little smell&mdash;no, all is as comfortable as one could wish, thank you,"
-said the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>"I suppose you'll go the route all the way up?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"No, we'll transship at Queenstown&mdash;there's a yacht waiting for me
-there, and we'll take her for the rest of the way to the African coast,
-by way of Gibraltar. You might help us with our luggage to-morrow&mdash;our
-little trunk is very heavy, you see." And he tried to raise one end of
-a small steamer trunk that was allowed in the room.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, that will be all right&mdash;the steward will fix you up&mdash;I'll see you
-before you go," I said, turning away.</p>
-
-<p>"I hope so," returned the doctor, with a most peculiar intonation in
-his voice that made me look at him. But he was now turning the leaves
-of the book again, and a moan from the bed made me hesitate no longer.</p>
-
-<p>I left them, and sent word to the head steward to see to my friends
-getting ashore in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>As we entered the Channel, the passengers who were to go ashore came on
-deck. Doctor Jackson and his wife appeared at the gangway, and waited
-quietly for the boat.</p>
-
-<p>The lady was now wrapped up in shawls, and her face was heavily veiled.
-The clergyman himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span> seemed a bit nervous, but they finally went over
-the side with their luggage all right.</p>
-
-<p>What he had told about that steamer trunk was no joke. Two assistant
-stewards could hardly lift it.</p>
-
-<p>Bound with iron and stoutly strapped, it seemed as though it would
-burst of its own weight before it was placed in the lugger that
-would take it ashore or rather to the small schooner that lay a few
-miles distant and which the doctor had pointed out as the vessel he
-had chartered as a yacht to take them on their summer cruise to the
-beautiful Mediterranean.</p>
-
-<p>I waved my hand, and then went below to turn in, for the last night is
-always a bad one for the chief mate when making the land.</p>
-
-<p>"Bang, bang, bang," came blows upon my door, followed by a yell from
-without. I expected to find the ship in collision, and leaped from my
-bunk half asleep. The express messenger stood without, accompanied by
-four assistants and the steward, the purser, and the second officer.</p>
-
-<p>"Safe blown, sir!" yelled the messenger. "It's bloomin' well half
-empty, sir! Nearly a quarter of a million gone. Party from above&mdash;you
-knew them, the steward says!"</p>
-
-<p>I ran with them to Room Sixty-two, and burst in where the captain stood
-gazing at a hole in the deck. He turned to me, but said nothing. The
-rug which had been placed over the opening was thrown aside, and there
-lay a hole eighteen inches wide right in the floor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>Upon the sides the charred wood told of some fierce heat to which it
-had been exposed. The heavy steel plate beneath had been melted and
-burned as if the blast of a volcano had seared it.</p>
-
-<p>Ragged-edged, melted, and bent lay the plate, and beneath it again
-lay the hole in the express safe right in the treasure room beneath.
-Down and through all led the seared hole. Some mighty heat had melted,
-burned, and blown away the plates of hard steel.</p>
-
-<p>I leaned over, and gazed down into the room where the gold had been
-packed in the short, stout boxes of the bank. It was scattered about,
-thrown all around in confusion as though the robbers had at last given
-up all hope of getting more out.</p>
-
-<p>They had taken all that two men could lift or carry for a few rods,
-stopping only at the limit of their endurance; and, though the amount
-was not so large as the express messenger had at first stated, it ran
-well over one hundred thousand dollars.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>For a moment I stood staring from the hole to Captain Hall and back,
-too amazed to speak, while the old man looked at me keenly.</p>
-
-<p>"Nice little job," he commented dryly.</p>
-
-<p>"The doctor and his wife&mdash;do you think?" I asked. I was beginning to
-see light.</p>
-
-<p>"Wife, thunder! That was a young man of tremendous strength," snarled
-the express messenger. "Look how he used that electric burner&mdash;look how
-he bent and tore at the plate&mdash;he was a giant&mdash;had the current on his
-hot chisel all day&mdash;that's the smell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span> you noticed. Probably the two
-most expert safe-crackers alive, and our outfit gave them the chance
-to work the hot knife, burn their way in where they never could have
-blown. They connected with the light&mdash;got current enough to work with,
-and covered up with the rug&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, we won't waste time seeing how it was done; we'll get a move
-after them", said the old man. "Jump on deck, and blow the siren&mdash;blow
-the alarm for fire, police&mdash;set the signals&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>I was gone before he had finished, and by the time the uproar was well
-under way I had time to gaze toward the little schooner the doctor had
-marked out as his yacht.</p>
-
-<p>She was still lying at anchor, but beyond her and about five miles
-distant lay a fishing schooner with very tall spars and a very able
-look. She was hoisting her foresail, and I could just make out that she
-was getting under way at once.</p>
-
-<p>I waited no longer. Jumping to the upper deck, I yelled for the crew
-of the first cutter, boat number one, and gave the signal for her men.
-They came scrambling as to the drill, and as they came I yelled to
-young Smith, the third officer, to get arms and join me.</p>
-
-<p>He dashed into his room, and came back with a heavy revolver. The
-express messenger came up while we were lowering away, and handed me
-another.</p>
-
-<p>"We'll go with you," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"No! No use loading her down with men," I replied; "we want to get some
-speed on her&mdash;row six oars <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>double banked, and that'll fill her up&mdash;you
-can come, you, Smith, and myself&mdash;it won't take a ship's crew to get
-them&mdash;lower away," I called, and the boat dropped.</p>
-
-<p>We followed, and in less time than it takes to tell it we were going
-through the sea at seven knots an hour with the best-drilled boat in
-the ship. Three men aft armed, and that was all.</p>
-
-<p>It was a bright summer morning, with almost no wind, and I was certain
-that we would soon overhaul the runaways. The schooner lifted her
-anchor, and stood out to the westward and southward, and soon appeared
-to be making good headway.</p>
-
-<p>"By Jupiter, she's got a motor in her!" said Smith.</p>
-
-<p>She was going ahead, almost straight in the eye of the wind, just close
-enough to keep her sails full, and she was moving a good five knots.
-She was a good four miles distant, and we would have to do some fine
-rowing to catch her.</p>
-
-<p>I looked my men over, and wondered if they could stand it. They pulled
-steadily, and the boat went along swiftly, but even a heavy ship with
-an engine has a distinct advantage over oars.</p>
-
-<p>The schooner's motor was but an auxiliary, to be sure, but five or six
-knots under motor was something desperate to catch by rowing when we
-were so far astern.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of another mile I was getting anxious. Our bearings were not
-changed to any extent, and the third officer looked askance at me.</p>
-
-<p>"Give it to her, bullies&mdash;there's a hundred apiece<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span> if we get them," I
-said, and swung my body with the stroke of the oars. This had an effect
-upon the men. A hundred dollars was more than three months' pay.</p>
-
-<p>They put their weight upon the ash, and the boat fairly lifted under
-the strain. The sweat began to pour down their faces, and the wind died
-away, until the swell ran oily and smooth.</p>
-
-<p>"Give it to her," I cried again, as we gained a little.</p>
-
-<p>The two men at the bow oar swung mightily upon it. There was a sharp
-crack. The bow oar snapped off at the rowlock, and the boat eased up
-her speed, leaving two good men idle.</p>
-
-<p>"Great snakes!" howled Smith, and the express messenger looked at me in
-despair.</p>
-
-<p>"We can't catch her now," he muttered.</p>
-
-<p>I knew it was true. We were now dropping back, and I kept on only
-because I felt that it would not do to give up. I scanned the sea for
-signs of a boat.</p>
-
-<p>There were some fishing to the northward, and it was our only chance. I
-swung her around toward them.</p>
-
-<p>"We've got to try for one&mdash;maybe there's one with a good motor in her,"
-I said. In a quarter of an hour we were up to one boat, and saw she was
-not fit. We swept past without slowing up.</p>
-
-<p>"Any boat about here with a strong motor?" I asked, as we came close.</p>
-
-<p>A fisherman waved his hand to the northward.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>"Boat up there&mdash;<i>Seawave</i>&mdash;she's fast; what's the matter?" he replied.</p>
-
-<p>But we were gone without further words, and soon came to the boat. She
-was long and narrow, built like a seiner, only not so heavy. Two men
-sat in her with lines out I hailed them as we came up.</p>
-
-<p>"Want to catch that schooner out there," I yelled, pointing to the
-vessel. "Give you a hundred dollars if you land us alongside&mdash;quick."</p>
-
-<p>"Got the money?" asked the man who appeared to own her.</p>
-
-<p>We came alongside without delay, and I felt rather foolish for a
-moment. But the express messenger had the cash with him. He handed it
-over without a word, and the fisherman turned quickly to his engine.</p>
-
-<p>The other man pulled up the anchor at once, and in half a minute we
-were under way, with the motor roaring out its glad sound in a series
-of rapid shots that were like the discharges of a rapid-fire gun.</p>
-
-<p>"Take the boat and follow," I called to the men, and then Smith, the
-messenger, and myself were away in the wake of the schooner that was
-now a good five miles off and going steadily seaward. It would be a
-chase for fair.</p>
-
-<p>"Can you make it?" I asked the owner, who sat in his oilskins at the
-engine.</p>
-
-<p>"Sure t'ing we make 'em&mdash;'bout two, three hours, if the gas holds out."</p>
-
-<p>We were now going along at eight knots and running<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span> steadily. After
-all, there's nothing like machinery to get things done.</p>
-
-<p>"This is something like," said Smith. "There'll be some shooting inside
-of an hour if the signs hold."</p>
-
-<p>The messenger said nothing. The men of the boat had not asked a
-question. They had taken us at our word, and were doing what they could
-to put us alongside.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it would be different when we came to close quarters. We had
-better tell them what our errand was before they stopped the motor
-at the beginning of hostilities. They might take us for what we were
-after&mdash;burglars, and spoil our chance to make a catch.</p>
-
-<p>We drew near the schooner after two hours' chase. The land was lost
-astern, and we had run fully fifteen miles off shore.</p>
-
-<p>The breeze began to freshen, but not enough to give the schooner her
-full, or even half, speed. She plugged along steadily at about five
-knots, and we drew up close enough to see a man at the wheel and no one
-else on deck.</p>
-
-<p>Smith and the messenger told our skipper how matters stood, and the
-fisherman seemed to hardly relish the game after he knew it. There was
-certain to be trouble.</p>
-
-<p>"Schooner ahoy!" I yelled, as we drew near enough to hail.</p>
-
-<p>The man at the wheel paid no attention until I had repeated it several
-times. Then he turned and asked us what we wished in no pleasant tone.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296</a></span>"You stop your engine and let us board," I yelled. "You have two
-robbers aboard, and we want them in the name of the law."</p>
-
-<p>"Who are you?" asked the man, spitting over the rail. "Go away&mdash;I don't
-know you."</p>
-
-<p>"Run alongside&mdash;we'll jump her," I said to the skipper. The messenger,
-Smith, and myself drew our revolvers, and stood ready as the small
-craft came up to the main channels. The schooner kept right along. We
-sprang aboard without meeting resistance, and gained the deck.</p>
-
-<p>"Where're your passengers? Don't fool with us," I snapped. "There's an
-old man and a young one dressed as a woman."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, Doctor Jackson and the young feller&mdash;they're down below&mdash;asleep.
-What do you want with them?"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We wasted no time talking. All three jumped down the companionway and
-into the little cabin. Doctor Jackson was in a bunk, apparently fast
-asleep, and a young man, whom I instantly recognized as the "wife," lay
-reclining upon a transom.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, what's the row&mdash;what's up?" asked the young fellow, rising at
-the sight of three armed men.</p>
-
-<p>"We want you&mdash;you know what for," said the messenger quietly. "Don't
-make any trouble&mdash;we won't stand it&mdash;come right along back with us, you
-and the other fellow there."</p>
-
-<p>The doctor awoke, and sat up, seemingly amazed. He expostulated, was
-dumfounded at the charge,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span> couldn't understand it&mdash;we must all be
-crazy. Two men came from forward and joined our group. It was all
-hands, just three men and two passengers&mdash;five in all to work the ship.</p>
-
-<p>"Stop the engine," I ordered, "and either come with us or turn the
-schooner back, and we'll go with you."</p>
-
-<p>They turned her around, and stood back toward the shore. On the way,
-while one of us stood guard over the two, the rest searched the
-schooner for the treasure, for the trunk. There was not a sign of gold
-anywhere aboard her.</p>
-
-<p>We took turns, but found nothing, leaving not a bolt hole unsearched.
-It was disheartening, and looked like we had lost, after all.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, what do you make of it?" I asked the messenger.</p>
-
-<p>"Looks like they got us right, after all," he said; "we haven't the
-slightest clew to the money, and won't get it after they once get in to
-the police. They'll buy their way out, for there's not the slightest
-evidence they did the job, although I know it was them as well as they
-themselves."</p>
-
-<p>"Plant it, you think?"</p>
-
-<p>"Sure as death, they dropped it somewhere, and they only know just
-where. They'll take a chance at going up for a spell, doing their bit,
-and then getting the cache. It's on the course out somewhere, but just
-where who knows? We're out of sight of land now, and it'll take a
-wizard to locate it on the schooner's course."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>"That's right enough," I asserted, "but how about trying them for a
-confession?"</p>
-
-<p>"Go ahead," he replied gloomily.</p>
-
-<p>I put it right up to the doctor. I promised him complete immunity if he
-would just tell where they had dropped that four hundred and odd pounds
-of gold.</p>
-
-<p>The pair simply grinned in amusement. It seemed to tickle them
-immensely.</p>
-
-<p>"And so you'd be a party to a felony?" asked the doctor, with great
-regret in his tone. "I didn't think that of you, captain&mdash;you surely
-disappoint me greatly. Now, if I knew where the gold lay, I should
-tell you at once, but warn you not to touch it, for I don't believe in
-mixing up with things of this sort. The men you are after must surely
-have taken the stuff on the previous voyage&mdash;or some other time&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"All right," I interrupted, "if you want it that way, you'll get it. We
-have enough evidence to send you up for twenty years at least&mdash;direct
-evidence."</p>
-
-<p>"I hate to hear you take on in this terrible manner, my dear captain,
-but I don't see what I can do about it. What makes you think I had
-anything to do with that gold?"</p>
-
-<p>It was of no use. They would not talk about it. I began to study the
-schooner's course and try to figure out where in that vast area of
-sea they could have let the stuff go overboard with the certainty of
-getting hold of it again.</p>
-
-<p>In a short time we met our own boat being rowed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span> rapidly after us, and
-then we took her in tow and dismissed our motor boat, which had been
-dragging along at the main channels. The men had earned their hundred,
-and they departed, highly pleased at their luck, which represented more
-than a month's profits fishing.</p>
-
-<p>As our boat came alongside, we were hailed joyfully by Jim Sanders, the
-coxswain, during my absence, and he held up a long line, at the end of
-which was fastened a small buoy. The other we saw was fast to the small
-trunk.</p>
-
-<p>"We found it all right", said Jim. "We was rowing along fast after
-you, an' suddenly my eye catches sight o' this here float. I grabs it,
-and up comes that trunk fast to the other end in about ten fathoms of
-water. That trunk is sure some heavy, and I reckon it's got the stuff
-in it."</p>
-
-<p>"Very good, very good indeed," cried the messenger. "Now things look
-better."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," said the third officer, "this is what we are looking for&mdash;no
-mistake."</p>
-
-<p>"Hoist it right on deck," I said, and a line was passed to it. It was
-all two men could do to get it aboard. When it was safe on the deck, I
-went below and saw the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>"We have the trunk with the gold all safe&mdash;now, what have you to say?"
-I said.</p>
-
-<p>"Indeed?" asked the doctor, in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>"Not really, say not so," remarked the younger man, in mock alarm.
-"Why, then you seem to have what you've been after, what you are
-looking for. If that is all, you better let us turn the ship about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
-and continue our journey. Why didn't you say you were looking for that
-trunk?"</p>
-
-<p>A yell from the deck told me something was not right. I came up the
-companion, and looked out, holding my pistol ready for trouble. The
-messenger was standing at the side of the trunk. So also was Smith.</p>
-
-<p>Two men had just opened it, and had dumped a lot of old iron and bolts
-onto the deck, where they lay in a pile of rusty, wet junk.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>For a moment I gazed in amazement at the littered deck. Then I smiled.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you suppose we could have made a mistake by any possible means?" I
-asked the express messenger.</p>
-
-<p>"Not by any chance, not a chance. This is a plant&mdash;why should they sink
-this trunk with a line and buoy to it? It proves beyond all doubt they
-have got the stuff somewhere. They dropped it, hoping we would stop and
-haul it up, and they'd gain just so much time by the device."</p>
-
-<p>"Then where in Davy Jones is the swag? Where could they have hidden it?"</p>
-
-<p>"That's for us to find out&mdash;I don't know."</p>
-
-<p>As we came in, a dozen boats came to meet us. The police took charge,
-and the two prisoners were ironed and taken ashore. The schooner was
-put in charge of detectives, and no one allowed aboard her.</p>
-
-<p>We went back to the ship in our boat, and reported the capture of the
-men, but the loss of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>money. Whereat Captain Hall was so angry that
-he would not speak to me that day. I felt that I had done what I could
-and that I was not at fault.</p>
-
-<p>I could do no less&mdash;nor no more, for that matter. I went below, and the
-ship went on to her dock, the passengers were sent ashore, and the dull
-routine of the lay-up began.</p>
-
-<p>I had some time now to myself, and studied the situation carefully.
-It would be a month before the trial, and we would have made another
-voyage before then. I was served, however, with a subp&oelig;na to appear
-as a principal witness, and I put the paper away and took up the study
-of the case with vigor.</p>
-
-<p>The three men aboard the schooner who had acted as crew were not in the
-game. That was evident, for they proved to be just plain fishermen who
-had chartered their craft to the doctor upon an agreement made on his
-former voyage. He had planned the coup, and made the vessel ready for
-the getaway. That was certain. The men were discharged.</p>
-
-<p>Every portion of the schooner capable of hiding a gold piece was
-thoroughly probed. Even her masts were bored at intervals, and she was
-hauled out and her keel searched for a hollow that might contain the
-treasure. Everything that men could do was apparently done. But not a
-sign of gold.</p>
-
-<p>The two men, the doctor and his accomplice, were sent to trial, and had
-the best lawyer in England to defend them, a man who did not work for
-small amounts. I noted that fact and waited.</p>
-
-<p>They were sent up for two years each solely on <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>the circumstantial
-evidence that they had occupied the room above the safe on that voyage
-and that if any one had committed the theft upon a former voyage it
-must necessarily have been discovered, as the safe was thoroughly
-cleaned and refilled with a new cargo of gold for that single trip.</p>
-
-<p>The schooner was sold at auction by the fishermen who owned her, as
-they were afraid to run her under the continual scrutiny which the
-company put upon her. She was broken up and her gear sold for junk.
-That was the end of her.</p>
-
-<p>It was thoroughly believed that the treasure was planted somewhere on
-the course we had taken during the chase, and many fishermen dragged
-the sea on that line in the hope of reward. But nothing came of it, and
-a year passed.</p>
-
-<p>The time came for the doctor and his pal to get out, for the law which
-cut the prison term to one-half for good behavior was now in force. I
-watched the papers, and tried to keep posted, but nothing was printed
-about the convicts.</p>
-
-<p>One day the doctor and his partner came aboard just as we were leaving,
-and spoke pleasantly to me. They had taken second class and return to
-New York. It was pure nerve, I thought, but the regulations allowed
-them the privilege, as they might not, under the "undesirable-citizen"
-act, be allowed to land in the States.</p>
-
-<p>They took no pains at all to hide their identity, and greeted me most
-cordially when I met them on deck the first day out. I asked them about
-their sojourn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span> in Dartmoor, and they talked freely, telling of the
-rigors of prison life.</p>
-
-<p>"But it is all over now," said the doctor. "We will live our lives as
-we always have, clean, honest, without fear and without reproach. We
-were innocent, as you know."</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps so&mdash;but what became of the gold?" I asked cynically.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, yes, the gold," murmured the doctor. "To be sure there was some
-doubt about the&mdash;what shall I call it?&mdash;the disposition of the treasure
-that the robbers worked so hard for. That will always be a mystery."</p>
-
-<p>I thought differently. I had by the process of elimination long ago
-come to the conclusion that the gold never left the ship in Europe.</p>
-
-<p>The strange way they had taken their baggage ashore, their ostentatious
-manner of taking out the heavy trunk and lowering it over the side in
-full view of all was evidently meant for a purpose.</p>
-
-<p>Why had they taken so much trouble to let all see its weight? Why had
-they dragged it with them when, after all, it contained apparently
-nothing but old iron? That it was to cover up the real effort of
-disposition was growing more and more plain to me, but, then, where
-could they have planted the heavy weight of gold?</p>
-
-<p>They could not have dropped it in mid-ocean&mdash;that was absurd. It did
-not occur to me for a long time that the hour down the bay from New
-York out to the lightship might suffice to enable them to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>cut into the
-through safe, which, of course, would not be opened until the other
-side was reached.</p>
-
-<p>It was upon a return voyage that an incident occurred that started my
-line of research upon the American channel.</p>
-
-<p>I noticed that in going down the bay we were forced&mdash;owing to the great
-length of the ship&mdash;close to the Southwest Spit Buoy. The turn here
-is abrupt, and, while the tide runs swiftly, there is a certainty of
-position always for a large ship.</p>
-
-<p>A smaller vessel might swing well out, but a vessel of the <i>Prince's</i>
-size could not. Then the idea of the buoys marking the line at close
-intervals came to me. It was just what they would desire for marking
-their cache.</p>
-
-<p>They could make a note of position, and drop their swag so closely
-to an established position that there would be no trouble at all in
-picking it up, even after a year's submersion.</p>
-
-<p>The trunk must have carried the hot-chisel outfit, the electrical tools
-for cutting, and these the burglars had tossed into the sea at the
-first opportunity, afterward filling the trunk with junk for a blind,
-feeling sure we would think it held the treasure.</p>
-
-<p>I had studied the process of cutting with an electrical jimmy, the
-melting of the plates, and I soon came to the conclusion that the job
-was done, finished before the ship left soundings off Sandy Hook.</p>
-
-<p>The pair were seemingly not well supplied with money, and I determined
-to watch them after they got ashore. By some strange freak the
-inspectors passed them, and they disappeared in the city, leaving no
-trace.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>"I want a two-weeks' leave of absence," I said to the old man that
-night, "and I want it right away&mdash;I'll get the gold we lost or lose my
-job. I'll take the third mate with me. Smith knows them."</p>
-
-<p>There was some trouble getting officers to fill our berths on such
-short notice, but the old man had some faith in me, and let us go.
-I drew a hundred dollars in pay, and we went right to Brooklyn and
-chartered a fast and powerful launch.</p>
-
-<p>Then we ran over the course the ship always steered on her run out the
-main ship channel, going close to the Southwest Spit Buoy.</p>
-
-<p>We did not come back to town again, but remained in the boat for two
-days and nights, coming in only to get gasoline and supplies, and then
-keeping right on the run in and out to sea.</p>
-
-<p>It was lonesome work, and we passed many small boats daily, but none
-had the men we hoped for in them.</p>
-
-<p>The third evening, just about dark, we noticed a launch running for the
-red buoy at the turn of the channel near Sandy Hook. We both were much
-disguised, being rigged with false beards and uncouth clothes.</p>
-
-<p>In daylight no one would have recognized us thirty feet distant, and at
-night we might have talked to our best friends without detection.</p>
-
-<p>As we came in, running very slow, we noticed a boat with two men in her
-near the Southwest Spit Buoy. The boat had stopped, and the men were
-doing nothing. They seemed to be waiting for something.</p>
-
-<p>We came past, sitting well below the gunwales of our craft, but
-watching the other boat. When we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span> came within fifty feet Smith sank
-below the coamings.</p>
-
-<p>"That's them all right," he whispered.</p>
-
-<p>I watched the pair from the corner of my eye, and headed away from the
-vicinity, keeping well down in our boat, and showing nothing but the
-back of an old battered hat.</p>
-
-<p>It was the doctor and his pal, and they were at work. They stood back
-and forth across the channel a few times, and one of them held a line
-towing astern. It was evident that they were dragging a grapnel over a
-certain part of the channel marked by the buoy and bearings upon Sandy
-Hook.</p>
-
-<p>Before we were half a mile away, they were hauling in the drag, both at
-it with all their strength, and we knew they had struck something.</p>
-
-<p>It was necessary to decide at once what to do. If they had the cache,
-we would find it; if they had hold of something else or were simply
-playing to throw any one off the scent, they would keep their secret.
-We decided to take the chance.</p>
-
-<p>I swung the launch around, and opened her up to the limit. In an
-instant we were flying toward them at fifteen miles an hour, and
-within two minutes were in hailing distance. They saw us coming, and
-hesitated. That hesitation made me sure of our game. They would not let
-go the cache unless something dangerous was about to happen, the danger
-of losing it altogether being too great. Smith jumped up, revolver in
-hand, as the launch came tearing up.</p>
-
-<p>"Hands up&mdash;stop that drag," he yelled. "We've got you, Doctor Jackson."</p>
-
-<p>A flash flicked the gloom, and a sharp "pop"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span> sounded, followed by
-another and another. Smith dropped his gun, and fell into the bottom of
-the boat.</p>
-
-<p>"They got me," he gasped.</p>
-
-<p>Then he raised himself upon his knees and, while I headed the flying
-craft straight for them and opened fire, Smith rested his revolver upon
-the coamings, and shot the doctor through the head.</p>
-
-<p>Then the launch crashed into their craft, going at full speed, and her
-sharp nose cut straight in a full foot and a half before she stopped.</p>
-
-<p>The young man who had shot my third mate was snapping an empty gun at
-me as he went over the side into the sea. I stopped the engine, and
-jumped for him.</p>
-
-<p>He dived, but as he came up I hit him over the head with a boat hook
-that lay handy, and before he sank I had caught the hook into his
-collar and dragged him alongside.</p>
-
-<p>Then I lifted him into our boat, and as his face came close to mine I
-recognized him as the former "wife" of the doctor, the robber who had
-masqueraded as a woman and who was evidently the electrical expert of
-the pair.</p>
-
-<p>I passed a lashing upon him quickly, and then went to Smith. My poor
-friend and shipmate was gasping in pain, lying upon the boat's bottom.
-I examined him, and found two wounds, one through his arm and another
-through his chest, both bullets being from a high-powered automatic and
-having passed cleanly through.</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes I had anchored the wreck of the launch which had
-swamped to the gunwales, and was running for the fort at the Hook,
-where I arrived<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span> fifteen minutes later, with Smith unconscious.</p>
-
-<p>Here I turned him over to the surgeon and, getting help from the
-officer in charge, I ran quickly back to the buoy. The dead body of the
-doctor was still lying in the swamped boat, and the men removed it.</p>
-
-<p>Then I got a pull upon the drag line, and was not surprised to find it
-caught to something very heavy. Three men helped me haul it in, and it
-came slowly.</p>
-
-<p>A bight of chain appeared upon the surface. We caught hold of this,
-and hove it in also. At each end were iron boxes weighing at least two
-hundred and fifty pounds each. In spite of our misfortunes I gave a
-yell. It was the gold at last.</p>
-
-<p>Young Simpson told how it was done after he had been turned over to the
-authorities. He had already been sentenced for the crime, and would
-therefore not have to suffer again, having served his term.</p>
-
-<p>He told glibly how they had done the job during the two hours they
-had after the treasure room was closed and the ship warping out and
-down the channel. The time had been ample, and the rest of the voyage
-was just to cover up, to throw us off the track. They had the cutting
-outfit in the trunk that had weighed so heavy, and had taken it away to
-throw overboard, which they did long before we came near them in the
-schooner.</p>
-
-<p>They had kept the trunk, but when they saw we were after them they
-had sunk it with a buoy, knowing that we would probably see it in the
-smooth sea and were aware of the old smuggler trick of sinking treasure
-down at the end of a fine line and small mark.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>Then they had decided to make no resistance, believing rightly that
-the easiest way was the best. They had taken their sentence based upon
-the circumstantial evidence in the case, and they were just about to
-get their treasure when we nabbed them. They had originally intended
-to get it in their schooner at their leisure, but we had stopped that.
-The location of the buoy at the turn of the channel marking the run to
-sea was a safe place to drop anything. It would hardly be disturbed for
-some time.</p>
-
-<p>The heavy, small iron boxes had been made purposely for the work, and
-the chains connecting them had been long enough to cover fifty feet, or
-cross enough space to insure picking it up without delay when dragged
-for.</p>
-
-<p>The old man smiled when I reported for duty, but was sad at the thought
-of our young third officer, who would be an invalid for many days.</p>
-
-<p>"They are going to give him the first mate's berth in the new ship to
-be out next season," said he, "and I'm mighty glad of it&mdash;he deserves
-something."</p>
-
-<p>"That's correct&mdash;he sure does, he worked hard, and took risks&mdash;and
-Smith is a good man anywhere, a good navigator also. But did you hear
-anything about me?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Sure; you're to stay right on here&mdash;chief officer, but they're going
-to hand you one thousand dollars for taking one hundred and twenty-five
-from the bottom&mdash;don't that satisfy you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Mighty well indeed&mdash;mighty well indeed," I replied. "Shake, captain."</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">THE JUDGMENT OF MEN<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>I had rowed in for fresh beef. The weather was cold, the water rough
-and when Wilson asked permission to go up town to get tobacco, I let
-him go and made my own way to the ship-chandler's, where we men of the
-sea usually bought our supplies and sometimes spent an hour or two
-discussing primage freights and other things pertaining to shipping.</p>
-
-<p>There were two big five-masters lying just outside of us in the
-channel and their masters were known to me. One of them had picked me
-up at sea from a derelict and the other was Bull Simpson, well known
-on the coast. Simpson was much given to gregariousness. Johnson was
-companionable, but quiet, and I knew they would be in Jackson's store
-that morning, for they would clear the next day.</p>
-
-<p>The day was in midwinter. The gloomy sky whipped by the nor'wester
-showed signs of snow. How one hates snow at sea! The nasty white stuff
-making the decks like glass, hiding everything from view. The harbor
-was white with the scrape of the cold wind, and the salt water froze
-where it struck<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span> in spray. Yes, I would go to Jackson's store. The
-shipping looked too gloomy to contemplate any longer. I thought of the
-frozen fingers handling canvas stiff as tin.</p>
-
-
-<p>The stove, a ship's bogie, was red hot in the back room. Simpson was
-there, long, lean and solemn. So was Johnson there, but he was smiling,
-smoking and so glad to be in harbor that it stuck out all over him.
-Captain Cone, master of a tramp steamer, sat near and warmed his fat
-toes, his pudgy hands red with frost.</p>
-
-<p>"Go back, they're all there," grinned Jackson to me, as I passed the
-desk. "Thought you'd gone to sea&mdash;sech fine wedder&mdash;for gulls&mdash;what? Go
-back an' set in, Cap; I'll come back for your order presently."</p>
-
-<p>"Hello, you look cool," said Johnson, smiling up at me from his chair.</p>
-
-<p>"Glad to see you&mdash;set in," said Simpson, making room for a chair near
-the bogie. "Shake hands with Captain Cone of the <i>Prince Albert</i>&mdash;Cone
-has a good tea-kettle for this weather&mdash;don't you wish you ran a tramp?
-Please? No, I didn't hear that last&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>I bowed to the Captain. A captain of a tramp was something new to us.
-We seldom had any but sailormen in the group and British skippers
-were always looked upon as a rarity. Still they were always welcome.
-Cone stuck out his pudgy hand. I squeezed the fat fingers until he
-winced and withdrew them. I never cared for pudgy-handed seamen&mdash;just
-prejudice, a meanness, but it couldn't be helped.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span> We can't help
-everything, we must be human, and Cone took it good-naturedly&mdash;was way
-above such things. He showed it by spitting voluminously at the bogie
-and remarking it was very cold to go to sea.</p>
-
-<p>Simpson didn't like it at all. He showed it, grumbled something about
-Yankees and stiff-necked folks, then subsided while I lit up and gazed
-complacently at Johnson. We talked of various things until Cone rose,
-buttoned his coat and went into the office to fill his order. Simpson
-glared at me for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>"What's the use of being so damned short with the Britisher? What's he
-done?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"It's what he hasn't done I object to," I answered. "Stupid, heavy
-brute&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>Captain Cone came back and extended his hand. "Good-by,
-Simpson&mdash;good-by, gentlemen&mdash;hope you'll have better weather of it
-to-morrow."</p>
-
-<p>I noticed that he held out his left hand; it was the left hand that was
-so pudgy, so fat and soft. His right hand was gloved and the fingers of
-the glove were stiff, straight.</p>
-
-<p>"Good day," I said, rising, "and good luck to you." Johnson nodded also
-and the stranger withdrew, followed by Jackson who saw him to the door.</p>
-
-<p>"Wake up," I said to Simpson. "Don't think I meant anything, but these
-Britisher tramp skippers are the limit. High ideals! lots of feeling!
-Human as a beef and twice as heavy&mdash;after dinner. Where did he blow in
-from?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>"He came in for coals to take him to Brunswick&mdash;he'll load for lumber
-there and go back home&mdash;hope he'll get a better reception than he got
-here&mdash;he's a member of the English Masters' Association; you might have
-been kind to him," said Simpson.</p>
-
-<p>"Was he the man they fired from the Association last month? Seems to me
-I heard of a Cone&mdash;seems like he was accused of brutality or something,
-lacks humanity&mdash;looks like it, anyway," said Johnson.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, he was fired&mdash;yes&mdash;by God, he was," snapped Simpson, "and it
-was just such judgment that gets lots of good men into trouble.
-'Lacked human sentiment'&mdash;lacked human sentiment&mdash;well, that's a
-charge for you! Hell! you fellows get narrower and narrower&mdash;I
-happen to know Cone, knew him years ago&mdash;he was fired for losing the
-<i>Champion</i>&mdash;'lacked human sentiment,' bah! Oh, now you remember him,
-heh?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, we remember him&mdash;the man who lost a fine ship in collision in a
-clear night," said I, with something of a sneer. "But that wasn't the
-worst of it&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, you read the damned papers&mdash;you got a fine idea of it all,"
-snapped Simpson. The old seaman turned and spat viciously at the bogie
-as if the poor old stove, red-hot, had done him some grievous wrong.
-Then he turned scornfully to Johnson.</p>
-
-<p>"You remember the <i>Champion</i>? You know something about her, you ain't
-so damned stuck about yourself. I happened to be aboard of her the day
-she sailed, talking to Redding,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span> her chief mate&mdash;Redding, that was lost
-in the <i>Arctic</i>&mdash;yes, Redding was as straight as a string&mdash;and he told
-me the details of that accident after he came from the hospital&mdash;too
-late. He was nearly a year in the insane ward from a blow that smashed
-his head, but he told me about Cone.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, it was Cone who left his wife&mdash;so they said&mdash;left her, deserted
-her and the children. It was Cone who acted in every disgraceful way
-the old women tell about, Cone who raised hell and paid the devil
-wherever he went, Cone who only got command of the <i>Champion</i> after
-pulling shares and playing the game for all it was worth&mdash;no, don't
-tell me&mdash;don't, I say&mdash;I don't want to hear about what he did. I'll
-tell you how he lost the ship, and you say you'll believe anything poor
-Redding said&mdash;so would I. If there was truth in any man it was in Dan
-Redding&mdash;poor devil."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," I assented, "Redding was all right."</p>
-
-<p>Simpson scorned to notice me. He talked at Johnson, or rather talked
-at me through Johnson, over him, and&mdash;Simpson could talk, talk like an
-Admiralty lawyer with two noggins of rum under his ribs. Jackson came
-in and took Cone's vacated chair. He rubbed his hands. Cone had been a
-good buyer, had needed plenty of stuff&mdash;and he got it at the highest
-rates. Jackson approved of Redding also, approved of him for the sake
-of memory&mdash;Redding had always paid a full bill&mdash;never asked rake-off,
-<i>pourboire</i>, "graft," or other money from him.</p>
-
-<p>"You heard all that stuff about Cone, too," said Simpson, sneeringly at
-Jackson; "and I dare say <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>you believe it like a good old woman you are,
-but I'll tell you just how he lost the ship&mdash;if you believe Redding.</p>
-
-<p>"They cleared at daylight, bound for St. John's&mdash;had twenty passengers
-first class and about seventy second&mdash;no steerage those days. Redding
-said the weather was hell and something worse from the time they
-dropped the land, and you men know how it is on the coast in the winter
-time. The old <i>Champion</i> came across and poked her nose into the fog
-bank off Sable Island&mdash;bad place? Well, I reckon it is. Bad because you
-can't tell where the devil you are and can't keep any kind of reckoning
-in that current. That Sable Island bank is nearly as bad as Hatteras
-for us windjammers.</p>
-
-<p>"Cone slowed his ship that last morning&mdash;according to Redding&mdash;slowed
-her down to a few knots, made the passengers keep off the decks in
-order to have peace and quiet aboard. One old lady didn't like it at
-all. She insisted she had a right to go where she pleased aboard&mdash;told
-the skipper so to his face and dared him to put her below. Some of the
-other women folks followed her example&mdash;did Cone do it? Well, he just
-called his quartermaster and told him to remove the objectionable old
-women, told him to carry them below if necessary&mdash;and that square-head
-did. Yes, sir, he just picked up the leader and carried her off in his
-arms while she screamed and clawed him, calling to the men to save her
-from the brutal assault.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes, he got a nice name for that. The passengers told how
-he acted, told how he brutally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span> made his men remove innocent and
-unoffending females&mdash;oh, what's the use? He was a brute and they made
-it out plain&mdash;it was all published in the papers.</p>
-
-<p>"It was along about five o'clock and the sun must have been well along
-to the nor'west horizon, tho' of course he couldn't see it in the
-fog&mdash;that a horn blared out faintly right ahead. The man on lookout
-heard it&mdash;for it was now quiet on deck&mdash;and the siren roared out its
-reply. Then he got a faint blow right off his starboard bow, a blow as
-if from a small fishing schooner. He kept along blowing regular blasts,
-kept along very slow.</p>
-
-<p>"Right out of the setting sun a bit of wind seemed to make. It lifted
-the bank enough to show him a four-masted ship standing right into him
-not two hundred feet from his bow. She was heeling with the growing
-breeze and going about six knots or better with just a white bone
-across her forefoot. Cone rang off his engines.</p>
-
-<p>"It is in these moments, you know, that things happen. Had Cone rang
-ahead full speed like Chambers did in the old <i>Lawrence</i>, rang and
-shoved into her full swing, he would have either gone clear or cut
-out enough to give her his stern on the turn and probably not sink
-either ship. He kept to the rules by British force of habit of abiding
-by them&mdash;and, well, the <i>Potomack</i>, under three skysails and shoving
-along with four thousand tons of cargo in her, hit him fair upon the
-side while he was swinging to port. The ship's jibboom reached over
-and drove a hole through the deckhouse first, poked right<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span> through and
-ripped off his blowoff pipe, letting the steam come roaring out of
-her, and then the heavy forefoot sunk like a wedge fair in her, right
-in the wake of her engines. It was the worst possible place to get
-it&mdash;you know that&mdash;right in the wake of the engines and close enough
-to the engine-room bulkhead to smash it so it was useless. Then it
-cut, shore down under the water line, and there he was with a hole in
-him big enough to drive in a trolley car, a hole and nothing but the
-forward bulkheads to hold him up&mdash;no, he was badly hit, hit right in
-the vitals, and the roar of the steam told him plainly that the ship
-was going to be put to it to float.</p>
-
-<p>"Then came the usual panic.</p>
-
-<p>"Cone tried to stop it, tried to stem the tide of passengers. His
-officers were good, but Redding was hit on the head by a block from the
-maingaff vang and while Cone was trusting to him to take charge aft, he
-set to work forward to get the boats out in ship-shape and seamanlike
-order. His second was a new man&mdash;Billings&mdash;a blue-nose he knew nothing
-about, but a good enough fellow to take charge. He and the third
-officer stood the crowd back for a time and got the port boats over.</p>
-
-<p>"You see, it was smooth and there wouldn't have been much trouble, but
-the passengers had a grouch against Cone, hated him. The women thought
-him a brute and the men had heard so much from them about his private
-life, his affairs, his general rascality, they wouldn't stand it any
-longer. They rushed it and two were shot, one fell overboard and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
-another was badly hurt. These were the only casualties&mdash;strange, wasn't
-it? Only passengers hurt were those who were trying to save themselves
-from the brutal and overbearing Cone.</p>
-
-<p>"The <i>Champion</i> settled quickly by the head, her nose getting well
-down. This had the evil tendency of lifting her stern so high that the
-boats couldn't be handled easily. It stopped the flow of the sea to a
-certain extent, but it was too late to do anything to help that now.
-The fireroom force came up, they were literally drowned out, forced to
-quit, and the engineers came forward and told of the useless steam&mdash;not
-enough to run the pumps. Then Cone knew it was get away while he could.</p>
-
-<p>"Cone stood on the port side of the flying bridge, stood there and
-roared out his orders, wondering why Redding didn't respond to the work
-cut out aft. He saw no boats going over where Redding should be tending
-to them, and when the crowd finally surged forward he had to let them
-come, had to let them get into the boats there. Oh, yes, he was charged
-with not holding them back, not being able to command his ship, but
-man, he had to let them come forward, it was only the fighting ones who
-insisted in getting first places and taking charge that got hurt.</p>
-
-<p>"The <i>Potomack</i> lay to and sent in her boats, sent in four big
-whaleboats and one dinghy. The water wasn't rough&mdash;any good boat would
-live a long time&mdash;and Cone let them take off his passengers as fast
-as they could. He was well scored for it afterward; they told how he
-couldn't do it himself, and if it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span> hadn't been for the <i>Potomack</i> he
-would have lost all his passengers.</p>
-
-<p>"When the <i>Champion</i> settled Cone was still standing there on the
-bridge, standing there and he knew what it meant to him.</p>
-
-<p>"'You'd better go along, sir,' said Billings, 'we're going in the next
-boat.'</p>
-
-<p>"But Cone just looked at him for a minute, just stood there watching
-things and saw the last passenger get away.</p>
-
-<p>"'You hound,' the fellow yelled, 'you cowardly rascal&mdash;you insulter of
-women!'</p>
-
-<p>"You see, passengers get excited in such cases, get to lose their
-heads. Cone never even looked at him, never took his eyes from the
-settling ship.</p>
-
-<p>"The engineer force had gone, the only men left aboard were the
-quartermasters and mates. Cone spoke to Billings.</p>
-
-<p>"'Get Redding and the rest&mdash;get in the boat, I'll come along in a
-moment.'</p>
-
-<p>"The <i>Champion</i> was settling fast now. The roar of the steam and air
-from between decks was deafening. Billings didn't quite get the words,
-but he knew he was told to go&mdash;and he went. The third officer found
-Redding lying with a broken head and dragged him to the side, lowered
-him down and started after him. Just as he did this, there was a
-ripping noise from below. It was like a tearing sort of explosion, a
-rending. Cone had disappeared from the bridge and they waited no longer
-but shoved clear. At that instant the <i>Champion</i> surged ahead, lifted
-her stern and dropped&mdash;she was gone.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>"The suction whirled about, sucked the boat first one way and then
-another, bringing her right over the foundering ship. Billings saw a
-form jammed under the topmast backstay, saw a hand clutching something
-white and he reached for it as the topmast went under.</p>
-
-<p>"It was Cone. It was the skipper.</p>
-
-<p>"They hauled him into the boat and he still clutched that thing in
-his hand. He had been drawn under, been badly strangled and he was
-unconscious, but his hand hold was firm and no one took notice of what
-he held. It was the photograph of a woman.</p>
-
-<p>"Billings didn't know anything about him; didn't know but what
-the tales told were true&mdash;so he took the thing away from him and
-said nothing about it; but Redding knew, Redding knew after he saw
-it&mdash;months afterward when it was shown him&mdash;too late to stop the nasty
-stories&mdash;oh, yes, it was the picture of his wife.</p>
-
-<p>"Of course, Cone was living alone, had many affairs&mdash;so they said&mdash;and
-it would not do to drag a woman into his ugly life. He had gone into
-his room to get it&mdash;the picture&mdash;gone in to get it with that ship
-sinking under him, the unsentimental and brutal Cone&mdash;oh, well, what's
-the use?</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, his hand was jammed between the backstay and the mast and
-Billings just got him clear in time&mdash;funny, is it? Well, I don't know,
-some men wouldn't have been so particular over a photograph, would have
-used both their hands to fight clear with&mdash;what? But then, that's what
-you call sentiment.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span> No, you wouldn't expect it from Cone, wouldn't
-expect to find it in a seaman with ruddy cheeks and quiet manner, soft
-and a bit fat&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"No," said Jackson, "you wouldn't expect a thing like that from Captain
-Cone&mdash;that's right."</p>
-
-<p>"No, you expect sentiment from the thin, poetical, big-eyed, tender
-men, the men who slush and slobber it over at all occasions. You find
-women looking for it in the tender talkers, the soft-spoken, the
-amorous&mdash;oh, hell! did you ever see a man who looked the part&mdash;what?"</p>
-
-<p>"I've sometimes had my doubts concerning heroes," said Johnson, "but
-they are&mdash;the real ones&mdash;generally most common-looking, most quiet and
-unassuming; but that Cone&mdash;well, he is a hard dose to swallow, and
-that's a fact."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, treat him decently when he comes back," said Simpson.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Some years later I met Cone at the dinner given by the Manager of the
-Southern Fruit Company to the Captains of the West India fleet who ran
-the steamers chartered under contract to fill the winter schedule.
-There were as usual many British vessels in the trade, some Norwegian
-and a few American, including myself.</p>
-
-<p>Cone had passed entirely out of my ken and this time I took his hand
-with the feeling that perhaps I had done the man an injustice by the
-human judgment passed upon him. He was a very old man now and his hand
-was still in a glove to hide the deformity which the accident had
-caused. He looked <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span>very much the kindly old-time shipmaster, bright
-of eye and vigorous to the last. He sat near me and remained silent
-during the opening of the somewhat formal repast. The Manager had been
-discussing some subject, for he seemed to wish to follow it at once.</p>
-
-<p>"A thing's either right or wrong," said the Manager didactically, as he
-looked over the gathering. He paused for the effect of his words to be
-felt. He loved platitudes, although the leading man in his business and
-a millionaire. "A thing is either right or wrong," he repeated, "and
-a man is either right or wrong. There's a difference between them as
-plain as between black and white."</p>
-
-<p>Captain Cone squirmed in his chair. He had listened to this sort of
-thing before from the Manager. The Company, the greatest shipping firm
-in the whole world, had paid him his salary, given him his liner and
-here was the Manager setting forth again against the manner of trusted
-employees who should know these self-evident truths. He interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>"In fifty-five years spent knocking about the world upon every sea,
-I've come to a different conclusion," said he quietly.</p>
-
-<p>It was so different from the usual applause, the applause which
-had already started and which would follow the Manager's splendid
-appreciation of the obvious. Several diners&mdash;there were twelve at the
-table&mdash;looked up quickly and wondered at the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>"What&mdash;what do you mean?" asked the Manager softly, amazed at the
-interruption. He had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span> coming to a point where he expected to
-hurl a smashing argument against the methods of some men who handled
-millions, and here he had been held up by a Captain, an employee of
-his Company. There was a silence, awkward, impressive&mdash;and the old
-seaman felt it, causing him to blush through his mahogany tan. He had
-committed himself, and he was essentially a modest man.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know exactly how to explain," said the Captain slowly. "These
-questions of human analysis are so very subtle, so elusive&mdash;I am only a
-sailorman after all, and perhaps I see things differently from the view
-taken by landsmen. There is much in the point of view. But it seems
-that I am still reasonable, still logical&mdash;and I am able to perform my
-duties even though I'm seventy."</p>
-
-<p>He paused, passed his brown hand across his grizzled forehead, where
-the hair still hung thickly. Then he let it drop slowly down over his
-beard and his eyes seemed to have an introspective look. He spoke very
-slowly and with considerable hesitation as one not used to the ready
-flow of language, words every one of which had a meaning.</p>
-
-<p>"There was a small matter," he continued, "which called my attention
-to the human judgment. I don't know how to tell it, but&mdash;well, you
-remember Jones, Captain Jones, who had an interest in the oil ships?
-Yes; well, I was thinking of him.</p>
-
-<p>"Jones was one of the first oil carriers. That was before the Standard
-took charge. I had sailed with him as mate long before the war.
-He got a great tank ship&mdash;lost her. Then came the squeeze<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span> of the
-Consolidated, then the death of competition&mdash;and, well, Jones lost one
-thing after another. Froze out. They made him watchman at the office,
-made him night watchman, a man who had once run a ten-thousand-ton
-oiler, a man who had made them millions by his care and industry. Then
-he sank to the gutter and on forty dollars a month he tried to wrest a
-living for seven children&mdash;four of them girls. You know the old story,
-the sordid details. Jones had to take on liquor once in a while. He
-would have gone mad without a drunk at least once a month. He figured
-that it was best to get drunk than go mad, best for his family. It's
-all well enough to talk, for the chicken-souled loafers who preach
-to their flocks and then get their living through the generosity of
-silly women, to call poor Jones a drunken reprobate, a useless loafer,
-because he drank. But the red-hearted men, the men who knew him, knew
-what he was suffering, knew what weight was pulling him down. In two
-years he never bought a suit of clothes. He never spent anything
-upon himself&mdash;except at certain times he felt that he must undergo
-relaxation, must get away from himself&mdash;then he would get drunk, very
-drunk.</p>
-
-<p>"His wife&mdash;oh, yes, he had his wife. She knew him, knew what he had
-gone through&mdash;she saw he got enough money for rum, helped him, stinted
-herself, slaved, worked&mdash;well, she did everything a poor, high-spirited
-woman could do."</p>
-
-<p>Cone paused, took a drink, a mere sip, from his glass of water,
-then pushed it from him. The looks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span> of the guests annoyed him. A
-prohibitionist from Maine glared at him and made him uncomfortable.
-There was a half-suppressed sneer upon the lips of the Manager, but he
-was a gentleman&mdash;and a host.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes&mdash;I was speaking of his wife," he went on. "She helped him, held
-him up with a mighty soul, a tremendous strength for a woman. All
-through the dark and gloomy life he led, sleeping in the daytime and
-wandering about the desolate offices at night, she was always ready,
-always willing to lend a hand, steadying, guiding, always sound in
-judgment and above all ready at all times to make any sacrifice for
-either him or the children&mdash;yes, she was a great woman&mdash;may the God of
-the sea hold her gently where she lies in its bosom&mdash;dead? Oh, yes,
-she died long ago. The worst of the affair came about when Jones fell
-sick. He finally broke down under the awful strain, couldn't stand
-it&mdash;no, the liquor didn't hurt him, he was used to that. It was the
-despair, the dead weight of crushed hopes, the knowledge of an old
-man unable to make good against the tide, the tide which was sweeping
-his children down to hell. The oldest girl was twenty and forced to
-work at a place where&mdash;well, never mind, it was the same old sordid
-story of a young woman staying, sticking out at a place where it was
-impossible for her to come out as she went in. Ruin, and hell for her
-afterward&mdash;convention, we call it&mdash;but what's the use? She was the old
-man's favorite, and it hit him very hard, very hard indeed.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I remember it very well. Poor old Jones, captain of a
-ten-thousand-ton ship, owner of a quarter <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>interest in one of the
-biggest commercial enterprises in the world&mdash;six children and a wife
-starving on forty dollars a month and the seventh child&mdash;yes, it
-was pretty bad, especially bad for Jones, for he had done nothing
-to deserve his fate, nothing but fight a combination which knew no
-mercy. The relentless, implacable cruelty of corporations is well
-enough known to you gentlemen. Their laws are like the laws of
-Nature&mdash;transgress them and you must die. The laws of life are supposed
-to be just, therefore it is probable that those of some corporations
-are so likewise&mdash;I don't know. But they had smashed Jones. Crushed him
-down&mdash;yes, there he was at forty a month, trying to forget, trying to
-do something to keep his family alive, and then under the heaviest
-strain he broke one day&mdash;broke and went down."</p>
-
-<p>Many of the guests at the Manager's table had now resumed their
-poise. Some at the farther end resumed conversation, overlooking the
-story-teller and wondering a little at his bad form to monopolize the
-talk of the complaisant dinner humor. But some of the men nearest
-the Manager still listened and the old Captain watched them with his
-dark bright eyes, eyes which seemed to sparkle like diamonds in the
-light. They were the eyes which had pointed the way to many millions
-of dollars' worth of cargo, many thousand passengers, and they watched
-over them through many a wild and stormy night upon the bridge of his
-ship in mid-ocean where the mind has much time to ponder over the
-methods, the ethics of the commercial human.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>"I found him at the hospital," went on Cone. "He was shaky, but he
-fought his weakness back and went home at the end of two weeks to find
-his wife down with pneumonia and the house full of famished children."</p>
-
-<p>Cone stopped speaking for a moment and gazed across the table at the
-polished buffet, seeming to see something in the mirror back of it. The
-Manager looked up, saw his gaze and spoke:</p>
-
-<p>"I know there's lots of hardships, Captain," said he, "and I don't lay
-it all to the drink habit. Let your glass be filled&mdash;what?"</p>
-
-<p>"Pardon me," said the old seaman. "I am old and forgetting my
-story&mdash;I was just thinking a bit. This is not a temperance lecture at
-all&mdash;no, no, that is not what I was thinking of." And he gazed at the
-prohibitionist across the board who was fingering his napkin.</p>
-
-<p>"No, the thing that I was coming to is this. Jones found things in a
-desperate condition at his home. He must have money. It was an absolute
-necessity to have medical attendance at once for his wife, and he
-dreaded the free ward of the hospitals&mdash;he had gone into one once
-himself and knew what it meant. He must have money for his children."</p>
-
-<p>"A man might steal under those conditions without being very bad,"
-interrupted a man sitting next to him.</p>
-
-<p>"That isn't what he did," said the old Captain. "He met a friend on
-the street while on his way to a pawnshop&mdash;and the friend heard his
-tale. His friend was a bank messenger, at least he was carrying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span> the
-proceeds of a ship's cargo in a bag. You see, in those days, captains
-were allowed to collect freights at certain points, being in the
-companies, and these moneys were carried aboard the ship until she
-reached her home port. Sometimes there were many thousand dollars. This
-friend had been with Jones in the old days and he knew his history.
-The money he carried was freights from an oil ship just arrived. There
-was fifteen thousand dollars of it in gold, and it was the property of
-the very corporation which had squeezed Jones and ruined him. Well,
-the friend did the obvious, did the human thing. He opened the bag
-and gave Jones just five hundred dollars in gold and then went along
-to try and fix the matter up with the firm&mdash;it required lying&mdash;that
-is bad; it required many other things which we will not discuss here,
-but they are eminently bad, bad as they can be&mdash;and by dint of lying,
-and pilfering, and&mdash;well, the friend made good the loss without ever
-getting found out&mdash;yes, a horrible example, I admit. He made good the
-five hundred and no one ever knew he was a thief. No one knows to this
-day&mdash;except&mdash;anyway, Jones saved his wife, and at the end of the money
-the friend helped him to buy into a schooner and he got command. They
-paid twenty-five per cent. in those days and he pulled out making
-enough to save the rest from abject poverty."</p>
-
-<p>"But you don't mean you approve of that fellow, that thief who
-appropriated other people's money, his employers' money, do you?" asked
-the Manager in amazement. "The thing for him to have done was to have
-gone <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span>to the firm and stated the case, told of the poverty of Jones,
-told how he should be helped. No human being would have refused him."</p>
-
-<p>"On the contrary, the friend did just those things&mdash;afterward&mdash;and
-as I said before, corporations know no laws but their own. They are
-relentless as the laws of Nature, as implacable as the laws of health.
-Go where there is cholera, get the germ into your system, and you
-will understand what I mean. No human feeling, no sympathy&mdash;nothing
-will save you but your own powers of resistance. You will necessarily
-die unless you can stand it. Most people die. And it may be right to
-have things this way&mdash;I don't know, I don't set up as a judge; I am a
-sailor. But I am human&mdash;and I don't hate my neighbor, I don't look upon
-my friend as my enemy. Perhaps I am wrong. Still the thief in this case
-suffered much. He was for years afraid of being found out. That shows
-the whole horrible futility of it all. He suffered more than Jones,
-for Jones knew from where the money came, knew it was money which by
-his judgment should have gone to him anyway. Jones refused to pay it
-back and wanted to publish the fact that he had gotten even with the
-corporation to the extent of five hundred dollars.</p>
-
-<p>"Of course, he didn't do it. The friend persuaded him not to, and when
-he went into the coaster he forgot to talk about it even when under the
-effects of his drinks.</p>
-
-<p>"You see, it was about that time the insurance troubles came about.
-Marine insurance had a tumble<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span> owing to the loss of several heavy
-ships and other matters not worth discussing now. You were badly hit
-yourself, I believe,"&mdash;and the old Captain nodded to the Manager,
-who smiled acquiescence&mdash;"you told me at the time&mdash;if I remember
-rightly&mdash;that one more vessel gone and you would go to the wall.</p>
-
-<p>"The friend owned shares in that schooner, owned more than half of
-her, and he it was that let her go out, made her go to sea after
-her policies ran out. He would not stop her carrying, for it meant
-laying her up and Jones would have to go ashore again until things
-straightened out. It was the hurricane season and she had to go light
-to Cuba.</p>
-
-<p>"I remember something of the affair, for I happened to be on the dock
-when she sailed. Jones was standing aft giving orders, and his wife,
-with her three daughters, were below in the cabin. It was a pretty
-picture of commercial life, a picture of a man doing his work with his
-family or part of it around him, and I almost envied him his place.
-What does an old liner skipper ever have of domestic life? Never gets
-home, never sees his wife but once or twice a year, and the company
-never lets her go aboard the ship at all if they can help it. Well,
-she sailed out that August day, and the next thing we heard of him was
-that his schooner was driven ashore during a gale. She rammed up on
-one of the Bahamas, Castle Rock, I believe, and then broke up. Some of
-the crew and his daughters were saved&mdash;he and his wife went down&mdash;lost
-before they could get them ashore.</p>
-
-<p>"And so there it is&mdash;did the men do all that was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span> right or did they
-do all that was wrong? That's the question. Where is the line of
-demarkation, where does the wrong leave off and right begin, or how is
-the mixture to be sifted down? We go by rules, we must play according
-to rules or the game becomes chaos. But do the rules always hold, do
-they always cover every emergency? I don't know, but I believe there is
-bad, or what is called bad, in all men, also there is good&mdash;it depends
-upon the man&mdash;not the rule."</p>
-
-<p>There was a long pause. The Manager gazed curiously at his guest.</p>
-
-<p>"You say the schooner went ashore on Castle Rock?"</p>
-
-<p>"I said&mdash;well, it was somewhere about there, I don't know exactly,"
-replied the old seaman, annoyed.</p>
-
-<p>"There never was a wreck on Castle Rock that I ever heard of," said the
-Manager, eying the old Captain curiously, "but there was the <i>Hattie
-Davis</i> that was lost on the Great Inagua Bank&mdash;she wasn't insured, I
-believe."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, she was lost on the Great Inagua," assented the Captain, leaning
-back, as though the story were closed.</p>
-
-<p>"You had a large interest in her, I believe," said the Manager slowly,
-"and I recollect, now, you lost all in her&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"The light was not so good as it is now," quickly put in the old
-seaman. "It used to show only in clear weather&mdash;and it's almost always
-clear through the passage&mdash;I remember how the passengers used to be
-glad when we entered the passage coming up from Cuba in the old Panama
-ships&mdash;rough<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span> in the tumble off Maysi when the wind holds nor'east for
-a spell."</p>
-
-<p>The Manager was gazing at the old skipper strangely. Then he suddenly
-turned and started to discuss other matters with his guests. The
-dinner went along without incident and afterward we arose to go to the
-smoking-room for our cigars.</p>
-
-<p>"Come along with me, Cone," said the Manager, "I have a new orchid I
-picked up I want to show you; you always liked flowers, you know."
-Afterward I passed them and overheard the Manager saying in a low
-tone&mdash;"Well, you always had a hell of a reputation, Cone, anyway,
-but under the circumstances&mdash;well, there might be some sort of
-justification. You are too full of that damned sentiment for any
-business whatever. Still, I'll admit that it isn't so much what a man
-does that matters&mdash;that is, it doesn't matter so much as <i>how</i> it is
-done&mdash;and <i>who</i> does it."</p>
-
-<p>And so this was Cone? This was the master who had earned a reputation
-for some very queer things as seamen see them. I remember the old days,
-the words of poor old Simpson who had long gone to the port of missing
-ships. Sentimental Captain Cone, stout, grizzled, bronzed, the man who
-lost his hand holding to the picture of a wife who had been false to
-him and who had accused him of many things too hard to print. It was
-strange.</p>
-
-<p>I suddenly felt I would like to see Simpson, to acknowledge he was not
-so far wrong after all.</p>
-
-<p>"The judgment of man is not good," I said in answer to some question
-relative to nothing concerning Cone, and with this platitude upon my
-lips I went home.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">ON GOING TO SEA</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>We sat together upon the quarter-deck under the awning of the <i>Harvest
-Queen</i>. My own ship lay in the berth opposite, and I had come over for
-a quiet smoke with Captain Large. He sailed in the morning, and was
-bound for Frisco around Cape Horn. I would not see him again for a year
-or two&mdash;probably never; but he and I had sailed together and I had been
-his mate. We talked of things, confidences, the talk of old shipmates
-who know each other very well, and who are passing to know each other
-as memories. I had shipped five apprentices, two sons of prominent men
-in the shipping circles of New York, and I wondered at the outcome.</p>
-
-<p>"I never take them any more," said Large. "I took one out of here a few
-years ago, and&mdash;well, I don't care to repeat the job."</p>
-
-<p>"But the boys are good&mdash;signed on regular&mdash;what can they do?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know, but I'll tell you what one did in the <i>Wildwood</i> when I
-took him to China. I don't know how to explain it. The strangeness of
-it all, the peculiar development that came about under seeming natural
-causes&mdash;hereditary, you will say, and perhaps that is right I have
-often studied it over, often lain awake in my bunk wondering at it all,
-what peculiar ideas grew in a brain that was almost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span> human&mdash;almost,
-for when you think of what he did you cannot believe he was quite so,
-even though his father was the President of the Marine Association and
-had commanded the best American ships in his day." The old skipper sat
-quiet for some minutes and seemed to be thinking, studying over some
-problem. His cigar shone like a spark in the warm night, but the smoke
-was invisible. I waited. Apprentices were new to me. I had not had much
-chance to study the training of youth. My own way had been rough. I had
-at last gotten my ship after a life of strenuous endeavor and often
-desperate effort, and I wanted to learn all I could. Men I knew. I had
-handled them by and large from every part of the globe, and discipline,
-iron discipline, was a thing my ship was noted for. She had a bad name.</p>
-
-<p>"You see," said Large, his deep voice booming softly in the night,
-"there is something intangible that a human being inherits from his
-forbears. We look at the successful man as a target to aim at, an
-idol we point out for youth to emulate. We don't always analyze the
-greatness. A successful man is often so from the stress he puts upon
-others. He will not stay in equilibrium. He keeps going on up, up
-beyond the place his own production entitles him. He becomes predatory,
-but unlike wolves or felines he preys upon his own kind.</p>
-
-<p>"When President Jackson of the Bengal Line asked me to take Willie,
-his son, I did so with the feeling that it was an honor conferred upon
-me, the captain of one of the ships. Jackson had earned <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span>his position
-by his own efforts and fought his way up to the top. I remembered him
-well enough when he was a master, but he was now President of the Line.
-He had a very sinister reputation in the old ships, but that was all
-forgotten now.</p>
-
-<p>"Willie came aboard looking like a physical wreck. He was a slight
-youth of fifteen, stoop-shouldered, pale of face, but with the eye
-of his father, and the peculiar settling of the corners of his mouth
-noticeable in the old man. 'Be sure you bring him back safely,' said
-his father, giving me a look I long remembered. 'Be sure you take good
-care of him&mdash;and bring him back.' I didn't quite know what he meant. I
-don't yet; but I know why he said it. I began to think of it before we
-were at sea a week.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, he was only a boy, a mere lad, but he was all of his father&mdash;his
-father as we remembered him in the South Sea. Degenerate? He was the
-ablest lad of his size I ever saw. He stood right there on the main
-deck the day we went out and took little or no notice of him while the
-tug had our line. He was signed on, mind you, signed on regular, so
-as not to excite the comment of 'pull.' Hell! why do they send boys
-to sea when the shore is the place to train them? He stood there and
-saw me looking at him, thinking of the words 'be sure and bring him
-back'&mdash;yes, I would.</p>
-
-<p>"'Say, Cap, dis is fine. Let's put de rags on her an' let her slide.
-I wants to see her slip erlong&mdash;t'hell wid towin', says me,' and he
-came up the poop steps on the starboard side to chat with me&mdash;a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span> thing
-no one, as you know, can do aboard a ship without a reprimand. Every
-one heard him talking to me. He yelled it out in a shrill voice&mdash;yes,
-talking to me, the captain, on the poop. 'See here, young man,' I said
-to him, 'you mustn't talk to me while I'm on deck. Go down on the main
-deck, and when you want anything, you ask the mate&mdash;he will talk with
-you or get you what you want&mdash;you understand? It's not the thing to
-ever speak to the captain of a ship without permission.'</p>
-
-<p>"'Aw, fergit it, cully! Don't youse make no mistake erbout me. I spoke
-fair an' civil to youse, an' if youse don't want to answer you kin go
-to hell, you stuck-up old fool! D'ye git that right?' he said shrilly.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, you can imagine what that sounded like to the men. Twenty of
-them were grinning and both mates aghast. I was the master, a man known
-the world over as a 'driver.' There was nothing to do but take the lad
-in hand at once.</p>
-
-<p>"'Take him forward and rope's-end him,' I said to Bowles, the second
-officer, a man weighing two hundred pounds and a 'bucko' of the
-strongest type. You remember him, the toughest mate afloat?</p>
-
-<p>"But Willie looked up at me with a sneer.</p>
-
-<p>"'You try it, you sea loafer. I'll sweat youse fer it if youse do. You
-ain't de whole thing aboard here. Youse don't know me, I guess.'</p>
-
-<p>"I had to do it. The affair had gone too far. Bowles grabbed him by
-the collar and lifted him off his feet, and he let out a scream like a
-wildcat&mdash;a most unearthly shriek. Bowles whipped him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span> good and hard,
-tanned him so he could scarcely sit down; but he just cursed and swore
-at the officer, telling him what he'd do to him afterward. He got an
-extra lick or two for this. Bowles paid no attention, but went back to
-his station to attend lines. Half an hour later he was standing at the
-rail when I saw a form shoot out of the galley door and drive a long
-knife into his back. He sank down without a word, and Willie stood over
-him ready for the finish. The mate knocked him down with a belaying pin
-before he could kill.</p>
-
-<p>"It was a terrible thing, an awful state of affairs beginning within
-five minutes after the tug had let go. It was uncanny. A young boy
-doing such things aboard a ship. I would have put him ashore at
-once, but remembered the articles he had signed and the words of the
-president of the line. I hesitated and the opportunity was lost&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"I would have made another," I interrupted. "I would have sent the
-young villain to prison at once. No good could possibly happen from
-such an agreement, no good come from a horrible little devil like that."</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know. I don't quite know yet what to make of it all.
-According to the usual rule there could be no good from a boy who
-would deliberately commit such a crime; but we men who know life, the
-real life, know that rules are not good to follow. You know that. I've
-tried to figure it all out, but there is no answer, no accounting for
-the strangeness of character that develop under certain conditions. We
-tied Willie up while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span> he was unconscious from the blow of the pin, and
-instead of putting Bowles ashore we endeavored to bring him around. I
-took him aft and sewed up the cut. It was an awful wound, but Bowles
-was a very strong man. It took a month before he could get about the
-deck again. We had run clear to the equator.</p>
-
-<p>"In the meantime Willie had had another run in, and I had him brought
-aft to have a little talk with him, to try and explain to him how a
-ship must be run, the iron discipline and the custom of the master not
-to associate with any one, either boy or man, from forward.</p>
-
-<p>"'Aw, cut it out, cully&mdash;cut de langwidge! It don't go none wid
-me&mdash;see? I comes aboard dis ship an' gets it in de neck de foist round.
-Den I slings inter de bloke wot does the trick&mdash;'n by rights I ought
-ter take a fall outer youse, Cap&mdash;'n I've a good mind to do it, too.
-Dem sea tricks don't go none wid me.'</p>
-
-<p>"'But don't you know I could hang you if I wanted to? Don't you know
-my word is law here? I am in absolute command. If you don't follow the
-rules of the ship I'll have to punish you severely.'</p>
-
-<p>"'Nothin' doin', Bo, nothin' doin' at all. Youse kin cut all that sort
-o' talk out when youse chins wid me&mdash;see? Say, Bo, whatcher take me
-fer, anyways? Er "come on," er what? Whatcher t'ink I am, anyways,
-hey? Go tell de little choild stories to yer gran'mother&mdash;don't
-spring dem on me, don't try to hand me nothin' funny&mdash;I'm a MAN! An'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span>
-don't youse t'ink youse kin take de call of me, neider, Bo, fer youse
-makes a mistake mixin' it wid me! I'm a fightin' MAN&mdash;me fader'll
-tell youse dat, an' dat's why he sends me wid youse when I might
-be goin' to school. De old man is a lulu, an' I am his son, Bo, a
-son of a dog&mdash;nothin' yaller in de breed; 'n if youse t'ink you kin
-razzle-dazzle me you'll sure fall down. Youse take dat from me, Bo!
-D'youse git it straight?'</p>
-
-<p>"'I'll turn you loose if you'll promise to do the right thing from now
-on,' I said.</p>
-
-<p>"'Aw, no, Bo, I don't have to promise nothin'. Youse ain't got me right
-yet. I ain't no child. What de hell's the matter wid youse, anyhow?'</p>
-
-<p>"'All right, then, you'll stay locked up until the end of the voyage
-and then I'll turn you over to the police, and&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
-
-<p>"'An' you'll pay like hell fer that 'f I does. Youse see!' he snarled.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, what could I do? What would you have done under the
-circumstances? The boy was not afraid. I knew his breed too well. I
-knew his father. He would not suffer the smallest infringement of what
-he believed to be his rights. He would resist to the death. He had
-gone with a gang of young ruffians and had developed a certain sense
-of what he believed to be right. He saw no law but that of absolute
-equality; and there is no such thing. He was at fault. It was absurd
-for men who ran a ship whose name was 'hard' to allow a little boy to
-take charge, a little fellow not weighing a hundred pounds. I decided
-to give him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span> a real whipping&mdash;a whipping that would make a permanent
-mark in his memory. I hated to think of it&mdash;hated to really believe
-it was necessary, for there is nothing so horrible as whipping a
-man&mdash;and the lad was a man in his own opinion. There is absolutely
-nothing so soul-killing, so fearfully degrading. I prefer the bloodiest
-fighting always to the cold-blooded lash. I have seen men lose their
-self-respect under the degrading stroke of the lash; and a man without
-self-respect had better be dead. I studied the case and remembered his
-father. He was a small man physically&mdash;I never knew a big man make a
-good seaman; but he could take charge of a ship, no matter what kind of
-creatures were forward, and he never spoke but once in giving an order.
-The father had the same idea in regard to right and wrong&mdash;he never
-forgave one, never forgot. Yet he had been a staunch friend of mine. He
-had many friends who swore by him&mdash;and he was always to be relied upon,
-you could always count upon him no matter what the cost to himself in
-any emergency. It was his idea of duty&mdash;and he feared nothing at all.</p>
-
-<p>"It was just a week later on a hot day when I had gone below to work
-the noon sight that I became aware of a pair of eyes looking at me from
-the top of the companionway, and as I looked up I gazed right into
-those of Willie; but it was along the blue barrel of my own forty-five
-caliber six-shooter. The gun had always been hanging close to my bunk
-head&mdash;ready for emergencies.</p>
-
-<p>"'Bang!' The shot came without a second's <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span>warning. The bullet tore
-through my arm. I sprang through the bulkhead into the forward cabin
-just as the second shot ripped me across the neck. I was rushing for
-the doorway to the main deck and the third shot threw splinters in my
-face as it hit the edge of the door. Willie was coming right along
-behind me, and firing as he came&mdash;and I&mdash;well, I confess it, I was
-running for my life. I heard his yell of derision, a shrill scream&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"The mate heard the firing, and as Willie came through the doorway he
-kicked him in the back and knocked him over. Then he jumped upon him
-and stamped all but the very life out of him by driving his boot-heels
-into his face."</p>
-
-<p>I shivered with the intensity of the tale, the horror of it all. The
-old man sat silent in the gloom and the spark of light from his cigar
-end flared and faded as he drew upon it. He was thinking of the past. I
-waited.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, what was I to do? I was a man, a ship master, and here I was
-with my arm shattered by a heavy bullet from a mere boy&mdash;or devil! What
-could I do?</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, then I whipped him&mdash;whipped him until the men turned away. I will
-not tell you of it&mdash;it was too horrible.</p>
-
-<p>"It was four weeks before I could get about the
-deck from the effects of that pistol shot. I had little
-medicine aboard. There I was limping about
-with a broken arm, and there was Bowles limping
-about with the tendons of his back cut through.
-It was awful. The men grinned. Yes, the men
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span>
-grinned at us. I had an extra padlock put upon
-the stateroom where Willie stayed, and he was
-kept tight after that.</p>
-
-<p>"At the end of a month Willie was all but dead.
-The terrific heat, the gases from the cargo and the
-close confinement told upon his weak frame. I
-saw that he would not last much longer. He would
-die in the ship, and I remembered the words of his
-father--'bring him back; be sure and bring him
-back!' There was an old man in the crew named
-Jim. He was half fish and the rest salt and rope-yarn.
-He offered to take the boy in hand and try
-to train him. I let him have a chance, always having
-him close at hand to stop any trouble with a
-pair of irons. And when he turned in the boy was
-locked up again. But there was no talk of doing
-right, no promise to be fair or obey orders from the
-little chap. I saw he would break out at the first
-opportunity and refused to give him one. I had
-old Jim read the Bible to him every day to see if
-I couldn't get him interested in religion. He liked
-that part of the Old Testament where it is especially
-bloody and deals with the desperate fighting
-of men, but when it came to other parts he lost
-interest.</p>
-
-<p>"'Say, cull, do youse believe dat yarn erbout de
-whale--say? Aw, gwan! don't spring nothin' funny
-on me, Bo. Gimme some of de hot stuff or cut it--see?
-Dat kid David was de stuff! Gimme some
-more o' his work, or let it go at dat. He might
-have hove de rock an' hit de giant in de neck--but
-I doubts it; but maybe so, maybe so. Dat giant
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span>
-warn't no bigger'n Bowles, I reckon--'n I c'u'd do
-fer him easy enough, as youse know. Yes, I c'u'd
-a dun up dat giant all right wid any sort er weaping--knife
-or rock--I'm a sort o' giant killer myself----'</p>
-
-<p>"'You ain't got de nerve to do nothing like that,
-boy. Shut up and listen!' said Jim.</p>
-
-<p>"'Say, Bo, don't youse make no mistake erbout
-me noive. I got de whole gang of youse beat to a
-gantline. I c'u'd stick youse all back in de lazereet
-an' not half woik. Aw, say, Jimmy, youse ain't
-got me measure quite right--see? Guess onct more,
-old boy; but go erlong an' read some more of de
-fight to me. I likes it all right.' And so they
-would chat together and I would listen to try and
-fathom the boy's mind. It was peculiar. And yet
-under it all was that vast ego, that immense regard
-for the opinions of others--not alone himself--he
-was too young yet, but for himself was the greatest,
-the self-respect. He was a leader, a boy with
-a soul--you may laugh when you think him a fiend,
-a perfect devil, if you will, but he was all right in
-some things.</p>
-
-<p>"I was more afraid of Rose, my mate.</p>
-
-<p>"Rose was a quiet man, a driver, and he had
-struck down the boy and beaten him to a jelly.
-The boy never alluded to it, never spoke of it even
-to Jim. That's where the danger lay. I felt that
-they would finish the fight when I let the lad loose,
-and dared not do so for a long time. Once when
-Jim had the boy on deck I caught Rose gazing at
-him with a peculiar steady light in his eyes. He
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span>
-just stood looking at the boy for nearly a full
-minute--then the lad turned and looked right into
-his eyes with the same peculiar steadiness--a stare
-that was unblinking, yet not strained. Willie had
-those light eyes, almost colorless, like his father.
-So had Rose, and they told each other so plainly
-what was behind their eyes that I almost smiled;
-but it was no smiling work, even if there was a
-boy in it. Rose showed plainly that he would wring
-the boy's neck at the first outfly, and was regardless
-of consequences. Rose was not a man to trifle
-with, yet when you remember that I was shot and
-the second mate cut, there was reason for the chief
-to throw out all sentiment. And so I kept Willie
-under Jim's care until we reached Hong-Kong.
-Then the old seaman wanted to go ashore and take
-the boy with him, promising not to go near a grog-shop.
-You can't trust a windjammer ashore after
-a long voyage, no matter how good a man he is.
-Jim came back to the ship that night the worse for
-wear, and told a tale of the boy slipping away from
-him in the streets. The man was drunk and I had
-him sent down in irons. Then I sent out a call for
-the police.</p>
-
-<p>"They found Willie, who had wandered off while
-Jim was drinking. The boy had walked the streets
-all night, not caring much about the ship, and because
-a Chinaman would not cut off his queue and
-make him a present of it, the boy had jumped him
-with a knife he had procured and tried to take it by
-force. The interference of the police was all that
-saved the boy's life, for the man's friends helped
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span>
-him hold the lad, and they were just in the act of
-cutting his throat when help arrived. I was almost
-sorry for the interference, but I remembered the
-words of his father.</p>
-
-<p>"Jim being unable to take further care of him
-for the present, I locked him up myself and turned
-in, being tired from the night's work. The next
-evening I saw Mr. Rose dragging Willie aboard
-the ship. How he got adrift I don't know, but he
-carried in each hand an oil can, while the mate,
-holding him, forced him aboard.</p>
-
-<p>"'Say, Bo, whatcher think I done--hey? Just
-watch dat junk dere lyin' in de next dock--see?
-Aw, chee, dem Chinks is de limit. Dat feller what
-got me in Dutch last night is aboard dere, an'--well,
-you jest watch him now and tell me what
-youse t'ink o' me, anyways. I remembers him, but
-most all Chinks looks alike to me. Anyhow, I fire
-her up fer fair--you watch her--see? Oh, say,
-Bo, what a pipe----'</p>
-
-<p>"Even while he spoke the black smoke poured
-from the fated junk. She burned like a box of
-matches. She was full of camphor wood and
-grease, and she fired the entire dock, burning six
-other vessels and making it so hot we were forced
-to warp into the stream.</p>
-
-<p>"No, I didn't give the boy up. I suppose I might
-have done so and seen him hung properly. I said
-nothing, and Rose was a very quiet man. The
-damage he had done apparently took the lad's mind
-off his former troubles, and on the way home I let
-him go back to his watch. He took to the rigging
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span>
-like a monkey. I will say here he was the best
-sailor I had ever seen. There was nothing he could
-not learn about seamanship. He would always take
-the weather earing in a blow and no man dared to
-send him in. When Jim was on deck the old seaman
-kept him under his eye in case of trouble, and
-Mr. Rose was always most vigilant. The mate had
-determined to kill the lad at the first sign of danger.
-I tried again and again to win his confidence,
-but he seemed to look upon me as his enemy. He
-refused to take me for a friend, and my little talks
-were futile.</p>
-
-<p>"'Aw, tell it to yer gran'mother,' he would say
-to me. 'Don't try to stuff me, Bo. Youse had
-your innings at that--now fergit it before you git
-inter the soup ag'in. I knows youse, an' I ain't
-done wid youse yet, either--see? Youse done me
-dirt--youse done me when I first come in de ship.
-I ain't decided just what I'll do to youse yet, but
-youse better keep yer eye liftin' fer me. Don' try
-to razzle-dazzle me none. I ain't afraid of youse
-at all. You ain't got de noive to do me--see? But
-I got it in fer youse all hunk, now don't make no
-mistake erbout dat. I'll let youse off easier the
-better we gets erlong--see? If we gets erlong all
-right I may let youse down easy--if not, I'll kill
-you as sure as I breathe, an' that goes as it lays.
-Do youse git it right?'</p>
-
-<p>"Here was a boy, now sixteen, telling the master
-of a ship he would kill him if things were not to his
-liking. What do you think of it, anyway? I never
-could work it out I couldn't lock him up any
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span>
-more for it would have killed him--and I must not
-kill the lad--I don't know----</p>
-
-<p>"The whole affair was insane. It was grotesque.
-But there was my shattered arm, and there was
-Bowles limping about--that fire at Hong-Kong--and
-I must bring Willie back home. I'm telling
-you a true story. I'm telling you of a boy, an apprentice.</p>
-
-<p>"When we struck the rough weather of the high
-latitudes Willie was happy. He was worked out to
-a gantline by Jim, and he was beginning to run the
-men a bit. It was amazing and absurd to hear
-that kid yelling orders to the men aloft. Slack-away'
-or 'clew up,' whatever the order was, and
-he was very smart. He could beat the best of them
-to the royal yard; and he was taking pride in it.
-His voice was at that stage when it cracks and
-goes into a treble, and no one laughed. Even the
-mate watched it all with gloomy eyes, never saying
-a thing, and never even smiling. And it was amazing
-how the men obeyed him. If a man failed to
-do so, only an apology and the reception of a kick
-upon the stern would save him from a fracas, for
-Willie kept right after them. Yes, he inherited all
-the masterly qualities of his father. He was a
-wonder at seamanship. One day a dago didn't like
-the way Willie trod upon his feet when they were
-both hauling a brace. They mixed, and it was the
-closest shave for the lad. He came out with a bad
-cut, for the dago at sea takes to a knife like a babe
-to milk. That night, while in his bunk, the dago
-was slammed over the head with a handspike, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span>
-we had to keep him off duty until the ship docked.</p>
-
-<p>"When we came in Jim brought his charge aft
-to sign off, as is the custom, you know, for their
-slop chest accounts. Willie came up.</p>
-
-<p>"I haven't got much against you, Willie; you owe
-me for a couple of plugs of tobacco, but we'll let
-that go," I said.</p>
-
-<p>"'No, we don't, Bo; youse charge it all up right
-an' proper. Den I got a small account agin de ship--which
-I'll settle right now----'</p>
-
-<p>"But old Jim was too quick for him.</p>
-
-<p>"'Take him forward and keep him in irons until
-we get in. We'll get inside before dark,' I ordered.
-You know how it is when a ship comes in. The
-land sharks were there in swarms, but among them
-was old man Jackson waiting for his son. They
-went away hand in hand, the old man never even
-speaking to me--I always thought he knew.</p>
-
-<p>"Our cargo was valued at about half a million.
-It was nearly all Jackson's, as he owned the greatest
-shares in all the ships. We docked and were
-forced to lay right behind a barge loaded with dynamite,
-nearly two tons of it ready for taking out
-in the morning to blow Hell Gate rock.</p>
-
-<p>"Bowles had gone ashore with the rest, and Rose
-had stepped up the street for a 'first night' off. He
-was not due until midnight. I always suspected the
-second officer or the dago--I don't know, only
-neither of them ever showed up again. They both
-had seen the President of the line take his son, his
-young hopeful, away with him. They both had
-suffered much from his hands. Perhaps it was revenge--to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span>
-try to get even with the father for the
-son's sins. Anyhow, I had hardly turned in that
-night, leaving old Jones, the shipkeeper, on deck,
-when the old fellow ran below and told me the
-ship was afire forward. I turned out instantly and
-was on deck.</p>
-
-<p>"The ship was burning like a beacon from the
-foremast to the t'gallant forecastle. She seemed
-to be spread with oil. Jones was seventy and unable
-to do much. I ran forward and yelled for
-help. In ten minutes the engines were playing a
-stream upon the ship and a fireboat was flooding
-her from aft. Jackson came down on the run to
-see his vessel being destroyed and his cargo vanishing
-in black smoke. He had had trouble with
-the insurance, and he was worried. Then while
-he stood upon the dock and spoke to me as I stood
-upon the rail amidships, I was aware of a small
-figure near him.</p>
-
-<p>"'Aw, say, Bo, youse better get away from
-there--cut out, see? There's powder to blow youse
-to hell and back right there in that lighter. Youse
-ain't got more'n a minute, cully. Better git gay
-wid de lines.'</p>
-
-<p>"Then I recognized Willie. He had come down
-to see the blaze and was calling attention to the
-thing we had forgotten for the moment.</p>
-
-<p>"'Call de watch, an' I'll lend youse a hand.'</p>
-
-<p>"I called for Jones to slack off the after lines,
-and then I ran as far as I could into the smoke and
-managed to cast off forward, getting nearly
-drowned with the engine water. Jackson came
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</a></span>
-aboard and worked like mad. The stern lines were
-cast off, but before we could do anything the ship
-began to swing right down upon the barge. The
-slip was too narrow to get the dynamite past the
-vessel, and there she was now surging ahead upon
-it. She had both blocked the slip and surged into
-it. I began to yell to the men standing about to
-get away from the place before the explosion. They
-had crowded about as close as they could to see
-the fire, not knowing anything about what was on
-the barge.</p>
-
-<p>"Jackson rushed aft and howled to the fireboat
-to pass a line, as the wind was now blowing her
-slowly across the slip and right upon the dynamite.
-Every one who could understand me began to run.
-The dock cleared off quickly. Then, just as I was
-about to jump ashore myself, I heard a voice close
-to the rail.</p>
-
-<p>"'Aw, say, Bo, give me a heavin' line--I kin
-swim acrost the slip--den hurry up an' bend de
-hawser, youse can heave her over easy enough.
-Don't get nutty.'</p>
-
-<p>"I saw Willie standing there, and without further
-ado I threw him the end of a small line. He
-jumped in without a word and swam rapidly across
-the narrow stretch of water to the other dock. A
-man on the pier reached down and took the line
-from the lad. I had already bent on the hawser,
-and it went across lively. Then taking the end to
-the midship capstan, I got old Jones to hold the
-turns while I walked her around as fast as I could.</p>
-
-<p>"But I was not strong enough to warp a heavy
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</a></span>
-ship across a slip even in still water. The ship
-surged ahead slowly in spite of all I could do, and
-Jackson grabbed a capstan bar to help. It was a
-poor chance at best, but we worked on. I caught a
-glimpse of a slight figure working upon the deck
-of the barge, throwing cases of powder overboard.
-A man appeared with him, but I could not take time
-to see much. The boxes were cases of about a
-hundred pounds each, and they were rapidly going
-overboard, and with the tide through the dock.
-Minutes passed, but nothing happened. We seemed
-to be getting way upon the ship, and Jackson swore
-and strove mightily to save her, with no thought of
-leaving even in the face of a terrific explosion. We
-would have gone clear all right but for the fact we
-had our port anchor over and hanging from the
-cathead. We had warped the ship clear of the
-barge, and her bow swung over, the line being too
-far aft and the fire and water too dangerous to
-work in forward. The fluke of the anchor swept
-a pile of boxes--about three hundred pounds---and
-then came the crash. It was terrific. The fluke
-was clear of the ship's hull by several feet, but it
-was blown through the deck, the five-thousand-pound
-anchor flung like a toy through her side.
-She shook from end to end. We were all blown
-flat, stunned, although we had many feet of solid
-vessel between us and the blast.</p>
-
-<p>"When we came around from the shock of the
-explosion Jackson had the pleasure of seeing his
-ship without a bowsprit, her nose blown clear off,
-but the fire was blown out. There was not even
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</a></span>
-much smoke left. The barge had entirely vanished.</p>
-
-<p>"The firemen came aboard afterward, and so did
-many shipmasters, whose vessels lay in the vicinity.
-Jackson met them dumbly. He said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>"'Good thing they got the dynamite overboard
-quick enough,' said Captain Smith of the <i>Sunnerdun</i>.
-'That boy, whoever he was, was all right.
-The watchman ran away just before the smash.'</p>
-
-<p>"'What boy?' asked a fireman.</p>
-
-<p>"But it was no use to tell us what boy--we knew,
-we felt, it all along.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, that was the end of him. He had tried to
-save the ship, his father's ship--and he had done it
-when men failed--I don't know--I can't judge him.
-Old man Jackson left without a word, and I never
-saw him again."</p>
-
-<p>The old seaman paused, and the night showed
-his cigar end flaming again. I sat there thinking
-over the tale, the true tale of that boy, for I knew
-Large was telling me only facts. It was all very
-strange, all like a horrid nightmare the old seaman
-had suffered from; but it was not a dream, it was
-the truth about a boy, just a rough, tough boy
-whose ideals had been a bit peculiar. I looked over
-across the berth at my own ship, where five boys
-were already signed on for the voyage around the
-Cape, and I began to wonder if I had done a wise
-thing to ship them. Then I determined right there
-to give them some extra thought and study, to try
-to fathom what lay behind their "going to sea."</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><strong>THE END</strong></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<h2><span class="large">FOOTNOTE:</span></h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> Copyright, 1911, by Doubleday, Page &amp; Co.</p></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Chief Mate's Yarns, by Mayn Clew Garnett
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Chief Mate's Yarns, by Mayn Clew Garnett
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Chief Mate's Yarns
- Twelve Tales of the Sea
-
-Author: Mayn Clew Garnett
-
-Release Date: October 9, 2017 [EBook #55723]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHIEF MATE'S YARNS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David E. Brown and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
-
- CHIEF MATE'S YARNS
-
- _TWELVE TALES OF THE SEA_
-
- BY
-
- CAPT. MAYN CLEW GARNETT
-
- [Illustration]
-
- G. W. DILLINGHAM COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1911, 1912, BY
- STREET & SMITH
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1912, BY
- G. W. DILLINGHAM COMPANY
-
- _The White Ghost of Disaster_
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- THE WHITE GHOST OF DISASTER 5
-
- THE LIGHT AHEAD 42
-
- THE WRECK OF THE "RATHBONE" 76
-
- THE AFTER BULKHEAD 105
-
- CAPTAIN JUNARD 123
-
- IN THE WAKE OF THE ENGINE 148
-
- IN THE HULL OF THE "HERALDINE" 172
-
- A TWO-STRANDED YARN--PART I 198
-
- A TWO-STRANDED YARN--PART II 234
-
- AT THE END OF THE DRAG-ROPE 263
-
- PIRATES TWAIN 279
-
- THE JUDGMENT OF MEN 310
-
- ON GOING TO SEA 333
-
-
-
-
-THE WHITE GHOST OF DISASTER
-
-
-We had been sitting in at the game for more than an hour, and no life
-had entered it. The thoughts of all composing that little group of five
-in the most secluded corner of the ship's smoking room were certainly
-not on the game, and three aces lay down to fours up.
-
-The morose and listless ship's officer out of a berth, although he
-spoke little--if at all--seemed to put a spell of uneasiness and unrest
-on the party. The others did not know him or his history; but his looks
-spelled disaster and misfortune.
-
-At last Charlie Spangler, the noted journalist, keen for a story or
-two, threw down his cards, exclaiming: "Let's quit. None of us is less
-uneasy than the rest of the ship's passengers."
-
-"Yes," chimed in Arthur Linch, the noted stock-broker. "We have
-endeavored to banish the all-pervading thought, 'will the ship arrive
-safely without being wrecked,' and have failed miserably. Cards will
-not do it." This seemed to express the sentiments of everybody except
-the morose mariner, whose thoughts nobody could read or fathom. He sat
-there, deep in his chair, gazing at a scene or scenes none of us could
-see or appreciate.
-
-"Well! Since we cannot take our thoughts off 'shipwreck,' we may as
-well discuss the subject and ease our minds," added the journalist
-again, still hot on the scent of the possible story which he felt that
-the ship's officer hoarded.
-
-The mariner, however, did not respond to this, and continued with his
-memories, apparently oblivious of our presence.
-
-Under the leadership of the journalist the discussion waxed warm for
-some time, until the stock-broker, ever solicitous for the welfare of
-the stock-market and conforming his opinions thereto, exclaimed loudly:
-"The officers and the crew were not responsible for the collision with
-the berg. It was an 'act of God!' and as such we are daily taking
-chances with it. What will be, will be. We cannot escape Destiny!"
-
-"Destiny be damned!" came like a thunderbolt from the heretofore
-silent mariner, and we all looked to see the face now full of rage and
-passion. "What do you know of the sea, you land pirate? What do you
-know of sea dangers and responsibility for the safety of human lives?
-Man! you're crazy. There is no such thing as Destiny at sea. A seaman
-knows what to expect when he takes chances. If you call that an 'act of
-God,' you deserve to have been there and submitted to it."
-
-The face of Charlie Spangler was glowing. His heart beat so fast when
-he heard this sea clam open up, that he was afraid it might overwork
-and stop. "Our friend is right!" he exclaimed. "I infer that he speaks
-from knowledge and experience. We are hardly qualified to discuss such
-matters properly.
-
-"You have something on your mind, friend. Unburden it to us. We are
-sympathetic, you know. Our position here makes us so," saying which,
-Spangler filled the mariner's half-empty glass and looked at him with
-sympathy streaming out of his trained eyes. We all nodded our assent.
-
-Having fortified himself with the contents of the glass before him, the
-mariner spoke: "Yes, gentlemen, I am going to speak from knowledge and
-experience. It was my luck to be aboard of the vessel which had the
-shortest of lives, but which will live in the memory of man for many a
-year.
-
-"It is my misfortune to be one of its surviving officers. I am going
-to give you the facts as they happened this last time, and a few other
-times besides. It is the experiences through which I have passed that
-make me wish I had gone down with the last one. I must now live on with
-memories, indelibly stamped on my brain, which I would gladly forget.
-Your attention, gentlemen--"
-
- * * * * *
-
-Captain Brownson came upon the bridge. It was early morning, and the
-liner was tearing through a smooth sea in about forty-three north
-latitude. The sun had not yet risen, but the gray of the coming
-daylight showed a heaving swell that rolled with the steadiness that
-told of a long stretch of calm water behind it. The men of the
-morning watch showed their pale faces white with that peculiar pallor
-which comes from the loss of the healthful sleep between midnight and
-morning. It was the second mate's watch, and that officer greeted the
-commander as he came to the bridge rail where the mate stood staring
-into the gray ahead.
-
-"See anything?" asked the master curtly.
-
-"No, sir--but I smell it--feel it," said the mate, without turning his
-head.
-
-"What?" asked Brownson.
-
-"Don't you feel it?--the chill, the--well, it's ice, sir--ice, if I
-know anything."
-
-"Ice?" snarled the captain. "You're crazy! What's the matter with you?"
-
-"Oh, very well--you asked me--I told you--that's all."
-
-The captain snorted. He disliked the second officer exceedingly. Mr.
-Smith had been sent him by the company at the request of the manager of
-the London office. He had always picked his own men, and he resented
-the office picking them for him. Besides, he had a nephew, a passenger
-aboard, who was an officer out of a berth.
-
-"What the devil do they know of a man, anyhow! I'm the one responsible
-for him. I'm the one, then, to choose him. They won't let me shift
-blame if anything happens, and yet they sent me a man I know nothing of
-except that he is young and strong. I'll wake him up some if he stays
-here." So he had commented to Mr. Wylie, the chief mate. Mr. Wylie had
-listened, thought over the matter, and nodded his head sagely.
-
-"Sure," he vouchsafed; "sure thing." That was as much as any one
-ever got out of Wylie. He was not a talkative mate. Yet when he knew
-Smith better, he retailed the master's conversation to him during a
-spell of generosity engendered by the donation of a few highballs by
-Macdowell, the chief engineer. Smith thanked him--and went his way
-as before, trying to do the best he could. He did not shirk duty on
-that account. Wylie insisted that the captain was right. A master was
-responsible, and it was always customary for him to pick his men as far
-as possible. Besides, as Wylie had learned from Macdowell, Brownson had
-a nephew in view that would have filled the berth about right--so Wylie
-thought--and Smith was a nuisance. Smith had taken it all in good part,
-and smiled. He liked Wylie.
-
-Brownson sniffed the air hungrily as he stood there at the bridge rail.
-The air was chilly, but it was always chilly in that latitude even in
-summer.
-
-"How does she head?" he asked savagely of the man at the steam-steering
-gear. The man spoke through the pilot-house window in a monotone:
-
-"West--three degrees south, sir."
-
-"That's west--one south by standard?" snapped Brownson.
-
-"Yes, sir," said Smith.
-
-"Let her go west--two south by binnacle--and mark the time accurately,"
-ordered Brownson.
-
-He would shift her a bit. The cool air seemed to come from the
-northward. It was as if a door in an ice box were suddenly opened and
-the cold air within let out in a cold, damp mass. A thin haze covered
-the sea. The side wash rolled away noisily, and disappeared into the
-mist a few fathoms from the ship's side. It seemed to thicken as the
-minutes passed.
-
-Brownson was nervous. He went inside the pilot house and spoke to the
-engineer through the tube leading to the engine room.
-
-"How is she going?"
-
-"Two hundred and ten, sir; never less than two and five the watch."
-
-"Well, she's going too almighty fast--shut her down to one hundred,"
-snapped Brownson. "She's been doing twenty-two knots--it's too
-fast--too fast, anyhow, in this weather. Ten knots will do until the
-sun scoffs off this mist. Shut her down."
-
-The slowing engines eased their vibrations, and the side wash rolled
-less noisily. There was a strange stillness over the sea. The silence
-grew as the headway subsided.
-
-The captain listened intently. He felt something.
-
-There is always that strange something that a seaman feels in the
-presence of great danger when awake. It has never been explained. But
-all good--really good--masters have felt it; can tell you of it if they
-will. It is uncanny, but it is as true as gospel. The second officer
-had felt it in the air, felt it in his nerves. He felt--_ice_. It was
-danger.
-
-Smith stood there watching the haze that seemed to deepen rather than
-disperse as the morning grew. The men turned out and the hose was
-started, the decks were sluiced down, and the gang with the squeegees
-followed. Two bells struck--five o'clock. Smith strained his gaze
-straight into the haze ahead. He fixed and refixed his glasses--a pair
-of powerful lenses of fifteen lines. He had bought them for fifty
-dollars, and always kept them near him while on watch.
-
-A man came up the bridge steps.
-
-"Shall I send up your coffee, sir?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, send it up," said Smith, in a whisper. He was listening.
-
-Something sounded out there in the haze. It was a strange, vibrating
-sound, a sort of whispering murmur, soft and low, like the far-away
-notes of a harp. Then it ceased. Smith looked at the captain who stood
-within the pilot-house window gazing down at the men at work on the
-deck below. The noise of the rushing water from the hose and their low
-tones seemed to annoy him. They wore rubber boots, and their footsteps
-were silent; but he gruffly ordered the bos'n to make them "shut up."
-
-"Better slow her down, sir--there's ice somewhere about here," said the
-second mate anxiously. He was thinking of the thousand and more souls
-below and the millions in cargo values.
-
-"Who's running this ship--me or you?" snarled Brownson savagely.
-
-It was an unnecessary remark, wholly uncalled for. Smith flushed
-under his tan and pallor. He had seldom been spoken to like that. He
-would have to stand it; but he would hunt a new ship as soon as he
-came ashore again. It was bad enough to be treated like a boy; but to
-be talked to that way before the men made it impossible, absolutely
-impossible. It meant the end of discipline at once. A man would retail
-it, more would repeat it, and--then--Smith turned away from the bridge
-rail in utter disgust. He was furious.
-
-"Blast the ship!" he muttered, as he turned away and gazed aft. His
-interest was over, entirely over. He would not have heard a gun fired
-at that moment, so furious was the passion at the unmerited insolence
-from his commander.
-
-And then, as if to give insult to injury, Brownson called down the tube:
-
-"Full speed ahead--give her all she'll do--I'm tired of loafing around
-here all the morning." Then he rang up the telegraph, and the sudden
-vibrations told of a giant let loose below.
-
-The _Admiral_ started ahead slowly. She was a giant liner, a ship of
-eight hundred feet in length. It took some moments to get headway upon
-that vast hull. But she started, and in a few minutes the snoring of
-the bow wave told of a tearing speed. She was doing twenty-two and a
-half knots an hour, or more than twenty-five miles, the speed of a
-train of cars.
-
-The under steward came up the bridge steps with the coffee. Smith took
-his cup and drank it greedily, almost savagely. He was much hurt. His
-feelings had been roughly handled. Yet he had not even answered the
-captain back. He took his place at the bridge rail and gazed straight
-ahead into the gray mist. He saw nothing, felt nothing, but the pain
-of his insult.
-
-"Let him run the ship to hell and back," he said to himself.
-
-There was a puff of colder air than usual. A chill as of death itself
-came floating over the silent ocean. A man on lookout stood staring
-straight into the mist ahead, and then sang out:
-
-"Something right ahead, sir," he yelled in a voice that carried like
-the roar of a gun.
-
-Brownson just seized the lever shutting the compartments, swung it,
-jammed it hard over, and screamed:
-
-"Stop her--stop her--hard over your wheel--hard over----"
-
-His voice ended in a vibrating screech that sounded wild, weird,
-uncanny in that awful silence. A hundred men stopped in their stride,
-or work, paralyzed at the tones coming from the bridge.
-
-And then came the impact.
-
-With a grinding, smashing roar as of thousands of tons coming together,
-the huge liner plunged headlong into the iceberg that rose grim and
-silent right ahead, towering over her in spite of her great height. The
-shock was terrific, and the grinding, thundering crash of falling tons
-of ice, coupled with the rending of steel plates and solid planks, made
-chaos of all sound.
-
-The _Admiral_ bit in, dug, plowed, kept on going, going, and the
-whole forward part of her almost disappeared into the wall of white.
-A thousand tons of huge flakes slammed and slid down her decks,
-burying her to the fore hatch in the smother. A thousand tons more
-crashed, slid, and plunged down the slopes of the icy mountain and
-hurled themselves into the sea with giant splashes, sending torrents
-of water as high as the bridge rail. The men who had been forward were
-swept away by the avalanche. Many were never seen again. And then, with
-reversed engines, she finally came to a dead stop, with her bows jammed
-a hundred feet deep in the ice wall of the berg.
-
-After that it was panic. All discipline seemed to end in the shock
-and struggle. Brownson howled and stormed from the bridge, and Smith
-shouted orders and sprang down to enforce them. The chief mate came
-on deck in his underclothes and passed the word to man the boats. A
-thousand passengers jammed the companionway and strove with panic and
-inhuman fury to reach the deck.
-
-One man clad in a night robe gained the outside of the press, and,
-running swiftly along the deck, flitted like a ghost over the rail, and
-disappeared into the sea. He had gone crazy, violently insane in the
-panic.
-
-Brownson tied down the siren cord, and the roar shook the atmosphere.
-The tremendous tones rose above the din of screaming men and cursing
-seamen; and then the master called down to the heart of the ship, the
-engine room.
-
-"Is she going?" he asked.
-
-"Water coming in like through a tunnel," came the response. "Nearly up
-to the grates now----"
-
-That was all. The man left the tube to rush on deck, and the captain
-knew the forward bulkheads had gone; had either jammed or burst under
-that terrific impact. The ship was going down.
-
-Brownson stood upon the bridge and gazed down at the human tide below
-him. Men fought furiously for places in the small boats. The fireroom
-crew came on deck and mingled with the passengers. The coal dust showed
-upon their white faces, making them seem strange beings from an inferno
-that was soon to be abolished. They strove for places in the lifeboats
-and hurled the weaker passengers about recklessly. Some, on the other
-hand, helped the women. One man dragged two women with him into a boat,
-kicking, twisting, and roaring like a lion. He was a big fellow with a
-red beard, and Brownson watched him. The mate struck him over the head
-with a hand spike for refusing to get out of the boat, and his interest
-in things ended at once and forever.
-
-The crew, on the whole, behaved well. Officers and men tried to keep
-some sort of discipline. Finally six boats went down alongside into
-the sea, and were promptly swarmed by the crowds above, who either
-slid down the falls or jumped overboard and climbed in from the sides.
-The sea was as still as a lake; only the slight swell heaved it. Great
-fields of floating particles of ice from the berg floated about, and
-those who were drenched in the spray shivered with the cold.
-
-The _Admiral_, running at twenty-two knots an hour, had struck straight
-into the wall of an iceberg that reached as far as the eye could see in
-the haze. It towered at least three hundred feet in the air, showing
-that its depth was colossal, probably at least half a mile. It was a
-giant ice mountain that had broken adrift from its northern home, and,
-drifting southward, had survived the heat of summer and the breaking of
-the sea upon its base.
-
-Smith had felt its dread presence, felt its proximity long before he
-had come to close quarters. The chill in the air, the peculiar feeling
-of danger, the icy breath of death--all had told him of a danger that
-was near. And yet Brownson had scoffed at him, railed at his intuition
-and sense. Upon the captain the whole blame of the disaster must fall
-if Smith told.
-
-The second officer almost smiled as he struggled with his boat.
-
-"The pig-headed fool!" he muttered between his set teeth. "The
-murdering monster--he's done it now! He's killed himself, and a
-thousand people along with him----"
-
-Smith fought savagely for the discipline of his boat. His men had
-rushed to their stations at the first call. The deck was beginning
-to slant dangerously as the falls were slacked off and the lifeboat
-lowered into the sea. Smith stood in the press about him and grew
-strangely calm. The action was good for him, good for the burning fury
-that had warped him, scorched him like a hot blast while he had stood
-silently upon the bridge and taken the insults of his commander. Women
-pleaded with him for places in the boat. Men begged and took hold of
-him. One lady, half clothed, dropped upon her knees and, holding his
-hand, which hung at his side, prayed to him as if he were a deity, a
-being to whom all should defer. He flung her off savagely.
-
-Bareheaded now, coatless, and with his shirt ripped, he stood there,
-and saw his men pass down sixteen women into his craft; pass them down
-without comment or favor, age or condition. Thirty souls went into his
-boat before he sprang into the falls and slid down himself. A dozen men
-tried to follow him, but he shoved off, and they went into the sea. His
-men got their oars out and rowed off a short distance.
-
-Muttering, praying, and crying, the passengers in his boat huddled
-themselves in her bottom. He spoke savagely to them, ordered them under
-pain of death to sit down. One man, who shivered as he spoke, insisted
-upon crawling about and shifting his position. Smith struck him over
-the head, knocking him senseless. Another, a woman, must stand upon the
-thwarts, to get as far away as possible from the dread and icy element
-about her. He swung his fist upon her jaw, and she went whimpering down
-into the boat's bottom, lying there and sobbing softly.
-
-Furiously swearing at the herd of helpless passengers who endangered
-his boat at every movement, he swung the craft's head about and
-stood gazing at his ship. After a little while the crowd became more
-manageable, and he saw he could keep them aboard without the certainty
-of upsetting the craft He had just been debating which of them he
-would throw overboard to save the rest; save them from their own
-struggling and fighting for their own selfish ends. He was as cold
-as steel, hard, inflexible. His men knew him for a ship's officer
-who would maintain his place under all hazards, and they watched him
-furtively, and were ready to obey him to the end without question.
-
-"Oh, the monster, the murdering monster!" he muttered again and again.
-
-His eyes were fixed upon the bridge. High up there stood Brownson--the
-captain who had sent his liner to her death, with hundreds of
-passengers.
-
-Brownson stood calmly watching the press gain and lose places in the
-boats. Two boats actually overloaded rolled over under the immense
-load of human freight. The others did not stop to pick them up. They
-had enough to do to save themselves. The ship was sinking. That was
-certain. She must have struck so hard that even the 'midship bulkheads
-gave way, or were so twisted out of place that the doors failed. The
-chief engineer came below him and glanced up.
-
-As he did so, a tremendous, roaring blast of steam blew the
-superstructure upward. The boilers had gone. Macdowell just gave
-Brownson a look. That was all. Then he rushed for a boat.
-
-Brownson grinned; actually smiled at him.
-
-The man at the wheel asked permission to go.
-
-"I'm a married man, sir--it's no use of me staying here any longer," he
-ventured.
-
-"Go--go to the devil!" said Brownson, without interest. The man fled.
-
-Brownson stopped giving any more orders. In silence he gazed down
-at the press of human beings, watching, debating within himself the
-chances they had of getting away from that scene of death and horror.
-
-The decks grew more and more steep. The liner was settling by the
-head and to starboard. She was even now twisting, rolling over; and
-the motion brought down thousands of blocks of ice from the berg. The
-engines had long since stopped. She still held her head against the ice
-wall; but it would give her no support. She was slipping away--down to
-her grave below.
-
-Brownson gazed back over the decks. He watched the crowd impersonally,
-and it seemed strange to him that so much valuable fabric should go to
-the bottom so quickly. The paint was so clean and bright, the brass
-was so shiny. The whole structure was so thoroughly clean, neat, and
-in proper order. It was absurd. There he was standing upon that bridge
-where he had stood so often, and here below him were hundreds of dying
-people--people like rats in a trap.
-
-"Good Heaven--is it real?"
-
-He was sure he was not awake. It must be a dream. Then the terrible
-knowledge came back upon him like a stroke; a blow that stopped his
-heart. It was the death of his ship he was watching--the death of his
-ship and of many of his passengers. Suddenly Brownson saw the boat of
-the second mate, and that officer standing looking up at him.
-
-The master thought he saw the officer's lips move. He wondered what the
-man thought, what he would say. He had insulted the officer, made him a
-clown before the men. He knew the second mate would not spare him. He
-knew the second mate would testify that he had given warning of ice ten
-minutes before they struck. He also knew that the man at the wheel had
-heard him, as had the steward who brought up the coffee, and one or two
-others who were near.
-
-No, there must be no investigation of his, Brownson's, blame in the
-matter. The master dared not face that. He looked vacantly at Smith.
-The officer stood gazing straight at him.
-
-The liner suddenly shifted, leaned to starboard, heeled far over,
-and her bows slipped from the berg, sinking down clear to her decks,
-clear down until the seas washed to the foot of her superstructure
-just below Brownson. Masses of ice fell from her into the sea. The
-grinding, splashing noise awoke the panic again among the remaining
-passengers and crew. They strove with maniac fury to get the rafts and
-other stuff that might float over the side. Two boats drew away full
-to the gunwales with people. The air below began to make that peculiar
-whistling sound that tells of pressure--pressure upon the vitals of the
-ship. She was going down.
-
-Brownson still stood gazing at his second mate.
-
-Smith met the master's eye with a steady look. Then he suddenly forgot
-himself and raised his hand.
-
-"Oh, you murdering rat, you cowardly scoundrel, you devil!" he roared
-out.
-
-Brownson saw the movement of the hand, saw that it was vindictive,
-furious, and full of menace. He could not hear the words.
-
-He smiled at the officer, raised his hand, and waved it in reply. It
-seemed to make the mate crazy. He gesticulated wildly, swore like a
-maniac--but Brownson did not hear him. He only knew what he was doing.
-
-He turned away, gave one more look over the sinking ship.
-
-"She's going now--and so am I," he muttered.
-
-Then he went slowly into his chart room, opened a drawer, and took out
-a revolver that he always kept there. He stood at the open door and
-cocked the weapon. He looked into its muzzle, and saw the bullet that
-would end his life when he pulled the trigger.
-
-He almost shuddered. It was so unreal. He could not quite do it. He
-gazed again at the second mate. He knew the officer was watching him,
-knew Smith would not believe he had the nerve to end the thing then and
-there. It amused him slightly in a grim sort of way. Why, he _must_
-die. That was certain. He could never face his own family and friends
-after what he had done. As to getting another ship--that was too absurd
-to think of.
-
-The form of a woman showed in the boat. She had risen from the bottom,
-where the blow of the officer had felled her in her frenzy. Brownson
-saw her, recognized her as his niece, the sister of the man he had
-wished to put in Smith's place. It was for his own nephew he had
-insulted his officer, had caused him to relax and lose the interest
-that made navigation safe, in the hope that Smith would leave and let
-his relative get the berth.
-
-He wondered if Smith knew. He stood there with the revolver in his hand
-watching for some sign from his second officer. Smith gazed at him in
-fury, apparently not noticing the girl whom he had just before knocked
-into the boat's bottom to keep order. She stood up. Smith roughly
-pushed her down again. Brownson was sure now--he felt that Smith knew
-all.
-
-But he put the revolver in his pocket. He would not fire yet.
-
-The ship was listing heavily, and the cries of the passengers were
-dying out. All who had been able to get away had gone, somehow, and
-only a few desperate men and women, who could not swim and who were
-cool enough to realize that swimming would but prolong an agony that
-was better over quickly, huddled aft at the taffrail. They would take
-the last second left them, the last instant of life, and suffer a
-thousand deaths every second to get it. It was absurd. Brownson pitied
-them.
-
-Many of these women were praying and talking to their men, who held
-them in a last embrace. One young woman was clinging closely to a
-young man, and they were apparently not suffering terror. A look of
-peacefulness was upon the faces of both. They were lovers, and were
-satisfied to die together; and the thought of it made them satisfied.
-Brownson wondered at this. They were young enough and strong enough to
-make a fight for life.
-
-A whistling roar, arose above all other sounds. The siren had ceased,
-and Brownson knew the air was rushing from below. The ship would drop
-in a moment. He grasped the pistol again. He dreaded that last plunge,
-that drop into the void below. The thought held him a little. The ocean
-was always so blue out there, so clear and apparently bottomless, a
-great void of water. He wondered at the depth, what kind of a dark bed
-would receive that giant fabric, the work of so many human hands. And
-then he wondered at his own end there. His own end? What nonsense! It
-was unreal. Death was always for others. It had never been for him. He
-had seen men die. It was not for him yet. He would not believe it. He
-would awaken soon, and the steward would bring him his coffee.
-
-Then he caught the eye of Smith again in that boat waiting for the
-end out there. His heart gave an immense jolt, began beating wildly.
-The ship heeled more and more. The ice crashed and plunged from her
-forward. Brownson was awakening to the real at last. He felt it in
-those extra heartbeats; knew he must hurry it. Then he wondered what
-the papers would say; whether they would call him a coward, afraid
-to face the inevitable. He hoped they would not. But, then, what
-difference would it all make, anyhow--to him? He was dead. His interest
-was over. What difference would it make whether he was a coward or
-not? Men knew him for what he was, but he existed no longer. He was
-dead.
-
-While he stood there with these thoughts in his mind, his nerve half
-lacking to end the thing, it seemed to him it was lasting for an
-eternity. He was growing tired of it all. He turned away again and
-entered the chart room.
-
-His cat crawled from somewhere and rubbed its tail and side against his
-leg. Then the animal jumped to the table, and he stroked it; actually
-stroked it while Smith watched him, and swore at him for a cold-blooded
-scoundrel.
-
-The ship sank to her superstructure. Her stern rose high in the air.
-It was now impossible to stand on deck without holding on. Some of the
-remaining passengers slid off with parting shrieks. They dropped into
-that icy sea.
-
-Brownson felt the end coming now, and turned again to the doorway,
-looking straight at his second mate. Smith was trying to quell the
-movement among his crowd which was endangering his boat again.
-
-The captain clutched the door jamb and watched. Then the ship began
-to sink. He could not make up his mind to jump clear. There was Smith
-looking at him. He dared not be saved when hundreds were being killed.
-No, he could not make that jump and swim to a boat under that officer's
-gaze. And yet at the last moment he was about to try it. Panic was
-upon him in a way that he hardly realized. He simply could not face
-the black gulf he was dropping into with his health and full physical
-powers still with him. It was nature to make a last effort for his
-life. Then, before he could make the jump overboard, he saw Smith again
-shaking his hand at him and howling curses.
-
-He pulled the pistol. An ashy whiteness came over his face. Smith saw
-it. He stopped swearing; stopped in his furious denunciation of the man
-who had caused so much destruction. He also saw the pistol plainly, and
-wondered at the captain's nerve.
-
-"You are afraid, you dog--you are afraid--you daren't do it, you
-murdering rat!" he yelled.
-
-The men in the boat were all gazing up at the chart-house door where
-the form of their commander stood.
-
-"He's going to shoot, sir," said the stroke oarsman.
-
-"He's afraid--he won't dare!" howled Smith.
-
-Brownson seemed to hear now. The silence was coming again, and the
-sounds on the sinking ship were dying out.
-
-Brownson gazed straight at his second officer. Smith saw him raise the
-pistol, saw a bit of blue smoke, saw his commander sink down to the
-deck and disappear. A cracking and banging of ice blocks blended with
-the report, and the ship raised her stern higher. Then she plunged
-straight downward, straight as a plummet for the bottom of the Atlantic
-Ocean. Smith knew his captain had gone to his end; that he was a dead
-man at last.
-
-He stood watching the mighty swirl where the liner had gone under. The
-men in his boat were also looking. They had seen all.
-
-"Look--look!" shrieked a passenger. "The captain has shot himself!"
-
-"She's gone--gone for good!" cried another. "Oh, the pity of it all!"
-
-Smith did not reply. He was still gazing at the apparition he had
-seen in that chart-house door; the figure of the man shooting himself
-through the head. It had chilled his anger, staggered him. The awful
-nerve of it all, the horror----
-
-"Hadn't we better see if we can get one or two more in her, sir?" asked
-the stroke oarsman. "I see a woman swimming there."
-
-Smith did not answer. He seemed not to hear. Then he suddenly awoke to
-his surroundings. He was alive to the occasion, the desperate situation.
-
-"Give way port--ease starboard--swing her out of that swirl--hard on
-that port oar," he ordered.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Smith looked around for the other boats. The chief mate's was in sight,
-showing dimly through the haze. She was full of people, crowded, and
-it was a wonder how she floated with the screaming, panic-stricken
-passengers, who fought for places in her in spite of Wylie's oaths and
-entreaties. Smith glared.
-
-"The fools!" he muttered. "If they would only think of something
-besides their own hides for a second. But they won't. They never do.
-It's nature, and when the trouble comes they fight like cats."
-
-He steered away from what he saw was trouble. He would not pick up the
-participants in the scuffle when they overturned the boat. He was full
-up now, carrying all his boat would hold. She rocked dangerously with
-every shifting of the crowd, that still trembled and scuffled for more
-comfort in her. Her gunwales were only a few inches above the sea, and
-it might come on to blow at any minute.
-
-"Sit down!" he roared to the old man, who would shift and squirm about
-in the boat, interfering with the stroke oarsman, who jammed his oar
-into the small of the fellow's back, regardless of the pain it caused.
-
-"Sit down or I'll throw you overboard! Do you hear?"
-
-The old man whimpered and struggled for a more comfortable position;
-and Smith reached over with the tiller and slammed him heavily across
-the shoulders, knocking him over.
-
-"If you get up again I'll kill you, you cowardly old nuisance!" he said
-savagely.
-
-The old man lay quiet and trembling. A young woman upbraided Smith for
-brutality and talked volubly.
-
-"Talk, you little fool!" he said. "Talk all you want to, but don't you
-get moving about in this boat, or I'll break your pretty neck."
-
-"You are a monster," said the girl.
-
-"Yes; but if I'd had my way, you would have been safe and sound below
-in your room instead of out here in this ice," snapped Smith.
-
-The girl quieted down, and then spoke to the young woman, who lay in
-the bottom of the boat where she had fallen when Smith struck her down.
-She was the niece of Captain Brownson.
-
-"I never heard of such utter brutality in my life," she said.
-
-Miss Billings, who had first found fault, agreed with her.
-
-"Was your brother aboard, Miss Roberts?" asked Smith.
-
-"Yes, he was--I think he went in the mate's boat--why do you ask?"
-
-"Oh, I was just thinking--that's all. He would have been second officer
-next voyage. That seemed to be fixed, didn't it?"
-
-"Yes; and if it had, this thing would not have happened," said the girl.
-
-"No; probably it would not," said the second officer sadly. He spoke,
-for the first time, with less passion. He thought of the manner they
-had taken to get his berth, the insults, the infamy of the whole thing.
-
-"No; I don't suppose you knew how it was done," said he, half aloud.
-
-The girl sat up. She had stopped whimpering from the blow.
-
-Smith watched her for a few minutes while he swung the boat's head for
-the gray mist ahead where he knew lay the iceberg. He thought the face
-pretty, the figure well rounded and perfectly shaped. He felt sorry he
-had used such harshness in making her behave in the boat. But there
-was no time for silly sentiment. That boat must be manned properly
-and kept afloat, and the slapping of a girl was nothing at all. She
-might start a sudden movement and endanger the lives of all. Absolute
-trimming of the craft was the only way she could be safe to carry the
-immense load. The men rowed slowly and apparently without object. Smith
-headed the boat for the ice.
-
-A long wall of peculiar pale blueness suddenly burst from the haze
-close to them. It was the iceberg. He swung the boat so that she would
-not strike it, and followed along the ragged side.
-
-The two young women gazed up at the pale blueness caused by the fresh
-water in the ice. It was a beautiful sight. The pinnacles were sharp
-as needles, and they pierced the mist in white points, tapering down
-to the white-and-blue sheen at the base, where the ocean roared and
-surged in a deep-toned murmur. Great pieces broke from the mass while
-they gazed. Smith steered out and sheered the boat's head away from the
-dangerous wall. It was grand but deadly. A large block lay right ahead.
-
-"Ease starboard," he said.
-
-The craft swung clear. The mist from the cold ocean thinned a little.
-Right ahead was a flat plateau, a raised field of ice joining the berg.
-It sloped down suddenly to the sea, and the swell broke upon it as upon
-a rocky shore. A long, flat floe stretched away from the higher part.
-It was a field of at least a half mile in length. The huge berg reached
-a full half mile further. The whole was evidently broken from some
-giant glacier in the Arctic.
-
-Smith debated his chances within himself. He scorned to ask his men,
-for he had seen much ice before in his seagoing. To remain near the
-berg was to miss a ship possibly; but to row far off was to miss fresh
-water. He had come away without either food or water, owing to the
-furious panic. He knew very well that, within a few hours at most, the
-famished folk in his boat would rave for a drink. They must have water,
-at least, even if they must do without food.
-
-The iceberg lay right in the path of ships, as his own had proved, the
-liner running upon the great circle from New York to Liverpool. There
-was the certainty of meeting, or of at least coming close to a vessel
-shortly, for others of his line would run the same circle, the same
-course, as he had run it before.
-
-With giant liners going at twenty-five knots speed, they usually kept
-pretty close to the same line, for there were few currents that were
-not accurately known over that route. The Gulf Stream was a fixed unit
-almost; and in calm weather other ships would certainly reckon with
-accuracy to meet its set. If he rowed far off the line, then he might
-or might not meet a ship. If he did not, then there would soon be death
-and terror in that boat.
-
-He decided to keep close to the berg, and ordered his men to give way
-slowly while he navigated the field and skirted it, keeping just far
-enough out to avoid the dangerous breaks and floating pieces.
-
-The morning wore away, and the occupants of his boat began to grow
-restless. They had been cramped up for several hours now, and they were
-not used to sitting in a cold, open boat in a thick, misty haze without
-food or water. The old man began to complain. Several women began to
-ask for water. One woman with three children begged him to go ashore
-and get them a piece of ice to allay their thirst. Smith saw that the
-effects of the wild excitement were now being felt, and the inevitable
-thirst that must follow was at hand.
-
-He headed the boat for a low part of the field.
-
-"Easy on your oars," he commanded. The boat slid gently upon the
-sloping ice.
-
-"Jump out, Sam," he said to the bow oarsman. "Jump out and take the
-painter with you." The man did so, hauling the line far up the floe.
-
-One by one the rest were allowed to climb out of the boat. They
-gathered upon a part of the field that rose a full ten feet above the
-sea; and there they began trying to get small pieces of ice to eat. It
-was as salt as the sea itself, and they were disappointed, spitting it
-out. Smith took a man along with him and started for the berg. The boat
-was left in charge of four men, who held her off the floe.
-
-Within half an hour, the whole crowd had managed to get fresh-water
-ice. The second officer kept them close to the boat and watched for
-any signs of change in the weather. They were allowed to go a short
-distance and get the stiffness from their limbs by exercise.
-
-"I am very tired and cold. Can I get back into the boat?" asked Miss
-Roberts, after she had been stamping her feet upon the floe for half an
-hour.
-
-Smith looked at her. The print of his hand was plainly marked upon her
-face. He felt ashamed.
-
-"Yes, you can go aboard," he said; and then, as if in apology for what
-he had done, he explained: "You must keep quiet in that boat, you know.
-You must not try to walk about, for it endangers the whole crowd. You
-understand, don't you?"
-
-"Yes, I'll try and keep still, but my feet get so cold and I grow so
-stiff."
-
-"Well, you must forgive me for having used you roughly. I had to do it.
-There was no time for politeness in that panic." He came close to her.
-His eyes held a light she feared greatly, and she shrank back.
-
-"I hope it is not a time now for politeness," she said, with meaning.
-
-"Oh, I wouldn't hurt you," said Smith.
-
-"I hope not," said the girl.
-
-Miss Billings asked if she could go aboard also. Smith allowed her, and
-called the boat in.
-
-The two girls climbed into the boat, and the older women commented
-spiritedly upon the favors of youth. Smith shut them up with an oath.
-The woman with the three children huddled them back aboard as the ice
-caused them to shiver with the cold on their little feet. They had
-neglected to put on their shoes. The women, for the most part, were
-only half dressed, and few, if any, had on shoes. They had rushed on
-deck at the first alarm, and the time allowed for dressing was short.
-The ship had gone down within fifteen minutes from the first impact
-with the berg.
-
-Smith walked to and fro upon the ice for some time. The sun shone for a
-few moments, but was quickly hidden again in the haze.
-
-A gentle breeze began to blow from the southward, and the haze broke up
-a little. Smith began to get nervous about the ice, and finally ordered
-all his people back into the boat, where they huddled and shivered,
-hungry but no longer thirsty.
-
-During all these hours there had been no further sign of the other
-boats. Smith knew that at least ten of them had gone clear of the
-sinking ship. The chief mate's boat was the one he was most interested
-in at present. He wanted to see the man who had indirectly caused the
-disaster; the man whom Brownson was playing up for the berth of second
-officer. The thing was a reality now since the tragedy. Before it, he
-had looked upon the matter as slight indeed.
-
-The second mate headed his boat out and kept clear of the drifting
-ice; but always under the lee of the berg, which offered considerable
-shelter from both wind and sea, which were rising. The danger of
-floating ice was not great during daylight, and he swung the small boat
-close and rode easily, keeping her dry and clear of water. He dreaded
-the plunging he must inevitably undergo in the open ocean with that
-load of women.
-
-With the increasing breeze, the haze lifted entirely until the horizon
-showed clear all around. There was no sign of the other boats. Smith
-knew then that they had steered off to the southward to avoid the ice.
-As the sea began to grow, the masses of ice broke adrift with distinct
-and loud reports, the plunging pieces from the higher parts making
-considerable noise above the deepening roar of the surge upon the base.
-
-At three in the afternoon, Smith began to feel nervous. The ice was
-breaking up fast, and immense pieces were floating in the sea which
-bore them toward him. They grew more and more dangerous to the small
-craft, and the officer headed away from the vicinity and sought the
-open at last.
-
-By five that afternoon, when the light was fading, he was riding a
-heavy sea, that grew rapidly and rolled quickly, the combers breaking
-badly and keeping two men busy bailing the boat. She made water fast.
-
-The night came on with all its terrors, and the small boat was in great
-danger. Smith tried his best to keep her headed to the sea, which
-was now running high and strong. His men began to weaken under the
-continuous strain; and by ten that night they could no longer hold the
-boat's head to the sea. She fell off once or twice, and nearly filled
-when in the trough. There was little to do but make a last effort to
-hold her. The steady second officer came to his last resource.
-
-There were five oars in the boat. Four of these he lashed into a drag
-by fastening two of them in the shape of a cross, and then lashing the
-other two across the end of the cross. He had a spare line of some
-length in the boat; and with this bent to the painter, he had a cable
-of at least twenty fathoms, which he led over the bows and to the drag.
-The drag was weighted with some chain that lay forward. The fifth oar
-he kept aboard, and used it himself for a sweep to hold her head as
-nearly as possible behind the drag and to the sea.
-
-He was tired, sore, and hungry, but he kept the boat's head true for
-hours, and his people huddled down in the bottom, and prayed or swore
-as the humor took them. The children wept, and some of the older women
-fainted and lay prone. These gave no trouble. Some of the younger ones
-still insisted on moving about, and brought the wrath of the mate upon
-them in no uncertain manner. Smith was making a fight for their lives,
-and would not tolerate any hysteria. He smote all who disobeyed with
-his usual impersonal and rough manner; but the two girls were now too
-much cowed to give him trouble. They lay in the boat's bottom and wept
-and sobbed the night long, holding to each other, while the boat tossed
-high in the air or fell far down the slopes of ugly seas. And all the
-time the water broke over her low gunwales as she sat well down under
-her load of living freight.
-
-It was about midnight when the old man, who had been unruly from the
-first, sprang upon a thwart and plunged over the side with a shrill
-scream.
-
-Smith saw him, and made, a pass to catch him with the oar; but the old
-fellow drifted out of reach. The second officer swung the boat as far
-as possible toward him; but still he could not reach the figure that
-showed floating for a few moments in the darkness. Then Miss Roberts,
-who was close to the stern sheets, spoke up.
-
-"Oh, the pity of it, the pity of that old man dying like this! Will no
-one save him?" she cried.
-
-Her companion sat up.
-
-"There's no one aboard here who can do anything but bully us women. If
-we had a man here, we might save him. I would jump after him myself,
-but I can't swim. It's horrible to see him drown right alongside of us
-in this darkness."
-
-Smith heard and smiled grimly. He was tired out, sore, and almost
-exhausted, but he was full of pluck and fight still. To drop the
-steering oar might prove fatal if a comber struck the boat. He called
-to the stroke oarsman who took the oar. Smith took the stern line, gave
-a turn about a cork jacket that lay upon the seat, and then over the
-side he went, calling the men to haul him in when he gave the word.
-
-The affair had only taken a few moments, and the form of the old fellow
-was hardly under the surface. Smith floundered to him; but, being a
-poor swimmer, as most sailors are, he was quite exhausted when he
-finally grabbed him. Instead of easing on the line, he hung dead upon
-it, hardly able to keep his face out of the sea. The girls watched him
-over the gunwales, but keeping their places. Two men started to haul
-him in without waiting for a signal; and they hove upon the line with a
-right good will. It was old and dry-rotted, as most lines in lifeboats
-are, and it parted.
-
-Smith felt the slack, and knew what it meant. The cork jacket held him
-above the surface, and he looked at the boat which seemed so far away
-in the darkness, but in reality was only a few fathoms. Yet it was too
-far for him to make it again. It meant his death, his ending.
-
-He tried to swim, but the exertion of the day had been too much. His
-efforts were weak and ill-directed, and he floundered weakly about,
-drifting farther away all the time.
-
-The stroke oarsman called for another line. There was none except that
-of the drag. It would not do to haul it in. The boat was doing all she
-could now to keep herself afloat, and to risk her broadside in the sea
-might be fatal for all hands.
-
-Miss Roberts begged some one to go to the officer's assistance. Smith
-seemed to hear and understand. He floundered with more vigor. There
-was not a man among the boat's crew who dared to go over the side in
-the night. There was nothing more to do but watch and hope that the
-second mate would finally make it. But he did not. He struggled on for
-many minutes. They could see him now and then fighting silently in the
-night. He still seemed to hold the old man with one hand.
-
-"It is dreadful--can no one do anything for him?" begged Miss Roberts.
-
-"I can't swim a stroke, lady," said the man at the steering oar.
-
-No one volunteered to go. Smith slowly drifted off as the boat sagged
-back upon her drag. Then he disappeared entirely in the darkness.
-
-"The brute--I didn't think it was in him," said Miss Billings, with
-feeling.
-
-"Don't talk that way," said Miss Roberts. "Don't talk that way of a man
-who did what he has done. I forgive him with all my heart----"
-
-The morning dawned, and the sea rolled with less vigor. The boat was
-still able to keep herself clear. The white faces of the men told of
-the frantic endeavor. The women were now nearly all too exhausted to
-either care for anything or do anything. They lay listless upon the
-boat's bottom, and she made better weather for that fact. By nine
-o'clock a steamer was heading for them; and within an hour they were
-safe aboard and bound in for New York. They arrived a few days later.
-
-The chief mate's boat had kept her course to the southward after
-leaving the berg--she had gone ahead of Smith's. By midnight that night
-she was almost dead ahead of the second officer's boat when Smith
-jumped in to save the old man.
-
-Daylight showed Wylie a dark speck on the horizon; and at the same time
-he saw the smoke of the approaching steamer. He had made bad weather
-of it, also; but with more men and less women in his craft he had kept
-to the oars, and, when it was very bad, had run slowly before it for
-several hours. This had brought him from many miles in advance to but
-a few ahead of Smith's boat; and he was rowing slowly ahead again by
-daylight. He sighted her, and noticed there were no oars; but he saw
-the man steering, and rightly guessed that they were hanging onto a
-drag.
-
-Mr. Roberts, the nephew of Captain Brownson, sat close to the mate. He
-had relieved him several times during the night. Large and powerful, he
-was able to aid the chief mate very much.
-
-"I think my sister is in that boat," he said as they sighted her.
-
-"It looks like the second officer's boat, all right," said Wylie.
-
-They rowed straight for her as the smoke of the steamer rose in the
-east. Before they came within a mile, they saw that the steamer would
-reach them before they could reach the boat. They then rowed slowly,
-and watched, waiting.
-
-"Something right ahead, sir," called a man forward.
-
-Roberts looked over the side. He saw something floating.
-
-"Starboard, swing her over a little," he said to the chief mate.
-
-Roberts leaned over the side. He was nervous at what he saw. It had the
-look of something he dreaded. Then the object came drifting along, and
-he reached for it. Long before he grasped it, he saw it was the form of
-a man holding to a cork jacket with one hand and the collar of a man's
-coat with the other.
-
-The old fellow floated high, and Smith's hand was clenched with a death
-grip in his clothes. His left hand was jammed through the life jacket,
-and the fingers clutched the straps. His head lay face upward, and his
-teeth showed bared from his gums.
-
-"Heavens! It's Smith himself!" exclaimed Roberts. He hauled him aboard
-with the help of a man.
-
-"It's poor Smith, all right," said Wylie sadly. The life jacket told a
-tale too plainly. Wylie knew what had happened.
-
-"It's just as well he didn't come ashore. He was guilty, all right,"
-said Mr. Roberts. "A man who wrecks a liner and kills hundreds of
-passengers might just as well stay out here. Shall we leave him?"
-
-"Not if I know it," said Wylie, with sudden heat.
-
-Within fifteen minutes they were picked up by the steamer and were
-safe. The manager of the line welcomed Mr. Roberts gladly when that
-gentleman came to seek him.
-
-"I'm sorry we didn't have you that voyage, Mr. Roberts," he said. "I
-don't like to say anything against a dead man; but, of course, Smith
-was on duty when she struck--that is all we know."
-
-"And I suppose you'll want me to go into the other ship, now, sir?"
-asked the officer.
-
-"Yes, you can report to Captain Wilson any time this week. How is your
-sister? Did she recover from the boat ride?"
-
-"Well, in a way, but she's forever talking about that blamed second
-mate, Smith, who seemed to have a strange sort of influence over her
-while she was with him in the boat. He struck her, too, the dog! It's
-just as well he didn't come back," said Roberts.
-
-"Well, she'll get over that all right. Smith was a rough sort of man;
-but as we knew him, he was a first-class sailor, a splendid navigator;
-and no one seems able to explain how he ran the ship against an iceberg
-during daylight. It's one of those things we'll never find out. The
-truth, you know, is mighty hard to fathom in marine disasters. It
-must have been a terrible blow to Brownson to have to kill himself,
-unable to face the shame for a mate's offense--but Brownson was always
-a sensitive man, a splendid fellow; and I suppose he would not go in
-a boat after what Smith had done. Brownson was captain, and might
-come under some criticism. Some of the men say he shot himself after
-upbraiding Smith for his crime."
-
-"Yes. My sister tells me they had quite heated words while the liner
-was sinking," said the new second mate.
-
-And so William Smith passed out. His name was never mentioned in
-shipping circles without reserve. But there are still some men who
-remember him, who knew plain "Bill" Smith, the fighting second officer
-of the liner that went to her end that morning off the Grand Banks. And
-those who knew Smith always think of that cork jacket. They made no
-comment. They knew him. It is not necessary.
-
-
-
-
-THE LIGHT AHEAD
-
-
-"Red light on starboard bow, sir," came the hail from forward. The man
-was Jenson, a "square-head" of more than usual intelligence and of keen
-eyesight.
-
-"All right," said the mate softly, with no concern. He gazed steadily
-at a point two points off the starboard bow, picked up the night glass,
-and took a quick look. Then he left the pilot house where he had been,
-and walked athwartships on the bridge.
-
-He was a young man. His eyes squinted a little under the strain of
-night work and showed the wrinkles at their corners. His hair was black
-and curly, and his bronzed face, strong-lined and handsome, was full
-of the strength and vigor of youth. He had gone to sea at fifteen. He
-was now twenty-five and a chief mate in a passenger ship, a first-class
-navigator, a good seaman. And the company liked him. He was a favorite,
-a young man rising in the best ships. Five feet eight in his white
-canvas shoes and white duck uniform, he looked short, for he was very
-stout of limb; a powerful man who had gained his strength by hard work
-in the forecastle and upon the main deck of several windjammers whose
-records in the Cape trade were well known to all shipping men.
-
-It was the midwatch. Mr. James had been upon the bridge about half an
-hour only. It was the blackest part of the night, the time between one
-and two, in the latitude north of Hatteras. James rubbed his eyes once
-or twice, brushed his short mustache from his mouth with his fingers,
-and felt again for the night glass just within the pilot-house window,
-which was open.
-
-"How does she head?" he asked the helmsman softly.
-
-"West, two degrees north, sir," said the quartermaster at the steam
-steering wheel.
-
-James looked again, and, replacing the glass, walked to the bridge rail
-and stopped.
-
-The point far ahead to starboard was showing plainly. It was the red
-light of some steamer whose hull was still below the horizon. Her
-funnel tops just showed like a black dot, darker than the surrounding
-gloom. Her masthead light was very bright, shining like a star of the
-first magnitude that had just risen from a clear sky. He knew she was a
-long way off. Not less than twelve miles separated the vessels. There
-was plenty of time for a change of course. He began to hum softly:
-
- "When the lights you see ahead,
- Port your helm and show your red----"
-
-"Yes," he muttered, "it's a good old saw--poetry of the night. I wonder
-if _she_ knows of the poetry of--of--the sea----"
-
-His mind went back to the days ashore, the last days he had spent upon
-the beach with her.
-
-"And I have worked up to this for you," he had told her with all the
-feeling he could muster, the strong passion of a strong man asking for
-what he desired most. "I have worked up to this for you, just you."
-
-The words rang in his ears. The scene was there before him. The
-beautiful woman, the woman he loved more than his life. He could tell
-her no more than that--he had done all he had done just for her, just
-to be able to call her his own.
-
-The dead monotony of the life before him hung like a black pall, heavy
-in the night. He saw all the lonely years he must face, all the hard
-life of the sailor, for she had simply laughed lightly, looked him
-squarely in the eyes--and shook her head.
-
-"No," she had said gently. "No, you mustn't think of it--I mean it----"
-And he knew that what he had done was as nothing to her, nothing at
-all--what was a mate to a woman like that?
-
-The steady vibration of the engines below made the steel rigging shake.
-The low drone of the side wash as the surf roared from the bows made
-a soft murmur where it reached his ears. It made him drowsy, dreamy,
-and sullen. He cared for nothing now. What was a mate, after all? Any
-corner groceryman was far better in the eyes of most women. Perhaps he
-had been mistaken. Perhaps the position he had ideals of was not much.
-Yes--that was it; he had been mistaken. And he gazed steadily out into
-the dark future, and subconsciously he saw a long, dreary life of toil
-and trouble, without the woman he loved to relieve the dark solitude.
-
-Before him rose the lights. The red was now well up and rising fast.
-It had been but a flickering spark at first, showing soon after the
-bright headlight had risen. It was upon the port side of that vessel's
-bridge and high above the sea. It was electric, for no ordinary oil
-burner would show so far with color. The ship must be a liner of size,
-and must be going fast. Suddenly he saw a flash of green. It was the
-starboard light of the approaching ship. Then for an instant both side
-lights shone brightly.
-
-The vessel then was not crossing his bows, after all. The green was her
-starboard light, and that was the one she must show. It was all right
-then. He would not change the course. If she swung out, she must be
-coming almost head on now, for her red had shone but two points off the
-bow, and the converging courses must be drawing together.
-
-All right then. If they crossed before the ships met it was well and
-good. There would probably be a mile or more to spare, and he was even
-now crossing her course, for he saw her green light, which showed him
-he was right ahead of her, and his rate of speed would take him over
-in a few moments. Then her green would be upon his right or starboard
-side, showing that she was passing astern of him. It was simple, plain
-as could be. He paid little or no attention any longer.
-
-And then suddenly the green light faded and the red shone again. It
-caused the officer to stop in his walk, which he had begun again to
-keep in action.
-
-"Port your helm a little," he ordered as he realized the positions.
-
-"Aye, aye, sir--port it is, sir," came the monotonous response from the
-pilot-house window; and the clanking of the steam gear sounded faintly
-upon his ears.
-
-The giant liner swung slowly to starboard, swung just a little; and,
-as she did so, the loom of a monstrous figure rose right ahead in the
-night. The glare of the bright headlight shone close aboard. The red of
-her port light was a dangerous glare; and at a space to port flickered
-a moment the fatal green of the starboard side light, flickered, and
-then went out, shut off by the running board as the vessel swung across
-the bows of the ship, where the mate stood gazing at her.
-
-"Hard aport," he yelled savagely.
-
-"Hard aport, sir," came the response from the wheel, and the voice
-showed more or less concern now.
-
-There was an instant of suspense, a moment of silence, and the two
-giant shapes came close with amazing speed. The liner swung to her port
-helm, and her bows pointed clear of the light ahead. But the speed was
-awful. Both going at twenty-five knots an hour, making the closing
-speed nearly a mile a minute, brought the giants too close to pass
-clear.
-
-There was a hoarse cry from forward. The mate knew he was not going
-to clear, and the roar of his siren tore the night's silence. Then
-the huge fabrics came in collision. There was a gigantic crash, a
-thundering shock, and a tearing, ripping sound as steel tore steel to
-ribbons.
-
-The shock made the rigging sing like a giant harp under the strain,
-and the "ping" of parting steel lines sounded in accompaniment to the
-tumultuous crashing of wood and iron. The cries of men came faintly
-through the uproar from forward, and this was followed almost instantly
-by frantic shrieks from aft as the effect of the shock was felt by the
-women passengers.
-
-The liner had failed to clear, and, swinging too late to port, had cut
-slantingly into the other ship's quarter and tore away the greater
-part of her stern. Tearing, grinding, ripping, and snapping, the huge
-shapes ground alongside for a few moments as their headway took them
-along without reducing speed. Too late the reversing engines, too late
-the telegraph for all speed astern. The ships had come in contact.
-The mate had run into another ship that had shown him her red light
-to starboard. There was no mistake about it. The cry of the seaman on
-watch had been heard by fifty persons.
-
-"Red light on the starboard bow, sir----"
-
-It rang in the officer's ears. It sounded above the terrible din of
-smashing steel and beams, and even above the roar of the sirens telling
-of the death wound that had been given a marine monster of twenty-five
-thousand tons register.
-
-The awful feeling of responsibility paralyzed the mate. The terror of
-what he had done numbed him; stunned him so that he stood there upon
-the bridge like a man asleep. Fifteen hundred human souls were sinking
-in that ship, which was now drifting off to port in the night with
-their cries sounding faintly through the blackness, even rising to be
-heard through the roar of the steam. He thought of it. It was ghastly.
-Fifteen hundred souls; and he knew how badly he had wounded the ship.
-He knew the terrific power of the blow he had delivered--shearing off
-the after part of that vessel and letting in the sea clear to the
-midship bulkhead. There was no chance for her to float. The wound
-was too deadly. It was as bad as though he had rammed her with a
-battleship's ram.
-
-The half-dressed form of the captain rushed to him--his captain.
-
-"What happened?" he whispered hoarsely. He seemed to be afraid to ask
-the question loudly. "Great Heaven, did you hit her?"
-
-The mate stood gazing at the huge shadow, and his tongue refused to
-answer the question. Then the voice beside him seemed to gain its
-power. It roared out:
-
-"Bulkheads, there--close them, quick!" And the automatic device, worked
-from the pilot house, was pulled savagely.
-
-The captain rushed into the pilot house. The man at the wheel who had
-left it to throw the lever to close the bulkheads sprang back to his
-post.
-
-"How'd you do it?" asked the master again, in a low voice full of
-passion and strained to the utmost. "How'd you strike--don't you know
-you killed at least five hundred men? You murdering brute--you were
-asleep." Then he raised his voice again, and bawled down through the
-tube to MacDougal, the chief engineer.
-
-"How is she--quick--get the pumps going--collision--keep the firemen
-cool, and for God's sake don't let them panic--keep them at their posts
-until we see what's up. We've run down the express steamer _Blue Star_,
-of the Royal Dutch Line----"
-
-The master turned to the pilot house again and looked out of the
-window. His chief officer was still standing where he had left him.
-
-"In Heaven's name, Mr. James, what's the matter with you to-night?"
-he broke out wildly, in passionate tones, almost sobbing. "It's all
-hands--get 'em out quick!"
-
-He was a strange creature standing there in his undershirt and drawers,
-with his long gray beard streaming down across his breast. The man at
-the wheel even looked at him for a moment, but did not smile. It was
-tragedy, not comedy.
-
-"Is she full speed astern?" asked the master quickly.
-
-"Yes, sir, full speed astern, sir," said the man. His face was white,
-and his hands shook a little while he held the spokes of the wheel.
-There was death for many that night, and he knew it. It would be hard
-to tell who would survive in the rush that was sure to come if the
-ship went down. Yet his seamanship told him that much was to be hoped
-from the forward bulkhead. It would hold her up if it could stand the
-strain.
-
-In two minutes there was a rush of hundreds of feet upon the decks
-below the flying bridge. The second officer came up half naked, dressed
-in shirt and trousers, without shoes or stockings. He was a powerful
-man and short, with a tremendous voice, a real Yankee bos'n voice;
-and he roared out orders for the men, who jumped to their stations
-automatically.
-
-The captain came again to the bridge and took command. He yelled to
-the boat crews below, and strove to quiet the crowding passengers who
-pushed and fought about the boats in spite of the after guard and
-seamen.
-
-"Get down there and wade into that mess, Wilson," said the master
-to the second officer; and he jumped down and went bawling through
-the press, pushing and pulling, striking here and there a refractory
-passenger who would insist upon trying to fill the small boats.
-
-"There is no danger--no danger whatever," roared the captain again
-and again from the bridge. The petty officers took up the cry, and
-gradually the press about the starboard lifeboats grew less. The boats
-upon the port side had been all carried away or smashed to bits. Ten
-boats were left.
-
-A man rushed up the bridge steps coming from aft.
-
-"She's sinking, sir," he panted, pointing to the dim shadow of the
-rammed ship drifting astern. The steady roar of her siren told of the
-danger, and seemed to be a resonant cry for help.
-
-The master gazed aft. Then he rushed to the pilot-house window and
-took up the night glass hanging there. He looked hard at the ship now
-lying astern and riding with her bows high in the air. The man was
-right. She was rapidly going down. Ten minutes at the most would tell
-the whole story.
-
-"Get the starboard boats out, Mr. James," called the captain in an
-even tone, "and let no one but the crews in them. The first man who
-attempts to get in will be shot. Go to the vessel and bring back all
-you can--quick----"
-
-But the form there had vanished before he had finished speaking. The
-chief officer had awakened at last from his stupor. His responsibility
-came back to him with a rush of feeling. But an instant before he had
-faced the end. He had decided to kill himself at once, and was just
-about to go to his room for his gun. He was too ashamed to face the
-ordeal, the ordeal of the officer who has run down a ship in a clear
-night. There had been literally no excuse for him. He could not plead
-ignorance of the laws; his license as officer made that impossible. He
-knew what to do when raising a light to starboard when that light was
-red. The rules were plainly written. Every common waterman knew them
-by heart. He had disobeyed them by some mischance, some mistake he
-could not exactly define; but he knew that under it all was that dull,
-sullen apathy from a wrong, or fancied wrong, that had caused him to be
-negligent.
-
-He would not go upon the witness stand and say that, because a woman
-did not love him, he had allowed his ship to ram a liner with fifteen
-hundred souls aboard her in a clear night. No! Death was a hundred, a
-thousand times better than such ignominy, such a miserable, cowardly
-sort of excuse. He would blow his brains out just as soon as he saw the
-finish, just as soon as he knew his vessel would float. Then came the
-captain's voice of command:
-
-"Get out the starboard boats and save all you can----"
-
-Yes, it was his duty; his above all others. He was at number one boat
-before the master had finished his orders.
-
-Six good men were at their stations. The falls were run taut, the boat
-shoved clear, and down she went with a rush into the sea. Nine others
-followed within a minute, and ten boats pulled away into the darkness
-astern, where the roar of the siren still sounded loud and resonant--a
-wild, terrible cry of death and destruction.
-
-James met a boat coming toward him before he reached the ship. She was
-full. Sixty-two men and women filled her, and she just floated, and
-that was all, her gunwales awash in the smooth sea. The swell lifted
-her, and she rose high above him, a dark object against the sky. Then
-she sank slowly down into the trough, and disappeared behind the hill
-of water that ran smoothly from the northeast in long, heaving seas.
-
-The night was still fine, and the wind almost nothing at all. The banks
-of vapor rising in the east told of a change; but the change was not
-yet. James noticed the weather mechanically, as a good seaman does,
-from a small boat when at sea at night; but he was thinking of the
-huge shadow which now drew close aboard.
-
-As the boat came under the port side, he could see the passengers
-crowding the rail in the waist, where the lifeboats were being filled
-and sent away as fast as men could work them. Seven boats were
-alongside full of human beings. Two more were being lowered. Three came
-from under the stern as he drew alongside.
-
-There was a mass of people still to be taken off. He saw at a glance
-that the liner had twenty large lifeboats for her complement. One was
-smashed. There was every reason to believe she would send out nineteen
-with at least a thousand people in them. There would be several hundred
-more to take besides these. The life rafts might do it, but he knew the
-danger of life rafts in the furious struggle in a sinking ship.
-
-The thing would be to save the passengers with his own boats. This he
-might do if the ship floated long enough. She was sinking fast, as he
-could see by her rising bows. She was probably even now hanging solely
-by her midship bulkhead, and that would most likely be badly smashed by
-the collision, for he had struck the ship far enough forward to do it
-damage, although his vessel had only cut into her well aft. The blow
-had been slanting. A little more time, perhaps a few seconds, and the
-ships would have swung clear.
-
-He came alongside and hailed the deck.
-
-"Send them down lively--come along now, quick!" he called up in his
-natural voice. It was the first time since the collision he had
-spoken. It sounded strange to hear his own tones coming natural again.
-
-In a few moments he was crowding and seating the women and children
-in his boat. Then came the men from everywhere. They crowded down the
-falls, jumped into the sea, and swam alongside, begging to be hauled
-aboard, or climbed over the high gunwales themselves. One powerful
-young man, stripped to the waist, dived clean from the hurricane deck,
-and almost instantly rose alongside. Then he swung himself into the
-boat, and stood amidships hauling others in until the craft settled
-down to her bearings and the men at the oars could hardly row.
-
-"Shove off--give way," ordered James.
-
-The boat started back slowly, the men rowing gingerly, poking and
-striking the passengers in the backs with the oars until the crowd
-settled itself. Then she went along slowly toward the ship, and the
-women in her prayed, the men swore, and the children wept and sobbed.
-And all the time the fact that he was the cause of it all impressed
-James queerly. He could not understand it, could not quite see why he
-had done it, and yet he knew he had. One man spoke to the athlete who
-had dived.
-
-"They should burn a man who would sink a ship like this on a clear
-night; they should burn him to a stake--the drunken, cowardly
-scoundrel----"
-
-And James sat there with the tiller ropes in his hand; sat silent,
-thoughtful, and knew in his heart the man had spoken the truth. If he
-could only be sure of the passengers--he would not give them a chance
-to say anything more. His boat came alongside his own ship. The crowd
-above cheered him--they did not know--he was a hero to them, the first
-boat with the rescued. How quickly they would change that cheer when
-they learned the truth! He almost smiled. His set face, strong-lined,
-bronzed, and virile, turned away from the people in the boat. He gave
-orders in the usual tone. The passengers were quickly passed aboard.
-Then he started back for another load.
-
-By this time the sides of his ship were crowded with boats. She was
-taking aboard over a thousand people, and the sea was still smooth.
-
-The swell heaved higher as the small boat went back toward the sinking
-steamer. James noticed it. The sky to the eastward was dark with a
-bank of vapor. The air had the feeling of a northeaster. It was coming
-along, and there was plenty of time, for it would come slowly. The last
-of the passengers would be either sunk or aboard his own ship before
-the breeze rose to a dangerous extent.
-
-The men rowed quickly. They were anxious. The horror of the whole thing
-had fallen upon them like a pall; but they strove mightily to do their
-share. James found his boat to be the last to reach the sinking ship.
-
-The liner was well down now by the stern and her deck was awash aft.
-She rose higher and higher as he gazed at her, her decks slanting,
-sloping, and she rolled loggily in the growing swell. Her siren
-stopped. A dull, muffled roar from the sea, a smothered explosion told
-of the end of the boilers. She would go in a moment. The passengers
-were clinging, grabbing to anything to hold on. The deck slanted so
-dangerously that many were slid off into the sea where they plunged,
-some silently and hopelessly, others screaming wildly with the terror
-of sudden death.
-
-James watched them. He saw many die, saw many go to their end. Others
-swam; and he strove to pick them up, forgetting himself in the struggle.
-
-He picked up sixteen in this manner, steering for them as they swam
-about in the night calling for help. The last one was a girl, a
-beautiful girl of twenty or less. He hauled her into the boat.
-
-A sudden, wild yelling caused him to look. The sinking liner stood upon
-end, her forefoot clear of the sea. She swung loggily to and fro for a
-moment, settling as she did so. Then, with a rush, she plunged stern
-first to the bottom, the crash of her bursting decks as the air blew
-out being the last sound he heard.
-
-The ship was very close to him. Her swing as she foundered brought her
-closer. The vortex sucked his boat toward her, drew the craft with a
-mighty pull. A spar, twisting, whirling in the swirl, struck the boat,
-and instantly she was a wreck, capsized, engulfed in the mighty hole
-the sinking liner made in the sea with her last plunge.
-
-James found himself smothered, drowning, drawn downward by a great
-force he could not fight against. The whole ocean seemed to pull down
-upon him and crush him into its black depths.
-
-The whole thing took such a small space of time, he hardly realized his
-position. The utter blackness, the salt water in his eyes and mouth,
-all paralyzed his mind for a few moments. Then he thought of his end.
-It was just as well. He was drowning, going to the bottom. He must soon
-go, anyhow; he could not face those wrecked passengers; and with the
-thought came a grim peacefulness, a satisfaction that the fight was all
-over. He could now rest at last.
-
-But nature within him was very strong. He was a powerful man. When he
-gave up the struggle, his natural buoyancy lifted him to the surface
-of the sea. He came up, his head appearing in the air, and he breathed
-again in spite of himself. Then the old, old fighting spirit, the
-desire to survive which is so strong within the breast of every young
-animal, took charge. No, he would not go down yet. He must see the
-finish, the end of things in which he was concerned.
-
-He swam about aimlessly. The swell heaved him high up, dropped him far
-down; and he noticed that now the sea was running, the small combers
-rising before a stiff breeze. These burst upon his face and head and
-smothered him a little. He turned his back to them, and swam on, on,
-and still on into the darkness.
-
-He saw nothing. The ship, the boats had all gone. Once he was about to
-cry for help; but the thought was horrible, distasteful to the last
-degree. He had no right to call for help. He would not. But he swam
-and tried to see something to get upon.
-
-Something struck him heavily upon the head. Stars swam before his eyes.
-He reached upward with his hands, and they met a solid substance. Then
-he sank slowly down, down--and the blackness came upon him.
-
-The object that had hit him was a small boat. In it were a man and a
-girl, the girl James himself had picked up from the sea a short time
-before. The man was a seaman, and he heard the boat strike. He reached
-over the side, caught the glimpse of a human form as it struck the
-boat's side and sank.
-
-The seaman took up the boat hook and was about to poke the body away.
-He was sick of dead men, sick of seeing corpses floating about. He had
-met half a dozen already that night. But this one seemed to move, and
-the hook caught in his clothes. He pulled the body up, and saw the man
-was not dead, but dazed, moving feebly in a drunken way. Then he pulled
-James into the boat.
-
-James regained his senses after half an hour; and during that time the
-boat ran before a stiff squall of wind and rain that swept it along
-before it into the darkness. The seaman steered with an oar, and kept
-the boat's head before the wind. The mate opened his eyes, and in the
-gray of the early dawn he saw a man he did not know, a seaman from the
-sunken liner, steering the boat calmly before the gale that was now
-coming fast with the rising sun. Near him in the bottom of the boat lay
-the girl huddled up and moaning with cold and fright, and fatigue.
-
-James arose and staggered aft.
-
-"How'd I get here?" he asked.
-
-"I pulled you in, sir," said the sailor. "Are you from the ship that
-sank us?"
-
-"Yes. I'm the mate, the chief officer."
-
-"Well, if I'd 'a' know'd it, I mightn't have taken the trouble," said
-the seaman.
-
-James said nothing. There was nothing for him to say. He knew the
-sailor was right. He knew the officers of his ship were men to scorn,
-to hate--but he would not say it was himself alone who had done
-the terrible deed. Something stopped him. It might have been sheer
-shame--or fear. He looked at the girl. Then he went to her and raised
-her, placing her upon a seat and trying to cheer her up.
-
-"We'll be picked up soon--don't worry about it. Our ship will stand by
-and hunt for all the missing----"
-
-"But I'm dreadfully cold," said the girl, with chattering teeth.
-
-"Put my coat on, then," said James; and he took off his soaked coat and
-made her put it on.
-
-The man grinned in derision.
-
-"Say," he said, "who was on watch when you hit us?"
-
-James took no notice. He would not answer the question. Then the girl
-spoke up.
-
-"Yes, whose fault was it? You belong to the other ship, you'll know all
-about it. They ought to hang the man who is responsible for this awful
-thing--my poor mother and father--oh----" And she broke into a sob.
-
-The man at the steering oar smiled grimly.
-
-"Yes, miss, that's right, they sure ought to hang the officer who
-runs down a liner on a clear night when he's bound to see the lights
-plainly. I don't make no excuses for him--it's more'n murder."
-
-"You were on watch, on duty--you are dressed?" said the girl.
-
-"Yes, I knowed it when I first seen you," snarled the seaman. "I reckon
-you're the man who did it--what was the matter? Couldn't you keep
-awake, or what?" The tone was a sneer, an insult, yet the sailor did
-wish to find out how so unusual a thing could happen as the running
-down of a ship on a clear night when her lights could be seen fifteen
-miles or more.
-
-James tried to defend himself. It was instinctive. The contempt of the
-sailor was too much. On other occasions, he never allowed the slightest
-insolence from the men of his own vessel. But now the officer was numb,
-paralyzed. He was guilty--and he knew it.
-
-For hours they sat now in silence, the seaman holding the boat steady
-before the northeaster, which grew in power until by nine in the
-morning it was blowing a furious gale, and the sea was running strongly
-with sweeping combers. There was nothing to do but keep the boat before
-it. To try to head any other way meant to risk her filling from a
-bursting sea. The exertion of steering was great. The seaman, with set
-face, held onto the oar, and James could see the sweat start under the
-constant strain, but he said nothing--he waited.
-
-"You'll have to take her, sir--a while--I'm getting played out," panted
-the man.
-
-"All right," said James, "give her to me--now----"
-
-He took the oar during the backward slant as she dropped down the side
-of the sea that passed under her. He was ready for the rush as she rose
-and shot forward again upon the breaking crest of the following hill.
-The exercise did him good. It made him think clearly, it took his mind
-from the hopelessness of his life.
-
-All that day the two men took turns keeping the small boat before the
-sea; and they ran to the southward a full half hundred miles before
-the gale let up. Both were too exhausted to talk, too thirsty to even
-speak--and there was neither water nor food in the boat. Her ration of
-biscuit and water had been lost when she had been drawn down by the
-sinking liner.
-
-The sailor had righted the boat after great effort, aided by the sea;
-and owing to the smoothness of the swell at the time he had managed to
-get her clear of water. Then he had picked up the girl who had been
-floating about, swimming and holding onto fragments of wreckage since
-James' boat had gone under.
-
-The mate noticed that, although the girl had not spoken to him again
-after knowing he had caused the disaster, she still wore his coat. He
-studied the matter, the inconsistency of women, and he thought it
-strange. The sun shone for a moment before it set that evening; and
-in the glowing light James gazed steadily at the woman. She was very
-beautiful. She had not made a complaint since the morning. The sea was
-still running high, although the wind was going down with the sun, yet
-the girl had not been seasick, nor had she shown any suffering.
-
-"How do you feel now?" he whispered, as he waited his turn at the oar.
-
-"I'm all right, thank you. Do you think we will get picked up?" she
-said.
-
-"We'll be picked up to-morrow--sure," said the officer. "We are now
-right in the track of the West India ships, and will sight something by
-daylight when we can set a signal. Are you very thirsty?"
-
-"Tell me first, how did this accident occur? Were you really asleep, or
-just what? I can stand the thirst, and I'm warm enough now. This water
-is like milk in comparison with the air, it's so warm."
-
-"We are in the Stream," said James; "the Gulf Stream, and that is about
-eighty along here--it's better than freezing in the high latitudes."
-
-"You haven't answered my question," said the girl.
-
-"I don't know--I don't remember what it was. I must have lost my
-head--been asleep--or something--yes, I was on duty, on watch--it was
-my fault entirely. I saw your ship, saw her red light to starboard--the
-right, you know. She had the right of way under the rules. I intended
-to swing off, waited a few minutes to see her better--then her
-green light showed--and--then it was too late. I went hard aport,
-did my best--but hit her--we were going very fast--both ships were
-going twenty-five knots--making the approaching speed fifty miles
-an hour--nearly a mile a minute--I must have lost my head just a
-moment--maybe I was dreaming----"
-
-"I know you are not to blame," said the girl, placing her hand in
-his. "You have told me the truth, a straight story--but yet I don't
-see how it all happened. I'm not a sailor, anyhow; perhaps I couldn't
-understand. But I feel you didn't do it on purpose----"
-
-"No, no," whispered James. "How could a man do a thing like that on
-purpose?" He could not tell her the truth. He was ashamed to mention a
-woman, to say he was sullen, depressed, stupefied at the loss of a love
-he bore a woman.
-
-He took his place at the oar for the last time that night. The sea was
-no longer dangerous. They spoke of rigging a drag with the oar and
-thwarts, making a drag by the aid of the painter or line, which still
-was fast to her forward. They had finished this before dark, and then
-they lay down, exhausted. The girl stood watch. In the dim dawn the
-girl gave out. She had stood watch all night, and she was exhausted.
-
-"I understand," she muttered to herself, "this poor fellow, this
-officer was tired out--he slept--I don't blame him at all, it was not
-his fault."
-
-The sun shone upon the three sleeping, the boat riding safely and
-dry to the drag made of the oar and thwarts. James aroused himself
-first, awakening dimly with the warmth of the sun. He sat up. The two
-others slept on. The girl was breathing loudly, almost panting, and her
-parted lips were blue. Yet she was beautiful. James knew it. She was
-exhausted, and help must come soon for her.
-
-He sat and gazed at the horizon, and when the sea lifted the boat,
-he stared hard all around to see if anything showed above the rim.
-Hours passed in this fashion. The girl moaned in her sleep. The sailor
-shifted uneasily, and grunted, snored, and murmured incoherently. They
-were all very thirsty.
-
-It was about ten o'clock in the morning that James saw something to
-the northward. It was just a speck, just a tiny dot on the rim of sea;
-but he knew it was a ship of some kind, a vessel passing. The minutes
-dragged, and he was about to rouse the sailor to get him to help watch.
-Then he remembered how the fellow had striven so manfully the day
-before when they rode out the gale. No, he would let them sleep.
-
-By noon, the vessel was close aboard and coming slowly with the wind
-upon her port beam. She was a schooner bound south. James could see the
-lumber on her decks. Her three masts swung to and fro in the swell, and
-she made bad weather of the sluggish sea. The foam showed white under
-her forefoot, and told of the speed being at least a few knots an hour.
-James called the sailor.
-
-"Get up--turn out--there's a schooner alongside," he said. The man
-moved slightly, and slept on. James shook him roughly.
-
-"Lemme alone," muttered the seaman.
-
-"Ship ahoy!" yelled the mate as the schooner came within a quarter of
-a mile and headed almost straight for them. He stood up and waved his
-arms. Nothing came of it. The girl awoke. She sat up and realized the
-position. In a moment she had taken off her skirt and handed it to the
-mate. He waved it wildly; and his yelling finally awoke the exhausted
-seaman. The man stood up and bawled loudly. Then he washed his mouth
-with salt water, and yelled again and again. James swung the skirt. The
-girl prayed audibly.
-
-The schooner stood right along on her course. She had not noticed the
-boat. Passing a few hundred fathoms from them caused all three to
-become frantic. The men bawled, cursed, and begged the schooner to take
-them in.
-
-The captain of the vessel, coming on deck, happened to look in their
-direction. He spoke to the man at the wheel, who for the first time
-seemed to take his eyes from the compass card. Then, taking his glass,
-the captain saw that three living souls were in the small boat. The
-next instant he was bawling orders, and the schooner hauled her wind
-and came slatting into the breeze.
-
-Six men appeared on her deck. James saw them working to get the small
-boat clear from her stern davits. Then they seemed to realize that this
-was unnecessary, and the schooner, flattening in her sheets, worked
-up to them slowly, rising and falling into the high swell. She stood
-across to windward, and then came about, easing off her sheets and
-drifting slowly down upon the boat.
-
-She drew close aboard.
-
-"Catch a line," yelled the captain from her deck.
-
-James waved his hand in reply, and a heaving line flaked out and fell
-across the boat's gunwales.
-
-In another moment they were being hauled aboard.
-
-Explanations came at once. The master of the schooner was bound for
-South America.
-
-"Of course, I'll put you all aboard the first homeward-bound ship I
-fall in with," said he.
-
-"But you surely will put us ashore at once," said the girl, after she
-had drunk tea and changed her clothes. They were eating gingerly of
-ship's food and drinking water ravenously.
-
-"That I cannot do, miss," said the captain. "I'm bound to Valparaiso
-with cargo, and I must take it there."
-
-"But we will pay you to take us ashore--pay you anything, for I am very
-rich," said the girl.
-
-The master smiled sadly. The effects of the forty hours in the open
-boat were evidently having their effect upon the young woman.
-
-"No," he said, "you go below, and the steward will give you all you
-want to eat, and your clothes will be dry enough to put on again before
-night. We might fall in with a ship bound north any time now. Then
-you'll have a chance."
-
-James knew the man was within his rights, of course. He was glad to be
-in the schooner. The sailor didn't seem to mind where he went. One
-ship was very much like another to him. The consul would be bound to
-ship him home, anyway. The girl was given a stateroom in the after
-cabin; and she soon slept the sleep of the exhausted.
-
-The mate stayed on deck. The whole thing had a strange look to him.
-He had decided to kill himself. He dared not go back to the States,
-anyhow, to face the charges that would be made against him. He might
-slip overboard any night on the run down, and no one would be the wiser.
-
-The fact that the schooner was bound to South America seemed to give
-him a respite. There was no hurry to commit the desperate act that he
-felt he must, in all honor and decency, do. He might live a month at
-least before dying.
-
-After the awful struggle through the gale and shipwreck, he felt a
-desire to live more than before. The whole affair was more distant,
-almost effaced. And now he was not going back, anyhow.
-
-The captain asked him few questions regarding his wreck, seeming to
-feel a certain delicacy about it. The day passed, and the next and the
-next, and no ship was sighted going north. They were now drawing out of
-the track of vessels, and a strange hope arose with the mate that they
-would not meet one.
-
-The girl sat with him often, and they talked of other things than
-shipwreck. She was beautiful--there was no question about it. The
-glow of returning strength made her more lovely. James found himself
-wondering at her. She had been the only human being so far that would
-condescend to speak to him without contempt. He was lonely, very
-lonely, and the girl seemed to feel he needed some one to cheer him
-up. She did not realize his weakness. He was very strong to her; a
-strong man who had suffered from an accident, due, perhaps, to his
-carelessness, but not to criminal negligence. But he knew, he knew, and
-could not tell.
-
-The days passed, and the terror of the thing he had in his mind began
-to fade slightly. He knew he must die. The sailor, his shipmate who had
-been picked up with him, had told every one in the schooner that he,
-James, was on watch and was responsible for a terrible disaster, the
-death of a great number of persons. James saw it in their looks. He
-knew he would never get a ship again, never hold a place among white
-men. Yes, he must die.
-
-It gave him a sort of grim satisfaction to feel that he was just to
-live a certain length of time, that he would cut that short at the last
-moment. He wondered how a prisoner felt when the sentence of death
-was pronounced upon him. He had pronounced it upon himself. It was
-a genuine relief, for the vision of those terror-stricken, drowning
-passengers was always with him night and day, except when he was in a
-dreamless sleep. That sleep seemed to be portentous of what he would
-face.
-
-The days turned to weeks and the weeks to months. The voyage was long
-and the winds light. They were ninety days to the latitude of the
-Falklands when they struck a furious "williwaw" from the hills of
-Patagonia. The schooner was in a bad fix. She was lightly manned; and,
-in spite of the addition of James and the seaman from the wreck, she
-held her canvas too long.
-
-The struggle was short but terrific. The fore-topsail blew away and
-saved the mast; but the main held, and the topmast buckled and finally
-went by the board. The headsails had been lowered, but they blew
-out from the gaskets, and the jibboom snapped short off under the
-tremendous threshing of flying canvas. The maintopmast, hanging by the
-backstays, fell across the triatic stay, and the steel of the backstays
-cut into the spring until it finally parted under the jerks, and the
-mizzen was left to stand alone. It went by the board, and the great
-mast, snapping short at the partners, went over the side, and smashed
-and banged there at each heave of the ship.
-
-There was desperate work to do to save the vessel. Her master did
-wonders and showed his skill; but the most dangerous and deadly task of
-going to leeward to cut adrift the lanyards was left to James. No one
-else would go.
-
-James was a powerful man, and had won his way to an officer's berth
-by endeavor, not by nepotism. His hope was that he might be killed in
-the struggle. He dared anything, tried to do the impossible--and did
-it. How he succeeded in clearing away the wreck of that mast remains a
-mystery to those who watched him. He was almost dead when dragged back
-and the schooner floated clear.
-
-The girl had seen the whole affair from the glass of the companionway.
-She had held her breath, almost fainted again and again at the
-sight of James in that fight for life. To her it was simply grand,
-tremendous--she had never been touched by a man's heroism before.
-
-When it was all over and the schooner, dismantled and storm-driven, lay
-riding down the giant seas that swept around the Horn in the Pacific
-Antarctic Drift, she watched over and attended the officer as he lay
-in his bunk with a broken arm, a cut across the head, and the toes of
-one foot gone. She knew that there was something behind the will to do
-as James had done. But she could not fathom it, could not tell why he
-was unresponsive. He lay silent mostly, and seldom looked at her. Yet
-he was sane in his conversation, not delirious in any way. It worried
-her. It caused that peculiar thing that is in every woman to make the
-man she admires responsive. And the more she showed her feelings, the
-less he seemed to care. It ended the way it usually does under such
-conditions. She fairly worshiped him.
-
-After that storm the weather grew very calm. The dark ocean seemed to
-be at rest for a spell. The schooner was now to the south'ard of the
-Falklands, and the captain decided that he would not venture around the
-Horn in the desperate condition he was in. Stanley Harbor was under his
-lee, and he bore away for it. Then, with the perversity of the southern
-zone, the wind hauled to the eastward and blew steadily for a week;
-blew right in their faces.
-
-James came on deck before they were within a hundred miles of the
-land. He sat about in the cold of the evening wrapped up in rugs, and
-the girl waited upon him, brought him anything he wished. In the long
-hours of daylight--for it was light enough to read until midnight--they
-sat near the taffrail. The captain said nothing; he would not notice.
-He liked the man who had saved his ship. The girl was sympathetic, and
-James often held her hand. She did not attempt to withdraw it.
-
-But he would not tell her he cared for her. That was absurd. He had
-already sacrificed his life. He was as good as dead. Yet he wondered
-at the passion that had brought him into such desperate trouble and
-had caused so much ruin and death. He pondered silently, and now often
-watched the girl furtively.
-
-Into the beautiful harbor, the great fiord of Port Stanley, they came,
-the schooner making fairly good way in spite of her crippled condition.
-Her arrival was greeted with joyous acclaim by the land sharks, who
-smelled the wound and saw the damage. They would make a good haul.
-Ships didn't come often--but when they did, well, they paid.
-
-The governor was notified of the arrival. He was told everything but
-the relation of the passengers to the ships to which they originally
-belonged. The master was generous; and, besides, it was not America
-they were now in. It was an outlying foreign colony at the edge of
-the world, a place where one seldom went or heard from. They might
-go ashore if they wished. The seaman asked to remain aboard. He was
-allowed to do so, and consequently did not go ashore and talk too much.
-
-James passed that last night in high spirits. He was going out on his
-last voyage. He was going to die, going to leave the woman who he knew
-loved him, who had been so sympathetic, so lovable. They were on deck a
-long time that evening, and the captain, being wise and old enough to
-understand, did not molest them.
-
-"Good night," she said finally. "Good night. I'll see you to-morrow
-before we go ashore. We can take the ship across to the straits, and
-meet the regular liner as she comes through from Punta Arenas. We'll be
-home again in a few weeks."
-
-"Good-by," he said simply. That was all. She went below.
-
-Shortly after four bells--two o'clock in the morning--James, with set
-face and grim resolution, stole on deck. He gazed up at the Southern
-Cross for a few moments, at the beautiful constellation that he would
-see for the last time; then at the grim, barren hills back of the
-settlement.
-
-It was a farewell look, his farewell to things in this world. He was
-determined not to be disgraced. He would die like a man, as he could no
-longer live like one.
-
-Then he dropped softly over the side, and sank down--down into the
-quiet waters of Stanley Harbor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The instinct of woman is often more certain than her reason. The girl
-had noticed something strange in the man's behavior. She had woman's
-instinct to divine its cause. She had not gone to bed that night, but
-waited to see just what might happen to the man who owned her very
-soul. She had not realized before that she loved this officer, this man
-who had confessed partly to his disgrace. The realization awakened her
-wits. She would see what he meant.
-
-At the slight splash, she was on deck in an instant. Her first thought
-was to call for help. Then she knew to do so was to call for an
-explanation; and she realized the disgrace that would follow instantly
-upon the explanation. She seized a life buoy always hanging upon the
-taffrail, and with it dropped over the side.
-
-She swam silently toward a spot that showed disturbed water rapidly
-drifting astern with the tide. Within a minute she had reached the form
-of James, who had not placed enough weights in his clothes to insure
-quick sinking. He was lying silently upon his back, waiting--waiting
-for the end that must come shortly.
-
-"Swim with me," she pleaded. "You must--come with me--we'll swim ashore
-together."
-
-Before the morning dawned, the pair were upon the beach, several miles
-distant from the schooner. James saw he was doomed to life. He could
-not even die. Then the beauty of the woman, the sympathy, the love he
-could not deny, had its way with him, and they decided to vanish into
-the country, to disappear together.
-
-This might or might not have been hard to do in the islands where
-every one is well known. But it happened that Captain Black, of the
-whaling station situated near the entrance of the fiord, was on deck
-that morning. He saw an amazing thing, a woman and a man swimming
-together, and finally making the land near the point.
-
-Calling a couple of men, he started for them in his whaleboat, and
-caught up with them before they had gone more than a few fathoms from
-the shore. They were chilled through, cold and exhausted. He took them
-aboard the whaling steamer, and soon saw that he had a seaman of parts
-in Mr. James. Men were hard to get. All of his crews were convicts or
-ticket-of-leave men; and the addition of a man even with a wife was
-something to be taken advantage of.
-
-He took James aside and asked him a few questions. He was satisfied
-that he would not get into trouble by giving the officer a billet; and
-he forthwith made him one of the company in charge of a small boat. The
-affair would be kept secret, and the governor would be told nothing. He
-probably would not ask too many questions, anyhow.
-
-"I shall ship you both to the north'ard station, fifty miles up the
-coast. You can have a shack there--plenty of peat for fires and good
-grub--I'll inspect you once a month. Johnson will be in charge of the
-station. You can take this letter to him. Your wife can go with you if
-you wish."
-
-James looked at the girl. She nodded her head.
-
-"Is there a priest about here?" asked James.
-
-"Yes. Why?" asked Black.
-
-"Well, if you'll kindly send for him, he can marry us before we start."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Back of the northward station, on the ramp that rises sheer back from
-the beach like a table-land, there are a few cottages. These are
-occupied by the crews of the whaling station and their families. In
-one of them is a handsome woman with two little tots--happy-faced and
-smiling she is. But she seems a bit out of place in her surroundings.
-Mrs. James Smith they call her, and she is apparently very happy, very
-happy indeed, in spite of it all.
-
-James Smith is the best gun pointer in the fleet, the best harpooner
-with the gun-firing harpoon. He is a sober, quiet, steady man, who has
-nothing now of the ship's officer about him. He never talks of wrecks.
-If some one starts a conversation regarding them--and they are much
-hoped for in the Falklands--he goes away.
-
-Sometimes in Jack's saloon down at Stanley, he has been known to sit
-and stare out over the dark ocean, to sit and often mutter:
-
-"Was it right, after all--was it worth while--was it?"
-
-But he is a sober, quiet, industrious man, who goes about his duties
-without enthusiasm, without effort.
-
-
-
-
-THE WRECK OF THE "RATHBONE"
-
-
-"Eight bells, sir," came the voice from without, following the _rap_,
-_rap_ upon the door of my room. I had just five minutes to dress myself
-and get out, and I rolled over, listening to the sounds on deck. As
-I had only taken off my sea boots, I was in no hurry to turn to. My
-sou'wester hung upon a peg, but my oilskin jacket was still buttoned up
-close about my neck, where it had been during my sleep; and the oilskin
-trousers scraped noisily as I slid my legs to the edge of the bunk.
-
-I had slept three hours and forty minutes, and must go out and relieve
-Slade, the second mate, who had, in turn, relieved me at the end of the
-mid-watch. It was now just five minutes of four in the morning, a cold,
-snowy nor'easter blowing, and the brig running wildly into the thick of
-it.
-
-We had cleared from New York for Rio, and were trying to run out into
-the warm Gulf Stream before the gale overblew us and forced us to heave
-to, to ride it down. January at sea on the coast was hard, indeed.
-
-I swore at the hard luck, for my sleep had seemed just an instant,
-just a second's unconsciousness, and I was stiff and soaked with sea
-water; so cold that I had to keep on my oilskins to sleep at all. I had
-finally steamed my body, incased as it was, into some sort of warmth,
-and the first movement sent the chills running down my spine. I threw
-off my blankets and stood shivering, trying to jam my feet into the wet
-boots as the bells struck off, and I was due on deck.
-
-Slade stood with his shoulders hunched to his ears at the break of the
-poop, holding to the rail to steady himself as the brig plunged and
-tore along under a reefed fore-topsail and close-reefed spanker, with
-the wind abaft the beam. The gray light of the winter morning had not
-come yet, and the snow beat upon my face, as if some invisible hand
-hurled it from the utter blackness to windward.
-
-The dull, snoring roar of the wind under the feet of the topsail told
-of the increasing velocity of the squalls; and the quick, live jerk
-of the ship as she went rushing along the crest of a roller for an
-instant, and then slid along the weather side, dropping stern foremost
-into the trough, with a heave to windward, indicated that we were doing
-all we could.
-
-"Southeast b'south!" yelled Slade into my ear. "You'll have to watch
-her."
-
-I knew what he meant. She was steering hard, and might broach to in any
-careless moment.
-
-"Call the old man if there's any change," he added, and stumbled down
-the poop steps to the main deck, where the watch were huddled under
-the lee of the deck house. Then he disappeared aft, and the night
-swallowed him up.
-
-I made my way to the wheel. Bill, a strong West Indian negro, was
-holding her steady enough, meeting her as she came to and swung off. He
-was assisted by Jones, a sturdy little fellow with a big shock head. I
-could just make out their faces in the light from the binnacle, which
-burned, for a wonder, in spite of the gale. It generally blew out in
-spite of all we could do to keep the lamps lit. Beyond was a hopeless
-blackness.
-
-I went to the weather rail and tried to see to windward. A fleeting
-glimpse of a white comber caught my gaze close aboard; but beyond a few
-fathoms I could see nothing at all. Aft under the stern the torrent
-of dead water boiled and roared, showing a sickly flare from the
-phosphorus. We were going some, probably twelve or fifteen knots an
-hour; and right ahead was nothing--that is, nothing we could see; just
-a black wall of darkness.
-
-Vainly I tried to make out the light of the coming morning; but the
-snow squalls shut off everything. Pete, sharp-eyed fellow of my watch,
-was on lookout on the forecastle head. I knew Pete's eyes were the best
-ever, but he could see nothing in that wild gale of snow and sleet and
-inky darkness. I went to the break of the poop again, and hailed the
-deck below.
-
-"Keep a sharp lookout ahead, there," I said, bawling the words out to
-reach through the storm. Then I stood waiting, for there was nothing
-else to do.
-
-Two bells came--five o'clock--and the watch reported all well and the
-lights burning brightly. Our starboard and port--green and red--lights
-were none too bright at any time, yet they were well within the law,
-and had served the ship for five years or more.
-
-I answered the hail, and stood trying again to see something over
-the black hills of water that were rushing to the southwest under
-the pressure of the gale. Something made me very nervous. I began to
-shiver, and the snow struck my face and melted enough to run down my
-neck, making me miserable, indeed. I still stood gazing right ahead
-into the night, hoping for the dawn which was now due in another hour,
-when I heard a yell from the forecastle head.
-
-"Light dead ahead, sir," came the hail.
-
-I looked and saw nothing, but took Pete's word for it.
-
-"Keep her off all she'll go," I roared to the wheel.
-
-And just as I felt her swing her stern to the following sea, I saw
-close to us the green light of a steamer, and above it her masthead
-light. Then the thing happened.
-
-A wild cry from forward, followed by the loom of a gigantic object in
-the gloom ahead. We were upon the vessel in a moment.
-
-A tremendous crash, grinding, tearing, splintering. The brig staggered,
-seemed to stop suddenly, and then the deep, roaring note of the gale
-smothered the rest.
-
-We struck, fairly head on, swung to, glanced along the ship's side,
-and were lying dismasted in the trough of the sea, our foremast over
-the side, and nothing but the lower main mast standing. The seas tore
-over us, and we lay like a log, while the shadow of the steamer passed
-slowly astern.
-
-The old man was on deck before I knew just what had happened. So also
-was Slade. The smashing and grinding of the wreckage alongside told of
-the spars; but we were too stunned to think of them.
-
-Was the hull split open with that furious impact? That was the thought
-in our minds. Ours was a wooden vessel--little, light, and very strong.
-Did we ram our plank ends in? If so, we were lost men, all of us.
-
-It was fully a half minute before we spoke of it. We knew just what to
-do, but we were stunned for a few moments. Then we made for the main
-deck, and tried the pumps. The water was coming in lively.
-
-"All hands on the pumps!" came the skipper's order; and we manned the
-brakes with the feeling that it was just a respite, just a little time
-to lose. The men took to them with a will, however; but I had a sinking
-feeling in the pit of my stomach, and I worked half-heartedly for a few
-minutes, until I brought myself around with a jerk. I was mate. I had
-the responsibility. And more than that--it had happened in my watch on
-deck. I was the one who must do the most.
-
-"Come along, bullies--get a couple of axes!" I roared, and made my way
-to the weather fore channels, where the rigging of the topmast and
-lower mast held the wreckage alongside, being drawn taut, as it were,
-across the deck, the spars to leeward, and banging and pounding against
-the ship with each surge. "Get into those lanyards!" and they chopped
-away in the gray light of the morning, cutting everything they could,
-and clearing the weather rigging of the strain.
-
-The wreckage now hung by the lee rigging, and drifted farther aft. The
-wheel was lashed hard down, and a bit of spanker raised again upon the
-mainmast, the halyards still being intact, although the boom had been
-broken by the shock. We soon had canvas on her aft, and she headed
-the sea, dropping back from the wreckage to a mooring hawser bent to
-the standing rigging of the foremast. We got a lashing to the foot of
-the mast, and she dragged the mass broadside, making a lee of it, and
-riding easily to the heavy seas, which now took her almost dead on her
-bows.
-
-When I had a chance to look about me again, the light of the morning
-had grown to its full height, and we were able to see around us.
-
-The gray light made things look almost hopeless for us. The pumps
-worked full stroke, and the water gained rapidly on us. There had been
-three feet made during the first half hour. We were settling, and the
-brig was riding more heavily, taking the seas over her head with a
-smothered feeling that told of what was coming.
-
-I had a chance to breathe again, and I looked out over the gray ocean,
-where the white combers rolled and the heavy clouds swept along close
-to their tops. A large, black object showed to the westward of us, and
-we recognized her as a steamer. She was very low in the water, and upon
-her rigging floated the signal, "_We are sinking._" She was the one we
-had run down.
-
-The old man stood gazing at her as I came on the poop. He was trying
-to make her out; and this he did finally, when the wind stretched her
-flag in a direction so that we could see it plainly. She was one of the
-Havana steamers bound up from Cuba, and was about five thousand tons.
-Her number was that of the _William Rathbone_.
-
-"No better fix than we are," snarled the skipper. "What was the matter?
-Didn't you see him? He's big enough."
-
-"Too dark," I said. "You know what kind of a night it was--look at it
-now. We might do something if we were sure of floating ourselves--no
-boat would live in this sea five minutes; but it'll smooth out,
-maybe----"
-
-"Maybe blow a hurricane!" howled the old man, his voice rising above
-the gale. "Get the boats ready, anyhow--get the steward to put all the
-grub he can get in them--too bad, too bad," he went on.
-
-While Slade helped to get the boats ready for leaving the brig, I went
-to the bow and tried to see just what damage we had done ourselves. It
-was dangerous work, as the seas came over in solid masses, and more
-than once I came near getting washed overboard. Splintered plank ends,
-a crushed stem showed through the wreck of the bowsprit, which still
-hung by the bobstays and shrouds, jammed foul of the catheads, so
-that only the end swung, and struck us a blow now and then. It was a
-hopeless mess.
-
-A great sea rose ahead, with its crest lifting for a break, and I
-ducked behind the windlass, holding on with both hands. The solid water
-swept over the bows, and I was almost drowned; but I held on. There was
-nothing I could do forward, and no men could work there. The steady
-grind of the pumps took the place of desperate rushing about the decks.
-The men stood in water to their knees as the seas swept her, but they
-still kept it up. As fast as one man gave out another took his place,
-regardless of watch; and the waiting ones chafed under the shelter of
-the mainmast.
-
-The boats were on booms over the forward house, where the seas could
-not wash them away; and Slade had them all ready to leave, although it
-was a study how to get them overboard in that sea with nothing forward
-to raise them with. The mainstay still held, and the mainmast was
-strong enough; but there was nothing forward at all above them. I went
-aft and waited.
-
-Old Captain Gantline was still standing at the poop rail watching
-the steamer. Our drift was about equal to hers, and we sagged off to
-leeward together, keeping about a mile apart. The steamer was settling.
-
-"Of course, he ought to have gone clear of us!" howled the old man as
-I came up. "I don't blame you, Mr. Garnett; I don't blame you--but you
-certainly swung us off at the last minute when you knew the law was to
-hold your course, and let him get out of our way."
-
-"But he was dead ahead, sir. I saw his lights right aboard. To luff
-meant to come to in that sea, and that would have been just as bad, for
-he'd have struck us aft--probably cut us in two."
-
-I really had done nothing out of the way. The steamer had not seen us,
-that was certain. I was supposed, under the law, to hold on until the
-last moment, and I had done so. I had only swung her off a little;
-tried to clear when I saw he would not. I knew the law well enough,
-and had followed it up to the moment of striking. Our swing off had
-made our bows fetch up against the steamer, and had probably caused him
-serious damage. But it had saved us from being cut down by her sharp
-steel stem, which would have gone through our wooden side as if through
-butter.
-
-No, I did not feel guilty; although there were evidently some hundred
-passengers and crew of that ship in dire peril and sore put to it. The
-old man knew I had done the best thing I could for us, and there was no
-possible way of avoiding a collision in a wild, thick night like the
-last when the ships were invisible but a few fathoms distant.
-
-We waited, and the brig settled slowly, while the wind still held
-from the northeast, and the sea still ran strong and high. There was
-apparently no chance for launching a small boat. The scud flew fast
-and the gray wind-swept ocean looked ugly enough, the surface covered
-with white. The steamer was slowly sinking, like ourselves, and it
-was only a question whether either would go through the day or not. I
-hoped that it would not come in the night. There's something peculiarly
-nerve-racking in wild night work in a sinking ship. The very absence of
-light lends terror to the already awful situation, and the wild rush of
-the wind and seas makes chaos of the blackness about.
-
-The day dragged slowly. It was like waiting for the end of the world.
-The vessels drifted apart but another mile or two, and we were still
-close enough to exchange signals. We had long ago run ours up, telling
-that the same state of affairs existed aboard the brig. If some
-passing coasting steamer came along, all might still be well with the
-passengers and crews of both of us. But not a sign of anything showed
-above the horizon.
-
-At five o'clock--two bells--that evening, the brig was well down in the
-water; and she was taking the seas nastily over her. The main deck was
-all but impossible to remain upon, and the men at the pumps had to lash
-themselves to keep there. It would be only a question of a few hours
-now. The drawn faces told of the strain. Slade, the second mate, came
-to me.
-
-"All over but the shouting," he said. "How'll we ever get them boats
-clear in this sea?"
-
-"Better start now before it's too late," I said, and went to the old
-man for orders.
-
-"All right, get them over," said the old man, in answer to my question;
-and we started on the last piece of work we were to do in that brig.
-
-Bill, the West Indian negro; Wilson; Peter, the Dutchman; and Jones
-were to row; and, with myself at the steering oar in command, made the
-working crew. Besides these men we had three others, making eight men
-all told for our boat. Slade went with the old man, dividing the little
-crew up evenly.
-
-We had a good crew. Long training in that little ship had made them
-good men. But for their steadiness we would never have got those
-boats clear. It was desperate work getting them over the side without
-smashing them. With a tackle upon the main, however, we managed to lift
-them clear and let them swing aft, lifting and guying them out by hand.
-Then we dropped them over the quarter, and let them tow astern to the
-end of a long line, and they rode free, being lighter than the ship and
-pulling dead to leeward.
-
-I was the first to leave, as became my place. The old man, as captain,
-must be the last. I hauled the boat up, and we climbed in, jumping the
-now short distance as she took the seas and rose close to the taffrail.
-The brig was very low, and settling fast.
-
-"Go to the steamer first," said the old man; "then head westerly until
-you get picked up or get ashore. We are not more than one hundred and
-fifty miles off--good-by."
-
-I dropped over, and the line was cast off, letting the boat drift
-slowly back, but still heading the sea so that she rode almost dry, in
-spite of the combers.
-
-The _Rathbone_ was in view about three miles distant, and by the weight
-upon the four oars we held her so that she drifted off bodily in that
-direction, while still heading well up to the wind. There was plenty
-of light left yet, but there was a night coming, and I hoped we would
-get a chance to board the big vessel before it was black dark. Perhaps
-she was not so dangerously hurt as she looked.
-
-I saw the old man's boat come away and take the general direction of
-our own; but the seas were too high to see her often. She was evidently
-making good weather of it, and I thanked the lucky stars that we had
-whaleboats for our business, and not the tin things they use for
-lifeboats in steamers.
-
-By keeping the boat's head quartering to the wind and sea, she drifted
-bodily off toward the _Rathbone_, and before dark we drew close aboard.
-
-There was much action taking place on her decks as we came close enough
-to see. Passengers ran about, and forms of seamen dashed fore and aft.
-It was evident that they were hurrying for some purpose, and that
-purpose showed as we noted the list to starboard the ship had. She was
-very low forward, and seemed to be ready to take the final plunge any
-moment.
-
-Our boat had been pretty badly smashed getting her overboard, and she
-was leaking badly from the started seams. In that strong, rolling sea
-she had all she could do with the crew in her; and I fervently hoped
-that I would not be called upon to take passengers. Four rowing and
-three for relief was all right, but a dozen more would swamp her.
-
-We came close under the _Rathbone's_ lee. She lay broadside to the sea,
-and her high stern, raised as it were by her sinking head, shut off the
-sweep of the combers.
-
-"Steady your oars," I commanded, as we came within a few fathoms. A man
-in uniform rushed to the ship's rail and hailed us through a megaphone.
-He was followed by several passengers.
-
-"Can you come aboard and help us?" he bawled. "We're sinking--all the
-boats gone to starboard--captain killed and chief mate knocked on the
-head by wreckage."
-
-"Men have refused duty," howled a man standing near him. "Mutiny
-aboard, and we're going down--come aboard and help us."
-
-While they hailed, I noticed the boats to port going over the side. One
-had already gone down, but she had fouled her falls, and had dropped
-end up, smashing against the ship's side and filling. Struggling men
-tried to clear her, but the sea was too heavy. A life raft was pushed
-over the rail, and fell heavily close to us, held by a line. It surged
-in the lee, and, as the ship drifted down, it struck her heavily,
-smashing the platform.
-
-"Don't go, sir," said Jake, in a voice that barely reached me.
-
-"We'll have troubles enough of our own," said another.
-
-"Shut up, there are passengers--don't you see the women?--we've got to
-help them," I said.
-
-I looked for the other boat. It was not in sight. The forms of two
-women came to the rail, one a young girl.
-
-"Throw me a line," I yelled to the man in uniform.
-
-A small line came sailing across the boat. I seized it, and went
-forward.
-
-"Jake and you, Bill, come with me, the rest lie by--keep her clear
-whatever you do," I said, and waved my hand to those above to haul
-away. With the bowline under my arms, I was soon on deck. Then I helped
-to haul my two men up.
-
-"I'm the second," said the man in uniform; "but I can't make 'em do
-anything. Just stretched one out when the rest knocked me over and took
-to the boats."
-
-Without delay we made our way along the port rail to amidships, where
-the boats were being lowered. Men crowded around them, and fought for
-places. The fireroom crew, white-skinned and partly clothed, their pale
-faces dirty with coal dust, stood around the nearest boat, and worked
-at the lashings, cursing, swearing, and shoving each other in the
-suppressed panic of men who are hurrying from death.
-
-The canvas covering was ripped off, and four men sprang into her,
-the rest shoving her bodily outboard. The men at the falls howled
-and swore, slacked off without regard to consequences, and the craft
-dropped a few feet, then swung off, and came with a crash against the
-side.
-
-"Fine discipline," I said to the second mate, who was close to me.
-
-A form touched my elbow. I turned, and saw a young girl.
-
-"Aren't they going to take us along with them?" she asked quietly, but
-with a voice full of pleading.
-
-I looked at her. She was not over twenty, and very pretty. Her big eyes
-were looking right into mine.
-
-"Sure, lady, you shall go," I said.
-
-Jake and Bill stood right behind me.
-
-"Have you a gun?" I asked the officer.
-
-"No; haven't got a thing--let's hoof 'em."
-
-"Avast slacking that boat down," I roared, rushing in.
-
-"Tell it to George," snarled a big fireman, shoving me aside.
-
-I hooked him under the jaw with all my strength, and he staggered back.
-Jake slammed the next man in the stomach, while the second officer
-waded in now, striking right and left in the press.
-
-"Get back--stand back!" we roared; and, for a wonder, forced our way
-along the ship's side, taking the falls.
-
-"Get a line below the block hook. Hold her off," came the order, and
-some one passed a line at the after fall, while a man in the boat
-pushed manfully against the ship's side to steady her.
-
-"Now, then, slack away together," I yelled; and Bill, who had the
-forward fall, slacked off with me, and the craft went rushing down just
-as the ship rolled to leeward. She struck the sea, the block unhooked;
-and, as the sinking ship rolled up, she fell clear, and hung to her
-painter. We had got one down all right. The men then rushed.
-
-Four of us fought back with all our might; but the weight of frantic
-men was too heavy for us. We were forced back and down, struggling
-under the crush of fighting firemen and seamen, who trampled, struck,
-and then tore loose to slide down the hanging boat falls or jump over
-into the sea, to climb in the floating craft below. The men below in
-the boat saw they would be swamped by numbers, and cut the painter. She
-drifted off, then crashed up against the ship's side, and finally swept
-around the stern, where she met the sea. That was the last I saw of her.
-
-With my clothes half torn off, oilskins hanging in rags, my face
-bleeding, and utterly exhausted, I got to my feet, and we made for the
-next boat. The press about her was not so great, and we managed to make
-way against it. It was the last boat, and the remaining few men left
-aboard were not enough to hold us. Among them were some passengers,
-whom we got aboard--four of them--and then finally sent the boat down
-clear. I looked around for the girl. Two women were in the boat, and
-the second officer said there was another aboard. I was out of breath,
-and stood panting a few moments, gazing aft through the bloom of the
-evening trying to see what had become of that girl. She was not in
-sight. I remembered she was near the other boat.
-
-"I'll run aft and try to find her," I yelled, and rushed down the deck.
-
-At the door of the saloon I saw a form huddled up on a transom just
-inside.
-
-"Come," I called roughly; "come along, quick--the boat's waiting."
-
-"Oh, it's you," she said; and I saw it was the girl I was looking for.
-She sat up. "Did you ever see such brutes?"
-
-"Never mind that now. Get a move on--the boat won't wait."
-
-As I spoke, I felt the ship drop suddenly forward. I turned quickly,
-and gazed forward. It was almost dark now; but I could see the white
-surge burst over the forecastle head.
-
-"She's going," I yelled, and grabbed the girl.
-
-A great sea crashed against the house, bursting it in, roaring,
-smashing, and pouring like a Niagara into the saloon. The deck forward
-had gone under, the stern was rising high in the air, and the slanting
-deck told me there was not a second to lose.
-
-The girl sprang up, and we dashed together to the taffrail, which was
-now fully twenty feet above the sea. There was nothing below but that
-life raft, the boats had gone to leeward to keep clear. Without a
-moment's hesitation, I dropped the girl into the sea, and sprang after
-her.
-
-Hampered with my ragged clothes and oilskins, I could hardly swim a
-stroke. A rushing comber struck me, and I felt myself going down,
-unable to fight any longer. My breath was gone.
-
-When I came to I was lying upon the life raft, and the girl was
-clinging to me with one hand, and passing one of the lashings of the
-raft with the other. It was black dark. Only the rushing seas about me
-told of our whereabouts; and the wild flings of the raft as it swept
-along with the rush made me aware of the present. I tried to see,
-raised my head, and felt very weak.
-
-"How'd we get here?" I asked.
-
-"I grabbed you and pulled you up," she said simply. "You were hit on
-the head by it--better tie yourself fast with that piece of cord, I
-can't hold you any longer."
-
-I took a few turns of the side lashings of the raft about our bodies,
-and, as the seas washed us, I noticed that the water felt so much
-warmer than the air. We were clear of the sea a few inches, but each
-comber dashed over and soaked us, washing so heavily that it was
-necessary to hold one's head up in order to breathe freely.
-
-"Did you see the boats?" I asked. "They'll pick us up presently."
-
-"No; I couldn't see anything. I had all I could do to pull you on the
-raft. You're pretty heavy, you know. Then I had to hold you for what
-seemed an hour, but maybe was only a few minutes. Do you think they'll
-find us?"
-
-"Sure. They wouldn't leave us. Ship went down, didn't it--rather
-sudden, and they had to let go. My men will stand by if it takes all
-night," I said.
-
-"I sincerely hope you are right about it. I don't much fancy this raft
-for a place to spend the night. Will we be drowned on it, do you think?"
-
-"No fear; we're all right. It can't sink. All we have to do is to keep
-a lookout for a boat and sing out for help. Why, there's five boats
-altogether, counting ours. Five boats, and it's just dark, not after
-six or seven o'clock at the most."
-
-"How far from land are we?" she asked, seemingly cheered but still
-somewhat doubtful.
-
-"Not far," I lied. I thought of a hundred and fifty miles of floating
-to get in--if the boats didn't pick us up. I began to experience that
-sinking feeling that comes to many when the outlook seems pretty bad.
-
-The girl was silent for some time after this, and seemed to be thinking
-of her troubles, for once she gave a little gasp of complaint.
-
-"Cheer up," I said; "don't give way to it yet. We'll be all right soon."
-
-As the hours passed and no boat come near, I began to feel very
-nervous. I could see but a few fathoms distant, and knew the chances
-were growing less and less. I hailed the blackness, bawled out as loud
-as I could, keeping it up at minute intervals. The wind seemed to be
-going down, but the sea still ran quickly, and was high and strong,
-lifting the raft skyward at each roll, and then dropping it down gently
-into the hollow trough. We felt the wind only when on the top of the
-seas, and it chilled us; but the warm edge of the Gulf Stream soaked
-us, and we could stand it for a long time. The sea was as warm as milk.
-
-How that long night passed I don't know. It seemed like eternity.
-Several times I lost consciousness, whether from exhaustion or from the
-blow I had received upon the head I cannot say. I held to the girl,
-and together we stood it out. Our lashings kept us upon the piece of
-platform remaining upon the two hollow iron cylinders comprising the
-raft.
-
-The girl lost her power of speech some time during the night, and
-seemed to faint, her head dropping upon the slats of the platform.
-I held it up to keep the water from her nose and mouth, and finally
-propped her head so that little water broke over it. It was all I could
-do.
-
-The raft swung around and around, sometimes with the sea on one side
-and then with it upon another. I felt for the oarlock, which is usually
-placed at either end to steer by, but it was gone. So also were the
-oars that had been placed between the cylinders and the platform. We
-simply had a float, that kept us bodily out of the sea, and that was
-all.
-
-After hours and hours of this wild pitching and rushing upon the crests
-of high, rolling seas, the motion began to get easier, and I noticed
-that the wind was rapidly falling. The crests no longer broke with the
-furious rush and tumble as formerly. Then the gray light of dawn came,
-and I began to see about us.
-
-The form of the girl lay alongside me, lashed to the platform. Her hair
-trailed into the sea in long tresses from her head, and her face was
-white as chalk. I thought she was dead, and shook her to see if there
-was any life to stir up. She lay limp. I took her hand and felt the
-wrist. A slight pulse told of the vital spark still burning. It seemed
-brutal to arouse her, to bring her back to the horror of her position.
-But I felt that it was best. I called to her, and she finally opened
-her eyes. She shivered, placed one arm under her, and then raised
-herself painfully into a sitting posture.
-
-"Cut the cord around my wrist, will you, please?" she said. "I promise
-not to fall off."
-
-"Better let it stay," I said. "I'll loose it so you can move about a
-little. Seems like they missed us in the dark."
-
-"Well, do you still think they'll pick us up? See; it's light now, the
-sun is coming up. I don't know as I care very much. Do you?"
-
-"Sure I care. Why not? We'll be all right soon."
-
-She let her head fall forward, and gave a little sob; just a bit of a
-cry.
-
-"Well, then I'm glad I pulled you out of the water," she said. "Seems
-like we might just as well have gone during the night. Do you really
-think it's worth struggling for like this? Life is good--and I want to
-live--but this is too hard--too terrible--and my poor mother----"
-
-"We'll be picked up before breakfast, sure," I said. "The boats must
-have drifted just the same as ourselves. Something'll come along soon."
-
-And yet deep down in me I knew that this was a bare chance. We were out
-of the track of ships, well off shore for the coasters, and not far
-enough for the Bermuda ships, like the _Rathbone_, which had stopped at
-the island on her way north.
-
-The sun rose, and daylight broadened into the morning. The wind fell
-rapidly, and the sea began to get that easy run of the Atlantic when
-undisturbed. I loosened my lashings and stood up, gazing about us.
-The motion of the raft was still severe; but I could stand, balancing
-myself. I shivered and shook with the wet and cold; but I now felt that
-with the sun shining we would soon be in better straits. As the raft
-rose upon the swells I looked all around the horizon. But there was
-nothing; not a thing save the sea in sight.
-
-"You can't see anything?" The girl's voice sounded strange, querulous,
-and pitiful. She was sitting with her head bowed upon her hands, which
-rested on her knees. Her wet dress clung to her, and she looked very
-frail, very delicate.
-
-"No; I can't see anything yet," I answered; "but we'll sight something
-before long. Tell me, were you from Bermuda?"
-
-"Yes; I was visiting my aunt there," she said. "I just graduated from
-the convent of the Sacred Cross last month. I've never been anywhere,
-or seen anyone, until this year. My mother is the only other near
-relative I have living."
-
-"Well, you've made a good start seeing things," said I, trying to smile
-at her. She turned a little pink, just flushed a bit; but it gave her
-white face a more natural look. She was a very pretty girl.
-
-"How old are you?" I asked.
-
-"Eighteen. Why?"
-
-"Oh, nothing, only----"
-
-I felt like a fool. Why should I bother this child about her age? She
-had saved my life by dragging me upon the raft, and I would save hers,
-if possible. It produced a feeling in me I could not quite understand.
-I liked to hear her talk, to have her look at me. She was very pretty;
-a good, innocent young girl.
-
-"I could eat a house, roof, and foundation," I ventured finally,
-seating myself. The wash of the sea now hardly reached us, and we were
-drying out fast in the cool breeze and sunshine.
-
-"Yes; I could eat a ship, masts, and spars," I went on.
-
-"Well, I suppose I'll be tough enough," she said, glancing at me with
-some show of fear in her eyes. "I once read of men on a raft who ate
-each other; but I never thought it would be my turn. No, never."
-
-"Don't be absurd," I said. "I don't intend to eat you--not yet."
-
-She looked at me very hard. Her eyes were moist; big, lustrous eyes.
-"No," she said seriously, "I don't believe you will," and she put her
-hand in mine.
-
-"Aw, don't be frightened, kid," I said. "I may look like the devil, but
-I'm not."
-
-And I sat there like an idiot holding that girl's hand, while the sun
-rose and shone warmer and warmer upon us, drying our garments and
-cheering us wonderfully. I had never met a girl of this kind before;
-and it was something of a problem how I was to keep her alive and
-cheerful on that raft. I swore fiercely at Jake, at Jones, and the rest
-for leaving us adrift. My oaths were something strange to the girl, for
-she shivered and drew her hand away.
-
-"Please don't," she said quietly. "What good does it do to use such
-language?"
-
-"Eases me a lot, miss. What's your name?"
-
-"Alice Trueman."
-
-I mumbled the name a few times, then relapsed into silence. After that
-there was nothing more said for a long time; but I saw her looking at
-me at intervals. Evidently I was an animal she was not used to, and I
-wondered at a mother who would bring up a girl to view a man as such a
-terrible sort of creature. I was a rough sailor; but I was human.
-
-The day advanced and the wind fell to a gentle breath. Then it became
-quite still, a dead calm, while the swell rolled steadily in from the
-eastward, but smoothed out into long, easy hills and hollows, upon
-which the raft rode easily and the platform kept clear of the sea at
-last.
-
-We took turns standing up and looking about the surrounding waste
-to see if there were any signs of a ship. Nothing showed upon the
-horizon, and the day wore down to evening. We were both very hungry
-and thirsty. I knew that the limit would soon be reached if there were
-nothing to eat or drink. The sun was now warm, and we ceased shivering
-as it settled in the west. The darkness of the night came on with its
-terrors, and still there was no sign of help from anywhere.
-
-"I really don't think I can stand it any longer, captain," said the
-girl.
-
-"I'm not the captain--just the mate," I answered; "but you'll have to
-stick it out for the night."
-
-Miss Alice gave a little sob. "I'm _so_ hungry and thirsty," she
-wailed. And added plaintively: "I've never been hungry in my life
-before."
-
-"Probably not," I said, sitting close to her and taking her hand in
-mine again. She made no resistance, and I passed my arm about her.
-"You must remember you've seen very little of the world yet. I've been
-hungry often--expect to be again before I go."
-
-"You see, I've had everything in the world I wanted. My father died
-very rich--and I can't stand the things people can who are used to
-them," she lamented.
-
-"Cheer up," I said. "While there's life there's hope, you know."
-
-She gave a little sigh, and let her head fall back upon my shoulder.
-And so we sat there in the growing darkness, together upon a raft in
-the middle of the Atlantic. As I look back upon it, there seems to be a
-bit of sentiment lacking. I felt nothing but pity for the girl at the
-time. I wasn't the least unhappy. I wasn't the least disturbed, except
-that hunger was gnawing at me and the fear the girl would die there.
-Personally I was not displeased with the position. Such is youth.
-
-"Alice," I said finally, "I find a lot of comfort in you being here
-with me, but I honestly believe I could stand it better if you were
-safe ashore. You've been a mighty brave little companion though."
-
-She gave my hand a bit of a squeeze, and sighed like a tired child.
-Then she closed her eyes.
-
-I was aroused by a hail.
-
-"Hey, there, aboard the raft!" came a yell from the darkness.
-
-"Boat, ahoy!" I howled, in desperation, hardly believing my ears.
-
-"Stand by and catch the line," came the yell again, and I jumped up and
-stared into the gloom.
-
-A dark spot showed close aboard. The sound of oars came over the water.
-A man's voice hailed again, and I recognized Jones, my bow oarsman.
-
-"Mr. Garnett----Is it you?" he cried; and a line came hurtling across
-the platform, striking me in the face. I seized it, snatched a turn
-upon one of the slats of the platform. The boat came alongside, while
-they held her off with the oars and boat hook.
-
-"A girl--one of the passengers, hey?" asked Jones. "Climb aboard, sir,
-and we'll take her in all safe enough."
-
-Wilson and Jones sprang upon the platform, and helped me lift the girl
-to her feet. She opened her eyes at the motion, and gave a cry of joy.
-
-"I'm so glad!" she said, and fainted dead away, while we placed her in
-the stern of the whaleboat.
-
-"Water, in the name of Heaven!" I panted. "You cowards! Why did you
-leave us?"
-
-"Hunted for you, sir, all night," said Jones, getting at the water
-breaker and measuring out a full quart. I held it to the lips of the
-girl, and she revived enough to drink part of it. I drank the rest, and
-drew another measure, drinking it off in a gulp.
-
-"Grub," I said, without further ado; and, while they shoved clear of
-the raft, I took a share of the ship's biscuit, eating ravenously.
-
-"Sit up and chew a bit of bread," I said to Miss Alice.
-
-She raised herself with an effort, and soon recovered sufficiently to
-eat something. Then she nestled close to me, let her head fall again
-upon my shoulder, and went to sleep like a tired child.
-
-We were heading almost due west for the coast now, and could not be
-very far away from coastwise traffic. I felt that the end would soon
-come, and that we would be picked up.
-
-Before midnight a light showed ahead. It was a steamer's headlight, and
-I soon made out her green light, showing she was heading north, inside
-of us. We would pass very close.
-
-"Give way strong; give way together. Let's get out of this," I said;
-and the men set to the oars.
-
-The light grew brighter, the green still showing. Soon the black form
-of the ship's hull showed through the gloom, her masthead light now
-looming high in the air, and her side light close aboard. We were
-drawing in, and I stood up and bawled out for help. The black bulk of
-her hull towered over us, and for an instant it seemed that she would
-run us down.
-
-"Hold--back water--hold hard!" I yelled, and the men obeyed.
-
-The ship tore past us, the foam of her bow wave splashing into the
-boat. I roared out curses upon the men above in her. Then she went on
-into the night. I howled, swore at her, called her skipper every name
-I could devise. The men seconded me, and together we called down enough
-curses upon that ship to have sunk her. Suddenly she seemed to slow up,
-to stop, and then lay dead in the gloom.
-
-"Row, you bullies, row for your lives!" I yelled; and the men gave
-their last spurt, putting their remaining strength into the pull. We
-drew closer, and a voice hailed us from the ship.
-
-"Ship ahoy!" I called again. "Throw us a line and stand by to pick us
-up."
-
-We came alongside. A line was dropped down, and Jones seized it,
-snatched a turn, and we were fast. The ship was wallowing slowly ahead;
-but we hung alongside safe enough.
-
-"Pass down a bowline," I sang out; "and be quick about it."
-
-The line came down into the boat, and I slipped it over the head of
-Miss Alice Trueman, jamming it under her arms.
-
-"H'ist away on deck," I directed; and the girl went aloft. The rest of
-us came one after the other.
-
-"I can't take your boat, sir," said the captain; "haven't any room."
-
-"Forget the boat. Give me something to eat and drink, and a place to
-lie down for a few weeks," I said, and I was led below.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Two days later we were at the dock in New York. I had not seen Alice
-since she had been turned over to the care of the stewardess; but I
-waited for her to come on deck. She came, pale but self-possessed.
-She was still weak, but was now nearly recovered. The ship was being
-warped to the pier, and it would be a few minutes before we could leave
-her. I came up and held out my hand.
-
-"Well," I said, "Alice, how about it? You were a good companion in
-trouble, a brave shipmate in the face of terrible danger. Somehow it
-has drawn me to you. I want to see you again."
-
-"Always, Mr. Garnett; always will I be glad to see you--but do you
-think it wise under the circumstances? Don't you think we had better
-say good-by now? It will only be more difficult later on. You know what
-I mean----"
-
-She looked up at me with moist eyes--eyes that told so much. I was
-taken all aback; but I understood. I was only a sailorman, a mate of
-a sailing ship. She was an heiress--a lady, as they say, educated and
-refined. She couldn't make me what she knew I would have to be to
-retain her respect and love, the love she would want to give. It was
-for my own good she was saying good-by. Yes, I believe she meant it
-only for that.
-
-"Sure, girl, I was only fooling," I said, with my throat choking so
-that the blamed ship reeled and swung about me.
-
-"Believe me, it's best so," she whispered, looking at me strangely with
-eyes now full of tears. She held out her hand, raised her head, put up
-her lips.
-
-"Kiss me good-by. You were awful good to me. Good-by."
-
-I felt that kiss burn my lips for many a day--yes, for a long time.
-
-
-
-
-THE AFTER BULKHEAD
-
-
-After coming home from the East I had, like many other ship's officers,
-taken up steam. There was more in it than the old wind-jammers, and the
-runs were short in comparison. It was not long before I went in the
-Prince Line, as they needed navigators badly.
-
-I was chief mate of the liner, and it was my unpleasant duty to do
-about everything. Old Man Hall, captain and R. N. R. man, did little
-beside working the ship's position after we got to sea. Ashore, he left
-everything to Mr. Small and myself, as far as the ship was concerned,
-and if there were a piece of frayed line, a bit of paint chafed, we
-heard all about it within two hours after he came aboard.
-
-Small was second under me, while the third and fourth officers were
-hardly more than apprentices, both being for the first time in the ship
-and not more than twenty-one or two years of age.
-
-Captain Hall was nearly seventy, and somewhat decrepit, but he was an
-accurate navigator, and had kept his record clean, making one hundred
-runs across the Western Ocean without accident. Masters of merchantmen
-are good or bad, according to their records, according to their
-reputations. Some said Hall had excellent luck. But, anyway, he was a
-good man, a fair-minded skipper, and he always brought in his ship on
-schedule, which was saying a good deal, for the Prince Line steamers
-were not noted for keeping close to time--any old time was good enough
-for most of them until the _Prince Gregory_, of twenty thousand tons,
-came along and made the lubbers look up a bit.
-
-She was the largest ship of the fleet--which comprised ten good
-steamers--and she was fitted with all the modern conveniences, from
-telephones to wireless, had a swimming pool, barber shop, gymnasium,
-cafe, and elevators to the hurricane deck.
-
-With only four watch officers, and six cadets, who were about as useful
-as a false keel on a trunk, I had enough to do before clearing.
-
-The chief engineer was an American, for a wonder, and his six
-assistants, including donkey man, were Liverpool cockneys. They drove a
-swarm of fire rats and coal passers that would have made a seaman crazy
-in two days, but Smith took things easy below, and, although he had to
-push her to keep the new record, he let his assistants do the heavy
-work. That's the reason he grew so fat--grew fat and even-tempered,
-while poor Small and myself sweated out our lives after the usual
-routine.
-
-We had forty men in the crew, and needed more, for we often had a
-thousand emigrants in the steerage. Sometimes we carried bunches of
-those big chaps from the European forests, Lithuanians, strong, sturdy
-brutes, totally without sense.
-
-It was in December that we took over five hundred of them on board, and
-while I was polite as possible, I put Small wise to keep a lookout on
-the critters. They were miners, for the most part. Contract men, going
-to the mines in Pennsylvania.
-
-By some means a quantity of their baggage got below with that of the
-cabin passengers. We had a lot of cabin folks that voyage. There was
-a bunch of actors, men and women you hear at the opera, drummers
-galore, buyers who were coming home from the fall trading, several
-millionaires; and, among the society or upper-strata people, the ones
-without occupation to give them distinction, were the Lady Amadoun and
-her following.
-
-Lady Amadoun was American born, but French by adoption, or, rather,
-marriage, preferring in her youth the suave manners of older
-generations to the rougher ones of her own countrymen. Raoul, Vicomte
-Amadoun, her husband, had not turned out the soft and gentle creature
-he appeared before marriage. In fact, he had followed the usual
-time-worn game of demanding money at unusual crises, which, as you
-know, has a tendency to make intelligent women think twice before
-coming across with it. The Vicomtesse Amadoun, or countess, as they
-called her, was young; in fact, looked hardly twenty-five--but, of
-course, a countess has maids to fix her up a bit!
-
-You see, being first officer, and sitting at the head of my own table
-in the saloon, the countess came under my observation more than I
-intended. Old Hall had his own cronies, who sat with him, and Driggs,
-the steward, gave the most prominent passenger my right-hand seat--sort
-of compliment. Driggs was a good steward, and owed his place to my
-exertions in his behalf.
-
-It was about this confounded baggage that I had a chance to further
-acquaint myself with nobility, for the trunks of the countess--and she
-had about fifty, including those of her friends who came with her--got
-mixed with the stuff that the baggage-master had sent by mistake to the
-first-class baggage room--the unlovely dunnage of the human moles who
-were roosting low in the steerage, and paying two pounds sterling a
-head for the privilege.
-
-"I would take it as a great favor if you would allow me to get into my
-baggage by to-morrow at the latest," said the countess, beaming upon me
-from the adjacent seat at my table at dinner that day. "You see, we've
-been all over Europe, and while traveling through Russia I picked up
-some very pretty furs, which will be nice to use on deck during this
-cool sea weather."
-
-"Madam," said I, "I shall be at your service right after eight bells
-to-morrow, when I leave the bridge." So I warned the baggage man,
-below, to have the place cleaned out a mite, so that her ladyship
-could go below without getting her frock spoiled from contact with the
-steerage passengers or their belongings.
-
-To be sure that he would do my bidding--he belonged to the purser's
-force--I went below that morning, and looked the baggage over myself.
-I passed in through the steerage, and noted the men stowed there. Two
-big brutes of Lithuanians sat upon their dunnage, and jabbered in their
-language.
-
-"Hike!" I said abruptly to the pair. "Git away from the baggage, and
-let the trunk slingers dig up."
-
-"Oh, Mister Mate, Mister Chief, we have our trunks here, also, and want
-to get to them," answered one fellow in fairly good lingo.
-
-"Beat it!" I ordered. "Make a get-away as quick as you can. Only
-first-class passengers can take their baggage out, or get a look-in.
-Why, you lubber, if every one of you steerage rats wanted to get into
-your trunks, it would take about fifteen hundred stewards and baggage
-men to take care of you."
-
-"But it is of great importance that we see our things--there are some
-things in my trunk I must get at, some important things----"
-
-"Try and fergit them until next Wednesday, when they can be dumped on
-Ellis Island; nuff sed--no more lingo--beat it!"
-
-The pair went away in very ugly humor, and I started the work of
-clearing that baggage room of their dunnage, and trying to select the
-trunks of the countess from the raffle. I managed to get about twenty
-of them, and let it go at that.
-
-The next day I took the countess below, and personally showed her over
-the trunks. She was accompanied by the count and her maid.
-
-"Now, Marie, which trunk was it in, _ma chere_? You must remember it
-very well," she said, looking at the mass of baggage.
-
-"_Mais oui_, it must be that grand affaire--that beeg one--see!" And
-the maid pointed to an immense Saratoga trunk, big enough to hold the
-clothes of a full man-o'-war's crew.
-
-The baggage master and I pulled the trunk out of the ruck, and the
-count produced a bunch of keys.
-
-I sauntered over to the other side of the room, where the gratings
-separated the steerage from the rest. The two fellows I saw there
-yesterday were watching through the slats, and did not notice me.
-
-"_Deux cent_," said one, in a whisper.
-
-"Whew, _mon Dieu_----"
-
-I knew that there was something about two hundred, but just what I
-couldn't quite log. My lingo goes mostly to Spanish and Chink, having
-sailed to those countries.
-
-The countess asked me to move the big trunk to the side of the ship.
-I did so without seeing the reason for the extra work, but the lady
-was gracious, and there was really no reason for not doing it. Two
-other trunks were opened, and the furs brought out. Then the lady
-went on deck again, after thanking me most profusely. Raoul was more
-reticent. He was not the tongue-lashing Frenchman he looked. He seemed
-preoccupied; but all very rich and powerful men seem that way to me,
-and after all I was but the chief officer. Perhaps the skipper would
-have drawn him out more.
-
-Nothing happened until we were within sight of the Nantucket Shoals
-lightship. That night the countess and her husband were on deck, and,
-the air being cool, they were well wrapped in furs. I watched them
-from the bridge. They kept well forward, near the starboard forward
-lifeboat. That was my boat under the drill orders, and I remembered it
-afterward.
-
-It was about two bells--nine o'clock in the evening--when there was a
-most terrific roar from below. The ship shook as though torn asunder.
-As I gazed aft, the deck seemed to rise and blow outboard. Something
-struck me heavily, and I was down and out for a few minutes. When I
-arose with ringing ears, I looked aft again, hardly realizing that I
-was awake and not dreaming. The siren was roaring full blast, and a
-throng of men and women were rushing forward toward the bridge. Old
-Hall came out of his room half dressed, and ran to me.
-
-"What is it--what's happened?" he yelled in my ear.
-
-"Don't know," I howled, and even then I didn't believe I was awake.
-
-The chief engineer ran up.
-
-"Starboard engine room full, sir--something blowed up below--whole side
-gone above water line--won't float ten minutes," he howled.
-
-"For God's sake, shut off that siren, then!" yelled old man Hall. Then,
-turning to me, he ordered: "Stand by the boats, and get the passengers
-out."
-
-In a few minutes the roar of the steam stopped. Hall stood calmly upon
-the bridge, and gave the orders for the small boats, and away they went
-one after the other. The wireless was sending its call for help, but
-there was no time for us to listen to replies; we had plenty to do.
-
-The _Prince Gregory_ settled slowly by the stern, and raised her bows
-high in the air. There she stopped, and, for a wonder, did not fall
-from under us.
-
-"Get into the boat, quick!" I said to the countess, and she sprang with
-amazing ease into the stern, followed by her husband and the maid.
-
-"Nix on the men!" I yelled, and grabbed the count. "Come out--women
-first," and I dragged him from the boat with no show of deference. He
-struck me savagely in the face, and I stretched him out with the boat's
-tiller. Seamen tossed him aside, and the swarm of women crowded up and
-into the craft while I held the men back as best I could.
-
-I knew it was to be a close haul. Seven hundred men and women, and only
-twenty boats! The life rafts would be doing duty pretty soon, and no
-mistake.
-
-I saw very little of the fracas around me, as one never does see much
-if he is tending to his own business, and mine at that time was getting
-forty-five women into a small boat, many of them in before she was
-lowered away.
-
-Luckily there was no sea running at all. It was calm and foggy, the
-water like black oil.
-
-I slid down the falls, and when we loaded up I took command at the
-tiller, and went out a little distance to clear the wreck in case of
-trouble. We lay at rest a hundred fathoms distant, and watched the
-scuffle aboard. Men yelled like mad, screamed, and fought. I caught
-the flash of a gun, and heard the report. I knew Hall would not stand
-for lawless rushing the boats, and was doing some fierce work. Pretty
-soon the outcry died away more and more, and still the black hull
-showed plainly, her bow still pointing skyward, and her stern submerged.
-
-"God's blessing, there's no wind or sea!" I said to Driscoll, my stroke
-oarsman.
-
-"You're right there, cap," said he. "What wus ut anyway?"
-
-"Blessed if I knew--she's just blowed up, whole stern gone out of her.
-She can't float two hours, and there'll be no one out here before
-daybreak if they do get the signal."
-
-"You brute!" exclaimed the countess, who was sitting close to me. "Why
-didn't you let my husband come in this boat?"
-
-"If he was a man, he wouldn't have wanted to," I snapped, hot at the
-insult.
-
-"I notice _you_ are here, all right, you ruffian!" she retorted,
-sneering. "What do you call yourself?"
-
-I thought best not to answer her. Words with women are generally
-wasted, and the woman always gets the last one, anyhow. The countess
-had always been so courteous and gentle that I supposed the excitement
-had turned her head; and then, after all, I had treated her husband
-a bit rough. He was a gentleman, and I was only a mate. That made a
-difference in her point of view, although I can't say it did so much in
-my own.
-
-I talked to Driscoll, and watched the _Prince Gregory_ as she lay there
-in the oily sea. Boats came and went toward the light vessel, and,
-thinking it would be a good thing to get rid of my cargo, I trailed off
-after the bunch, and was soon alongside the lightship.
-
-As fast as we could, we sent the women aboard, finding that the little
-ship would hold hundreds of passengers, in spite of her diminutive
-size. Inside of half an hour, she had fully five hundred people in her,
-and was jammed to the rails, below and on deck. Still, it was better
-than an open boat, and I kept bringing them by scores, until there
-were no more, save a few boatloads, and these we kept afloat in the
-lifeboats.
-
-During this time I thought little, or not at all, about the count.
-The ship still hung by her after bulkhead, and Lord knows the man who
-set it in her deserves praise enough. How it stood that strain is a
-wonder to this day. If there had been any sea running she would have
-gone down like a stone, for no unbraced cross-section of a ship can
-stand the surge of ten thousand tons in a seaway. It must have burst
-like blotting paper when wetted down. With ten men--all second-class
-passengers--in my boat besides the crew, I went back to the ship for
-the last time, and watched old man Hall as he stood upon the bridge.
-I could just make him out through the hazy gloom of the night, but I
-could hear his voice distinctly, as he gave orders to the few men who
-stayed with him.
-
-"Do you want any more help, sir?" I asked, coming alongside.
-
-"What's that--you, Jack?" he answered. "No, I reckon not. She'll hang
-on for hours, if the weather remains calm like this. All the passengers
-safe?"
-
-"All aboard the lightship, or hanging to her by painters--there's a
-line of boats half a mile long trailing on behind her, and they're safe
-enough, as they can't get lost as long as they hold to her. Tide runs
-hard here on the edge of the Stream, but her wireless is going right
-along, and she says two cutters left Boston half an hour ago, under
-full steam--ought to be here before late in the morning, anyway. Never
-lost a man, hey?"
-
-"No," says he, "not that I know of; and that's some remarkable, too."
-
-I thought it was, also, but said nothing more for a few moments,
-watching the half-sunken hull slowly rolling from side to side in the
-smooth swell.
-
-While I watched I saw the form of a man coming from aft, along the
-rail of the main deck, which was just awash. As every one had left the
-after part of the ship and the engine room abandoned, I thought this
-strange, and watched the figure until it came almost amidships. Then it
-disappeared in the cabin.
-
-"More men aft, sir?" I asked Hall, who still stood leaning upon the
-bridge rail, waiting for help.
-
-"No, no one left aboard--just Jenkins and his crew of four men--myself,
-that's all." Jenkins was carpenter.
-
-"Saw a man coming from aft, sir--must be some passenger overlooked.
-Shall I jump up, and see to him?"
-
-"All right," came the response, and almost before he spoke the men who
-waited on their oars shoved the boat astern until she was almost level
-with the sunken deck. I sprang out of her, and sung to them to lie by
-and keep clear of the captain's boat, which lay alongside, just forward
-of us, waiting until the old man found it necessary to leave.
-
-I made my way in through the passageway to the saloon, and found the
-deck still clear of water, although the sucking roar and surge of the
-sea beneath told of the immense volume in the lower decks. The lights
-had long gone out, with the drowning of the dynamos, and I felt for a
-cabin door, intending to grab one of the emergency candles which are
-always in place on the bulkheads.
-
-I found one, and struck a light; then made my way along the passage in
-front of the lower staterooms, calling at intervals for any one who
-might be near and unable to realize the peril of a foundering ship. I
-admit it was some ticklish. I had my hair raised more than once when
-the ship took a more than usually heavy roll, and the rushing thunders
-below started with renewed force. What if she should drop? It was a bad
-thought, and not tending to still my pulse. I couldn't help thinking of
-the thousand fathoms or so of blue sea beneath my feet----
-
-I thought I heard a footstep crossing the passage in front of me. It is
-strange how, above the general thunder of rushing water, a slight sound
-makes itself evident. It was like standing upon the shore during the
-running of a heavy surf. One can almost talk in a whisper while the
-thunder reverberates along the coast.
-
-A shadow crossed in front of me, and I hailed again. It was a man, and
-he was coming from below, from the sunken lower decks. He came up the
-staircase of the lower saloon, and darted along the passageway to port.
-
-"Hey, there! Stop!" I yelled.
-
-The man turned, and in an instant I recognized him. It was the Vicomte
-Raoul.
-
-He eyed me with a savage look, and waited for me to come up.
-
-"What ees it you want?" he growled.
-
-"Just you!" I told him. "Don't you know you are in danger of getting
-killed down here?"
-
-"And how does that matter interest you?" he retorted, with those
-shrugging shoulders and arched eyebrows he could handle so well.
-
-"It don't, except that, as I'm an officer, it's my duty to see you
-leave the ship under orders of the captain."
-
-"I noticed you were not so queek to have me leave dees sheep when
-I first started," he sneered, "and eef I go back for my jewels, my
-valuables, eet ees no affaire of yours--eh?"
-
-"It is only to the extent that I must see you off the vessel," I said.
-
-We were standing near the after companionway, and I noticed the
-splintered planking, where the force of the explosion had blown it
-upward. It was directly over the baggage room, where the trunks were
-stowed below. This was now under six to ten feet of clear water.
-
-"If you want to get into your trunks, you will have to be a good
-diver," I said. "There's no chance in the world of getting below
-here--she's flooded full to the after bulkheads number four in the wake
-of the starboard engines. You couldn't do a thing below if you got
-there."
-
-In a more courteous tone, the count explained:
-
-"Eet is a matter of small valuables in my room, not my trunk. Go along
-like a good fellow, and I will follow instantly. I just go below to my
-room--I come with you instantly--go!"
-
-"Well, I'll wait here if it don't take too long," I said. "It's against
-orders, and if anything happens to you I'll get it, all right. Hurry
-up, and beat it back--the boat's waiting, and the ship'll drop any
-minute. It's only that number four bulkhead holding her."
-
-"Ah, yes, dat number four! Eet ees just at my stateroom door, zat
-number four you call heem. Wait, my good fellow, I come immediate," and
-he went down the companionway, which was knee-deep at the bottom in sea
-water.
-
-He splashed through the shallow wash, and disappeared along the
-gloomy passage, where the candlelight failed. I stood above and
-waited, holding my breath at times, and cursing the luck that made
-me weak enough to allow him to do such a foolish thing as go below
-for valuables. However, I had treated him pretty rough at the first
-getaway, and felt he had a right to some consideration.
-
-Suddenly I remembered that his stateroom was not below on that
-main deck! It seemed to me he had rooms forward and above; but the
-excitement had caused me to forget this detail, and I was so taken up,
-even at the time, that I only remembered it in a half-dazed way. What
-did he want below, then?
-
-I waited, and the minutes flew by, seeming long enough. The candle ran
-its hot grease down upon my hand, and burned it. I was getting sore and
-impatient at the wait. If anything happened, I could never be given a
-reprimand, for I would never show up to receive it. The ship would go
-down and take me with her, all right enough. I hadn't a chance in the
-world--and I was waiting there for a count, a man who had sprung into
-the mate's boat to get clear, when there were hundreds of women waiting
-and screaming to go!
-
-There was a sharp explosion from below. The ship shook a little, and
-rolled to port.
-
-"Just Heaven! Did that bulkhead go?"
-
-A form tore down the passageway, splashed through the water at the foot
-of the companion, and was upon me in an instant. Raoul struck me fairly
-between the eyes, and I went down to sleep--that was all I remember
-of the inside of the _Prince Gregory_, as she lay foundering off the
-Shoals.
-
-When I came to, I was in the boat, with Driscoll bending over me and
-pouring sea water upon my head. The dark stain showed me that I was
-bleeding fast, and the sailor tore off the sleeve of his jumper, and
-tied it about my forehead. I tried to sit up, but everything swam and
-rolled about me horribly. Finally I managed to get my head up.
-
-"What's happened?" I asked.
-
-"Bulkhead gave way, sir," he told me. "You was hit on the head by
-wreckage. I run in after you, an' jest managed to git you clear. She's
-gone, sir!"
-
-"What! The ship?" I cried.
-
-"Sure, sir."
-
-"And the old man--Jenkins, and the rest of them?"
-
-"All got clear just in time--seems like Jenkins and his gang were at
-the bulkhead from forrards, trying to shore it up, when _bing!_ she
-went, and them as was left beat it--all got clear, sir."
-
-"See anything of a passenger--that chap we had a run-in with at the
-first getaway?" I asked.
-
-"Yes, sir; one man got away in the skipper's boat--that's them headin'
-for the lightship over there," and he pointed to a blur that showed
-through the hazy night. I began to gather my senses again, but I
-couldn't make head or tail of it. What did that fellow nail me for? I
-had hit him, to be sure; but that was for a purpose. He surely intended
-to fix me, all right. About a minute more, and I would have gone with
-the ship.
-
-"Cowardly rat!" I whispered.
-
-"Who?" asked Driscoll.
-
-"That white-livered dog who knocked me out," I said, gritting my teeth
-at the thought.
-
-"Better lie quiet, sir; better keep still--you're bug a bit, but will
-be all right to-morrow. Does it hurt you much, sir?"
-
-"Shut up!" I commanded ungratefully, and Driscoll gazed at me
-sorrowfully, pulling away again at his oar, for we were now almost to
-the lightship.
-
-All that night we lay trailing astern. There was a long line of
-lifeboats reaching nearly half a mile back, all hanging to the taffrail
-of the ship.
-
-About daylight she got in touch with a passing passenger ship, bound
-in, and while we were busy shifting the hundreds of passengers the
-cutters showed up, and helped to expedite matters by towing the small
-boats. Before breakfast time we had all the outfit aboard and away for
-New York. Hall and myself went aboard the cutter _Eagle_. We waited
-for several hours, to see if there were anything more to find drifting
-about, and then away we went for home, thanking the captain of the
-Nantucket Shoals lightship for what he had done.
-
-"I don't understand it at all--don't seem to be just right," repeated
-Hall over and over to the captain of the cutter. "She just blew
-up--that's all there is to it. We had a drove of miners aboard, and you
-know how hard it is to keep those fellows from carrying explosives in
-their dunnage. You simply can't stop to search them. There was probably
-a couple of hundred pounds of blasting powder, at the least--went off
-like a mine blowing up a battleship. That bulkhead in the wake of the
-starboard engine room saved us--that's all!"
-
-I was out of a ship. When we got in, the manager laid me off for a
-month, and then gave me the second greaser's berth on the old _Prince
-Leander_, a bum ship--and that's a fact. When I reached the other
-side again, I saw by the papers that a certain Frenchman had tried to
-collect nearly a million francs on his insurance for cargo and personal
-belongings in the _Prince Gregory_. It seems that he had shipped tons
-of expensive machinery and had insured it fully. The stuff was cased
-tightly, but one case marked for him had broken while being handled on
-the dock, and nothing but bricks fell out.
-
-The insurance companies held up the claim. I hurried to the consul's
-office, and told of the episode of the trunk, and how I was hit
-over the nut by a certain French gentleman during the fracas. The
-description answered to the man of machinery, and when I told of that
-last little crack I had heard below, the consul waited not on the order
-of his going, but ordered a cab and fairly threw me into it. We tore to
-the office of the underwriters, and I told my tale. Then I began to see
-the light, at last.
-
-It was the old game tried under a new guise--and it had nearly cost the
-lives of a half thousand human beings. The horror of it appalled me,
-and I found myself wondering if I were to be trusted about without a
-nurse again. However, I was not censured severely. The crook was well
-known to the police, and since then the police of many countries have
-been trying to locate a gentleman who answers to the description of the
-Vicomte Raoul de Amadoun.
-
-
-
-
-CAPTAIN JUNARD
-
-
-Captain Junard awoke suddenly from a sound sleep. He listened intently
-for a few moments. The steady vibrations of the ship's engines told of
-the unchecked motion, the unhindered rush of the ship through the sea.
-Yet something had awakened him, something had given him a start from a
-dreamless sleep, the sleep of a tired man. He knew that something was
-wrong, felt it, and wondered at it, while his heart began to sound the
-alarm by its increasing pulsations. He wondered if he were sick, had
-eaten something that might produce nightmare; but he felt very well,
-and knew he never started at trifles. His hand reached for the revolver
-at the head of his bunk. He always kept it there for emergencies. It
-was a heavy forty-five, with a long, blue barrel--a strong weapon that
-had stood him handily in several affairs aboard the steamer. The light
-in his room was dim, but there was enough of it to show him that his
-room was empty. His hand reached the spot where the weapon usually
-hung, but failed to reach it. He groped softly for several moments.
-There was nothing upon the bulkhead; the gun was gone.
-
-This fact made a peculiar impression upon him. He felt now that
-his instinct was correct, that he was indeed in danger. His mind
-cleared quickly from the stupor of sound sleep, and he remembered.
-He was carrying papers of peculiar importance in his strong box, or
-safe--papers relating to a deal in shipping connected with a revolution
-in a Central American state. A rival line had tried to stop the affair,
-which grew into political importance when secret agents of the United
-States tried to find out how deeply it might affect the Panama Canal.
-The concession had not been granted. The Canal Zone was not yet in
-existence, and the United States was sure to get it if this deal went
-through. The president had watched the affair with hungry eyes. Now the
-papers were in his--Junard's--possession, aboard his ship, bound for
-the state department in Washington.
-
-Junard started up when he found his hand missing the butt of that
-revolver. It had been a pleasant fancy to him when he remembered its
-solid grip and deadly accuracy, a dependable friend in the hours of
-darkness and distress. Now it was gone, and could not have gone without
-some one having taken it. If they took it, they took it to keep him
-from using it. The idea of its loss awakened him more than anything
-else, and sent his heart beating fast as with sudden quickness and
-energy he sprang from his bed. There was nothing in his room, nothing
-at all. The lamp burned low. The electrics had been switched off, as
-they gave too much light for him to sleep in. Junard stood wondering,
-studying, and gazing at his safe, which lay bolted to the deck in a
-corner of his room.
-
-The captain's room was just abaft the pilot house, as is usual in
-ships of that class. A stairway, or companion, of five steps led to
-the pilot house, but these were cut flush with his room and into the
-floor of the house above, so that he could shut the door. The door was
-shut now as he looked, but the sound of the steering gear told him
-that the man at the wheel, within a dozen feet of him, was steering
-and attending apparently to his business. The room ran clear across
-the superstructure, opening with a door upon either side. To starboard
-was his bathroom, to port was a closet, which adjoined the room of the
-chief officer, being separated from it by the bulkhead. Both these
-rooms led aft and opened into his room by doors in the bulkhead. This
-made his room a complete section of the superstructure about twelve
-feet deep and running clear through. There was nothing in it that could
-hide any one. A table, a couch with leather cushions, several chairs,
-and a large desk completed the furniture. His bed was a large double
-bunk let in to port and hung with curtains. It somewhat resembled an
-old four-poster bed.
-
-Junard walked quickly to the safe. It was locked. He smiled at himself.
-The absurdity of the thing almost made him laugh. And yet he was as
-nervous as a ship's cat when watching a strange dog. He opened the door
-leading to the pilot house. The man in there was standing in regulation
-pose, with his hands upon the spokes of the steam steering gear. The
-sudden rattle and clank told Junard the fellow was awake and alert.
-The dim light from the binnacle made his outline plainly discernible,
-and Junard recognized him as Swan, a quartermaster of long service and
-excellent ability.
-
-"How's she heading, Swan?" whispered the captain.
-
-"No'the, two east, sir," said the man, with a slight start. The words
-had come to him from the gloom behind him, and he had not heard the
-door open.
-
-"That's right; they haven't reported the Cape yet?"
-
-"No, sir; but that's Cape Maysi, sir, I think," said Swan, pointing
-to a light that had just begun to show right over the port bow. Eight
-bells struck off upon the clock in the house as he spoke, and the
-cry came from forward. The chief mate, who was on watch, came to the
-pilot-house window, reached in, and took out the night glasses. He
-adjusted them and gazed at Cape Maysi. Captain Junard watched him
-narrowly, and noted that he took the bearings and made the remark
-in his order book. Mr. Jameson was a good officer and a first-class
-navigator, and Junard did not wish to appear on deck until he was
-called. It looked as if he did not trust the officer sufficiently. He
-would wait until the light was reported officially.
-
-When Junard turned to reenter his room, he heard a slight noise. There
-was a rustle, a whirl, and the door of the room to port clicked to. It
-had been shut when he jumped from his bunk. He gazed in the direction
-of the safe, and saw that it was now standing wide open, the door
-swinging slowly with the motion of the ship. He sprang to the switch
-and turned on the light, full power.
-
-In front of him was the safe, with the door open. In front of the safe
-lay a huge knife, and alongside of the knife lay his revolver, fully
-loaded, and cocked. Whoever had it was ready to use it upon a moment's
-notice. The intruder had fled at the sound of Junard's steps upon the
-pilot-house companion.
-
-Junard was a very heavy-set man. He stood but five feet two inches, but
-was at least three feet across the shoulders, an immense man for his
-height, his chest being as broad and hairy as a gorilla's. His powerful
-legs were set wide apart to steady himself to the ship's motion, and
-for a brief instant he stood there in the full light, clothed in his
-pajamas. Then, with a roar like that of a bull, he plunged headlong for
-the lattice door of his room, and, bursting it with a crash, reached
-the deck in full stride. He just caught sight of what appeared to be
-a skirt, switching around the corner of the deck house, and he leaped
-savagely for it. He reached the corner, swung around it--and saw no
-one. Down the alleyway he ran, swung about, and came out to port upon
-the deck. There was not a soul to be seen, and he hesitated an instant
-which way to run. Then he ran aft with prodigious speed, and, within a
-couple of seconds, reached the cabin companionway. The light burned at
-the head of the broad stairs, but not a soul was in sight. He dashed
-inside silently, being barefooted, and, peering over the baluster, he
-saw the steward on watch peacefully snoring away in a chair near the
-water-cooler at the foot of the stairway.
-
-"Sam!" he called sharply.
-
-The man awoke with a start.
-
-"Aye, aye, sir!" he said, looking about him, recognizing the captain's
-voice, but not seeing him at once.
-
-"Has any one come down this way within the last few minutes?" asked
-Junard.
-
-"No, sir, not a soul, sir."
-
-"Sure?"
-
-"Sure, sir. I've only been dozing but a minute. I'd have seen 'em, sir."
-
-Junard slipped away quietly, leaving the under-steward wondering what
-he wanted. With amazing swiftness, the master rushed back to his room.
-He reached it, and went inside the broken door. The light was still
-burning, but the safe was now closed. He tried the combination lock,
-and found it had been locked. The gun and knife had also disappeared.
-The room was in perfect order, the light burning full power, and there
-was not a thing to show that there had been an entry made. The bursted
-door was the only sign of any irregularity. He stood gazing at the safe
-for a few minutes. The thing was almost uncanny. He began to wonder
-if he had not had a nightmare, dreamed the whole thing. He turned the
-combination of the safe, and opened the door again. The contents of the
-safe were apparently intact. He reached for the inner drawer, where the
-important papers had been kept. They were gone.
-
-It was not nightmare, after all. The thing was real. The papers had
-been taken from the safe, and they were worth perhaps a million to the
-finder, if not much more; that is, if they could be gotten out of the
-ship and into the hands of those who were antagonistic to the deal. He
-pondered a few minutes more, and then decided to go on deck and stand
-the next watch upon the bridge, remaining there, with the excuse that
-the cape was drawing abreast and he would take his departure from it.
-He decided not to say anything to either officer. The thing had best
-be kept secret, for the very existence of the papers might imperil his
-company, if that existence were known to certain parties. He hastily
-dressed and went on the bridge.
-
-Mr. Dunn, the second officer, was now on watch, and it was about a
-quarter of an hour past midnight. The cape was drawing up, and was fast
-approaching the port beam. The ship was running about sixteen knots
-through a smooth sea, with a stiff northeast trade blowing almost dead
-ahead.
-
-Junard came to where the second officer stood. Mr. Dunn turned and
-spoke to him, remarking upon the blackness of the night and the
-clearness of the Cape Maysi light.
-
-Captain Junard said nothing, but watched the second officer narrowly,
-and tried to fathom his demeanor, looking for some sign that might show
-a knowledge of what had transpired aboard within the past few minutes.
-Dunn had been upon the bridge when that safe was shut, when the
-revolver had been taken away. Yet Dunn had been in the employ of the
-company for ten years, and was a reliable man, a sailor who had always
-done his duty without murmur. He had a fine record.
-
-The light drew abeam, and the ship ran close to the low, rocky point
-where it juts out into the sea. The high mountains a few miles back
-showed dimly in the gloom, making a huge shadow in the background. As
-the light is upon the north side of the low promontory and shows across
-to the southward, the land was very near as the ship steamed past it
-and laid her head for the passage.
-
-Junard gazed hard at the shore. He was thinking. Would any one try
-to get into communication with Cuba here at the cape? There was a
-question. If a small boat lay near, with lights out, she might get
-close to the ship without being observed, for it was quite dark, and
-the loom of the land made it darker than usual. It was nearly six
-hours' run to the next light, in the Bahamas, across the channel, and
-the Inagua Bank was too far to the eastward to invite shelter for a
-small boat. It would be either at the cape, or near Castle Rock, or
-Fortune Island, he believed, that an attempt might be made to get into
-communication with the ship. This he must stop. No one must get in
-communication with the land before daylight. Then he would search every
-passenger thoroughly, go through all rooms, and take a chance at the
-result. At Castle Rock he would be on watch, if nothing occurred here.
-
-He gazed steadily into the blackness ahead. The stiff trade wind blew
-the tops of the seas white. They broke in whitecaps, which showed now
-and then through the gloom of the night. He strained his eyes, but
-nothing showed ahead. The glass showed a dull, dark sea; there was
-nothing in the line of vision within three miles--that is, nothing as
-large as a whaleboat. He was sure of this. There might be something
-under the dark loom of the land, but the glass failed to show anything.
-
-"You take a four-point bearing upon the light, Mr. Dunn, and get the
-distance accurate," said Junard. "The mate took his bearing before
-he left the deck, but you can take another--we are about abreast
-now--she's doing exactly sixteen."
-
-Knowing that this would take the second officer until the light bore
-four points abaft the beam, Junard left the bridge and went aft without
-notice. He slipped down to the main deck, and went along the gangway
-until he reached the taffrail. The whirl of the wheel shook the ship
-mightily here, the long, steel arm of the tiller under the gratings
-shook and vibrated with the pulsations. The chains drawn taut clanked
-and rattled in the guides and sounded above the low murmur of the
-shaking fabric. Junard gazed over the stern and watched the thrust of
-the screw as it tore the sea white and whirled a giant stream astern
-that showed sickly white with the phosphorescent glow.
-
-When he turned again, he was aware of some one watching him. A head had
-appeared and vanished from behind the end of the cabin structure. The
-captain sprang for it with a bound. He turned the corner in time to see
-a skirt disappearing into the alleyway leading into the saloon. He was
-upon it with a catlike rush. He reached the saloon door just as it
-closed in his face.
-
-Without hesitating an instant, he plunged against it, and it gave way
-to his great weight and power. He burst with a crash into the saloon.
-
-The under steward who was on watch aft saw an apparition of a man in
-uniform coming through the door like a bull. He had opened his eyes in
-time to recognize the captain, who ran right across the cabin and out
-upon the deck beyond.
-
-Junard was swift. He made a reach for the figure as it flitted into a
-room which opened upon the deck nearly amidships. His iron grip closed
-upon the skirt, which stretched out in the wind behind the fleeing
-figure. Then something struck him full in the face, took his breath,
-and blinded him. He clung to the cloth, choking, coughing, and blinded;
-made a grab with his free hand to clutch the person--but his grip
-closed upon empty air.
-
-When he got the ammonia out of his eyes, which were almost blinded
-by the scorching fluid, he hurried to his room and bathed his head
-copiously in cold water until he regained his sight.
-
-"Well, it's a woman, all right," he commented. "We'll have her all
-right in the morning; she won't get a show to-night to get away with
-anything. I guess I've got her measure."
-
-In a few minutes he sent for the purser.
-
-That individual came to the captain's room with fear and trembling.
-He had been playing draw poker, and breaking the rules of the ship,
-regardless of discipline, and expected, of course, to get a rating.
-
-"Give me the passenger list," said Junard.
-
-It was produced. They ran over it, looking for the location of all the
-women under thirty or thereabouts in the ship. Junard said nothing of
-his adventure, and the purser was amazed at his appearance.
-
-"Had a bad night, captain?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, rather. There's a case of cholera aboard--among the women--I
-don't know which one, but we'll have a chance to find out to-morrow.
-Don't speak of it to any one, mind you; don't let it out under any
-conditions--you understand?"
-
-"Sure not," said the purser, paling a little under the news. "How did
-you come to find it out, sir?"
-
-"Never mind that now. Just keep an eye on all the women in this ship,
-and don't let any of them get to throwing things overboard, or trying
-to do anything foolish. Watch them, and tell me of anything that might
-happen."
-
-The purser, amazed, went back to his game of poker with certain
-passengers; but before doing so, he instructed several of his force to
-watch both gangways for the rest of the night. He did not know what
-the "old man" expected, but supposed that cholera patients attempted
-to throw things overboard, or tried suicide. The thought of the dread
-disease aboard made him forgetful of the game, and he lost heavily
-before morning.
-
-Junard, still smarting from the ammonia thrown in his face, came again
-upon the bridge. He had saved his eyes by a fraction, for the fluid had
-struck him right in the nose and mouth, and only the spray of it had
-gotten into his face higher up. It had been squirted by a fluid "gun"
-of the kind commonly used by bicyclists for repelling angry dogs. Part
-of the skirt had remained in his grip, but the person had slipped away
-in an instant and disappeared. It angered him to think a woman could do
-such a thing. And yet, if it were a woman watching him, there was sure
-to be more than a woman connected with it. No woman, he reasoned, could
-have tried his safe. No woman would have taken his revolver and carried
-it, along with a deadly knife. There must have been a well-organized
-party to the affair, and they had watched him, after taking the papers,
-to see just what he would do. Of course, he knew they would not toss
-such a valuable document overboard in the night time without a boat
-being close at hand to pick it up. The ocean is a hard place to find
-anything at night. He knew now that they were aware of his watchfulness
-and would not attempt to get rid of the papers except under the most
-favorable conditions. To throw them overboard attached to anything
-small enough not to attract attention would be to invite sure loss. He
-reasoned this out as he stood out the rest of Mr. Dunn's watch, and at
-eight bells--four o'clock in the morning--the mate came again on the
-bridge without anything happening to excite him.
-
-"I've been on deck for a short time, Mr. Jameson," said Junard; "but
-I'm going to turn in for a little while. Call me when we get well up to
-Castle Rock--we'll raise it before morning, before daylight with the
-weather clear like this."
-
-"Aye, aye, sir; I will, sir--she's doing fine now," said Jameson, as he
-signed the order book for his course during his watch.
-
-At two bells--five o'clock--the mate called the captain by going to his
-port door and knocking. He was amazed at the sight of a young woman
-who came forth from the room and whisked herself quickly down the
-deck and out of sight. Such a thing as a woman in the master's room
-at that hour was enough to excite Mr. Jameson. He had not been on the
-ship long, and the captain was new to him. Masters naturally had love
-affairs as well as sailors, but they were generally careful about being
-caught. Here Junard had asked him to call him when they sighted Castle
-Rock, and, as he knew they must do this by five, at least, the mate
-was puzzled to see a woman leaving the captain's room when he knocked.
-Why hadn't she left sooner? It was a joke he would be bound to retail
-to the rest sooner or later, and he smiled at the thought. He tried to
-get a glimpse of her face, but failed. Then he waited a decent length
-of time, and knocked again, louder, announcing the light ahead on the
-starboard bow.
-
-Junard came on deck instantly. He had been dressed and dozing.
-
-The gray light of the morning, which was now beginning to show things
-a little, enabled Junard to note the smile upon the face of his chief
-mate.
-
-"Anything funny doing?" he asked.
-
-"No, sir; but I seen her--I couldn't help it."
-
-"Seen who?"
-
-"I beg your pardon, sir; but she was just going out when I came to call
-you when I raised the light--your orders, sir, you know. I wouldn't----"
-
-"Out with it! Whom did you see?" snapped the captain sharply, and his
-tone told plainly that he was in no mood for a joke. The mate sobered
-at once.
-
-"There was a lady leaving your room as I came to knock--that's all,
-sir," he said sullenly. The captain had a poor appreciation of humor,
-he thought.
-
-"What kind of looking woman was she?"
-
-"Medium-sized, very well built--I might say stocky, sir--dressed in a
-dark cloth dress; she didn't have on a hat." This last was with almost
-a sneer. It brought Junard around with a jerk.
-
-"I don't wish to seem foolish, Mr. Jameson, but you appear to presume
-too much. I might insinuate gently that you are a damn fool--but I
-won't, not until you tell me what is amusing you, and what you saw.
-I will say there was no woman in my room. If there was, I'd not be
-troubled to confess it."
-
-"That's all I seen, sir," said Jameson sourly.
-
-"Which way did she go?"
-
-"She went aft," said the mate, wondering at the captain trying to hide
-the obvious. It irked him to think his master a fool. "She went aft,
-and that's all I seen."
-
-"Mr. Jameson, there's a few things you don't know," said Junard. "When
-we get abreast of Castle Rock, I want you to go aft and watch both
-sides of the ship carefully, you understand? I want you to see that
-not a thing is thrown overboard--not a single thing--and if there is
-anything showing in the wake, come to me at once--or, better still,
-ring off the engines and mark it to pick up. This is very important.
-I can't tell you right now just how important it is, but I will say
-your berth depends upon it. Do not let anything leave the ship without
-notice--not a thing."
-
-"Aye, aye, sir," said Jameson; and he went aft amazed at the outcome of
-his deductions. He wondered what was up. Some affair of the captain's,
-he was sure. But the severity of the master's tone, the earnestness
-of the captain's manner, disturbed him greatly. There was something
-peculiar about it that made him, forced him, to give his attention to
-it. And there was the threat of his own berth, his position, being in
-forfeit. He did not like that kind of talk from a captain. It savored
-of undue severity. He took his station aft of the superstructure with
-some misgivings. In the gray light of dawn, he watched both gangways,
-first one side and then the other, keeping well back of the house.
-
-Castle Rock light drew well upon the bow. It was now within a mile, and
-Junard noticed a small fishing boat riding in the fairway just ahead
-of the ship. As the water was very deep here, he knew she was not
-anchored, but must be waiting and under way; yet no sail showed upon
-her. Perhaps a powerful motor lay within her. He watched her carefully,
-and walked from side to side of the bridge, waiting for some sign from
-those aboard. The wake was now showing white in the gray of morning,
-and a small object could soon be distinguished in the smooth sea to
-leeward of the lighthouse, where the heavy swell of the Atlantic was
-cut off.
-
-Jameson, who stood at the taffrail, saw a figure of a man peer from
-the window of a stateroom nearly amidships. The head was quickly
-withdrawn. The mate watched, and then walked quickly across the stern
-and watched the wake, wondering what might be taking place. The form
-of a woman flitted down the gangway from forward, showing dimly in the
-gloom. She came from the opposite side of the ship from where he had
-seen the head peer forth. Hiding behind the house, he watched her come
-quickly aft. She was carrying something in her hand that looked like a
-life buoy. Instinctively the mate made ready to catch her. He saw that
-life belt, and to his imagination it spelled something like a person
-going overboard. The form of a man came quickly behind her, and Jameson
-recognized one of the under stewards, who had been watching for trouble
-at the purser's orders.
-
-The woman ran at the sound of footsteps behind her. She came with
-amazing swiftness to the taffrail, near where Jameson stood. He
-gathered himself, and sprang forth, clasping her in his arms just as
-she hurled the life belt over the side into the sea.
-
-The girl screamed shrilly, struggled frantically in the embrace of the
-officer. Jameson wondered what he was about--began to think he had
-captured a lunatic--when the rush of feet above caused him to loosen
-his grip. He turned in time to see Captain Junard take a header from
-the rail of the deck above and plunge headlong into the sea where it
-boiled and swirled from the thrust of the screw.
-
-Jameson was paralyzed for an instant. He distinctly saw his commander
-go overboard. It gave him a shock. He let go the girl and stood
-motionless for a second. Then, as the head of Junard arose in the white
-waste astern and struck out for an object, the life belt the girl had
-thrown over, he gathered his wits again, and dashed for the quarter
-bell pull, or telegraph, to the engine room.
-
-Full speed astern he threw it, and the astonished engineer on watch
-nearly fainted under the sudden warning. Thinking that a collision
-was at hand, he shut down and reversed under full power, opening the
-throttle wide, and giving her every ounce of steam in her boilers as
-she took the strain. The sudden take-up, the tremendous vibrations, and
-the slowing speed awoke many passengers. Not a sound of action had gone
-forth save the screams of the girl, and these were now silent as she
-had quickly flitted out of sight when the mate released her. Jameson
-rushed to the bridge and called his watch as he ran. Then he set the
-siren cord down hard, and the unearthly roar awoke the quiet tropical
-morning. Men rushed about. The watch hurried aft.
-
-"Stop her!" yelled Jameson to the quartermaster. "Stop her--don't go
-astern!"
-
-"Stop her, sir!" came the answering cry from the wheel. Jameson rushed
-to the rail again, and cut loose a life buoy from its lashings. He ran
-aft with it, intending to throw it out to his captain. Junard, however,
-was but a speck, far astern, his head showing like a black dot in the
-white water of the wake. The mate noticed for the first time that the
-small fishing boat ahead was now standing down toward the ship under
-rapid headway, the exhaust from her motor sounding loud and sharp over
-the sea.
-
-"Get the quarter boat down--quick!" came his order.
-
-Then he hesitated a moment. The small fishing boat was nearing them
-with rapidity. She headed straight for Junard, and would reach him long
-before any rowboat from the ship could get there.
-
-"Hold on! Avast the boat there!" he ordered. "That motor boat will pick
-him up, all right." Then the thought that he was not quite right in
-not lowering down a boat for his commander, that it might look queer,
-waiting for a stranger to do his evident duty, came over him, and he
-gave the order to lower away. The small boat dropped into the sea. The
-steamer was now motionless, lying in the calm sea behind the rock, with
-her engines stopped. Men crowded the rail aft to watch.
-
-"What's the matter? What made him jump overboard?" came the question
-from all sides. "It's the captain! What's up?"
-
-Jameson could not quite tell. He was vaguely aware that his commander
-sprang over for some object. That he took a desperate chance, with the
-ship going ahead, was certain. Had he not been seen, the vessel would
-have been miles away before missing him, for there had been no warning
-from the bridge. The mate slid down the falls, wondering what he was
-doing.
-
-"Cast off--give way, port; back, starboard!" came his order. He stood
-up, to see better, and gazed at the fishing boat, that now approached
-the speck he knew to be the head of Captain Junard.
-
-"Give way together!" he said, glad to get away from the ship, with the
-inquisitive crowd gathering rapidly and increasing in both anxiety and
-numbers.
-
-He watched the motor boat come quickly to where Junard swam. The
-captain was not a good swimmer. Few seamen can swim well. Jameson saw
-the boat approach, men lean out from her side, and grab something,
-apparently trying to lift the captain aboard. Then there was a
-tremendous floundering and threshing about in the sea, distant shouts
-for help from the captain, and the mate grasped the tiller yoke with a
-certain grip.
-
-"Give way, bullies! Give way--all that's in you now!" he urged.
-
-Something was taking place that he did not quite understand, but he had
-heard that call for help.
-
-Junard saw the fishing boat coming toward him before it reached him.
-He waited, swimming slowly and reserving his strength, feeling that
-the occupants were hostile and were waiting for the papers that had
-been tossed overboard. It was about where he expected something to
-happen. The lighthouse and the shelter of the island made it a most
-convenient spot to pull off the finish of the affair. The light-draft
-fishing boat, with her motor, could easily evade capture from anything
-the ship could send out after her. The steamer herself could not enter
-the shoal water, and must allow the smaller boat to get away across
-the shallow parts of the Great Panama Bank to some distant rendezvous,
-where the papers could be put aboard a proper ship to take them to the
-conspirators. He, the commander, had no right to leave the ship in the
-manner he had done; but necessity called for drastic action, and he had
-plunged over the side as soon as he had seen the girl fling an object
-overboard.
-
-Three men in the fishing boat were watching him as she drew up. His own
-boat was a long distance off, but he hoped the mate would hurry.
-
-A man came forward in the motor boat, and leaned out from her side.
-He watched him narrowly. The man made a grab for Junard as the
-boat reached him, and the captain, with a sudden jerk, dragged him
-overboard. Then he yelled for help.
-
-The man's two companions in the boat sprang to his aid. Junard found
-himself engaged in a desperate struggle with three men, and shoved
-himself away from the side of the craft.
-
-He held fast to the package, a metal cylinder, tightly wrapped in
-canvas, and at the same time struggled out of reach of the men above
-him. The man he had pulled overboard regained his strength, and,
-grasping the life belt with one hand, grabbed at the package with the
-other. The package tied to the life belt could not be gotten out of
-his reach, and Junard was struggling with one hand and fighting and
-grasping alternately at the life belt with the other.
-
-"Give it up, you scoundrel!" hissed the fellow. "What do you know about
-this package? Give it to me--do you hear?"
-
-"I hear well enough," snarled Junard, struggling farther out of the
-reach of those in the motor boat. "But I'm the captain of that ship
-there--and the papers are in my care. Let go, or I'll do you harm!"
-
-The man glared at him savagely. Then he turned to the men above him in
-the boat, now a dozen feet away.
-
-"Shoot, Jim--shoot quick--kill the fool if he won't let go!" he said.
-
-The man addressed was a tall, dark fellow with a sinister look. That
-he was Colombian, Junard knew from his accent and appearance. The
-other, who had stopped the engine, and who seemed to be the engineer,
-looked askance. He evidently did not like the shooting part. This man
-was also a Colombian, but his features were those of a man who works
-outdoors at a simple trade. The other two looked like desperate men,
-and Junard felt that they would stop at nothing to get the papers from
-him. The man who was called Jim hesitated, and then, seeing the small
-boat approaching from the steamer, reached behind his back and brought
-forth a long, blue revolver. Junard waited until the barrel came within
-a line with his eye; then he ducked, and swung the life belt around,
-coming up with it in front of him, and raising it partly before his
-face. The pistol cracked sharply, and the bullet tore through the cork.
-Junard let go the package, and seized the man in the water with both
-hands, whirling him about and holding him squarely in front of himself.
-
-"Start that engine!" called the man, struggling vainly to get away.
-
-The man who had stopped it whirled the wheel over again, and the rumble
-of the motor began. The two waited, without throwing on the clutch.
-
-Junard grasped the man firmly, and forced him down under the sea, going
-under with him, and holding his breath to the limit of his great lungs.
-
-When he came up again the man was choking, gasping for air. Junard
-only waited long enough to fill his own lungs with a breath, and then
-ducked again, the crack of the revolver ringing in his ears as he went,
-pulling his antagonist down with him.
-
-The next time he came up the fellow could not talk, but choked and
-gasped for air. Junard held him with a giant's grip, his long, powerful
-arms encircling him like those of a gorilla. The fellow let go the life
-belt and the package. Junard took in more air, and dropped down again,
-while a bullet tore through his hair, cutting his scalp.
-
-This time when he came up the fellow was limp. Junard held him before
-him, and the man with the pistol was afraid to fire, as the captain's
-eyes just showed above the man's neck. The captain struggled farther
-and farther away from the boat, getting fully twenty feet distant. The
-man at the engine threw on the clutch, and the boat shot ahead, swung
-sharply around, and headed for the floating men.
-
-Junard saw the mate standing up in the stern of the ship's boat, and
-knew he was doing all he could to reach him. The shots had made him
-aware of the desperate situation, and the men were bending their backs
-with a will to the oars. Jameson yelled harshly, the men in the motor
-craft saw that to remain longer would mean capture. They swung off and
-headed for the steamer, leaving their companion in Junard's grip. The
-next moment the mate came tearing up, and, leaning over, grasped his
-commander and hauled him aboard the boat.
-
-Junard came over the side, and immediately reached for a boat hook. He
-stabbed at the cork jacket, and hauled it alongside, dragging it aboard
-before the boat lost her headway. The body of the exhausted man sank
-before either he or Jameson could get another hold of him.
-
-"To the ship--quick!" gasped the captain.
-
-"What's the matter? What's up?" questioned the mate.
-
-"Never mind--swing her, quick!"
-
-The boat turned around and headed back, the captain urging the men to
-their utmost. The fishing boat, with her motor going full speed, left
-them far behind. They were unable to get near the craft.
-
-Junard, watching them, saw the boat come close under the ship's stern.
-A form of a woman leaped from the rail of the lower deck. The splash
-threw spray almost into the boat as she went past, and they saw the
-tall Colombian reach over and drag the girl aboard. The boat shot
-around the steamer's stern and disappeared for a few moments; and when
-Junard saw her again she was a quarter of a mile distant, and making
-rapid headway for the shoal water of the island. He started after her,
-when the shots from the revolver began to strike about the craft, and
-Junard ordered his men to stop rowing. He knew he could not capture
-her, unarmed as he was, and he had his precious papers safe in his
-mighty hands. To follow was only to invite trouble.
-
-The fishing boat ran quickly out of range, and Junard watched her for a
-few minutes. Then he headed his boat back to the ship.
-
-The rail was crowded as he came alongside, the purser watching him, and
-half the passengers were on deck to see what was taking place.
-
-"What was it? What's the matter?" asked a score at once.
-
-"Man overboard--that's all," said Jameson.
-
-"H'ist her up," said Junard, and he clambered up the swinging ladder
-thrown over to him, taking the life belt and the package under his arm.
-
-Mr. Dunn was on deck, and Junard gave him his orders.
-
-"Full speed ahead--on her course, north to west," he said, and went
-into his room. The door closed behind him. Then he switched off the
-lights, for it was now broad daylight, and then he opened the package.
-The papers were all there and intact, the water not reaching them at
-all. The safe was opened, and they were placed within. Then Junard
-stripped and turned in for a few hours of dreamless, quiet sleep.
-
-He had saved the papers of his company, documents that were valued at
-more than a million dollars--and not a soul aboard knew what had really
-happened. Even Jameson was never quite sure.
-
-The purser asked no questions about cholera, the ship headed along upon
-her course toward New York, and the warm day took its routine without
-further incident. Junard appeared very happy, and told many interesting
-stories at the dinner table that day. He answered no questions
-concerning the affair of the night.
-
-He brought in his papers, delivered them in person, and a great
-political change took place without any one but a few select souls ever
-knowing how near the verge of revolution a prominent South American
-republic had been. Junard was offered a medal for risking his life
-trying to save that of a man overboard--but he refused it. The shots
-from the fishing boat were explained as signals for help. That was all.
-
-
-
-
-IN THE WAKE OF THE ENGINE
-
-
-I had been transferred to the old _Prince Albert_, one of
-the freighters on the Jamaica run, and the skipper was Bill
-Boldwin--Boldwin who was once in the Amper Line, but who had a
-monstrous thirst and a reckless disposition--too reckless for
-first-class passengers. The "old man," as all captains are called,
-having these failings, had also a mighty poor education, and his
-navigation was mostly, "Let her go and trust to the sun."
-
-"Compasses?" said Bill. "How'd they get along before they had 'em, hey?
-Steer the course, or thereabouts; you'll git thar or somewheres nigh to
-it--if you don't fetch up."
-
-"But the company?" I said in amazement.
-
-"The company be blowed! Take life easy--it's short. Don't let the
-company worry you to any great extent. They'll give you a job as night
-watchman at twenty per month after they get out of you all there is in
-you."
-
-At the same time Bill, who was my "old man," and who, by the way,
-was ten years younger than myself, would not stand for any too much
-carelessness on the part of his first officer. I was his chief mate.
-He knew what I had to do, and hated to tell me. I confess I seldom gave
-him a chance. The second greaser was a little, short squarehead named
-Andersen; at least we called him that, going on the principle that
-it was a sure thing that if he was a squarehead he was either named
-Andersen or Johnson. There are no other names in Sweden, and a man
-naturally just has to be one or the other. They're good enough.
-
-Andersen knew his business and was an able seaman, learning his little
-book in the old sailing ships where they teach you something not always
-taught in steam. He had the bos'n in with him, and what the bos'n
-didn't know about handling the steam winches would be hard to tell. But
-that's all the bos'n knew. Not a thing else. If he had he wouldn't have
-rammed greasy rags in behind the ceiling of the after deck house in a
-hurry to get his grub at knock-off time.
-
-No, that was the failing of the bos'n; he lacked knowledge, and was as
-good a navigator as you might find in a young lady's finishing school.
-He had paws on him like a loggerhead's flippers, nearly a foot across,
-and each finger was a marline spike, and every thread of his hair,
-where he wasn't clean bald, was a rope yarn. He knew sailoring--nothing
-else.
-
-He was about as much afraid of anything in this world or the next as
-a hungry shark is of beef; in fact, he seemed to take to trouble with
-about the same sort of appetite. In six months I never had a chance to
-tell him anything except the routine.
-
-The chief engineer was McDougal, and the second was Mac something--all
-of our engine-room force went under the same name of Mac, just plain
-"_Mac_," and if they were not Scotchmen, I never saw one in my life.
-Scotchmen are born engine men, take to a machine like a dago does to
-a knife. The rest of the fireroom bunch were the old-style Liverpool
-Irishmen, and I'll tell you something, they were hard ones all right.
-They were the toughest lot of coal tossers I ever sailed with, and even
-the donkey man, O'Hare, was a peach of a Donegal Irishman with Galways
-of reddish hue that stuck out from under his shirt collar, pointing
-upward as if they were growing some husky on his throat.
-
-That was the principal part of our crew. There were some twenty others,
-including the cooks, galley boys, seamen, and quartermasters.
-
-We cleared for Antonio, and were soon running out over the Western
-Ocean in the lazy, tiresome routine of ship's duty. We were licensed to
-carry passengers and had a few waiters aboard, a steward, and a lady of
-about thirty signed on as stewardess.
-
-As there were no passengers this voyage out--no one ever went out
-with us if he could help it, but came back when there were no other
-ships--the cabin crowd had an easy time, regular yachting trip; and if
-Miss Lucy Docking had a stupid time, it was because she wouldn't talk
-to the rest.
-
-"Stuck-up and sassy," they said aft, but I never could tell, never
-getting a chance to talk with her without a dozen or more listening.
-At the same time I didn't like to blame the girl just because she
-didn't like the set of lovers the ship furnished free of charge. "Let
-her pick her own," said I, "it's like enough she'll make a mistake,
-anyways, without your help." I never had a big opinion of women,
-anyhow, for the only one I ever proposed marriage to fell down and
-nearly died laughing at me, and that after I had been dreaming of her
-and thinking her the greatest angel in the world.
-
-Miss Lucy was all right with me, because I let her alone, except in
-the mid-watch, when I was cold and thirsty. Then she used to get me a
-cup of cocoa or chocolate or coffee, and I tell you the man who stands
-the mid-watch on the old freighters is earning all he gets, whether it
-comes by way of the stewardess or by way of the front office.
-
-We crossed the Western Ocean in the usual manner. I had my order book
-to sign, and I saw that the second greaser didn't get gay with it. Days
-and days of the old routine passed, and we were in the edge of the
-trade when the first thing happened to show what a wild lot of yaps we
-had in that ship.
-
-The bos'n stuffed his oiled rags in behind the ceiling of the after
-house, and it was about three days afterward we struck the hot weather.
-The rags promptly caught fire--they always do when snugged in from the
-air--and we hove the old hooker to in the teeth of the trade with the
-after deck a roaring furnace. If you think we didn't have a time of
-it putting that deck house out, throwing it overboard in pieces, you
-should look up Lloyd's. Well, the way I talked to that bos'n would have
-given heart disease to most men, but the beggar didn't see it at all.
-
-"Rags is rags," he says, "and what for don't I put them behaind
-something?"
-
-"Because if you do it again we'll toss you overboard with twenty pound
-of kentledge to your feet," I told him, and it was the only reason he
-could get through his bullet head. It didn't scare him at all. He only
-looked upon the matter as closed, for he would not mutiny. He was too
-good a sailor for any foolishness.
-
-"Rags is rags," he would repeat as we chopped the blackened wreck away
-the day after, when all hands had been near the port of missing ships
-and were tired and nervous, having been on duty for fifty hours without
-a break. "Rags is rags, an' some son of a sea-cook set fire to 'em--no
-rags I ever seen ever took fire of themselves. Does a ship run herself,
-hey? Answer me that! Does a ship run her own engines, steer her own
-course, what? Some one of you sons of Ham did that dirty trick and I'll
-get you for it yet!"
-
-"But rags do fire themselves, even if a ship don't," said the old man,
-"and you are the leading bonehead not to know it. You don't rate a
-brass boy in anything but a coal barge, and if you don't look out I'll
-have to train you some."
-
-"Rags is----"
-
-Only the size and look of the bos'n's hands prevented the old man from
-committing murder right there. But the bos'n took it out on the men.
-What he didn't do to them that voyage was never logged.
-
-Miss Docking stood the test well. She stayed on deck and watched the
-fracas and never turned a hair, so to speak, waiting for the word to
-take to the boats with as cool a nerve as anything I ever saw. She
-was billeted for my boat, Number One, and I confess I was somewhat
-disappointed when the blamed deck house burned to the steel and the
-danger of leaving the ship was past.
-
-Boldwin was always taking it easy, and he never even took that real
-hard, although it would cost him something to explain how he did the
-damage when the underwriters asked him.
-
-"Don't do it again," was all he said to me.
-
-"No, not until we get another deck house at least," I said. "Maybe I
-can see that they don't set fire to the anchor or burn up the windlass,
-or eat the coir hawser, or----"
-
-"Well, see that you don't. That's your business--you're mate," he
-snapped back, and started for the chart house.
-
-Andersen came to me. "I tank I sign de order book for sou'west half
-sou'--here we bane running eastb'no'th. How I tell de truth wid sech a
-t'ing--hey?" said he.
-
-"If you always tell the truth in this line of packets you'll soon get a
-job hoeing potatoes in Essex! What's the matter with you? Do you want
-the company to get wise that we fought a fire set in with oiled rags by
-a fool of a bos'n and had to run the ship fifty miles off her course?
-Who'll pay for the coal? Who'll square the old man? Who'll tell the
-passengers that we don't always have a bonehead bos'n to wreck us, and
-that if they'll promise to come again we'll see that it don't happen
-often--no, not often?"
-
-Andersen went on duty with a queer look in his eyes. He had seen
-something and it amazed him--just why I never could tell, for he had
-been in steamers before and ought to have known something of a ship's
-officers' duties before coming into the Prince Line.
-
-The truth in many lines is sacred. Absolutely sacred. Too sacred
-entirely to shift about the deck like a bag of dunnage and leave lying
-around for some fools to play with. No, never play with the truth in
-some lines of shipping. Do your duty. That's all you've got to do, and
-if it's so logged, why, then you're all right. If it isn't, why, then
-you better get to driving a truck or peddling peanuts.
-
-Well, Boldwin was a pretty good sort, as I have said. He mostly saw
-that all of us did our duty--in the log book, in the order book, and
-with the company officers. We went along slowly on our course after
-that, and were in the latitude of Watlings when bad weather came on.
-It was nothing much, just a cyclone of the usual order, coming as it
-did in the hurricane season; but we were a full-powered ship of six
-thousand tons, and it wouldn't have delayed us to any extent--except
-that we didn't count on the donkey man from Donegal.
-
-You see, the _Albert_ had one of those underwater ash-chutes. The pipe
-came down through the bilge, about fifteen feet below the water line.
-It was a foot in diameter, and was supposedly bolted to the skin and as
-solid as the keel or garboards.
-
-The metal of the pipe was half an inch in thickness, and was braced and
-bolted so that the top which showed above the water line could be hove
-on and shut off in a seaway. The top had a sliding cover working with
-a lever, and when the ashes were to be fired out the cover was thrown
-back, the bucket dumped, and a jet of steam blew the mass out through
-the ship's bottom, making no dirt or dust at all, and doing away with
-the everlasting firing over the side.
-
-It was a good invention. It saved the company many dollars in paint,
-and it kept the ship, which was always short-handed, looking better
-than most vessels that used the old way over the side.
-
-It would have lasted forever if the man from Donegal hadn't been of an
-inquisitive turn of mind, and started exploring it with a monkey wrench
-the week before the storm. As it happened he broke several of the
-bolts which had rusted in the bottom, and the metal, having been much
-worn and corroded, the first thing Mac knew was a torrent of sea water
-pouring into the after compartment, coming as it did through a pipe
-hole about a foot in diameter and fifteen feet below the sea level.
-
-It caught the firemen unawares. The donkey man was with them and
-let out a yip that brought every coal passer, oiler, and fireman
-to the chute. A wild burst of water tore through that hole, and the
-compartment was flooded in less time than it takes to tell about
-it--and that compartment ran the whole length of the engine room and
-aft of it until it brought up in the wake of the machinery, where the
-bulkhead of the tail-shaft room shut off the stern.
-
-The donkey man managed to get out with the rest, and the fires in
-starboard boilers swamped, nearly blowing up the ship as the water
-flooded them. It was only because there was enough water to prevent the
-making of steam to any great extent that saved us from having the whole
-midsection blown in the air.
-
-And all the time I was holding to the bridge rail with a cyclone
-snoring down upon us at the rate of seventy miles an hour. Luckily the
-ash pipe stayed partly bolted to the skin of the bottom. That alone
-saved us from total loss.
-
-Of course I knew something was wrong the minute the boilers went
-smothered. The terrific roar of steam and the easing of the engines
-told me that sure enough trouble was coming, and all the time I had
-been wondering how we would hold the hooker up to that gale with the
-full power in her.
-
-"What's the matter--bottom blow away?" howled Boldwin, coming from the
-pilot house and yelling in my ear.
-
-"God knows--anything might happen to us after last week," I howled in
-return, but the force of the hurricane blew the words away, and the
-old man went staggering and pulling himself along the rail until he
-managed to get below. For the next fifteen minutes on that bridge I did
-some small bit of thinking. Looked like all day with us. Not a sign
-could I get from anywhere, and of course I dared not leave the bridge.
-Once I thought she had blown up with powder. Next I thought the engines
-had gone through the bottom. And all the time I could feel her settling
-in that whirlwind sea--a sea torn white with the blast of the squalls
-that were now coming faster and faster each minute.
-
-"Well, I'm mighty glad I'm not married, anyway," I said to myself, for
-it looked like the long sleep coming fast. And then I somehow thought
-of that Miss Docking below there in the comfortable cabin waiting for
-the finish. It gave me a bit of a turn, and I tried to imagine what
-that cabin would look like in a few minutes when the sea water swept
-through it with all its transoms and cushions, piano and carpet----
-
-"Hard a starboard, sir," came the cry.
-
-It was most welcome. Anything but that standing there waiting for the
-next minute to follow the last. I saw that the quartermaster swung the
-wheel over quickly. It was steam steering, and the ship fell off in the
-trough of the sea in a few minutes, the weight of the gale driving her
-bodily to leeward and heeling her over to quite a list.
-
-"Heave her to," came the order passed up from the old man, and I put
-the wheel hard down and waited to see if she would stay without coming
-up. She lay easily drifting off, and while I watched her for trouble
-the old man sent for me. Andersen came up and took my place, and I ran
-down, half blown, half crawling to the shelter of the deck house, and
-from there below to see what had happened.
-
-Bill Boldwin was standing at the ash chute swearing at the man from
-Donegal. The donkey man was trying to tell what he didn't know about
-his business, and all the time the water flowed freely through the
-one-foot pipe until it so filled the compartment that nothing more
-could come up through it. It was a good thing! If the whole Atlantic
-Ocean had been delegated to flow through that pipe, nobody was there
-to stop it, not a soul to say why not. And then I was aware of the
-stewardess standing in the press of faces, looking scared but cool.
-
-"Why don't you ram something in it?" she asked.
-
-Simple? Sure it was simple. No one had tried to do such a thing, but
-there she was asking why.
-
-"The pipe'll break away--you can't shove anything down it," said
-Boldwin.
-
-"No? But why don't you shove something from the outside?" said Miss
-Docking.
-
-"Go to your room," snarled the old man.
-
-"She's right--we'll stop it in a jiffy--from the outside," I yelled.
-
-The skipper thought I was crazy. He looked at me.
-
-"How'll you get anything over the outside in this seaway, you
-bonehead?" he asked.
-
-"Get me the hand lead," I yelled to the bos'n, "and a stick of light
-wood--big piece, big enough to float a man."
-
-The bos'n ran for the stuff. That was one good point in that bos'n.
-He'd do what he was told even when he hadn't the slightest idea what
-he was doing. He came back in a few minutes with a long piece of white
-pine and the hand lead. I looked them over for a moment to judge the
-weight and floating power of the tools. Then I quickly hitched the lead
-to the piece of pine and left the bight of the line so that as soon as
-I jerked it hard the lead would free itself and go hell bent for Davy
-Jones, leaving the Pine line fast to the lead line to float up and away.
-
-To the end of the chute I now quickly made my way. The Donegal man
-wanted to help, and faith! he was a good man when it came to doing
-things he understood. He showed me where the upper end of that chute
-was in that roaring surge of filthy water, and the beggar actually got
-a hold of the lever that worked the cover and jammed it open.
-
-I instantly dropped the lead, the wood, and the line through, and had
-the satisfaction of feeling the line going fast to the bottom out
-through the hole in the bilge. When the line had gone about ten fathoms
-I gave the sudden jerk. Off comes the lead and the line stops running
-out.
-
-"Get to windward and grab that plank," I yelled, and even the old man
-followed the bunch that struggled to the rail and watched the sea
-where we drifted bodily off. In a minute the bos'n saw it. In five more
-he had the plank back aboard and a three-inch line fast to the lead
-line. This I hauled quickly but cautiously back through the ash pipe
-until I got a good hold of the end.
-
-"Now," I yelled, "give me mattresses, beds, canvas, fearnaught, or
-oakum--anything so long as you get it here quick."
-
-The stewardess had already anticipated my work. I caught her eye back
-of the line of men.
-
-"Here they are," she said quietly.
-
-The bos'n got a Number Double O hatch cover. I wrapped the mattresses
-in it, and then quickly hitched the three-inch line carefully about the
-middle.
-
-"Over the side with it," I shouted. Over it went, and as it did so I
-got the line hauling through the pipe. Two men helped me. We hauled the
-plug jam up tight against the ship's bilge, and then surged upon the
-line and made it fast.
-
-"Now go ahead and pump her clear, Mac, pump her out--she's tight as a
-drum," I said, and the old man looked at me with a peculiar smile.
-
-An hour later that compartment was clear of water, and she leaked only
-a little around the stuffing, which was not enough to wet a man's feet.
-Another day and the starboard boilers were doing duty with a smoothing
-sea and a sun peeping out through the banks of trade clouds. The storm
-had long passed; the _Prince Albert_ was on her way under full power,
-with nothing at all to disturb the serenity of the passage, save
-the knowledge that we had a masterly crew aboard and some excellent
-specimens for manning passenger ships.
-
-Down the Western Ocean we ran without further incident, and hove to off
-the entrance of Antonio, burning flares for the pilot. You know the
-place. Narrow cut in through the reef, with the harbor lying like a
-pool of blue water in the surrounding hills. Not a breath of air in the
-place even when, half a mile distant, just outside, the trade might be
-blowing a twenty-knot breeze.
-
-The pilot came out at daybreak, and we ran in, tied up to the wharf,
-and began discharging. My duties were ended for the time, as I thought,
-and I took a stroll up to the hotel upon the hill. There was no use
-trying to get any sleep in the watch below while at the dock, for two
-hundred howling Jamaica blacks roared and surged along the gangways and
-crowded the winches, handling the cargo ably, while the women came down
-in swarms to chat with the crew and sell a few grapefruit and oranges.
-Boldwin let any one come aboard, and as the men were not supposed to
-handle cargo, they had plenty of time in spite of all we could do to
-keep them busy.
-
-The skipper reported the damage to the agents, and told of the disaster
-below. He was honest. He might have saved that bit of knowledge until
-we reached England again, but he told his tale, and the agents refused
-to allow him to sail until the pipe was repaired and properly bolted
-down into the bilge plates as it should be. In the smooth water of
-that mirror-like harbor it seemed an easy thing to do. All that was
-necessary was to get a diver to go under the fifteen feet to the
-outside end and pass up the bolts through the flange.
-
-Mr. Man from Donegal could then get at them with his monkey wrench and
-screw down the nuts upon them, clamping the pipe as fast as the keel
-itself.
-
-"You take a look around uptown and try to get hold of a diver," said
-the old man. "Mr. Sacks, the agent, says he don't know of any nearer
-than Kingston, and it'll take two days to get the one over there, as
-he's out on a wreck off the harbor. We can't wait two days. Got to get
-to Montego Bay and take on a lot of stuff, then get to Kingston for
-clearing and off we go."
-
-"Why not wait until we get to Kingston to do the trick?" I asked.
-
-Bill Boldwin gazed at me in contempt.
-
-"Say, do you want to advertise the fact that we are on the bum to all
-the passengers the line'll carry? Think a minute, man, and don't ask
-fool questions. We got to get that job done right here--see? We don't
-go outside until there's something more'n a mattress and a bit of
-fearnaught between us and the bottom of the Caribbean."
-
-"But we carried it the last thousand miles all right," I said.
-
-Bill turned away in disgust.
-
-As a matter of fact, I didn't like the idea of trying to get hold of
-a diver in Antonio. There were not enough divers to go down to find
-the bottoms of the rum bottles ashore, let alone a ship's bilge. It's
-true, a man might do the thing naked in that clear water. I've seen
-men in the East copper a ship twice as deep with nothing on them but a
-hammer and a mouthful of nails.
-
-After a day's search I gave it up. Not a man knew anything about
-submarine work, and at the hotel they laughed at me when I inquired for
-a diver. I also noticed that Miss Lucy Docking looked well sitting upon
-the veranda of the joint, togged out as she was in white linen. She
-gave me a nod, but wasn't keen on talking when I tried to find out if
-she had made arrangements for lady passengers that voyage.
-
-"There's two on the books--that's all," she said, and gazed placidly
-out over the tops of the cocoa-nuts growing upon the beach below.
-
-"Your advice last Friday helped me a lot," I said, "and I appreciate it
-and would----"
-
-"Would you like some more?" she interrupted suddenly.
-
-"Anything you might suggest," I said.
-
-"Beat it back to the ship, then," she answered without a smile.
-
-"Sure--if that's your advice," I snarled; "the hot weather has
-evidently soured your----"
-
-"Cut it out--I'm not a guest here, and what do you think the agents
-would say if they saw the chief officer of their 'crack' liner talking
-to their stewardess sitting on the hotel piazza? I thought you had more
-sense."
-
-"I ain't the only fool aboard--that's straight," I said.
-
-"No; nor ashore, either--why don't you stop that hole yourself? You're
-big enough and ugly enough to stop a clock," she snapped.
-
-"Thanks!" I answered, and strode away with the kindest feelings
-imaginable for our stewardess.
-
-But strange as it may seem, that remark was what did the business. I
-would stop that hole if I had to be keelhauled myself to do it. What!
-Lay the ship up a day or two while that lady sat around in white duck
-and looked out dreamily over that beautiful harbor? Not if I knew
-myself. I'd see that the ship got away and hoped she would carry at
-least two ugly and indignant aged ladies who could and would make life
-a happy dream for that stewardess.
-
-I went back aboard with the report that there was not a diver this side
-of hell, and that if the ship would stand the expense of my funeral I
-would at least try to pass the bolts for the man from Donegal to screw
-fast.
-
-"Sink a donkey man, anyhow!" I swore, "why don't the company get
-engineers enough to run a ship properly?"
-
-"Why, indeed?" smiled Bill Boldwin.
-
-I turned to the men I needed, and with that bos'n to give them advice
-with those flippers of his, I peeled off and made ready for the work.
-The engine-room force had taken off the pipe and bolted a new flange to
-it, a strong job and proper. The affair was all ready to ship just as
-soon as we dared pull the wad of stuffing away and set it up. A frame
-had been rigged in the room to steady the affair, and the bolt holes
-had been reamed out as much as they would stand. A deck pump kept the
-water from the vicinity, the water that still leaked in around the bolt
-holes.
-
-It was necessary to get the wad of stuff away from the bolt holes in
-the flanges, for it spread out so that it made passing of bolts from
-the outside impossible. The pressure upon it from the water under the
-ship at the depth of fifteen feet was great, and I was supposed to get
-a line to it so that it might be pulled away by the men on deck after
-we slacked away the three-inch line by which we had hauled it into the
-breach. The pipe was set up true over the opening, the holes lined up,
-a few bolts inserted point downward to steady it, and all was ready for
-the man outside to get the blamed wad away and pass the bolts upward so
-that their threads would appear through the flange. I went on deck and
-gazed down over the side at the warm blue depths.
-
-"Strange that the mate has to do the dog's work," I said to Mac, who
-was waiting and watching.
-
-I had a line rigged under the bilge by passing it under the bows and
-drifting it aft until it came right on the line of the hole. It was
-slack enough to allow a handhold, so that I could pull myself down
-quickly and then let go as I pushed in a bolt.
-
-I took a light line and over I went.
-
-The water was fine. The light filtered down under the ship's bilge,
-and it was only dark after I swept well under the curve of the side.
-Still, I could see a little, and soon made out a mass which I rightly
-took to be the mattress and stuff filling the hole.
-
-I tried to get the line fast to the thing, feeling quickly, but I
-lost my breath before I got it fast and, letting go, struggled to the
-surface again.
-
-"What luck?" asked Mac, grinning over at me.
-
-I wasted no time in idle words. I recovered and grasped the line again
-and hauled myself furiously toward the opening underneath. I could not
-get the line fast, and had to come up and confess that I had failed so
-far.
-
-"Look out a shark don't get you," said some one with an idea of wit.
-
-"Give me a marline spike," I ordered that bos'n, and the beggar got
-one, handing it to me by a line. I dove again, and this time managed to
-drive the spike in between the turns of the line holding the mattress.
-The next dive I got the small line fast to it, and, coming up, told
-them to slack away on the big line inside and haul the small one
-outside and get the stuffing away. It came easy enough, and the line of
-interested faces peering over the rail above bore a different look as I
-hung with one hand and rested from the exertion.
-
-"Now for the bolts," I said, and one was handed down. I hauled under
-again and inserted it, feeling with some satisfaction the other end
-being grasped by some one inboard. Mr. Donkey Man had hold of it all
-right, and, putting on a nut, set it up without delay. This much of
-the job was not so hard, but I was now getting tired, and found that
-I could hardly get below before I wanted to get my breath again. I was
-no diver--no, not to speak of, but I thought of that woman sitting up
-there waiting, taking it easy with her insolence and white dress----
-
-Seven other inch bolts were to be inserted before the job could be
-finished inside, and the water was pouring through the bolt holes in
-streams that kept the pumps working full stroke and made working about
-the opening difficult. I came on deck, and Bill Boldwin gave me a
-noggin of rum, grinning at me all the time.
-
-"You ain't so bad for a mate--I've sailed with worse," said he.
-
-"The next time I sign on it'll be as a master submarine," I said, with
-some feeling. "Now, if I didn't have to wear these breeches I could do
-better and faster work."
-
-"Why don't you take 'em off?" he said.
-
-"But the ladies--I must wear something----"
-
-"Oh, what do you care for a lot of niggers? Strip if it does you any
-good."
-
-I was just about to take his advice when I noticed the face of Miss
-Docking passing the port along the gangway. She had been attracted by
-the crowd aboard, and had come, woman-like, out of pure curiosity, to
-see what was on.
-
-"No," I said; "I'll fix the rest, all right--gimme another noggin."
-
-I got seven of the eight bolts in place; and the donkey man, assisted
-by Mac and the entire engine-room force, set them up one at a time
-after packing the joint properly. Only one wooden plug remained
-inboard, and the water squirted straight up nearly fifteen feet with
-the pressure when that was pulled out for my last attempt. If I could
-get that bolt in, there was a job done that would save the company
-perhaps a few hundred dollars, and I would get--well, I might get
-mentioned as something better than the ordinary mate when Bill made
-his report. But that wasn't what made me do the thing; it was the
-confounded spirit that Lucy Docking stirred up within me. Oh, yes, I
-was a fool, all right. I don't deny it.
-
-The affair was getting to be something of a circus by this time, and
-the coons who were looking on were making remarks. I was about to clear
-the gangway when I thought that here was the last plug, the last bolt,
-and then for a nip and a sleep before clearing. I went over with that
-last bolt, and, as I did so, I saw Miss Lucy gazing out of a cabin
-port at me. Before I went under her face appeared above the rail and
-watched. I was so tired by this time that I had the small line, which
-was hambroline, fast about my armpits, so that Mac and his crew could
-haul me up if I gave out entirely. This was my mistake.
-
-Down I went, and as I went under I thought I heard the word "Shark!"
-muttered by some of the colored folk above. I had just shoved in the
-last bolt when a shadow passed. At the same instant there was a mighty
-pull upon the line. I was jerked bodily away, and my back scraped the
-huge barnacles which covered the ship all along in the wake of her
-engines clear to her sternpost. The razor-like edges cut and stung
-me. I felt a mighty desire to breathe, and tried to get upward. Then
-my head struck the bottom of the ship with great violence, and I was
-partly stunned. This was what probably saved my life, for I ceased to
-breathe, and the spasm passed.
-
-What really happened was this:
-
-A huge sawfish was swimming about the harbor, having just come inside
-the reef. Tropical seas are infested by many of these fish, which "fin
-out" like a shark, and which are probably of the shark species. The
-long snout, unlike the swordfish, which is a giant mackerel, is studded
-with rows of sharp teeth, put there for the Lord knows what purpose.
-This monster had come close to the ship, and the negroes had spotted
-him, and thought him a shark at a distance where his snout could not be
-seen.
-
-Some one shouted, "Shark!" and the intelligent bos'n hauled line with
-those finlike flippers of his after the manner of a sperm-whaler coming
-upon a three hundred-barrel whale. My head had struck the ship's bilge,
-and my back had been cut open with the razor-like barnacles--and then
-the fish, getting frightened at the uproar, dove below, and his teeth
-on his saw snout fouled the line.
-
-It parted, but it parted between him and the ship, and away I went in
-tow of a flying sawfish.
-
-I knew nothing about it for some time, luckily; it would have affected
-my nerves.
-
-Luckily the negroes were active in spite of their laziness. A small
-boat, lying alongside the ship, was instantly manned, and within a
-minute it was after me, with four stout blacks pulling for all they
-were worth. A man in the bow reached over and jabbed at the line with
-his boat hook and jerked it aboard. Then he lifted me in and turned me
-over to the rest in the boat, while he held on to the line and played
-the fish gamely for all the sport there was in it.
-
-I came to in that boat towing behind a sawfish, which the natives
-seemed to think was more important to catch than me getting back aboard
-and receiving proper treatment for being nearly cut in two and drowned.
-
-The line finally broke, and they rowed me sorrowfully back alongside.
-I looked up, and saw Miss Lucy Docking gazing over the side with
-some show of anxiety expressed upon her face. Also I noted Bill
-Boldwin, skipper of the _Prince Albert_, showing some interest in the
-proceedings.
-
-"Send him aboard, you black scoundrels!" screamed Miss Lucy. "How dare
-you keep that man in the boat chasing a good-for-nothing fish?"
-
-"Bring him alongside, or I'll be in there after you," roared Bill.
-
-My bos'n passed a line down, and I was quickly hoisted aboard, where I
-was laid out flat on my back, as I was still too weak to stand. Miss
-Lucy herself poured whisky down my throat and smoothed my wet hair back
-from my bleeding head.
-
-"Arnica, you lazy rascals!" she hissed, and some one went for it.
-My cuts were soaked in it, and it stung furiously, but the cuts of
-barnacles are poisonous, and I rather preferred arnica to friar's
-balsam, which I knew Bill would rub me with. Then the bos'n helped me
-to my bunk, and Miss Lucy Docking was left alone with me to attend to
-my wants.
-
-"I suppose my advice and counsel was not so good this time?" she said
-as Bill left us.
-
-"Well, it taught me one thing, all right enough," I said, "and that may
-do me some good in the future."
-
-"And how is that?" asked the lady, looking at me with some show of
-concern. She had wonderful eyes, and her hair was noticeably curly at
-the temples--and her mouth----
-
-"Well, it will teach me never, no, never, under any circumstances
-whatever, do you understand?--never to take it again," I said, taking
-her hand.
-
-"We'll see about that later on," she said, and her mouth had a peculiar
-droop at the corners that has been a constant source of dread to me
-ever since--that is, whenever I see it.
-
-
-
-
-IN THE HULL OF THE "HERALDINE"
-
-
-"I understand that you did good work in the _Prince Alfred_ in time of
-trouble," said Lord Hawkes, looking at me with approval. He was manager
-of the Prince Line, and, when he sent for any of us to tell us that we
-had done well, it was time to--well, he didn't often do that, and I
-must have shown some embarrassment.
-
-I remained silent, holding my cap in my hands and looking at Boldwin,
-my skipper, who had done me the honor to report me favorably in the log
-book.
-
-"I hear, also," continued Lord Hawkes, "that you are a good diver, a
-master workman under water----"
-
-"Pardon me, your lordship," I interrupted, "I'm but a licensed ship's
-officer, and what I don't know about diving would fill a dozen empty
-log books."
-
-"Well, at all events, you showed resource. Yes, my good Garnett, you
-are a man of infinite resource. There's no doubt about that, and that's
-what I'm coming to. You are also resolute in time of trouble, and the
-two qualities are what I need in the work I am going to send you to
-do."
-
-Bill Boldwin looked scared. He didn't want to lose his mate. He had
-simply spoken for me that I might get in the good books of the company,
-not get away from his ship.
-
-The manager of the Bay Line seemed to be studying some papers upon the
-desk before him while we two stood respectfully in front as became
-seamen in the presence of our mighty ruler. Boldwin was keen on lords.
-I hadn't associated with them to any great extent myself, but I was
-willing--no matter what might be said about them.
-
-"The _Princess Heraldine_, our Cape liner, left port August the fifth,"
-said Lord Hawkes. "She had aboard in her safe the famous Solander
-diamond, a stone nearly as large as the Cullinan and worth something
-like a round half-million dollars. Also she had about three million
-more in various stones uncut and consigned to the firm here. In running
-up the West African coast, she broke her crank shaft and drove it
-through her bottom, tearing the compartment to pieces, and forcing
-Captain Sumner to head for Lagos in the hope of beaching her before she
-sank. He managed to get her into ten fathoms on that low, sandy coast,
-and she went down about a mile or two offshore.
-
-"All the passengers were saved, but by some oversight the combination
-of the safe was lost at the time they needed it, owing to the agent,
-Grimes, being either too frightened or too ill to remember it.
-
-"Captain Sumner--the only other man aboard who knew the
-combination--was unable to either leave the bridge at the critical
-moment of her sinking, owing to the necessity of saving the passengers
-in the small boats, or tell any one before the _Heraldine_ suddenly
-settled and went down, carrying five of the crew and the entire
-contents of the safe along with her."
-
-Lord Hawkes looked up at me shrewdly as he finished and gazed into my
-eyes.
-
-I saw no necessity for a reply. There was a few minutes' silence, then
-he went on:
-
-"The wrecking company is now on the way there, but there has been some
-trouble experienced with them and with the underwriters. Therefore
-we've deemed it worth while to send a ship--one of our regular Cape
-boats on her lay-up voyage--to Lagos, and try for the safe.
-
-"The ship is a total loss, and will be covered all right, but the
-diamonds are not insured, owing, as I have said, to some disagreement
-with the underwriters lately, and it has been just our luck to lose
-them this voyage.
-
-"You are to take the _Prince John_, and go to Lagos. There you will
-find the wrecking crew waiting orders. You are to see that we get that
-safe intact--you understand? We want that safe _just as it was before
-it went to the bottom_. Your orders are here." And he handed me a
-folded document. "You will leave at once."
-
-"Aye, aye, sir," I said, somewhat bewildered, but getting the lay of
-the thing straight enough. "Is that all, sir?"
-
-"That's all. If you wish anything regarding details, you will see Mr.
-Smith of the main office. I wish again to impress you that this mission
-is important."
-
-It struck me so at once. A few millions in diamonds in ten fathoms--in
-a ten-ton safe! Yes, that was something worth looking after. It was
-important, all right. Seemed easy enough. Any one who knows anything
-about wrecking, knows that ten fathoms isn't too deep to work, although
-it's some little ways down. It depends also upon other conditions,
-which might or might not prevail. I'd get that safe easy enough--yank
-it aboard all standing, as we say at sea.
-
-Well, within two days I was standing on the bridge of the _Prince
-John_, and wondering how the poor fellows in Africa managed to keep a
-ship of her class afloat long enough to lay her up.
-
-It was the company's policy to have their African steamers laid up at
-Cape Town--helped labor, local progress, and all that sort of thing. In
-reality they got the work done for about half what it would cost them
-in England.
-
-The _Prince John_ could make ten knots under most favorable
-circumstances, but as this was her lay-up voyage, she, as might be
-imagined, was not doing her best. I think she rammed along about eight,
-most of the way down; and McDougal, the chief engineer, was working
-like a machinist from daylight till dark to get her to do that.
-
-We carried only the crew of six seamen and ten firemen, with two
-engineers, a donkeyman, a pair of mates, a cook, and galley boy. Just
-two dozen of us all told; and, while I had never commanded a ship of
-any size before, I was not suffering much from swelled cranium as I
-stood upon the bridge and gave orders.
-
-Low-powered, black-sided, with the regulation Clyde bow and round
-stern, she was no better than a tramp. We carried extra diving and
-hoisting gear for the wrecking crew that had preceded us. Our winches
-were heavy, and built for working in the African trade where a ship
-must handle her own cargo. They would be useful in the work ahead.
-
-My mates, Simpson and Dennison, were good men, and knew their little
-book all right. Simpson had a very red nose, and looked as if he
-liquored on the sly, but he never showed groggy on duty, so I had no
-chance to call him down. He would continue the voyage as captain after
-I got that safe up and on its way to England. Dennison was young and
-boyish. He was a good lad, and never slept in his watch on deck--at
-least I never caught him.
-
-The run was uneventful, and we were sooner or later close to the West
-African coast, running through an oily sea, and pointing for Lagos.
-
-One hot and stifling morning after I had worked the sight, I was
-sitting in a deck chair at the pilot-house door, thinking of Lucy
-Docking, and how I might make a saving of fifteen pounds a month out of
-a salary fixed at twelve. This mathematical problem was unfinished when
-Dennison hailed me from the bridge.
-
-"Vessel right ahead, sir, anchored about a mile and a half offshore,"
-he said.
-
-It was our friends, the wrecking crew, and we had arrived.
-
-The topmasts of the _Heraldine_ stuck clear of the oily sea. She had
-been a three-masted ship with square rig forward and fore and aft upon
-the main and mizzen. She had sails upon her spars already bent after
-the old-time style of low-powered ships. She lay easily in about ten or
-twelve fathoms, and had a slight list to port owing to her settling a
-bit upon her bilge.
-
-Being very flat and wide-bottomed, she looked almost ready to rise and
-continue her voyage lying as she did in that smooth sea, and being
-unhurt save for that gash in her bilge where the broken crank tore
-through, thrashing her life out before the engineer could shut off
-steam.
-
-I pictured for a moment the huge flail, the piston with the broken
-crank attached, the pieces not less than half a ton, whirling up and
-down under the full pressure of her cylinders with nothing to stop
-it. There must have been a wild mess in that engine room with a crazy
-hammer going full tilt like that.
-
-As in most single-screw ships, her crank must have thrown down when
-connected but a foot or two above her bilge, and when it tore loose it
-must have struck full power at each and every wild throw of the piston.
-
-My business was not to raise her, however. She was not worth it, having
-insurance, and being better as a total loss. I was after getting into
-the treasure room situated just beneath the main deck forward of the
-boilers.
-
-The room, from the drawings furnished by her builders, was an iron
-compartment ten by fifteen feet. At one end of it--the forward one--was
-built the huge safe. This was bolted down, and to the beams.
-
-It was not a new affair, having done duty for years in the African
-trade, but it had a very effective combination lock of the usual kind,
-and, as one would have to open the strong-room door before being able
-to get to the combination of the safe, it was considered perfectly
-competent to carry any amount of treasure.
-
-Mr. Haswell, of Haswell & Jones, submarine experts, came aboard from
-the powerful wrecking tug, which lay near us. He was a little man, but
-quite fat. Red hair and whiskers gave his pale face a peculiar sickly
-tint, but he was not a sickly man. He was reckoned one of the best
-deep-water workers in England, and could stand a very high pressure for
-a long time. Little pale eyes looked shrewdly at me as he presented
-his card, coming aboard as he did from a boat rowed by six sturdy
-blacks--"kroo boys," he called them. I met him at the side, and shook
-hands.
-
-"We're ready to begin whenever you say," he said. "I got the firm's
-letter, and have only just arrived myself. They told me you had the
-gear aboard with you."
-
-"Yes, I have plenty of gear, all right," I answered, "and you can
-commence work to-day if you want to. This place is too cold for me, and
-I'd just as soon get away from here the next day, if possible."
-
-"It's some hot, all right, but one don't notice it below so much. I
-suppose those derricks you've got will hold all right--what?" And he
-gazed at our hoisting gear.
-
-The thermometer was one hundred and six under the after awning, and not
-a breath of air stirring. The hot, sandy coast shone like a white band,
-fringing the blue water, and I wondered what kind of weather it was on
-that white, sandy shore.
-
-We went over the gear together, and then sat sweating and panting for
-air, while the steward brought us something cool to drink--that is,
-as cool as could be procured. Then I went with Mr. Haswell aboard the
-wrecking tug, and was introduced to the working force.
-
-Ten white men and twenty blacks were the outfit. This with what I had
-was enough to raise the ship had we so wished. Only two of the white
-men were divers--Williams, a sturdy fellow weighing nearly three
-hundred; and Mitchell, a short, powerful man, about two hundred and
-fifty. Both were under forty, and had done plenty of deep-water work.
-They looked upon the job as trifling.
-
-"We'll blow the deck off to-morrow, and then tear out a side of the
-room," said Haswell. "After that we can disconnect the safe, and you
-can get your winches to do the rest. In three days we ought to cover
-the job."
-
-The hot, oily calm continued. The night was something fierce to
-contemplate. The sun came out again like a molten ball of metal, and
-Haswell donned his suit lazily, while the air pumps, manned by four
-blacks, were started.
-
-A ladder reaching a fathom down under the sea was fastened to the tug's
-side, and Haswell lowered himself over upon it, and waited for his
-helmet. This was fastened by Williams, and then the air was started.
-
-As it whistled into the dome, the front glass was screwed on, and the
-little man was shut off from us. Slowly he went down and swung clear,
-dropping out of sight in a storm of bubbles which rose from his helmet.
-
-I took out the water glass. This was a cylindrical bucket with a glass
-bottom. By jamming one's head into the bucket and sinking the bottom of
-the affair under the sea to a depth of three or four inches, objects
-could be seen about twice as distinctly as without it--this owing to
-the fact that in the open the reflection and motion of the light upon
-the always moving sea surface, prevent the gaze from following objects
-distinctly.
-
-In order to use the water glass it was, of course, necessary to get
-close to the sea.
-
-I dropped into the small boat lying alongside the wrecking tug, and
-leaned far over the gunwale, peering down. The long, easy swell, the
-sure sign of an immense calm area of sea, came slowly from the westward
-and rolled the boat gently but enough to keep me from getting a good
-look until I caught my balance. Then I managed to get the glass down
-firmly, and hold it about four inches under with my head in the bucket.
-
-At first I could make out little or nothing. The sea was not very clear
-at the spot, owing to the close proximity of the low, sandy shore where
-the surf rolled incessantly, stirring up the bottom. Soon I could make
-out the outline of the deck below where the flying bridge rose within
-three fathoms of the surface.
-
-The _Heraldine_ was drawing about twenty-two feet when she sank, and
-her flying bridge was fully twenty-five to thirty above the sea. I
-tried to see farther, but could make out nothing at all.
-
-The lines of the diver led toward the fore part of the ship, and moved
-slightly. Williams, who tended them, sat listlessly upon the rail of
-the tug, and gave or drew in as the occasion called. I kept looking to
-see things, but could make out nothing further in the way of the wreck.
-
-A huge shadow passed under me--a long, dark shape. It was a gigantic
-shark nosing about the wreck.
-
-I called out to Williams.
-
-"No fear," he replied lazily; "they won't hurt him in that dress--might
-if he was naked."
-
-The shark passed along forward, and sank down out of sight. Then
-Haswell signaled that he was coming up.
-
-He came slowly, and I watched the lines coming in. Soon the metal
-helmet appeared, and then he climbed with seeming difficulty up the
-ladder, helped by Williams. When he came above the rail, he hung over
-it, and his front glass was unscrewed, the pumps stopped working, and
-we came close to hear the news.
-
-"Located her all right," he said. "You can fix up about twenty pounds
-of number two gelatine--better put it in a tube, and be sure to make
-the wires fast--have to pull it through some wreckage down there."
-
-"See anything of a big shark?" I asked.
-
-"Oh, yes, I gave him a poke in the stomach with a stick--he won't
-bother me in this dress--but I did get nipped by one of those poisonous
-snakes--see?" And he held out his hand, where a small trickle of blood
-ran down from the second joint of his forefinger.
-
-Williams gave an exclamation. The natives looked at him anxiously.
-
-"I'll come aboard and rest a while before going down again," said
-Haswell. And he was helped aboard, and undressed.
-
-His finger swelled while this was being done, and, by the time he stood
-in his flannels, he had a hand that was fast turning black. Williams
-said little. The poisonous water snakes that infest certain tropical
-seas close to the river mouths were known to him. Those in the Indian
-Ocean are especially dangerous.
-
-Haswell gazed at the blackening finger, and shook his head.
-
-"Better give me some whisky," he said. He drank, and sat down.
-Williams stood near, and Mitchell came up.
-
-"That's a bad bite," said Mitchell.
-
-"Well, I suppose there's no use waiting any longer--cut it off, and be
-quick," said Haswell.
-
-Mitchell, iron-nerved and steady, cut the finger off close to the hand,
-and stopped the flow of blood with a strong bandage. The swelling
-continued, and the arm began to pain greatly.
-
-"Cut away the hand," said Haswell, white and shaky, but showing an
-amazing coolness. He realized his danger. Mitchell performed another
-amputation.
-
-Within an hour they had his arm off at the elbow, and Haswell was
-turning blue all over.
-
-It was an uncanny thing--right there in that bright sunshine, a man
-done a mortal injury by some foul sea vermin that had attacked him in
-the depths. I had heard of the sea snakes that come down the African
-rivers and go well offshore, but had never seen one. Those in the
-Indian Ocean I had seen often, and remembered that they were about four
-or five feet long and a few inches in circumference.
-
-Haswell, with remarkable nerve, faced his end unflinchingly. It was
-wonderful to see him sitting there, unafraid, with his arm three times
-its natural size at the shoulder where the last bandage of Mitchell had
-been fastened.
-
-"I reckon I'll last about an hour longer," he finally said.
-"It's--no--use." His strength was leaving him, and he spoke haltingly,
-in hardly more than a whisper.
-
-They gave him more whisky, and waited. Then Williams took down his last
-words in reference to his family affairs, and Haswell laid himself down
-on a transom. Two hours later he was stone dead.
-
-That was a beginning that would have shaken the nerve of many men.
-Mitchell had his partner sewn up in canvas, and they buried him far out
-at sea, rowing off in the small boat.
-
-The next day Williams started down. He found the location of the strong
-room, and was careful to wear heavy gloves while working. Then he
-placed the charge.
-
-The crack that followed was not loud--deep down as it was. A storm of
-bubbles arose to the surface, and the sea lifted a few inches just over
-the place where the gelatine exploded. Then Mitchell prepared to go
-down and examine the result.
-
-The oily sea heaved and sank with the long swell, and there was
-nothing to indicate that there would be any trouble. Nothing could
-move the wreck. Mitchell went under at eleven that morning, and, after
-he had been down half an hour, Williams signaled him. He received no
-answer. With some anxiety, the big man started to haul line, when, to
-the horror of all, the two lines--hose and life line--came in easily
-without anything at their end.
-
-The hose showed a clean cut well down near the helmet, and the life
-line showed a ragged cut or break which stranded it out a full foot.
-Mitchell was left below, cut off from us as clean as if he had been
-left upon the moon.
-
-Williams strove with all haste to get into another suit, but it was
-a good ten minutes before he did so. He went down with a man of his
-outfit holding line for him, and came back in ten minutes with a white
-face and staring eyes.
-
-"Whole side of the room fell on him," he said; "cut his hose and--and
-left him there. Give me a line, I'll get him out."
-
-"Dead?" I whispered.
-
-He looked up at me from the circular hole in the helmet, and seemed to
-think me mad.
-
-"Dead? Of course, he's dead--a ton or two of iron on top of him, and no
-air--sure he's dead. We'll have to put the line to the winch to haul
-him out from under it."
-
-We buried Mitchell as we had Haswell, hauling him from under the
-wreckage by a line to our steam winch, and afterward carrying him well
-out to sea, where he was weighted and sunk. It was bitter work, and all
-the time that hot sun shone down upon us until the seams of the decks
-warped and the tar ran out of the lanyards.
-
-Williams was shaken. The next day he refused to go down, and pleaded a
-rest necessary. His men were silent and awed. I could say nothing to
-urge them on, as I felt that they had endured enough for a few days, at
-least.
-
-Then Williams was taken with the African fever, and there was no one
-left who would go below for any amount of money offered. The horror of
-the thing had shaken the nerves of the entire outfit. There might be
-millions below there, but no man of that crew would touch them just
-at present, and we were lying there in that oily sea, eating up the
-company's money and cursing at the strange chance that had made our
-expedition so fatal.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the end of a week Williams was so bad that I gave him up as a factor
-to help us. At times he was delirious, and raved horribly. His men
-were for abandoning the work, and putting into Lagos, and from there
-clearing for home.
-
-I refused to hear of such a thing, although I was a bit worked up at
-the outcome of what had at first appeared to be an easy job. To send
-North for more divers was to delay the work months. To await the coming
-of the next coast steamer meant delay of at least three weeks--and
-even then there was no certainty of help from her. She didn't carry
-divers, and, although she would naturally give me any aid in her power,
-belonging to our company as she did, I felt that I would rather not ask
-anything from her skipper until the last act.
-
-A man named Rokeby of the tug's working crew offered to tend line for
-me if I chose to go down. He assured me that the pressure at fifty
-or even sixty feet would not injure me. I might suffer some from the
-splitting headache natural to the pressure, but that was all. I could
-blow open the safe or get chains fast to it, or cut it adrift somehow.
-
-I thought over the matter while Williams raved and rolled in his
-sweltering bunk, and the sun shone down upon that dead ocean full of
-crawling life and hidden treasure.
-
-"Gimme the gloves and plenty of air," I finally said, after waiting
-three days, hoping that some of the wrecking crew would get their nerve
-back.
-
-They all showed willingness to work if I went down, and I was soon
-incased in the suit of Williams.
-
-If you think I was not nervous, you should have had an inside photo
-of my mind as I stood there upon the rounds of the ladder waiting for
-Rokeby to screw fast the front glass. I would have given it up but for
-the looks of the men. They seemed to gaze upon me with a sort of awe
-and amazement, but they made no comment whatever.
-
-The kroo boys swung the pump handles with a will, and when I heard
-the hiss of the air I must say my heart gave two jumps and came near
-landing overboard--at least, it felt that way; but I would have died
-rather than let those men see that I was afraid. Such is the ego, the
-vanity of us all.
-
-"Shall I screw her on, sir?"
-
-The voice was Rokeby's, and it aroused me from the contemplation of the
-thing to do. I tried to look bored and annoyed.
-
-"Yes, screw it down--mind the lines tenderly, and pull me right up if I
-give the signal," I said.
-
-"Aye, aye, sir," he answered, and he screwed in the front glass.
-
-The air whistled into the helmet back of my head, and the noise aroused
-me to a sense of the danger should it suddenly cease. I put one foot
-and then another upon the ladder rungs, and went down until I swung off.
-
-It seemed as if I was about to fly off into space, and for a few
-moments I almost lost my balance. Then my heavy leaden shoes sank me
-straight down, and I dropped slowly until my feet touched something.
-
-The light had gradually faded as I left the surface, and where I now
-stood it seemed to be pitch dark. The pressure of the air appeared to
-swell my head, and a roaring was in my ears. Then I determined to do
-something, and bent forward to see if I could.
-
-Gradually the dim outline of the ship's deck took form before the
-glass--that is, the deck in my immediate vicinity. I could make out the
-rail, and began pulling myself along by it. Soon I came to the pilot
-house forward, and recognized it by feeling the panels of the glass
-front with my hands.
-
-I knew that I was just about right in regard to position, and started
-for the rail to get over the side and down to the place where the
-blow-out had been made. I carefully swung one leg over and then
-another, amazed at the ease with which I lifted the immense leaden
-shoes. Then guiding my air hose and line clear of the rail, I slipped
-off, and dropped down to the bottom far below.
-
-In spite of the fact that I had now been under several minutes, I could
-not make out objects well enough to do anything; but determined to try
-to feel for the opening to the safe. After ten minutes spent groping
-about, I felt an immense hole in the ship's side, my fingers going
-carefully around the edges where the torn plates told of the force of
-the blast.
-
-I entered and felt for the sides of the room within where the blast
-had torn out the iron and held it hanging to drop upon the unfortunate
-Mitchell. I now saw I could do nothing without more light, and
-carefully made my way out to the sea floor, where I signaled to haul me
-up.
-
-I came slowly, and as I did so my brain appeared swelling until it
-seemed no longer possible to hold it within my skull. The pain was
-intense, and I hardly noticed the growing light until I was at the foot
-of the ladder. Then I climbed up, being dragged bodily by my life line.
-The front was taken off my helmet, and I spoke.
-
-"It's all right," I panted, "get the lamp out, and stand by to send me
-down the tools I'll need."
-
-Rokeby gave me a small drink of whisky, and the rest soon had the
-electric lamp ready. I went below again. This time I had no trouble in
-finding my way, for the light from the spark penetrated the sea for
-several feet about me.
-
-In the watery darkness I made out the hole, and saw the damage done by
-the charge. The entire wall of the compartment had been blown in, and,
-in going into the room, Mitchell had gotten under it so that he had
-dislodged an immense piece of plate which had fallen upon him, and cut
-off his air and line.
-
-I went forward cautiously, and poked the lamp ahead of me. It seemed
-a long way to the safe, but I finally came up against it, and made out
-its outline in the lamplight. Its edge stood out sharply. Beyond was
-the inky blackness of a tomb.
-
-I saw that it would be necessary for me to blow it loose from the
-beams, as I was not good enough workman to cut or loosen the bolts.
-Making a hasty but pretty good examination of the bottom and sides,
-I determined to go back aboard and study it out. A little powder
-underneath would loosen the floor bolts, and then, with a stout chain
-about it, we might start the winches to haul it through the opening,
-which I saw would have to be enlarged at the bottom. I came up, and was
-satisfied for the day.
-
-The next morning I had recovered my nerve to a great extent, and was
-eager to get to work. The men were also better pleased at the prospect.
-My head had bothered me all night, but now eased up, as I donned the
-rubber.
-
-So far I had seen neither fish nor crawling reptile. The bottom was not
-very soft, however, and was so covered with weed and sea growths that
-it may have harbored many things not visible to the eye at that depth.
-I kept to the gloves, not daring to risk my hands after Haswell's fatal
-ending.
-
-The first shot tore the bottom off the compartment, and left the safe
-hanging by the bolts against the bulkhead. The second shot broke away
-these, and, when I went down again, I found the safe had dropped down
-to the deck below, the powder, or rather nitrogelatine, having torn
-the deck away for the space of fifteen feet or more, leaving ragged
-splinters of deck planking sticking forth.
-
-The electric lamp showed the mass below me as I stood at the edge of
-the hole, and I very carefully drew my line and air so that they would
-not foul when I dropped over. Then I went down and found the safe
-intact, but in a very difficult position to handle.
-
-The next blast required a large charge, in order to blow the side out
-down to the lower deck, as it was impossible to drag that safe up
-through the hole. I placed fifty pounds of gelatine in two charges just
-abreast the safe on the outside of the hull, and blew away the plates
-until a trolley car could almost have entered the hole in the ship's
-side.
-
-I was all ready now for getting slings upon the treasure, and I could
-hardly wait until the next day.
-
-The wreck was in very bad shape below from the effects of the blasts,
-but I was nearly done now. Another day might find the diamonds upon the
-deck of the old ship above me. I managed to pass turns of a heavy chain
-around the safe, and stop them up so that they could be hocked to the
-fall. Then I got the tackle down, and by means of a whip to the tug
-started the mass of metal outboard.
-
-It came along all right, and I thought it would go clear. Then
-something suddenly stopped it below, and I had to go down again to
-clear it. It was fast in the hole, having jammed against the edge so
-that no amount of pulling would break it clear.
-
-I lost no time getting another tackle to it, and rigged it to lift it
-end up, and turn it over, then the first fall would pull it out and
-clear. I was getting pretty well used to being below by this time, and
-the headache was lessening. I found that I could remain under fully
-half an hour now, and work most of that time.
-
-The last time I went below I had a premonition that all was not as
-it should be down there, and I went along very carefully. I made my
-way into the ship's hull, and was just getting the new tackle set up
-taut and ready, when the whole ship heeled suddenly to port. The safe
-slewed sideways and slid down the now slanting deck, blocking the hole
-entirely across, but leaving my lines and tackle clear.
-
-I signaled to come up at once. Then my line jerked, hauled me close up
-to the opening, and there I jammed, stuck so I could not get back. I
-signaled frantically for help, and they pulled me with all their might.
-But they might as well have tried to lift the wreck itself. I was
-caught.
-
-During the next few minutes I thought a great deal. The horror of my
-situation dawned upon me. I was fast below there--not a chance for
-getting out. There seemed nothing to do, but wait placidly for the end.
-
-The next few minutes were hours to me. I could signal with the line,
-but that was all. They knew I was alive, and they knew something must
-have happened by the heeling of the sunken wreck.
-
-The blasting had probably blown away the sandy bottom under her, and
-she had simply cast over and slid the stuff to leeward.
-
-There was plenty of room to take that safe out endways, but it was now
-so fixed that some one would have to slew it around before that could
-be done. My lamp was still burning, and the blackness lost some of its
-terrors in that pitiful light.
-
-I was in the hull of a lost ship, and I felt that I was indeed a lost
-man. Memories came and went with lightning-like rapidity. I thought of
-Lucy Docking, and wondered how she would take my death. Then I began to
-feel the effects of the pressure, and my head grew flighty.
-
-I dreamed of beautiful blue skies and green fields, the shore, the
-mountains; and all the time Lucy was with me, going from place to
-place. I was not unhappy. There was a feeling of contentment with the
-woman I had chosen, and it was all real, so real that I only awoke
-under the vicious pulling upon my life line by the men above.
-
-Then the horror of my situation came back to me, and the roaring in my
-ears told me of my predicament. I gazed out of the front glass into the
-dark medium about me, the rays of the lamp making sharp outlines and
-shadows.
-
-I remembered the safe. It lay jammed across the hole, and, while I
-was too feeble to take great interest, I recall watching it with a
-sort of fascination. I felt its sides, its edges. Then the combination
-attracted me, shining as it did in the dim light, like a bit of white
-in the surrounding blackness. I lazily turned the knob, whirled it
-about. And all the time they were pumping air to me under the pressure
-of fifty feet of water.
-
-I felt at the aperture above where the edge of the safe shut off the
-opening. There was nearly a foot of clear room, but this was not enough
-for my figure, incased as it was in the suit. It was ample for the life
-line and hose to pass through without any interruption at all, and all
-I had to do was to live long enough for them to get that safe away.
-Surely some one would come down, and try to sling it again properly.
-
-I lay with my front glass to the opening, and held the lamp so that
-the rays would shine outside. There I watched and tried to control the
-thoughts that kept coming with a surging feeling of dread that made my
-heart thump all the harder. Drowsiness would come, and the whirling
-in my brain would get me back again to the land and beautiful dreams.
-Then the jerking and hauling, and trying to dislodge me would arouse me
-again, and I would come back to the present.
-
-I remember watching through the opening, and seeing forms passing.
-These must have been fish, or denizens of the sea. They flitted through
-the range of the lamp like sudden ghosts, the light striking their
-bodies, and then disappearing into the blackness without.
-
-The lamp suddenly went out.
-
-I was seized with the wildest terror at the inky blackness about me.
-The full horror of it all now came with greater force. That tiny
-spark had kept me up wonderfully. It had seemed like a ray of hope.
-I put out my hands with muscles shaking and trembling, feeling that
-inexorable edge of iron that shut me off from life.
-
-Would Rokeby try it? Would he try to save me?
-
-That was the final thought. I tried to put myself in his place. I would
-do much for a man dying by inches--dying where he might be saved if one
-would take a little risk. He might get below in time yet. He might get
-a whip upon that safe, and, with the powerful wrecking tug working her
-winches, upset the huge square of steel, and drag it out of the way.
-
-But if he was coming down, he should have come hours ago. As a matter
-of fact, I had already been down half an hour, and I could stand it
-for at least twice that long yet. But it seemed to me that I had been
-abandoned, that they were too cowardly to try to save me. My whirling
-brain and roaring ears told me a story of days of suffering, of
-interminable torture.
-
-Would Rokeby try it?
-
-I remembered how it struck me when Mitchell's line came up cut off
-from him. I knew what that poor fellow had gone through; what he had
-suffered, at least, for a few moments down there.
-
-No, I would hardly blame Rokeby for not trying it. It was too dangerous
-for any one to try. And yet----
-
-That latent hope, that feeling that there would be something at last,
-kept me from dying. The air was still coming down, and I was in no
-immediate danger.
-
-I tried to make myself think that I was in no danger at all; that all
-would be well when Rokeby came down, and got a hold of the safe. But I
-knew in my heart that the men above, the whole general crew, were not
-the men to help.
-
-As a record of fact, the men above were awed at the disaster, and
-only Rokeby's steadiness saved my life. He had the pumps kept going,
-and finally decided that he would have to take a chance down there,
-or let me die like a hooked fish. He was man enough to overcome the
-nerve-shaking dangers that had beset us, and he put on another suit.
-Then, with his breath fairly gone from fright, he went down to help me.
-
-He had never gone below before, except under most favorable conditions
-and in very shallow water. Still, he knew what to do, and he managed
-to get a good man above to tend line for him. He found things in bad
-shape at the opening, but lost no more time than he could help getting
-a purchase to the end of that safe, and the winches started. In half
-an hour they had dragged it clear of the ship, and I was hauled aboard
-insensible, but still alive.
-
-Before I had regained my senses, they had the safe fast aboard the old
-hooker, and I had the satisfaction of staggering on deck to view it.
-
-There it was, all right, perfectly intact. I had saved the company
-several millions, and it had cost the lives of two men, and nearly my
-own.
-
-There was not a moment lost in getting away from that hot, unhealthy
-coast. We got under way that very evening with Williams still stricken
-with the fever, and myself too weak to sit up, but I would not stop a
-minute.
-
-"Get her under way at once," I said, and the mates needed no urging.
-
-The wrecking tug, under full steam, came alongside, and the safe was
-slung carefully over to her deck, where it was bolted down and made as
-fast as a sailor could make it. I put a metal line about it, and sealed
-it up, not even willing to trust to the safe combination that had
-withstood the blasts and the sea.
-
-"Good-by, and a pleasant voyage to the Cape for you," I said to my
-former shipmates. They steamed away to the southward to lay the old
-ship up for repairs, and we, in the mighty wrecker, _Viking_, under
-full power and making fifteen knots the hour, stood back for old
-England, where we arrived safe enough a short time later.
-
-
-
-
-A TWO-STRANDED YARN
-
-PART I.
-
-
-"Captain Gantline?" The words escaped me like a shot from a gun.
-
-"Sure as eggs--'n where did you come from?" said that stout seaman. He
-stood at the bar of Bill's place on Telegraph Hill, drinking rum. His
-eyes, crinkled up at the corners like the ripples of a ship's cutwater
-in a smooth sea, were bloodshot and liquor-soaked. Old man Gantline was
-broad of beam and shorter than myself--no real good seaman is tall--and
-he raised his empty glass and hammered upon the bar with it.
-
-"Gimme another drink," said he to the barkeeper. Then he turned to me.
-"So it's you fer sure, old man--well, well, what a small world it is,
-after all! Take a nip--I'm sure glad to see you--an' how'd it happen?"
-
-I saw that old Gantline was getting drunk. It was a shame. The old
-skipper was a crack packet skipper. I was amazed at him, for he was not
-a drinking man. I wondered what made him do it. The barkeeper was now
-opening another bottle, and I knew the old sailor had drunk much.
-
-"I blew in from New York around the Cape last week," I said.
-
-"Must 'a' been blowin' some, hey, then--kinder quick passage--what?"
-
-"Oh, I don't mean I made the run in a week--we were one hundred and
-sixty days--but I've been here in Frisco a week. And I've spent all the
-money I saved from the munificent owners of the British ship _Glenmar_,
-who rated me as second mate at thirty per--or, rather, five pun ten a
-month. I tried to eat something since I came in to make up for what
-I didn't get at sea. Those Englishmen are sure on short commons, all
-right--but I haven't been drinking. I don't drink."
-
-"I do," said Gantline.
-
-"I see it," I answered; "but it don't seem to do you any good, though
-it isn't for me to tell you so, I know. A drink or two don't hurt any
-one much, but pour it in, and come with me, and listen to my tale of
-woe. I need some one who knows something to listen to me--I'm broke."
-
-"Well, I dunno as I might jest as well," sighed Gantline. "I'll take a
-couple more noggins--then you can come down to the ship with me."
-
-"Sure, that's just what we'll do--go down aboard--hurry up and poison
-yourself sufficiently," I said, and waited until he had soaked down a
-few more drafts of liquid fire. Then, as he was growing unsteady, I
-linked his arm in my own, and we went slowly down Market Street until
-we came to the water front.
-
-"That's her layin' out there--_Silas Tanner_--four masts--or are they
-five? Sink me if I kin count 'em, Clew! You count 'em for me--seems
-like there's more'n half a dozen sticks risin' outen her--hey? Maybe
-Slade's stuck more in her, thinkin' four ain't enough----"
-
-"What? A schooner? You in a schooner--how'd you come to go in a
-fore-and-after, Gantline? You, an old square-rigger!"
-
-"That's hit, thash hit, Clew--me, an old seaman, in a coaster--for'n
-aft--Chinks for passengers--cabin, too--ladies aft--I'm clear drunk,
-Clew--an' I don't care 'f 'am--nuff to make a man drunk," mumbled
-Gantline.
-
-It was high time to get him to his ship. I hailed a small boat, and got
-him aboard, and then we went out to the _Tanner_--four-masted schooner,
-now riding at anchor off Market Street, San Francisco, waiting for a
-tide and something I could not guess as yet.
-
-She was heavily loaded, all right, and I wondered at the old man's
-conduct the more. The idea of him forgetting himself at the last
-minute! It was too much. And with a mate like Slade--Slade, who had
-sailed in several ships with me, the best mate I had known for many a
-year. We drew alongside.
-
-"Lower down the side ladder--the skipper's coming up," I sang out, and
-a head came to the high rail. It was the mate's.
-
-"Christopher Columbus! How'd this happen?" asked Slade. "And how--how'd
-you turn up? I'm glad to see you, old man--pass him up--look out he
-don't fall overboard."
-
-We managed to get the skipper on deck, and then below to his bunk,
-Slade questioning me all the time, and asking about times gone by.
-Then, after we had the old man safely stowed, we came on deck together,
-and Slade told me the trouble.
-
-"Bound out for Guam with cargo and fifty coolies--Chinks--for labor
-there. We got a passenger's license, and take out several first class
-to Manila, besides. Loaded down with general cargo, and two safes full
-of silver for circulation at Agana--about ten thousand dollars."
-
-"Well, what's the trouble?" I asked.
-
-"The old man don't like the coolie idea," Slade went on. "He hates
-Chinks. We got all loaded up, and then the owners sent word that we
-must provide quarters for fifty men--Chinamen, too, at that--and the
-old man threw a fit. He'd have quit the ship, but he's bought into
-her, and can't do it. We had to clear out the alleyways under the
-poop, knock ports in the sides, and build up a line of shelves for
-'em to sleep on--twenty-five on a side, and right next the after
-saloon---couldn't get them below--see the doors we cut in the bulkhead?
-Lets 'em out on deck. It's a government contract, and it's good pay,
-all right--but them dirty coolies! It's a shame to make an old fellow
-like Gantline carry them--he hates' em so."
-
-"Who's second under you?" I asked.
-
-"Nobody--thought you'd come for it. Isn't that what you're here for?"
-
-"Not that I know of," I answered. "But I'll take it if the old man says
-so, all right, all right. I've been ashore long enough--broke, too."
-
-"Sure thing," said Slade. "You're as good as signed on right now--soon
-as he gets over it he'll ask you to go--never saw the old man like that
-before, and it's a pity, too. 'Never thought I'd run a slaver,' says
-he--and I don't much blame him, either."
-
-"I'll send down my dunnage in the morning," I said. "How about the
-crew?"
-
-"Well, we'll get them, all right. Whisky Bill's attended to it--we'll
-get ten men--all we need with the engine for handling line."
-
-I hastened ashore to settle my affairs and get my dunnage down to the
-ship.
-
-In payment for my last week's board I gave my landlord a whale's
-tooth, carved prettily--or, rather, I left it behind for him to accept
-gracefully, and before daylight in the morning I was aboard the
-_Tanner_. Gantline was so glad to see me come that he almost forgot his
-headache. I signed for the voyage and went on duty.
-
-The decks of the schooner were somewhat disordered that morning she was
-to leave. Honolulu was her first stop, and there was much to go on deck
-for that shorter run. The crimp had just brought down the men, and we
-mates upset each seaman's bag of dunnage, and scattered the contents
-about the gangway. We searched for hidden liquor and firearms, well
-knowing a sailor's habits, and we knocked things about a little hunting
-for them. The poor, half-sober devils could separate their belongings
-afterward as best they might.
-
-The result of the search was that, after the mate had confiscated a few
-bottles of stuff and a couple of out-of-date revolvers and ammunition,
-the general pile divided up among the men was enough to refill each bag
-again, the effort of sorting personal belongings at that moment being
-entirely too laborious to entertain.
-
-Slade took two bottles, and managed to secrete them upon his person
-while the eye of the skipper was diverted to a passenger who had just
-appeared. Slade was slanting toward the forward cabin with the goods,
-closely followed by his emulating second officer, when the voice of the
-old man roared out orders for me to see to getting the baggage of the
-passengers below without delay. I turned, somewhat disappointed, just
-as Slade entered the door of the saloon and winked slowly and meaningly
-at me.
-
-With some small encomiums pronounced upon the untimely work cut out
-for me, I turned to the gangway, and ordered up a few men in tones and
-language I should hate to repeat.
-
-As I did so I suddenly came face to face with the passenger who had
-come from behind a cab and started down the gangway plank to the ship's
-deck. She put her lorgnette up to her eyes and gazed smilingly at me.
-Then she was joined by a younger woman, a girl about twenty, who took
-the older woman's arm, led her down the plank to the deck, and went
-right into the door of the forward cabin, leaving me staring as though
-I had seen a ghost.
-
-"I don't got no good eyes, den, if dat ain't de purtiest gal I ever
-see," said a Dutchman who was waiting to hear further orders from me.
-Another man, with a loose lip, looked up and scratched his head.
-
-"Get, you squareheads--get a move on before something happens to you,"
-I growled.
-
-"I do love to hear them swear so," said the elder lady, as she reached
-the door. "They're such romantic fellows--so bold--oh, dear, just hear
-what that man----"
-
-"Come along, auntie, come back where the captain is. I never heard such
-language before, and I don't think it a bit romantic--no, not at all.
-It's all dreadfully vulgar, and all that--but that man--well, well, he
-does say some amusing things, even if they are not what they should be."
-
-Miss Aline MacDonald led her aunt aft, and I breathed easier. That she
-had flung me a sort of compliment was certain. I knew it. I had more
-queer ways of cussing out a Dutchman than any Yankee mate afloat--I
-knew that--but----
-
-Gantline met them as they entered, and extended his hand.
-
-"Come aft, ladies, come aft, and I'll have the stewardess show you your
-rooms at once--hope they'll suit you--best in the ship. Of course, we
-don't compete with the steamers, but a voyage in this schooner will be
-worth two in a steamer as a health restorer. If things ain't the way
-you like them, sing out--I'll do the best I can." And he led the way
-aft to where a Kanaka woman took them in charge. Then I ducked into the
-mate's room, and joined Slade for a few minutes. He had already pulled
-a cork.
-
-"Ain't adverse none to passengers," said he, pouring out the liquor,
-"but you may sink me if that old un don't come near the limit--you hear
-me?"
-
-"Give me a drink and shut up about passengers," I grinned. "The old
-one's all right. She appreciated my education--sort of goo-gooed at me
-while I was laying out some language--quick with the booze, before the
-old man gets wise to it."
-
-We hurried back on deck in time to take charge of things, and we were
-soon ready and waiting for the coolies, who were to come aboard from
-the tug that would tow us out to sea.
-
-The tug _Raven_ took our towline and we warped out, swung around, and
-were headed for the open sea within a few minutes. The engineer had
-steam up in the donkey, and the winches turned. Our crew were used to
-fore-and-aft canvas, and Slade took the turns as the halyards came to
-the revolving drums, being helped, as I may say, by his second mate,
-who held the peak as he held the throat.
-
-We snatched stoppers upon them as the sails came to the mastheads, and
-in less time than it takes to tell we had all save the headsails on
-the _Tanner_, and were standing out. The tug dropped back, and came
-alongside, taking her lines.
-
-"Stand by fer yore passengers," bawled a red-headed fellow, grinning
-from the pilot house.
-
-I now saw a crowd of yellow-tails gathering on the tug's deck.
-Fifty-seven of them, all told, led by a giant yellow man in a skullcap
-and long, braided cue. A chattering babble of Chink talk, and the big
-fellow hustled the crowd to the rail, up the schooner's side, and on
-deck in less than a minute.
-
-Bundles, packages, clothes, came with them, and Slade gave up the
-premeditated job of searching them in a few moments as he saw the
-yellow men gather up their belongings and crowd about the break of the
-poop, jamming in a mass right under the edge from where Gantline leaned
-over and gazed down at them in sour amazement and distrust.
-
-"Me makee dem tlake-a down, down," cooed the giant leader in a
-sing-song voice, pointing with his hand at the crowd of Chinamen.
-
-"Yes, git below--git out an' be quick about it," snarled the old man
-from above him. "You're blockin' the decks--slam 'em in the alleyways,
-git 'em out the way," he continued to Slade and myself.
-
-"No lika men high, a-a-h, aye, makee down, down," sang the giant, with
-a glint in his little slits of eyes.
-
-He was an ugly animal. Talk about your Oriental being a degenerate!
-Well, that fellow was nothing degenerate physically. He was six
-feet four, and about half as wide across the hulking shoulders. A
-thin-lipped mouth ran clear across his face; his nose was flat, like an
-African's. A whitish-blue scar had ripped his pleasing features from
-eye to chin on the starboard side, and his head was enormous.
-
-The hair was shaved close up to the limits of that skullcap of black
-silk, and from under its lower end there dropped a cue about a fathom
-long, all done up with silk cords and stuff, until a pretty little
-black tassel was plaited into the end, surmounted by a Matthew Walker
-knot and a couple of Turks' heads.
-
-He was something to notice, all right, and his voice was grand.
-Nothing of the nervous squeak of the coolie about it. It sang along
-with flutelike notes that bristled full of "I's" and "Ah's," until you
-thought he was singing it to his men in a sort of deep bass or baritone.
-
-Understand him? Did you ever know any white man who could understand a
-Chink if that fellow didn't talk for him to understand it? No, we took
-it for granted that the "boss" coolie was on the level, and was arguing
-with the herd to corral them into the alleyways where they belonged. He
-understood the skipper right enough.
-
-A stout yellow man edged from the press about the door of the forward
-house, and came to the big man's side. A soft gabble, then a yell, then
-the herd took the alleyways on the jump, and inside of ten seconds
-there was not a yellowskin on deck.
-
-"Got 'em trained, all right enough," said Slade, with a grin. "The old
-man needn't worry about 'em if the big one goes at it that way."
-
-"Fifty-seven Chinks on a dead man's chest--and I'll bet my month's pay
-they've a bottle of rum--maybe a hundred," I ventured. "What's the big
-cheese's name?"
-
-"Sink me, if I know! The old man called him 'Yaller Dog,' and he's
-that, all solid. Let it go at that. I'd sure like to have him in my
-watch. What a man he'd make on a earing in a blow!"
-
-"Shall we deal them their rice raw or cooked?" I asked. "I suppose they
-won't eat it if it's cooked in the galley, and then they'd be trying to
-build fires under the cabin or in the lazaret to boil it."
-
-"No; let 'em eat it or throw it overboard. What do you care? Turn the
-men to, and choose the watch, and then I'll go below for a rest."
-
-I did so, and soon the Farallones were disappearing in the east astern.
-
-The first two days out there was so much to do aboard that I hardly
-had time to observe things. The decks were lumbered up with all kinds
-of gear, and a load of stuff for Honolulu, which took all our time to
-secure. The men were under the union scale of the West Coast--that is,
-thirty dollars per month--and there was nothing off on account of our
-going deep-water in her, for we were not by any means coasting at all,
-as our course lay directly across the Pacific Ocean, and the itinerary
-took in a voyage of seven thousand miles.
-
-I hated the fore-and-aft canvas. I knew its value on short runs and in
-smooth seas, but when it comes to deep water and a rough old ocean,
-with a twenty-five-knot wind increasing to fifty, give me the square
-canvas with double topsails, that men can handle.
-
-However, we were very fast. The _Tanner_ could do fifteen knots free
-on a wind that would jam a square-rigger close and by. Her four masts
-were of the usual type, all the same, and her gaff-topsails were high
-on the hoist, giving her a tall appearance.
-
-The first day under all sail, with the wind abeam, she rolled off
-thirteen and fourteen knots an hour, and kept her decks awash under
-a perfect torrent of foam, dragging her rail through a solid mass of
-suds. She simply ran, shoved her sharp nose out through it, and slipped
-over the long, smooth, rolling swell with a plunging lift that felt
-good.
-
-The steam winches for handling line were good. With drums turning,
-all one had to do was to snatch the halyard in the deck block, grab a
-turn on the drum, and up went anything that could go. Then a stopper
-on the line, and to the belaying pin--and all was done. There was no
-hee-hawing, no singing of sailor's chanteys, no sailoring of the type
-we had known in our earlier days; but I am free to admit that I would
-rather have had the steam winches--especially when it came on to blow
-and we had to reef her down.
-
-The Chinks were allowed on deck from eight bells in the morning until
-eight at night; and they were always getting in the way.
-
-Miss MacDonald and her aunt came on deck most of the time, and sat
-wrapped in rugs near the wheel, where the old man entertained them with
-tales of the sea. They were greatly interested in the Chinamen.
-
-I found my watch on the poop not at all disagreeable during daylight,
-for Miss Aline was good to look at. She was of medium height, with
-brown hair that curled in spite of the sea wind, and she was solidly
-and strongly built, her figure having lines that told of sturdiness
-rather than delicate beauty. But although she was not what one would
-call fat, or even stout, she was certainly not thin, and her rounded
-face was rosy with health.
-
-Her mouth had a peculiar gentleness of expression, and when she showed
-her white teeth to me and flushed a bit upon recognizing the master
-handler of fluent oaths, I thought her about as good as they come. I
-was a bit embarrassed, but I was only second greaser, and as such could
-not sit at the table with her, so I said little.
-
-I told Slade, however, that his hands were unfit to pass salt junk to
-a lady--and, for a wonder, he washed them in fresh water before going
-below! He was mate, and could sit in with the skipper, while I walked
-the deck above and made mental comments upon the irony of fate that
-shoved in a fellow like him to entertain a girl that he could not speak
-to without stammering like a drunken man, while I-----
-
-It was in my watch during dinner that I had the first real chance
-to see our coolie boss. The second week, after things had settled
-themselves, and the routine of the ship took the place of the frantic
-scramble to get things shipshape, I stood at the break of the poop,
-which in the _Tanner_ was very low--not more than four feet above
-the deck, as is the case in many schooners--and as I stood there up
-popped Yellow Dog, the giant Chink, from the door of the alleyway to
-starboard. The beggar was so tall that he was almost on a level with
-myself, in spite of the difference in the decks, and I found his eyes
-close to mine as he turned and saw me.
-
-"Have any trouble in the passageway?" I asked him, thinking he might
-have been a bit mixed in straightening out that gang below in the
-narrow space.
-
-He gave me a look, a slanting glance from the corners of his little,
-screwed-up eyes, and then he turned his back upon me as if I had been
-bilge water, and offended his senses.
-
-"Hey, Yellow Dog! What's the matter with you? Are you tongue-tied?
-Don't you know enough of ship's etiquette to answer an officer when he
-speaks?" I spat at him.
-
-"I tlakee captain man--not you," he sang, in his musical voice, and he
-forthwith strode to the galley, where a Kanaka cook was busy with the
-dinner.
-
-"You great big Yellow----" But there is no use of telling what I
-remarked to him as he went along that deck. As the officer in command
-at the moment, I was not a little offended by this high-handed way of a
-common Chink, more especially as I was inquiring for the welfare of his
-men.
-
-The cook heard my note of temper, and refused the giant admittance
-to his galley's sacred precincts, whereupon Yellow Dog seized him by
-the scruff of the neck, and tossed him into the lee scuppers. He was
-about to pitch a pot of hot water on top of him, but I interposed an
-objection to this action in the shape of a belaying pin which, flung
-by my right arm under full swing, struck Yellow Dog fairly upon the
-skull-cap, and, bounding off, flew overboard.
-
-The giant staggered, caught himself from falling, then he stood very
-straight, and gave me a look that for cold fury expressed more than I
-had ever dreamed possible in a Chink.
-
-"Killee you fo' that," he hissed.
-
-"Go on, do your killing, Yellow Dog," I snapped. "But take care you
-don't get something yourself--and the next time I speak to you aboard
-here, if you don't answer at once you'll find something else bounding
-off your dome that you'll remember for a long time. Now send your mess
-kids to that galley, and the cook will hand you out your rice and
-long-lick."
-
-The men of my watch stopped work where they were, and grinned at the
-big Chinaman. Their contempt for the race was more than my own, and I
-knew I had the hearty approval of the sailors. At the same time I was
-sorry that the thing had happened, for the Chinamen who were already
-on deck passed the word along, and by the time I had finished talking
-the whole gang of them were standing about, with looks upon their faces
-that told of trouble.
-
-It was a bad beginning for a long voyage.
-
-Gantline came on deck as soon as he could finish his dinner, and wanted
-to know what the trouble was about, but that was all he said. He
-found no fault with my remarks nor with my actions. A ship's officer
-must maintain discipline, and discipline cannot be maintained without
-respect.
-
-Miss MacDonald came up with her aunt, and I went below to my dinner.
-As I passed the door of the forward house leading into the cabin, the
-stout Chink who seemed to be a close chum of the big leader glared
-at me. He had a sinister face, with little slits of eyes that looked
-slantwise, like the eyes of a wolf.
-
-His moustaches were thin and straight along his lip, until they reached
-the corners of his wide mouth, then they suddenly dropped straight
-down, and hung like the tusks of a walrus, two thin, black points
-of hair about six inches long. They gave him the appearance of some
-carnivorous animal, fierce, saturnine and dangerous.
-
-Instead of slamming him for his insolence, I pretended not to see him,
-and passed in, yet the look stayed with me, and I remembered it at
-intervals. He was a wolf, all right, a human wolf--but I was to find
-that out later.
-
-"What do you think of our passengers--the coolies?" I asked Jack, the
-steward, who sat at my mess next the carpenter, Oleson.
-
-"Watch them, Mr. Garnett, watch them," he warned. "I've seen some
-mighty bad Chinks leaving the coast lately. These men belong to
-tongs--hatchet men--and if you'll take my word for it you will
-find plenty of long, black-barreled guns tucked somewhere in their
-dunnage. But the hatchet is their game for those they have a grudge
-against--hatchets don't make a noise at night."
-
-"They won't get about the decks in my watch, to use any hatchets, or
-guns, either, for that matter," I answered. "I'll tuck them in snug to
-bed at eight bells."
-
-"Hatchet's a bad thing at night," put in Oleson. "I'll put a heavy
-staple on their door after they turn in."
-
-In my watch below I read ancient magazines until I fell asleep. In my
-dreams I saw that stout Chinaman's face with the pointed whiskers and
-slant eyes peering down over me. In his hand was a little, thin-bladed
-hatchet, like a tomahawk, and as I reached up for him I awoke with a
-start, shivering in spite of the heat.
-
-The door of my cabin was closed, and my window, or port, was but half
-open, sliding as it did upon sills about five feet above the main deck.
-
-A shadow passed even as I looked up, but when I sprang out of my bunk
-and slammed the glass open, there was nothing near the opening.
-
-Just twenty or thirty feet distant forward two of the crew were working
-on some gear, and the light was still strong enough to recognize them
-as Jim and Bill, of Slade's watch. Then the bells of the dogwatch
-struck, and I went on deck, swearing at myself for a nervous fool.
-
-I refused to take a gun which hung over my bunk, hating the idea of
-doing such a thing, for guns always spelled trouble in all ships I had
-ever been in, and I hated the idea of using one. I went on the poop,
-and Miss MacDonald was sitting there with her aunt, chatting with the
-old man.
-
-"Keep her steady as she goes--sou'west half west," said Gantline, as I
-came up.
-
-"Aye, aye, sir," I answered, and was about to go aft to the wheel, when
-the young lady spoke to me.
-
-"I have just asked the captain to allow me to read a chapter from the
-Bible to those Chinamen," she said, "and, if you will assist me, we
-will gather them close together on the deck there"--pointing to the
-main deck. "I can stand upon the edge and see them better. You don't
-know whether they can speak or understand English, do you?"
-
-"I think they understand me at times," I ventured, "but I'm a bit
-doubtful about the kind of talk you will toss them."
-
-"Toss them? What do you mean?" she asked.
-
-"Why, I mean--well, they understand the kind of English we use at
-times--I don't know how to explain--it isn't a written language----"
-
-"I should sincerely hope not," said Miss MacDonald meaningly.
-
-"Yes, but, my dear, it is so expressive--I heard you talking to them
-during dinner to-day," interrupted her aunt.
-
-I blushed a little. "Well, then, that's what I mean," I said. "I don't
-want to say that I think you are wasting time reading to them--you know
-they have a religion of their own--one that antedates ours--they won't
-take it right."
-
-"That's a question we won't discuss at present," said Miss MacDonald.
-"There are many Christianized Chinamen at home, and they seem to
-appreciate it very much."
-
-"Always, if there's a pretty woman to teach them," I snapped.
-
-There was a silence after this. I had been rude, I suppose, but I was
-only telling the truth. I went to the break, or edge, of the schooner's
-poop, and called the watch, which had been mustering on deck.
-
-"Get the coolies aft to the mast," I ordered.
-
-The men passed the word along, and two or three Chinks who understood
-English as well as I did came slouching aft. Gradually about two
-dozen stood or congregated near enough to hear, but Yellow Dog and
-his slant-eyed chum of the walrus mustaches seemed to decline the
-invitation.
-
-"Couldn't you get the large man, their leader, to come also?" asked the
-lady.
-
-"Not without dragging him lashed fast," I protested.
-
-"Very well," she said, with just a bit of temper in her voice.
-
-Gantline had gone below, and I was in charge of the deck until supper
-was over. The reading would not take long, and the steward was already
-bringing the cabin mess aft along the gangway. The young lady read
-calmly, and with a peculiarly sweet voice, that attracted the attention
-of the men, but not of the coolies.
-
-The Chinks stood about, and some gazed out over the sea, some grinned
-openly up at her, with a smile that told of tolerance for an imbecile.
-Miss MacDonald, senior, went below to prepare for supper.
-
-Before the girl had finished, Yellow Dog came aft, and gazed at her in
-open admiration. He made some remark to his stout friend, and they
-both smiled sardonically, but their attitude was not particularly
-offensive.
-
-I found some business at the spanker sheet, and when I came forward to
-where the girl stood, she was finishing.
-
-"There is only one way to treat heathen, Mr. Garnett," she said, "and
-that is to be always kind, universally even-tempered, and gentle with
-them. They have had a hard road for many generations, and take to
-kindness, as all lower creatures do. They will only get stubborn if you
-use hard words and roughness. I know something about their habits, for
-I've taught the school at home, where we had twenty pupils, all grown
-men."
-
-At this I protested. I confess I was hot.
-
-"If you are kind to them they will think you're afraid of them," I
-declared. "If you mule-lick them, hog-strap them, and generally beat
-the devil out of them, they'll do as you tell them--not otherwise. I'm
-not running a school aboard here, if you please, and while I will give
-you any assistance you want or can get, I go on the log right now that
-as far as we handle these men, we must beat them and lick them into
-submission. There's no other way at sea. It's brutal, but the other way
-will turn out more brutal. I'm not responsible for them being in this
-ship--but I'll see they get to their port of discharge, all right, if I
-have to flay them alive!"
-
-"I think you are perfectly horrible--perfectly, brutal to say such
-things," said Miss MacDonald. "Are all seamen brutes? Does the captain
-stand for such things aboard here?"
-
-"There is only one way to do with cattle of this sort," I insisted.
-"I don't want the job--I'd rather run in a bunch of snakes. But a
-ship's bound to be run the way ships are run. There isn't any new way
-to run a ship, believe me. It's all been tried out hundreds of years
-before you were born. Perhaps some day, when we don't need ships, the
-brotherly-love racket will work all right; but not these days."
-
-"I don't believe it, anyhow," said the lady, "and I'm amazed that a man
-of apparent intelligence should say such things. You should do unto
-others as you would have them do unto you--always."
-
-"Quite so," I assented, somewhat nettled at the idea that a young lady
-should give me points on running a ship. "I always do, always do unto
-the crew or those coolies the same as I would expect them to do to
-me--if I was the same kind of rascal they are--and if our places were
-exchanged. There can be only one man in charge of the deck, the watch
-officer, and he's responsible for everything that happens. And if I
-would be so bold as to give you a bit of advice, I should say to you,
-for God's sake don't try any foolishness on those yellow-skins while
-they are under my charge. It'll only make trouble, and there'll be
-enough of that, anyhow, by the way things look."
-
-"What do you mean?" asked Miss Aline.
-
-"I mean that Yellow Dog, as the skipper calls him, that big Chink, is
-not liking ship's discipline already. If you will go near the door
-of the alleyway when they open it you will smell the fumes of opium
-strong enough to knock you down. They don't pretend to obey orders, and
-the company makes us carry them and take care of them like they were
-babies. We can't even search them or offer any kind of protest--they'd
-refuse to come if the contract was not drawn that way."
-
-"Well, be kind to them, be always lenient with them," said Miss Aline,
-in a tone so different, so pleading that I gave up. "Don't yell at them
-like I heard you to-day. It isn't dignified, it isn't right--you will
-be good to them, now, won't you?--just try it and see if it don't work."
-
-"Ho, well, I'll try to do the best I can, of course," I answered,
-thinking of the stout pirate with the hangers. "Yes, I'll try to
-be just as kind as I possibly can--of course, I'll promise you
-that--that's the skipper's orders, you know."
-
-The steward had already brought the mess things for the cabin, and
-the lady went below to join her aunt and the old man--and Slade. The
-mate was not standing for my line of talk, as I could see by the way
-Miss Aline spoke, and it made me warm to think that a mate of Slade's
-attainments should be so mushy as to snicker and grin when I told him
-how things stood.
-
-"'Keep solid with the passengers'--that's one of the old rules in the
-express steamers, you know--'keep right with the ladies,'" he said,
-grinning at me when I mentioned the missionary work the young lady
-had undertaken. "And, by the way, lend me a couple of your clean
-collars--you won't need them right away, and I do."
-
-"I'll do nothing of the kind," I answered shortly.
-
-"Oh, don't get rattled because I've got the inside route. Don't be mad,
-old man, because I've gained the weather of you. All's fair in the
-game. And between you and me, if the Chink gets gay with you, bang him
-on the nut for fair, and I'll slip in with you--if it's dark. But you
-don't want to queer me below. Now, be sane, and come across with those
-collars. I'm young and single--and mate, see?"
-
-"Go to the devil!" I answered, but I knew Slade would go to my room,
-instead, and nail those white-laundered collars I had kept clean.
-
-That night, when I turned in, I found that, indeed, Slade had been
-below, and had rummaged my things about most unkindly, taking my linen.
-I turned in with a feeling of resentment at his luck in position, but
-I dismissed the feeling quickly as the absurdity of the affair dawned
-upon me, for, after all, I was not thinking of women at all, and had no
-right to under the present high salary I was drawing.
-
-Rolling into my bunk, I was instantly asleep. In my dreams I saw that
-walrus-looking Chink. His long black feelers hung down over me, the
-points piercing my vitals like tusks. I gave a yell and awoke!
-
-The lamp was burning dimly, as it always did in my room at night, ready
-for the sudden call to the deck, and I could see everything distinctly
-the moment I opened my eyes. A face was just leaving the glass of my
-window. I sprang out of the bunk, and peered out through the glass. At
-that instant there was a heavy rat-tat-tat upon the door, and the voice
-of Jim Douglas, of Slade's watch, called to me that it was eight bells,
-and time to turn out. I threw open the door.
-
-"Did you look in through my window?" I asked him.
-
-"No, sir; I wouldn't do anything like that, sir," said the seaman.
-
-He was a good-looking young Scotchman of twenty-four, tall and strong,
-with an honest face. I knew he was telling the truth.
-
-"That's all," I said, and he went on his way.
-
-I looked at the gun that hung over my shelf at the bunk head. It was
-one I took off a dago named Louis, of my watch, and it was a heavy gun,
-forty-five caliber, and long in the barrel.
-
-"Perfectly absurd to think of it," I muttered to myself. I pulled on my
-coat, and started for the deck, when something, some instinct, told me
-to take the weapon.
-
-"Sentiment be hanged!" I said out loud, and tucked the revolver in a
-rear pocket. Then I made the deck, and found Slade standing at the
-mizzen waiting for me.
-
-"We'll raise the land before morning," said he. "She's been running
-like a scared rat all night. Keep a lookout, and when you sight
-anything sing out to the old man--he'll be on deck probably, but he's
-been acting queer lately, and you better watch him. We'll heave her to
-for a pilot, and you know the rest."
-
-"All right," I answered.
-
-The soft, damp air of the trade wind made the decks soaking wet. The
-low hum through the rigging added to the murmuring of the side wash.
-The creaking of sheet blocks and slight straining of the gear were
-the only noises that broke the stillness of the peaceful night. The
-schooner was running along rapidly, heeling gently to the wind, and
-everything drawing. The rolling motion was slight, for the wind was
-strong enough to hold her steady.
-
-The voices of the watch forward sounded above the murmuring, and I
-could see the glow of a pipe belonging to some one who disregarded the
-ship's discipline sufficiently to smoke while on duty. I took my place
-at the mizzen rigging to con the vessel, and stood there silently for a
-long time watching the foam rushing past her, now and then gazing far
-ahead to see if I could raise the lights of Pearl Harbor. The wind was
-almost astern, and the headsails were consequently not doing much work.
-I listened to the slatting, and then sang out:
-
-"Haul down the jib topsail and roll it up."
-
-"Aye, aye, sir," came the response, and the men went to the forecastle
-head.
-
-Aft at the wheel the shadow of a man holding the spokes was the only
-sign of life on deck. I took my place again at the weather rigging, and
-waited for the report from forward.
-
-A heavier swell than usual rolled the schooner, and I turned to look
-aft. At that instant something whizzed past my ear, and struck with a
-chugging sound into the backstay. My ear stung sharply, and something
-warm ran down my neck. I saw a form vanish behind the mast, and called
-out.
-
-I knew I had been struck, and drew my gun, springing toward the figure,
-which dashed silently across the deck as I gained the mast. I fired
-at it without hesitation, and the fellow let out a scream, gained the
-rail, and plunged over the side.
-
-I was at the rail in an instant, but saw nothing in the foam. A
-moment's silence followed, and then a sound of steps and a rising
-murmur of voices told me of the alarm.
-
-Gantline was on deck in less time than it takes to tell it, and he
-roared out: "What's the matter?"
-
-Slade sprang from the door of the forward cabin, calling out that he
-was coming. Men from forward rushed aft. Then, from out of the doors
-of the alleyways, a stream of figures poured forth, flowing like a
-black tide onto the main deck. A sudden roar of voices followed, and I
-recognized the high-pitched tones of our coolies.
-
-"All hands--help! All hands aft--quick!" I yelled, and fired into the
-black figures who swarmed up the poop and crowded upon me.
-
-As I fired, I heard the shrill screams of the elder Miss MacDonald,
-and then there was indiscriminate firing. I yelled to Slade, and he
-answered once. The crowd surged over me, and I was down, with a dozen
-panting heathens on top of me. In a minute it was all over. Some one
-passed a line about my arms, and, kick as I might, they soon had me
-snug and fast. Gantline roared out orders from the wheel, and I heard
-the crack of a pistol at rapid intervals. Then a roaring, surging mob
-rolled over him--and there was the schooner luffing to under full sail,
-her head sheets thrashing and the canvas thundering in the stiff breeze.
-
-They had taken her. We were overpowered, all right. The men forward
-stood it out but a moment longer, and surrendered.
-
-When I could see again I noticed the giant form of Yellow Dog standing
-near the wheel, and two of his men at the wheel spokes. He sang out
-orders in his musical bass voice, and the sheets were quickly trimmed
-in. The schooner now headed well up with the wind abeam, and pointed
-away across the Pacific, far to the northward of Hawaii. Yellow Dog had
-taken her easily.
-
-I was hauled below, and tossed into the forward cabin. Here I found
-Slade lashed fast, like myself. He was hurt by a bullet that had torn
-his thigh, and was bleeding. Upon a transom lay Gantline, trussed from
-head to foot in line, and the old skipper was swearing fiercely at the
-ill fortune that had overtaken his ship.
-
-I noticed a few Chinks standing near the door of the after cabin, and
-they looked at us casually, seeming to regard us not at all. Then I
-heard the soft voice of Miss Aline pleading with Yellow Dog. But of
-course she might have pleaded with the sea with as much effect. Then
-the sounds died away, and we lay there, waiting for daylight and what
-might follow.
-
-Daylight came, and the schooner still held her way under all sail
-except the jib topsail that I had hauled down before the fracas. She
-now lay at a sharp angle, and felt the trade wind upon her starboard
-beam.
-
-Yellow Dog came into the forward cabin. He stopped a moment near me,
-then kicked me savagely, muttering strange sounds in his own language.
-I told him fluently in good seaman's English just what I thought of
-him, and if he did not understand me he was something dense, for I've
-had every kind of human under the sun on my ship's deck, and I have so
-far failed to notice any who could not understand me when I let off a
-few pieces of literature or oratory.
-
-Yellow Dog seemed rather pleased than otherwise, for he called his man,
-the walrus-mustached one, and grinned while they held a confab. I took
-it that something choice would be handed me within a very short time.
-
-When I had a chance to ask the skipper, he told us we were within forty
-miles of Pearl Harbor. From the way we nosed into the breeze, the
-schooner was now heading northwest across the ocean, giving the harbor
-a wide berth.
-
-"What'll they do?" I asked him.
-
-"Sink her, with us aboard--take the ten thousand dollars in the safe,
-and make a get-away with it. They'll turn up ashore in some deserted
-place, and that'll be about all. Then they'll divide the swag,
-separate, and Yellow Dog will go his way--probably back to China. It's
-not much money when you think of it for a white man, but it's a whole
-heap for a Chink."
-
-After the day had well advanced we heard noises on deck. The foresail
-was lowered, or, rather, let go by the run, the noise of tearing gear
-sounding plainly. Topsails, staysails, and everything forward except
-the jib were cut away. Then the spanker was lowered, and left threshing
-about, half up, with the sheet hauled amidships. The jib was hauled
-to the mast, and the schooner lay hove to in the trade swell, riding
-easily upon the sea, and remaining very steady.
-
-We heard them getting out the boats, and there was much noise from aft
-where the safe was fast to the deck in the captain's cabin. Finally a
-terrific explosion took place there, and after that the noises died
-away.
-
-"Blew it," said Slade.
-
-A smell of smoke now began to be apparently in the confined air of the
-cabin.
-
-"Good Lord! Are they going to fire us?" asked the mate.
-
-"Safest way, I suppose. Knock a hole in her bottom first, set her on
-fire, and then get out," I said.
-
-"But the girl?" asked Slade.
-
-"Oh, Yellow Dog will take care of her--probably take her along with him
-in the boats."
-
-"Not if I know it. Man, do you know what that means?" he panted,
-straining at his wrist lashings.
-
-"Well, it's a mighty bad outlook, but if you can stop it, sing out;
-I'll help," I said.
-
-The smoke grew more dense in the confined space. The noise of hoisting
-gear died away, and the shouts of men from a distance told that they
-already had the small boats over, and were alongside.
-
-Slade strained away at his lines, and I did, also, but we were fast.
-Gantline muttered on the transom, and began to choke with the smoke.
-Suddenly a form burst into the room. It was Oleson, the carpenter. He
-slashed at our lashings with a heavy knife, and in a moment we were
-free.
-
-We dragged ourselves out on deck, crawling to keep below the rail, so
-that we could not be seen from the small boats. Two forms lay right in
-front of a door--two of our men who had been killed. Not a sign of a
-wounded Chink, or dead one, either. They had taken them along if there
-were any.
-
-"I cut loose," said Oleson; "rubbed the lashings on a broken bottle
-they left on deck near me. They've knocked a few holes in her, and
-it's up to us to stop them up before the schooner sinks. She's on
-fire forward--whole barrel of oil poured over her decks and lit up
-before----"
-
-"Looks like they have her either way, then," said Gantline. "But we'll
-try the fire first, and take a chance at her settling under us."
-
-I peeped over the rail and saw the boats--three of them--about a
-mile distant. Then Slade and I ran below aft. The two passengers had
-apparently gone with them, and the cabin was empty. Gantline, with
-Oleson and six men left alive aboard, fought the fire, and we joined
-them.
-
-Half an hour's work and we had the fire out, but it had played the
-mischief with the running gear, having burned up plenty of line that
-lay on the deck. Oleson and Slade went below forward, while Gantline
-and I went after to find where they had knocked holes in her bottom.
-
-The sound of rushing water told us the position of the leak almost
-before we reached the lower deck. They had not done much of a job,
-having cut squarely into her just below the water line, trusting to the
-fire to finish their work for them.
-
-Calling all hands, we jammed a mattress into the hole, and then passed
-a tarpaulin down on the outside. Oleson spiked planks over the wad,
-and we had a fair stopper on the place. Then we set to work to get the
-canvas on her.
-
-Yellow Dog, finding that the schooner was not burning quickly, put back
-in his boat to see what the trouble was. We were then at the gear, and
-he soon saw us. His men sent the boat along with a will, and they drew
-close aboard in a few minutes.
-
-We were now without arms, and he seemed to be satisfied that he would
-get us without trouble. It was blowing fresh, and the schooner was
-drifting bodily to leeward.
-
-We crammed the oil-soaked stuff from her decks into the donkey boiler,
-and as the fire was already burning, and steam was almost up, we
-waited, while some of us hoisted the headsails and swung her head off
-before the wind. The mizzen was swayed up, and in a few minutes the
-schooner was under good headway, sliding along at four or five knots,
-and keeping the boat at a distance.
-
-"Now, then, my hearty, we'll soon fix you," said Gantline.
-
-Between moments of desperate work we had a chance to see that the other
-boats were also coming back after us. At the present rate we were
-holding our own, and Yellow Dog stood no chance to catch us, but he
-kept on, and managed to get within a couple of hundred yards.
-
-From here he opened fire upon us with the heavy six-shooters, and we
-heard the spat of the lead in the canvas, but for ourselves we kept
-below the rail, and the power of a revolver was not enough to bother us
-exceedingly.
-
-Soon Oleson announced that we could put the halyards to the winches,
-and we sent the foresail and mainsail up in no time. Then we set the
-spanker and had all the lower canvas on her.
-
-The schooner lay well over under the pressure, and we sent her along a
-good ten knots, while we cleared up the gear and made things shipshape.
-The boats were soon black specks in the sunshine.
-
-"Now, then, let's get to work on that yellow boy right," said the old
-man.
-
-"No, don't let him get too far away from us," said Slade. "The two
-ladies are in that boat with the big Chink, and we better attend to it
-first."
-
-We hauled our wind and began reaching back, the boat with Yellow Dog
-being kept right under the jibboom end.
-
-"I reckon I'll take the wheel and you go forward, Mr. Garnett," said
-Gantline.
-
-"Will you run him down?" I asked.
-
-"Without any mistake at all--if you'll give me the course right when he
-gets in close," said the captain.
-
-"But the ladies, the passengers?" said Slade.
-
-"We'll do the best we can for them--just as well to get killed that way
-as to get away with those fellows, isn't it?"
-
-The men took to the idea at once, and we grouped close under the
-shelter of the windlass, watching the schooner run. She was going a
-full ten, and rising and falling with a rhythmic motion, her side,
-where the patch was, being almost clear of the sea.
-
-Yellow Dog saw us, and knew what we intended to do. He swung his boat
-around and pulled dead into the wind's eye, knowing that if we missed
-him we would not get a chance to strike again until we beat well up
-to windward of him. He would make it warm on deck as we came close,
-and Gantline took the precaution to place a few boards against the
-binnacle, so that he could crouch behind them when the firing began. I
-was to wave my hand which way he should steer, and he was to keep me in
-sight readily.
-
-We drew rapidly up to the boat. Yellow Dog stood up in the stern, and
-held a long, black-barreled revolver in his hand.
-
-We crouched lower, and the schooner bore down upon the boat. I waved
-my hand to starboard, and Gantline gave her a few spokes. Yellow Dog
-backed water, and the boat would have gone clear of the cutwater, but
-at that instant a heavier puff of wind heeled the schooner over, and
-she luffed to a trifle, her cutwater rising upon a swell.
-
-Then, with the downward plunge, she shored through the small boat,
-striking it fairly amidships.
-
-I was so taken up with the affair that I poked my head too far over the
-rail, and a bullet ripped my cheek open, knocking me head over heels
-with the shock.
-
-I scrambled to my feet, furious with the pain and excitement. The
-fragments of the small boat drifted alongside, the after part going to
-leeward, and dragging along the channels. I saw Slade spring upon the
-rail for an instant, and then plunge overboard.
-
-Holding my bleeding face with one hand, I ran to the forechannels, and
-saw Yellow Dog grasp the chains as they washed past. He had a mighty
-grip, and that hand hold of his was a wonder. He drew himself into the
-chains, and, without waiting, clambered up and over the rail, springing
-to the deck right in front of me as I backed away.
-
-Oleson saw him coming, and so did a seaman named Wales. The three of us
-closed on him, and dragged him down, and we rolled in the lee scuppers,
-a fighting, snarling pile of humanity, while Gantline let the wheel go,
-and ran to help us.
-
-Yellow Dog tossed the three of us off with the ease of a man throwing
-aside children, and would have taken charge in another moment, but
-Gantline, running up behind him with a handspike, swung the bar down
-with full force upon that little skullcap, and the giant Chink
-stretched out harmless. We had him trussed before the schooner had
-stopped her headway into the breeze.
-
-Then we ran to the side, and looked for Slade. He was swimming easily
-about a hundred yards astern, holding the form of Miss Aline with one
-hand, and keeping her head clear of the water. All about were the forms
-of swimming Chinamen.
-
-Quickly backing the headsails, we sent the schooner astern, drifting
-down upon the mate. I made a line fast to a life buoy, and flung it far
-out. After what seemed a long time, we finally had the mate fast to it,
-and were hauling him in. Soon he was taken aboard, and Miss MacDonald
-was carried below. Then we went to work trying to pick up the Chinks.
-
-Many of these refused to come aboard, preferring to die in the sea.
-Some we caught and dragged up forcibly. We caught most of them, and
-then hauled our wind for the two boats that were now almost out of
-sight.
-
-Within a couple of hours we had the first alongside, and she
-surrendered. In it was Miss Aline's aunt, and she was passed below
-insensible. The other boat took longer to get, but we finally got
-her alongside, and the men out of her. Forty-seven Chinks stood the
-muster. We had lost ten of them and two of our men in the fracas. Miss
-MacDonald came out of her faint, and from her room, where she had
-locked herself. She fell into the arms of her niece.
-
-"Oh, the brave men, those romantic sailors, those heroes!" she cried,
-in an ecstasy of joy, and she gave me a look worth millions.
-
-"Hush!" said Miss Aline. "Perhaps if those heroes had been a little
-more gentle there would have been no trouble--but I am glad we are
-saved. Mr. Slade risked his life for me."
-
-The Kanaka cook crawled from the lower hold, where he had hidden at
-the first outcry, and the stewardess came from the lazaret. We came
-into Honolulu that evening with the police flag flying, and turned the
-big Chink over to the authorities for treatment. His lieutenant of the
-walrus mustaches was missing.
-
-Miss Aline came on deck to look around. She saw Slade, and went to him.
-What she said to him was none of my business, but Slade was a good man
-and a good mate. Afterward she came to the mizzen where I stood like a
-bandaged soldier.
-
-"I suppose you'll not make the rest of the voyage with us?" I asked.
-
-"Why not?" she asked.
-
-"Oh--er--I don't know; maybe you don't care so much for the heathen.
-Brotherly love and kindness--fine theory, all right, but we're not just
-ready to put it in practice--willing to wait, you know, until it comes
-our way--perhaps a bit afraid----"
-
-"You are very much mistaken, sir," she broke in. "You will find out
-your error, too, I think, before we get through. I am firmly convinced
-that your own actions with that poor heathen are as much at fault as
-his, and that if you had not treated him so roughly he would never have
-done what he did."
-
-I grinned. I couldn't help it. Slade was winking at me from the door
-of the forward house. Oh, well, here was a good woman gone wrong in
-her theories, and I would not be insolent enough to disagree with her.
-I let it go at that. I was willing to wait until she had finished the
-voyage--for Slade's sake. He was a sly dog, that Slade.
-
-We found about two thousand dollars of the money taken among the men
-captured. The rest was a total loss, and Gantline bemoaned his fate, as
-it fell upon him to a certain extent.
-
-We cleared, leaving the big Chinaman to stand trial with two others as
-accessories, and the police absolved me absolutely from all blame in
-the matter.
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-
-"No loafing around the ship," I called to the little yellow chap who
-was sitting near the spring line which held the schooner _Tanner_ to
-the wharf at Honolulu. The man paid not the slightest attention to me.
-
-"Hey, there, sonny! Move out! Beat it; make a getaway, you savvy?" I
-bawled in a louder tone.
-
-Then he arose, and instead of a young fellow I was amazed to find him
-at least ten years older than myself--and I had been a ship's officer
-some years. He walked slowly to the vessel's side, and gazed up at me
-where I stood near the break of the poop, holding to a backstay.
-
-She was a modern, short-poop schooner. The sallow little man was not
-a Chinaman, nor of Kanaka breed, but a full-blooded Japanese. He was
-stout, strong, yellow of skin, and his black hair was too long for his
-country's custom, sticking out from under the rim of a brown derby that
-had seen its best days. His eyes were slitlike, keen little eyes, but
-there was nothing repulsive in them. They attracted me. For one thing,
-he had an open frankness, an honest and fearless look, and his face was
-sad.
-
-"What you doin' on the dock, Togi?" I asked, eying him humorously.
-
-"If your august presence will listen, I'll tell you," he answered
-easily.
-
-"Sure, Michael, let her go, and don't mind my gigantic--er--august
-self," I sniggered.
-
-"In the first place," he said, "I'm not sonny, being, if your honorable
-temper allows, a man of forty. If fine schooner says so, I go with
-you as far as Tokyo. There I am the humble cousin of the Honorable
-Baron Komuri, son of a Samurai, under the former emperor. I should
-like indeed to sail with you, and will----" Here he stopped a moment,
-hesitating.
-
-"Go on, king, old man; don't let anything stop you from telling your
-yarn. Sing it out, and I'll listen if it breaks a bone."
-
-"No, no; not king, old man; just Mister Komuri--if your presence allows
-me to correct. Your humble servant is but a plain man. Better be plain
-man than dead lion, as your excellent books say. I accept plain man,
-and go that way if so ship says."
-
-"We are not going to Tokyo, but if you see the skipper he'll take you
-clear to Manila for a hundred or two yen. You savvy him yen. Must pay,
-you know."
-
-"Ah, that is of what I wish to tell your honorable self. Allow me to
-make myself so humble to tell I have not the yen you ask. I have not
-anything----"
-
-"Nothing doing, kiddo; on your way," I said remorselessly.
-
-"But I sit on dock end waiting----"
-
-"Waiting for what?"
-
-"Waiting for two hundred yen to fly up and knock me dead. I wait and no
-yen fly up to strike me on the cranium. Now I go with fine ship, and
-work like plain man."
-
-"You have a sense of humor, king," said I, "and sink me if I don't try
-to get you a job wrastling the dishes aft. How about it? Can you sling
-the pots--are you a number-one pot-wrastler?"
-
-"I never wrastle; a little jujutsu sometimes when necessary for take
-care, but I work at anything your august self tells. If honorable
-commander tells me to wrastle pots, I try him so. I pretty good with
-sword or short knife----"
-
-"Not so fast, king; this isn't a man-of-war; no fighting here. All the
-fracasing done here is done by my august self and the other mate, Mr.
-Bill Slade, both, as you say, honorable men, and some hustlers when it
-comes right down to handling cloth in a blow. What I want--honorable
-ship wants--is a man to give the eats aft--savvy? Bring in the hash
-from honorable cook in galley--see? Set dish on table, wash dish off
-table. You know."
-
-"But I am soldier--son of Samurai. I do not like dishwork; but if no
-other way, I do mean work to get to Tokyo," he said sadly.
-
-"You're on," I hastened to say. "You're on, king, but in the future you
-will be known as Koko. Savvy?"
-
-"As Mister Komuri," he interrupted, with a look from those slits of
-eyes that called my attention.
-
-"No misters aboard here but my honorable self and mate. Rules of
-honorable ship, you know. Sorry, but august skipper has discipline,
-and you are soldier. You savvy? We'll compromise on Komuri. How's
-that--just plain Komuri, steward, hash boy, hey?"
-
-"Your august self, yes; to common men, Mister Komuri, yes."
-
-"Get aboard, then," I said. "Go forward to the galley. The cook--that
-big Kanaka there--he'll give you the line. In the meantime I'll square
-it with the boss."
-
-Mister Komuri sprang over the rail, and made his way as directed. It
-was easy to see that he had been in ships before, as what Japanese
-hasn't, since they are a race of seamen.
-
-Our new member took hold without further orders, and I saw him not
-again until the land was well astern, and we were on our way to Guam,
-with forty-seven chink coolies below, and two lady passengers aft.
-
-This was the second part of our run, the first being from Frisco, where
-we had shipped the coolies under the leadership of their gigantic
-foreman, who had tried to take the ship and landed in jail for his
-pains. The few thousand dollars we now carried in the safe aft was not
-worthy of anxiety in regard to protection. Our voyage promised to be
-uneventful.
-
-Among our crew were two new hands we had shipped at Honolulu to
-help run the ship, also to take care of the Chinese we carried. Our
-experience with the coolies had taught us that being short-handed was
-not either good or safe. Our arms were now ready, being, as they were,
-riot guns full of buckshot, and reliable six-shooters of heavy caliber.
-This going out with nearly half a hundred Chinks with but three men in
-a watch was all right if the Chinks were good, but we had found they
-were not to be trusted. With the leader of the uprising in jail for
-murder, and his lieutenant killed, we hoped for an easy life.
-
-We now had four men in watch, with the engineer for the ever-ready
-steam winch bunking in his engine house with banked fires and enough
-steam always ready to handle line. We were really carrying a full crew
-for a schooner, and the expense of the engine was extra, there being
-now enough men to handle her canvas easily without the aid of the
-winches.
-
-One of the new men was a strange-looking fellow, who was neither dago
-nor Dutchman. Just what he was I don't know, except that he was crafty,
-watchful, and dodged all work possible. He had a way of looking at you
-with eyes that seemed to fathom your inmost thoughts, an affected way
-of appearing to understand, and his peculiar silences gave support to
-the look. It deceived the old man.
-
-It deceived both Slade and myself at first, but afterward we grew more
-discerning, peered deeper into his meaning, and saw--nothing. He was
-just a petty, crafty sea lawyer who was looking for trouble to carry
-back to the coast, where they love to get masters and mates mixed up in
-courts for some violation of the shipping articles.
-
-This fellow's name was Dodd--Alfred Dodd--and he was called Alf by his
-shipmates. Komuri seemed to sense danger the moment he jostled the
-seaman in the gangway the first day out. I heard the row from the deck,
-and it was short.
-
-"Hey, Jack," yelled Dodd to the regular steward we had signed on in
-Frisco, "Jack, you seem to belong to the nobility now--can't hand a man
-a pot of coffee during the mid-watch no more, hey? Let the king do it."
-
-"Not king; just plain Mister Komuri," purred our little helper, as he
-grinned.
-
-"What's the matter?" asked Dodd. "Don't four-flush at your title, hey?"
-
-"Aw, give us rest," said Jack, who was good-natured and liked the
-little yellow man, for Komuri did all his work now, and there was no
-comeback.
-
-"I don't know if honorable sailor means wrong by four-flush," said
-Komuri quietly, "but if he does the finger of Fate will point at him."
-
-"Wow! Fate will point at me! What der you think o' that?" sneered Dodd.
-"Let's hope you ain't Fate, sonny, or I might p'int my own fair hand at
-you in return."
-
-"If honorable seaman will step out to the fore end of ship I'll show
-him just what a son of Samurai means. It will take short time."
-
-"Sure, king; I'll go you that explanation, all right. Come right along
-while the watch are getting their whack. No one will notice us."
-
-Komuri jumped like a tiger without warning. He sprang upon the fellow,
-and had a strangle hold of his wrist, and twisted over his neck until
-I thought he was getting killed. I had to stop laughing to run up and
-stop the fracas. Dodd was sweating with pain, and cursing furiously,
-absolutely helpless. It was so quickly done that I wondered at it. Of
-course, a strong man might grab the small fellow and jerk him out of
-his shoes, but that was not Dodd.
-
-"Drop it!" I commanded, and the second steward let go at once, smiling.
-"Now, get below, and quit this fooling," said I, and the sailor waited
-for no further orders. "You can show me some of your tricks, you
-Japanese juggler, when we have more time," I said to the little man.
-"You interest me considerable. Get to the hash, and don't waste time
-with a fool like that."
-
-Of course, it might be expected that a man of Komuri's parts would be
-gallant, for it seems always the case when a man is able and unafraid
-that he is sure to love with more passion than discernment. Komuri was
-not an exception.
-
-Not being at the first table with the passengers, I had small
-opportunity to see how he treated Miss MacDonald, but from what Slade
-told me I was concerned. The small chap was always in attendance upon
-the ladies when they were on deck. He was politeness itself, and he
-busied himself with all kinds of little efforts to make them more
-comfortable than they were.
-
-"If honorable ladies will allow, I fix the rugs in chairs," he would
-say, and although the weather was tropical, a rug made a softer seat
-when they took the air on deck, which they did nearly all daytime while
-we ran our westing down beneath the tropic of Cancer.
-
-With a good full month or six weeks before us, and a fair wind on the
-starboard quarter all the time, we had a stretch of water to cross
-that put one in mind of steamers. The ship ran steadily day and night
-at about from eight to ten knots an hour. We seldom touched a sheet
-or halyard except to set it up, and the gentle heeling with the trade
-swell made the voyage seem like a yachting trip.
-
-Komuri had much time to devote to the comfort of the ladies, and the
-elder one seemed to like him very much indeed. He told them stories of
-the warlike Samurai, and honor and self-respect stood out plainly in
-them all. It was not a bad thing, except that he always seemed to be
-something of a hero, and no steward either second or first should be
-such a thing where there are seamen around waiting for the job.
-
-"I have always believed that you heathen were very able people," said
-Miss Aline, "and if you were treated properly you would be just as
-gentle and tractable as the European races."
-
-"Heathen," said Komuri calmly, "are those who do not accept your own
-honorable views. Who knows which is right? It is a word we never use in
-Japan."
-
-She looked at him a moment, and said: "You are quite incorrigible. I
-hope you are not really bad, after all."
-
-"Honorable lady must see by how I do--not how I talk; she judge humble
-self most true. Her heart right," said the Japanese, which I thought
-was going some for a second steward, especially when I remembered how
-Slade stood, or wished to stand, in a certain quarter. I thought it
-best to let the humble steward see he was going far enough.
-
-"Say, king, old man," I interrupted, "Jack wants you to get busy with
-the potatoes for dinner. He's waiting for the peelings."
-
-Komuri nodded to me respectfully.
-
-"At once, august mate, I go," he said, and went.
-
-"Quite a superior steward, that Japanese boy," said the elder lady to
-me.
-
-"Oh, he's a wonder, all right," I assented; "but his place is in the
-galley, and not on the quarter-deck--if I may be allowed to speak of
-it."
-
-"And I do hope you will treat him kindly--not as you did the Chinese
-man who went bad," said Miss Aline.
-
-"No fear of it--not the king. He wouldn't stand roughing--and don't
-call for it. You see, while he goes with the Chinks altogether too much
-for their own good, and talks altogether too much for his own, he is
-not a Chinaman. Oh, no; he is far removed from the coolie Chinks, as
-far as the skipper himself. He's just a plain little fighting man, that
-a good-sized mate like myself could bite in two; but I know him--just
-what he'd do."
-
-"Why, what?" asked Miss Aline.
-
-"I'd hate to tell you," I grinned.
-
-"You may be a good seaman, but you're somewhat stupid," said Miss
-Aline, and I laughed outright at her humor.
-
-"What do you think of this fine weather?" asked her aunt to change the
-conversation.
-
-"It's good as it goes, but it's the hurricane season, and we can't
-count on it lasting all the way, you know," I said. "Maybe we'll hook
-right into a typhoon before----"
-
-"Oh, you always want something rough, something bad," put in Miss
-Aline. "I never saw such a man. Why do you always look for trouble?
-Don't you find it often enough without hunting it always?"
-
-"Sure as eggs," I said; "but I'm only telling you what I believe, what
-the signs show me. I'm not trying to frighten you at all."
-
-"I think you are perfectly horrid," said the young woman.
-
-"I hope I'm wrong, at least," I answered. But as I scanned the perfect
-sky I felt that indeed I was trespassing upon the feelings of the
-passengers too much, in spite of the fact that I had a mercury glass to
-observe in Slade's room.
-
-The coolies came on deck in the daytime now, and sat in rows along the
-waterways, eating their rice and chewing some sort of stuff to fill in
-the interval between meals. They chattered a lot, and appeared not to
-feel abashed at their former behavior.
-
-At these times the old man would come on deck--it being about the time
-he'd take the noon sight--and gaze down at them dismally. He hated
-Chinks, and their presence in his ship was more than he could get used
-to.
-
-"What good are Chinks, anyway?" he would say.
-
-"Somebody's got to do the work in hot countries, and you can't always
-get the blacks. They are just like mules, carabao buffalo, or jacks.
-They'll work on ten cents a day and get fat; they don't know any
-better," I'd tell him.
-
-But he would shake his old, shaggy head and mutter:
-
-"What good, what good, anyway?"
-
-As a matter of fact, they did no harm aboard besides befouling the air
-of the alleyways with their eternal opium smoking. They had nothing at
-all to do with the men forward, and the only person who appeared to
-be able to hold intercourse with them was Komuri. He understood their
-lingo or singsong way of telling it, and he would talk to them for
-hours during the evening after the supper things were washed up, and
-Jack, the steward, had turned in.
-
-I was a bit suspicious of this, for I don't like men of the after
-guard to be intimate with either the crew or the passengers. It starts
-something before long, and the voyage across the Pacific is a long one
-if nothing else. Slade commented upon the Japanese often, and he rather
-disliked our little second steward for his untiring efforts in behalf
-of the ladies. Slade was a jealous man, although he was a seaman from
-clew to earing, and his attentions to Miss Aline were more and more
-marked as the schooner sped on her course.
-
-"Why shouldn't I get married?" he used to say to me when we had a
-chance to be together, which was seldom enough. "Why shouldn't I get a
-wife, and take up the simple life of the farmer? I've been through all
-the hardness of seagoing, and I'm tired of it. What is a man, after
-all, if he sticks to it? He gets to be a skipper of some blamed hooker
-that'll make him a couple of thousand a year when he is too old to
-enjoy spending it. Then he loses her, maybe, and then where is he? A
-fit subject, for the sailors' home. No, I'm going to marry that woman
-and get a berth ashore. You watch me."
-
-Of course, I encouraged him all I thought necessary. I even grinned
-at times when I thought of the picture he would make as a husband of a
-woman like Miss Aline MacDonald--after he had been on the beach for a
-year or two.
-
-And so we ran our westing down, and drew near the one hundred and
-sixtieth meridian to the northward of the Marshall Islands. Here the
-trade failed us for a wonder, and began to get fitful and squally. At
-times it would come with a rush, and then die away altogether, the
-squalls being accompanied by rain. A mighty swell began to heave in
-from the southeast diagonally across the trade swell, and it lumped up
-some, heaving the schooner over and rolling her down to her bearings
-when the wind failed to hold her.
-
-The glass fell, and the air became sultry, the sun glowing like a ball
-of red copper in the hazy atmosphere. The squall clouds grew heavier,
-and when the sun shone between them it sent long rays, fan-shaped,
-through the mist.
-
-The old man came on deck, and viewed the sea with a critical eye. It
-was nearly eight bells, and Slade was on watch. I came out and watched
-them take the sun for meridian altitude--both of them sometimes did
-this together--and when the bells struck off, Slade came down from the
-poop, and joined me on the main deck.
-
-"What'd you make of the weather, old man?" he asked.
-
-"Looks dirty to me; glass falling and the hot squalls coming from that
-quarter--whew! Look at it!"
-
-As I spoke a huge roller swept under the schooner, lifting her skyward,
-and then dropping her slowly down the side. It was an enormous sea--a
-hill of water full forty feet high--and it rolled like a living
-mountain, a mighty mass that made nothing of the trade swell, and told
-of some tremendous power behind it.
-
-The sea ran swiftly, with a quick, live feeling. As sure as death there
-was awful wind somewhere in that peaceful ocean, driving with immense
-force and resistless power.
-
-Slade looked askance at the topsails. As he gazed the old man sang out
-from aft:
-
-"Clew up the topsails and roll them up snug. Put extra gaskets on them!"
-
-Then came the main and mizzen along with the outer jibs, and by the
-time the watch had their dinner we were close reefing the mizzen and
-taking the bonnet out of the foresail.
-
-Miss Aline was on deck, as the sudden motion was so extraordinary that
-to remain below meant to be seasick. Her aunt came up from a hasty
-meal, and clung to the poop rail and watched us work.
-
-"Oh, those gallant men!" she murmured to her niece. "See how they climb
-like monkeys upon that awful sail. Romantic heroes! Yes, Aline, they
-are wonderful, and the way that officer talks to them is a revelation.
-Just hear him."
-
-I was at that moment holding forth to a couple of squareheads upon
-the evident virtues of passing reef points properly, and I may have
-slipped my etiquette a bit, for my language was such that I was almost
-persuaded to follow it with action. But I had heard enough. I stopped.
-The men went on lazily, growling at the work.
-
-"Reefing a ship in a dead calm," grumbled one, "ten minutes for the
-eats, and then we'll loose these here p'ints out ag'in, and take the
-sail to the winch."
-
-I was too angry to hear more. Here was an old lady putting me queer
-with men who ought to know better than talk when they were expected to
-hurry. At least they should not criticize their officers.
-
-"Get along, you Scandaluvian sons of Haman! Get those points in lively,
-or the squall'll break before you know it--an' I'll be the rain,
-thunder, and lightning!" I roared.
-
-I refused to look at the two passengers, and went to the forward end
-of the poop, and looked down at the Chinks, who were seated in the
-waterways eating their rice and long-lick--molasses. Just what to do
-with these fellows seemed to me a problem. We could hardly lock them in
-now, and if trouble came along quickly they would be in it, right in
-the middle.
-
-The old man came from below, and gazed solemnly across the misty sea,
-and I went to him.
-
-"How about it?" he asked. "Hadn't we better house them Chinks now,
-before it's too late? They'll die of suffocation in those alleyways
-with the ports shut fast--I suppose you shut the ports in, didn't you?"
-he said.
-
-"Sure. Everything is snugged in below. Komuri saw to it. He knows how
-to talk to the Mongolians--tell them they must keep the ports shut.
-But I don't like leaving them on deck, even if it is hot enough to
-roast potatoes on the deck planks. How's the glass, sir?"
-
-"Bottom dropped out of it somehow; mercury concave and 'way down.
-There's some unusual disturbance knocking about this sea. There's
-trouble ahead--typhoon season, you know. Nothing but wind moves that
-awful swell. Look at that!"
-
-A hill of water rolled majestically onward, catching us under the
-counter, and sending us along its great, smooth crest, then dropping us
-again as we had hardly steering way under the short canvas.
-
-"I'd like to know which way it's coming--lay our course to drift out
-of it, or run, but who knows--who knows before it strikes? I wish you
-would see to the gear forward. I don't want things to get loose. And
-take charge. No, sir; don't let anything out of the way happen while
-you're on deck."
-
-I saw the old man was getting nervous. The low pressure and the
-sultriness were telling on him. He knew what was coming well enough,
-and fretted under it. It was hard waiting, even for an old seaman like
-himself. Slade came on deck, and puffed carelessly at his pipe, gazing
-about, and then going aft to chat with the ladies. He was always ready
-to cheer them up. Nothing would happen--positively nothing. There
-was no use of their getting nervous at the heavy swell. It had often
-happened before--a heavy swell and no wind, 'way out here in the middle
-of the Pacific. No telling where the storm might be, but, of course it
-wouldn't be near us--oh, no.
-
-Oleson came aft to me.
-
-"Shall I lock in the Chinks?" he asked.
-
-"Yes," I answered. "Lock 'em up, put a padlock on both doors, and see
-that they don't get loose again until this is over."
-
-Oleson went to Komuri. The Jap listened to him, and then repeated the
-order, passing the word like a seaman should, without comment. The
-Chinks followed him into their quarters in the alleyways, and Oleson
-locked the doors on the outside, putting extra padlocks on them. The
-alleyways were upon the main deck, and shut off from the lazaret by a
-bulkhead.
-
-"If honorable mate will let me open those ports inside, Chinese men
-will be able to breathe better--air very hot in there," said Komuri.
-
-"All right, king; go ahead. And if she lists over and drowns them like
-rats in a trap you'll be the man to loose them--see?" I warned him.
-
-"I'll take care them, me," said Komuri. "If honorable ship, she turns
-over, me, Komuri, will see to ports. Very hot inside there."
-
-I turned away and watched the horizon. The haze was thickening, and the
-squalls were beginning to come with more force than before. A sudden
-spurt of wind sang hoarsely in the rigging, and a drift of spray flew
-upward.
-
-The men were still at work making things snug when I heard a murmuring,
-a moaning, vast, filling the air, then dying away again. It was all
-about us, seemingly upon all sides. Then again I heard a harplike note
-of great volume. The horizon disappeared in the southeast, and the
-blue-steel bank of vapor shut off the sunlight. It grew dark and gloomy.
-
-"She's coming along all right in a few minutes," said Slade, who came
-near to me and passed on to his room. He came on deck in a couple of
-minutes, with an oilskin coat buttoned fast about him, and he sweltered
-in its heat. I still stood at the weather rigging.
-
-"Go get your rain clothes on," he said, coming to relieve me.
-
-"Nix! Let her go as it is--better wet with salt water than sweat," I
-replied.
-
-The skipper came forward. He suggested that the two passengers go
-below, and Jack, the steward, with Komuri to assist him, managed to get
-them below without protest, although it was something like ninety-six
-or seven in that saloon.
-
-A white streak spread upon the sea. The squall struck, snoring away
-with a vigor that told of more coming. The spumedrift flew over us.
-Then another, and another furious blast of wind bore down upon the
-schooner, and she lay slowly over until her rail was submerged.
-
-In five minutes the hurricane was roaring over us, and the _Tanner_ lay
-upon her beam ends while we struggled with the mizzen, and held the
-wheel hard up to throw her off, the weight of the wind holding her down
-with a giant hand.
-
-Yelling and struggling, all hands now tried to get that mizzen in. It
-was a waste of time. I saw the skipper clinging to the boom and using
-his knife upon the canvas, and did likewise. With a thundering roar the
-sail split, torn to ribbons. We could not make ourselves heard in the
-chaos of sound, but waved frantically our orders and helped as only
-good seamen can.
-
-But the _Tanner_ refused to go off. She lay flat out with her
-cross-trees in the lift of the sea, and she hung there. The
-forestaysail burst with a crack that we heard aft, and vanished as if
-it had been snow in a jet of steam. The bonneted foresail held with the
-wind roaring over the top of it, spilling away, but still keeping full
-enough to keep from slatting and bursting. It was the heaviest canvas
-and brand new, and all the time squall after squall bore upon the
-straining ship, roaring, screaming with the blast of a gun as the puffs
-came and went.
-
-That wind was like a wall of something solid. To move in it was
-enough to tax the strength. It pressed one against what was to
-leeward--pressed him, held him and bore upon him like a weight of
-something solid. To let go meant to run the risk of being blown bodily
-away into the sea.
-
-We clung along the weather rail, and hung on with both hands, watching
-the white smother fore and aft, but unable to look to windward for an
-instant against the blast. The outfly and uproar was so tremendous that
-all sounds were lost in it. I found myself near Slade and the old man,
-all three clinging to the rail, and gasping for breath. The skipper's
-gray head shone bare in the blast, and the white foam flecked it, and
-dripped from his beard, his ruddy cheeks glowing red in contrast. His
-teeth were set, and he was just holding on.
-
-For a long time we three hung there, and did nothing but try to survive
-the fury of that hurricane. The forward part of the schooner was
-blotted out, and I just remember that to leeward, where I could look,
-the surge boiled and foamed clear up to the hatch coamings.
-
-I thought of the women below, and knew they were safe for the time
-being. Then I remembered the starboard alleyway, and the ports that
-Komuri had left open to give the Chinks air. The alleyway was now
-completely submerged; the ports far below the surface of the sea, the
-Chinamen were caught there like rats in a trap.
-
-The narrow space must even now be filling up, and I thought of the poor
-coolies struggling against that door the carpenter had so securely
-locked and fastened upon them. They could never break it open, for upon
-it we had placed our safety against another uprising, and the double,
-two-inch planks bolted crossways would stand more than the weight of
-the crowd that would be able to surge against it. The alleyway could
-fill entirely without any water getting below.
-
-I grabbed Slade by the arm, and pointed at the lower deck.
-
-"The Chinks--below--can't get out!" I roared against the hurricane.
-
-Slade grinned a sickly grin and nodded. Then he ducked his head
-against the wind and bellowed back:
-
-"Can't help it--can't go there--sure death!"
-
-I fancied I could hear the outcries of the imprisoned men, but the
-deep, bass undertone of the hurricane roared away overhead and swept
-away the impression.
-
-It was sickening to think of it. Fully twenty men were in that
-alleyway, and the four eight-inch ports were letting in four streams of
-sea water, for the Chinamen would not know enough to jam them full of
-clothes or anything they could get hold of, being little better than
-animals in point of intelligence.
-
-If the schooner would only pay off she would right herself and let the
-openings come above the sea level; but she hung there dead, beaten down
-by a blast so terrific that it seemed like a solid wall of something
-heavy tearing upon her and crushing her life out. It took the breath
-away, and I found myself gasping, trying to get air to breathe, sucking
-in the flying drift and spray, and choking, holding one hand over my
-nose and mouth to keep from actually drowning in the smother.
-
-It seemed as if we had already been hove down a full hour, and I was
-tiring. The schooner held doggedly broadside in the trough of the
-sea, which was now appalling in height, and was breaking solidly over
-her high rail and upturned side. We could not last much longer in the
-dangerous position, and I began to believe we were lost. Our hatches
-were closed, and no water could get below unless something gave way,
-but it was certain something would go before long under that strain.
-
-I looked hopelessly at the man at the wheel, who had passed a lashing
-upon his waist, and was straddling the shaft, clinging to the spokes
-with desperation. I wondered if he still held the wheel hard up, but
-knew that in her present knocked-down state it would make little
-difference, for she would not steer without some headsail to swing her
-out and off that mighty sea.
-
-I crawled along the rail, fighting my way hand over hand, passing the
-skipper and gaining the edge of the poop. I yelled to Douglas, who was
-the man straddling the wheel shaft, but he only shook his head and
-ducked from the squalls.
-
-While I bawled for him to tell me what helm she carried, I was aware
-of a figure crawling from the companionway to the after cabin. It
-came creeping up just under me, up the almost perpendicular deck, and
-it looked like a big monkey until it came right into me, and then I
-recognized Komuri, our little steward.
-
-Komuri was yellow, a pasty yellow, and his wrinkled face looked old and
-haggard. He was only partly dressed, and he clawed the rail frantically
-for a hand hold. He looked the worst-scared Jap I had ever seen or
-dreamed of. He climbed close to me.
-
-"Men locked in--all die--ports open," he screeched in my ear.
-
-"I know--can't help it--door under water--no tools," I yelled in
-reply, and he howled something that ended in a screech that was
-unintelligible, for over it all sounded that deep, bass roar,
-thundering, booming, vibrating into chaos all sounds.
-
-I watched him, and he climbed past me, making his way forward with
-amazing speed, considering he was crawling along a wall which had been
-the deck. He made the break of the poop, and disappeared, going in the
-direction of the forward house, although how he ever expected to get
-there was beyond reason.
-
-Something made me follow him, and soon Slade and myself were at the
-edge of the poop, and gazing down at the partly submerged door of the
-starboard alleyway. While we looked, Komuri came climbing along the
-rail of the ship, disappearing now and then under the solid water that
-swept her, but, to our amazement, still keeping hold of the pins, and
-gaining slowly toward us.
-
-In one hand he held Oleson's ax, and he was coming toward us, coming to
-do a piece of work we had already given up as impossible.
-
-No word was spoken as Komuri struggled up to where we clung and gasped
-for breath, half drowned in the rush of water.
-
-I passed the end of a line about him after a fashion, and he dropped
-off to starboard down the steep slant, and instantly went under as a
-huge sea fell over the schooner.
-
-We held the line. Then we saw him again, and he was hacking away at the
-door, chopping at the lock and staple while he swung scrambling with
-his feet against the planks. Slade thoughtfully dropped down other
-lines, and made them fast.
-
-I could see little of what was going on. The seas were breaking over
-us now with tremendous volume, and it seemed only a question of a few
-minutes before the schooner must go down, anyhow, for she couldn't lie
-on her beam ends very long without something giving way.
-
-The work of getting at those Chinks appeared to me now a useless labor.
-We would all be where there was no caste, no coolies, in a short time.
-And yet such is the habit of a seaman, he works on against certain
-failure at times, when ordinary folk would accept the verdict and quit.
-
-I held Komuri until my arms were nearly paralyzed, and I was fainting
-with exertion and lack of air. The first thing I knew of what he had
-done was when a Chink came climbing monkey fashion up one of the lines,
-followed by another and another, their yellow faces pasty and drawn,
-and their pigtails streaming after them. They clung along the weather
-side, and lashed themselves fast to whatever they could find. I saw the
-dark figures of a couple fade away in the smother to leeward, and knew
-they had gone to where all Chinks go sooner or later, but the rest came
-up and clung for life there in the strident breath of the typhoon, and
-the booming roar drowned out even their shrieks and yelps.
-
-I tried to haul Komuri up again, but could not. I howled for Slade
-to help me, but he was separated by a row of Chinks, and couldn't
-reach me. I hammered the nearest Chinaman over the head in frantic
-desperation to make him haul line and save the little Jap, but the
-fellow only ducked the blows, which were too weak to hurt much.
-
-Komuri, exhausted, could not climb back. He could no longer help
-himself; and he was trusting to me to get him up from the white smother
-beneath that was drowning him. The madness of my weakness came over
-me. I had been a bucko mate with ready hand, and could take them by
-and large as they came from the dock to the forecastle, but here I was
-weakening, holding to a line at the end of which was the bravest little
-man I had even seen, the gamest little fighter--Komuri, son of Samurai,
-the fighting class of the Japanese.
-
-And Komuri was going to his death because I couldn't help him. On and
-on I struggled with the line, bellowing curses, but I could get little
-or no line over the pin, and I was growing surely weaker and weaker.
-
-Then I stopped, and tried to see if there was any chance to help, any
-chance to save the little hero. I saw Komuri dangling in the foam, his
-face upturned to me, and a smile upon his yellow, wrinkled visage. He
-waved feebly to me, and I knew he was signaling for me to haul him
-up--and was wondering why I didn't.
-
-"Oh, my God, you poor little devil!" I howled. "It's too bad--too bad!"
-
-A gigantic sea crashed over the schooner, a mountain of water. I passed
-the line about my waist, and snatched a turn to keep from being washed
-away. That was the last I remembered for some time.
-
-When I regained my senses I was lying on the deck, and Slade was
-dragging me by the arm toward the cabin doors. The roar of the
-hurricane still boomed over us--the wild rush of the sea--but it came
-from aft now, and I knew they had at last got her off the wind, and
-were running her either to hell or safety.
-
-Ten minutes later I was struggling up the companionway again to the
-deck, where the old man was now conning her, and watching her run
-seventeen knots an hour before a series of hurricane squalls that
-simply lifted her almost bodily out of the sea.
-
-I saw we had passed the center of the cyclone, for we had the wind
-almost directly opposite from where it was when we lay knocked down. I
-got to the shelter of the mizzen, and from there watched the men at the
-wheel hold her as she ran. Some one had loosed a bit of canvas forward,
-but it had blown away, and the ribbon streamers stretched and cracked
-until they vanished in the blast.
-
-"How'd you do it?" I yelled to Slade, who clung in the lee.
-
-"Squalls let up sudden--hit the center--she righted, and then ran off
-when we hit the other side of it!" howled the mate.
-
-"Where's Komuri?" I howled.
-
-"Don't know--must have gone to leeward. Some Chinks gone, too--you came
-near going."
-
-That was all I could get from Slade. But I knew all that was
-necessary. Komuri had gone to the port of missing ships. He had died
-as a Samurai should, facing his end fearlessly, fighting to the last
-for others in the hope to save them, the ones he had tried to help by
-giving them air and leaving their ports open when they should have
-been closed. He had known his responsibility, and had done what we had
-failed to do.
-
-There were three Chinamen missing, but our own men were safe. They had
-got under the side of the engine house, where they were protected from
-both the sea and wind. They clung there until the vessel righted, and
-then turned to with a will to save the ship.
-
-We ran the _Tanner_ all that day and the following night, keeping her
-before a mighty sea that almost overran us. She steered well once she
-got off before it, and after we got canvas on her forward she was safe
-enough. It had been a close squeak for all hands, and we breathed
-easier as she ran out of the disturbance and came again upon her
-course. A week later we ran her in behind the reef of Guam, and came to
-anchor off the town of Agana, where we were to discharge part of our
-cargo and the Chinese.
-
-In behind the barrier we ran her without further incident, and as
-the wind fell we rolled up the canvas and let her drift into fifteen
-fathoms before letting go the hook.
-
-The ladies came on deck for the first time since the typhoon, and gazed
-happily at the beautiful island crowned with green, tropical foliage--a
-welcome relief to the eye that had seen only the blue water for so
-long. They were to leave us here, and we were to go on to Manila,
-coming later to take them back upon the return voyage. It would give
-them three months on Guam.
-
-"Where is our little Jap, Kamuri--we haven't seen him for a week?"
-asked Miss Aline. "He was nice about getting our things together--we
-really must have him help us ashore."
-
-"Hasn't Slade told you?" I said.
-
-"No. What do you mean?" she asked in surprise.
-
-"Komuri is dead--lost in the typhoon--he saved the Chinks," I answered.
-
-Both women gasped their surprise.
-
-"I am so sorry!" exclaimed the younger.
-
-"And he was so good," said her aunt. "I wondered why Mr. Slade hadn't
-spoken of him before. I suppose it's because Mr. Slade feels that he is
-now to be your guardian and must protect you from all ill news--oh, I
-forgot--you hadn't heard. Yes, Mr. Slade is the man. He saved Aline's
-life, you know, and they are to be married after we get back. Strange
-he didn't tell you."
-
-I thought so, too. Slade was a sly dog--and he had used my collars,
-also, in his wooing. I was--well, I was ready to congratulate any man
-who could make up his mind to marry.
-
-But I turned away so abruptly that I thought I had to apologize to
-Slade afterward, to keep from getting in a row with him. But Slade
-understood, and squeezed my hand.
-
-"There's some of that port left over below," he said, and he led the
-way down.
-
-He filled two glasses to the brim, handing me one.
-
-"To your health--and that of Miss Aline," I said stiffly, feeling that
-there was something to say, or do.
-
-"No," said Slade slowly, thoughtfully, "to the best man."
-
-"Sure--to me, the best man at the wedding?" I said, in feigned surprise.
-
-"Oh, no," corrected the mate. "Not at all--although you are not so bad,
-old chap." He raised his eyes and looked straight into mine. "We drink
-to the best man in the ship--who was in the ship--to Komuri."
-
-And we drained our glasses.
-
-
-
-
-AT THE END OF THE DRAG-ROPE
-
-
-There were five men all told in the fishing schooner _Flying Star_.
-I had known them all well, and had been shipmate with four of them.
-Captain Johnny Sparks was a Dutchman, a "squarehead," but a good
-seaman, and he had fished on the Hatteras Banks during three bluefish
-seasons. His vessel was a Provincetown specimen--what used to be termed
-the "Gloucester fisherman" type, before the decadence of that port in
-the industry which once made it famous had ended its shipbuilding.
-
-She was a small vessel, much smaller than the modern Provincetown
-fisherman, which has a short foremast, a mainmast planted almost
-amidships, and sweeping canoe bows with overhang. No, she was of the
-old type--two sticks stuck upright in her at almost equal distances,
-marking her into three almost equal parts; a main-topmast sprung well
-forward and stayed well aft to steady the "whip" of long and continuous
-plunging into a lifting head sea. She was "chunky" in model, bows
-rather bluff, almost like a coaster, and her stern was of the old-time
-sawed-off pattern, sunk low in the water, an ugly stern for running in
-a heavy sea when the lift is quick and fast.
-
-She was not worth over two thousand dollars, but Captain Johnny owned
-half of her, and he had no criticisms to make of her behavior in heavy
-weather. With a long, straight keel and full under-body, she was an
-excellent sea craft, provided she was properly handled.
-
-I was mate of the passenger ship _Prince Alfred_ with Bill Boldwin,
-running from New York to the West Indies, and as we ran on schedule we
-often fell in with the Hatteras fishermen twice during a voyage.
-
-Johnny was fishing three miles north of the Diamond Shoal Lightship
-as we passed him on our voyage out. He stood upon his quarterdeck
-and waved to me. I was on the bridge, and bawled out I would have
-some fruit for him on the return trip. He nodded and waved his hand
-in appreciation, and his cook poked his head out of the galley and
-grinned. His boats were scattered along the shoal, all hauling up
-bluefish as fast as they could.
-
-Four other vessels from New York were on the grounds, but I recognized
-none of them. Our passengers gazed at the small boats tossing as only
-light-built dories can toss in a lively sea; and they commented on the
-fishing.
-
-As a rule, the average landsman thinks all fishing is done on the Grand
-or George's Banks. They get the idea from writers who know these waters
-well, and it never enters their heads that the northern banks are but
-a very small part of the great Atlantic fishing grounds, where the
-professional fisherman must toil to wrest his living from the salt sea.
-
-It was due to a Gloucester Yankee, though, that the great fishing
-of Campeche Bank became known. Hove-to in a vicious norther a few
-score miles off Galveston, the "cod-hauler" was driven gradually
-off shore until he was far away from the land. Suddenly from a
-fathomless gulf--he had had the perseverance to keep his lead going
-at intervals--he fetched the ground in thirty fathoms, and gradually
-shoaled his water.
-
-With a hook just above the lead, he soon began to haul up snappers, and
-he came running into port a few days later with his schooner loaded to
-her bearings with as prime fish as ever came out of the sea.
-
-Captain Johnny had fished there a year, but owing to the slowness of
-the _Flying Star_ he had given it up until the steam patrol boat had
-been put on to make the rounds and buy the fish on the grounds. It was
-Johnny who had gone into Sabine once for water when Dick Hollister was
-marshal.
-
-Hollister was a saturnine chap, who wore a heavy Colt with seven
-notches in the handle, each notch meant for some beggar he had been
-forced to perforate in the course of his strenuous career. He was
-accounted one of the most fearless and able marshals in Texas. One
-morning he visited the _Flying Star_, apparently looking for a man he
-wanted for a certain episode in horses. He swaggered about the decks
-with his Colt in full view, and caused so much interest that he
-impeded the work.
-
-Johnny spoke softly to him--he always had a soft way of speaking--and
-told him he must get ashore. The marshal turned and gazed at the little
-"squarehead" in disdain; but Captain Johnny, who was sitting on his
-hatch-combing, looked up with gentle gray eyes and pointed to the jetty.
-
-"You get avay--get oudt wid you, my friend. I don't got no time fer
-wastin' wid circus-actor mens wid funny fringes and artillery dragging
-mid dere waist belts--git!"
-
-And as the marshal didn't move, Johnny shied a coiled line at him,
-hitting him somewhat violently in the body.
-
-Instantly Hollister drew his Colt.
-
-"You blamed little shrimp! if you do that again I'll plug you," he said
-quietly, wiping the fish scales and salt water from his clothes. "Don't
-make any mistake; I'm not your friend."
-
-Captain Johnny was especially blue and sad that morning, so he gazed at
-the marshal, while his hand reached for a heavy sinker.
-
-"If you ain't my friend, fire away not; if you are mine friend, you
-shoot me, for I'm tired enough wid dis business, an' I don't vant do be
-livin' always, forever, yet. Shoot, mein dear friend, shoot--or if not
-mine friend, den take dis!"
-
-And he tossed the pound lead with such precision that it stretched
-Hollister flat upon the deck before he could take good aim to do more
-than rip the collar off Johnny's coat with his fire. When he came to,
-Johnny was bathing his head where the sinker had cut him, and pouring
-good whisky down his throat.
-
-"You are mine friend--but a poor shot--take another drink with me, and
-den go. Here's your blunderbust--you interrupts de vork on de deck--git
-oudt!"
-
-And yet there was a lot of energy in that sturdy form standing there
-upon the deck of his undermanned schooner waving his acknowledgments to
-me upon the bridge of the liner. Yes, Captain Johnny Sparks was a good
-seaman. May the deep ocean hold him gently in its eternal embrace, for
-he loved it--loved it as only a true seaman does!
-
-We made the run south, and were coming up with a full complement of
-passengers from Jamaica, when we began to notice a definite change in
-the weather. It was the hurricane season, September, and the heat was
-oppressive. The passengers lay about the decks in chairs all day and
-half the night, getting what air the ship made with her rush of fifteen
-knots an hour through the quiet sea. We ran along through the Passage,
-leaving Cape Maysi out of sight before dark, and rapidly hauling up
-under the lee of the Great Inagua Bank. Here in the smooth sea night
-fell upon the ocean, and I went on the bridge for the first watch.
-
-As I came into the pilot house to sign the order-book for my course,
-Captain Boldwin called my attention to the glass. It had fallen rapidly
-during the last few hours, and was now dangerously low.
-
-"Keep a good lookout," he said, "and call me at the first signs of a
-change." I signed the order-book, and he went below.
-
-How many times has an officer signed that order-book before even going
-on the bridge? And how many times has the said officer made an entirely
-different course from that signed for? But then steamship companies do
-not supply ships and coal for their officers to study navigation. It
-would not look well on paper. Every officer of a passenger ship is a
-licensed master, a captain; and no first-class company will ship any
-other kind of man to go on the bridge to take charge for the watch
-of four hours, for during that time the ship is absolutely under his
-command, and it is necessary that he shall be a skilled navigator,
-capable of taking the ship along just as safely should accident befall
-her commander. For this responsibility he receives from seventy-five
-to a hundred dollars per month; and half of the passengers whose lives
-he holds in the hollow of his hand for half the night look upon him as
-little better than a ship's cook!
-
-We appeared to follow the low barometer, or it to follow us, for when
-daylight came we were still running smoothly across the Atlantic with
-nothing but an oppressive heat and mugginess to warn the landsman of
-the low pressure.
-
-"There's something coming along behind us; something there astern that
-will probably make things howl," said Boldwin, as he came on deck in
-the morning.
-
-The sun was brassy in a coppery haze, but it was clear enough to get
-a good sight for longitude. I called off three good sights, took the
-note, and went below to work the longitude before breakfast. On ships
-running across the Gulf or Florida Stream from the southward, bound for
-New York or some port south of it, there is every necessity for getting
-the westing accurate. We always found that, running diagonally across
-for the Diamond Shoal Light vessel, we were set about twelve miles to
-the northeast while running at from twelve to fifteen knots. This was
-almost a regular fixed factor, but in heavy weather it was not always
-safe to run full speed inside of it.
-
-To make to the eastward of the lightship was well enough, but to fetch
-to the westward was the one thing that has always made Boldwin nervous,
-and rightly so. If he missed it going to the eastward, he would pick
-up some other landfall to the northward, if he was too far off; but if
-he missed it going to the westward in a driving gale, when it was too
-thick to see half a mile--well, we had never done so yet, and had no
-reason to pray for the experience.
-
-We were a fast liner, full of fruit and passengers, and we could not
-stop for anything on the run up. With fifty thousand bunches of bananas
-below, we must drive the ship to her destination as fast as she could
-go, and neither hurricane nor calm must stop her. The company seldom
-kept a seaman long who brought in fifty thousand bunches of ruined
-fruit, some of it twelve hands, and most of it more than eight, selling
-at retail at nearly a dollar a bunch.
-
-Two years before, Boldwin, after being hove-to for thirty-six hours
-in a gale, had brought in his ship laden with fruit he had taken under
-protest, the "yellow" being plainly in sight at the ends of more than
-half the bunches. He had docked, and a score of men had waded about
-for several days up to their hips in a mess which, once seen, causes
-all lovers of bananas to eschew that fruit forever afterward. Banana
-juice will cut the steel plates of a ship's side almost like diluted
-sulphuric acid--but they gave him another chance.
-
-It was late in the afternoon of the day we had run clear of the land,
-when the first signs of the hurricane of September 19, 1903, made its
-appearance. The swell began to roll heavily from the southeast with a
-curious cross-roll from the westward, making a peculiarly uncomfortable
-sea for a steamer running northward. It dropped away from under our
-counter, and the _Prince Alfred_ dipped her taffrail almost to the
-unruffled surface. Then she would rise upon it, and, as it lifted well
-under her underbody, she would roll to port and throw her stern so high
-that the starboard screw would race in a storm of foam at the surface,
-shaking her tremendously, and annoying the passengers who happened to
-occupy after-staterooms.
-
-When the second officer, Smith, came on duty, I made my way aft to take
-a look over things--to see that the small boats were securely lashed;
-that gratings and gear were in place, for it was evident that we were
-to have a piece of dirty weather. A large, fat, pale-faced woman poked
-her head out of window and demanded that I have the starboard engine
-stopped at once, as it was too racking on her nerves. She declared she
-had stood it as long as she could, and would lodge a complaint with
-the president of the company immediately she got ashore, if her demand
-were not complied with instantly. I started to argue the case, but she
-cut me short, exclaiming that "they never did such things on the French
-boats."
-
-All the gear was in order aft, and I had just made my way to the
-bridge, when the Captain called my attention to a haze gathering to the
-southward.
-
-"The glass is starting down again--dropped two more tenths," he said.
-"We'll run foul of something before eight bells. Looks like it was
-following the Stream along to the northward; it usually does."
-
-A heavy, blue-black bank of cloud, smooth, and swept into an immense
-semicircle over the southern horizon, but rising fast, told of the
-beginning of trouble. Half an hour later we began to feel the squalls,
-which came suddenly and with vicious spurts of fine rain.
-
-"According to old Captain Valdes," said Boldwin, "if you place your
-back to the wind, the center of the blow is to the left, or port side,
-and a bit behind you. This breeze is coming in from the east'ard good
-and quick, and it looks like we'll fetch the center straight and fair
-the way we're heading."
-
-"Would you stop her and heave her up?" I asked.
-
-"Stop her? Not as long as she'll swim. What do you think we are--a
-sand-barge? Stop a liner running on schedule with a fortune of bananas
-lying below? Get those ventilators trimmed, and put three covers on
-the after hatch and lash them fast. We'll run her. Who do you think
-would take this packet out the next voyage if he hove her to?"
-
-As it was only too evident that it would be my chance, I said nothing.
-
-The light grew dim as the gray pall of the storm quickly overspread the
-sky. The dull gray light made the sea appear queer and dark, with the
-great heave now running quickly, as though a mighty power were working
-close behind it. The tops of the breaking combers had a peculiar lift
-to them as they met the cross-swell, and the racing of the starboard
-engine became more and more violent. A terrific squall bore upon the
-ship, seemed to almost lift her bodily before it. The roar of the wind
-whirling through the heavy standing rigging told of its velocity, and
-then we waded right into the thick of it, with the _Prince Alfred_
-lurching along eighteen knots an hour over a sea which was torn into a
-white and gray world that ended, so far as our vision was concerned, a
-few fathoms from the ship's side.
-
-Boldwin was standing on the bridge, holding to the rail, and leaning to
-the blasts as though it took his whole weight to bear up against them.
-I came close to him.
-
-"Get every one ... below! Lock in ... passengers!" I caught his words
-with my ear ten inches from his mouth. "Cover ... hatches ... all fast."
-
-I knew what he meant. When the _Prince Alfred_ closed down her cargo
-there was something unusual happening. Making my way down the bridge
-steps, I got the men of the watch together. It was tough work, for the
-sea was now ugly, and we were running our weather-rail down at each
-roll, and scooping up plenty of water which she sent across her decks
-to leeward. To stand up without holding on meant to be blown bodily
-against the lee rail at the risk of going over.
-
-It was an hour before I got back to the bridge, and when I did so, the
-squalls were becoming more frequent, and more and more violent, but
-there was no shift yet. It soon grew dark--a black dark--and we tore
-along into the blackness, unable to see two fathoms ahead. As yet we
-were outside the Stream, and consequently not in the usual line of the
-coasters, which are the dread of the liner's officers, for nothing
-is so uncomfortable as the sudden raising of the dim and sometimes
-half-extinguished lights of a schooner on a thick night while tearing
-along before a gale. Having the right of way, the sailing vessel has
-nothing to do but keep her course, while the steamship, with but a
-few seconds to spare, swings quickly to pass, sometimes missing a
-catastrophe by a few feet. A poor red light on such a night cannot be
-seen twenty fathoms.
-
-Before midnight the shift began. It came from the southward--a bad
-sign, for it told plainly that we were nearing the center of the
-disturbance; and as we were heading diagonally across the path of the
-storm, we were almost certain to bring up in its dread vortex. As chief
-officer, it would have been a bit out of place for me to suggest the
-thing the ordinary seaman would do--that is, heave to and work out of
-it. Boldwin stood on his bridge and kept her going.
-
-And yet it had to come. Before daylight the sea was terrific--the
-squalls coming with furious rushes, shifting, and hurling a frightful
-sea. A huge, lifting hill of water broke high above the taffrail, and
-roared a full fathom deep over the quarter-deck. The crash shook the
-steamer through her whole frame. It was as though she had struck a
-solid rock. The white glint of the foam showed through the blackness,
-but the dull, thunderous roar drowned all other sounds.
-
-Boldwin went to the speaking tube in the pilot house, called to the
-chief engineer to stand by to heave her to and watch the engines as she
-came into the trough.
-
-"We'll have to stop her," he said; and I nodded assent.
-
-In the pilot house the clanking of the steam steering gear sounded
-dully in the deep, sonorous undertone of the gale outside.
-
-Boldwin waited but a moment, and then gave the order:
-
-"Hard over, sir!" cried the quartermaster; and the rattling clank
-of the engine sounded the signal for me to take advantage of the
-opportunity to get outside by the lee door.
-
-If it had been blowing before while we were running, it was now a blast.
-
-The _Prince Alfred_ laid down her whole five hundred feet of steel side
-into that sea, and the crash of the mighty hill that swept her shook
-her as though she had been struck amidships by the ram of a battleship.
-The forward funnel guys parted, and I had a momentary glimpse of a
-great pillar of iron going over the side to leeward. Then she began to
-head the sea, and no human could face the storm of flying water which
-swept the bridge.
-
-With heads down, gasping for breath, Boldwin and myself gripped the
-bridge rail. The flying atmosphere tore past us. We dared not loose our
-grasp for an instant, and to get back to the shelter of the pilot house
-was impossible without following the iron rail aft.
-
-After a thunderous rush of quick and vicious squalls, there was a
-sudden lull. A giant comber showed ahead, and its white and foaming
-crest lifted clear into the night. She buried her whole forward deck,
-and, as the water cleared, we could see about us. The dull snore of a
-giant sea sounded close aboard. It was uncanny, this sudden stillness,
-full of a palpitating murmur and pregnant with an ominous power.
-
-"Right in it!" gasped Boldwin. "How does she head now?"
-
-"Southeast by south," I answered. "The next squall will probably come
-from the northwest."
-
-"Well, I guess we'll swing her while it's still--Lord, what an awful
-sea!"
-
-The _Prince Alfred_ came slowly around with her engines turning at
-half speed. The high, leaping hills of water seemed to come from all
-directions at once. They fell upon her decks and shook her up a
-bit, but did no damage. Five, ten, fifteen minutes passed. A distant
-murmuring sounded over the torn sea.
-
-"Which way?" asked Boldwin nervously.
-
-A puff of cool air blew straight in our faces; we had not noted how
-sultry it was, for we were soaking wet and exhausted. The puff blew to
-a breeze. Then came a spurt of rain and a faint flash of lightning. In
-a minute we were facing furious squalls, and the _Prince Alfred_, with
-a full head of steam, had all she could do to keep steering way with
-her nose pointed straight into the blast from nor'-nor'-west.
-
-It was in the gray of the early morning, while Boldwin and I were still
-on the bridge, and the second and third officers were in charge of the
-saloons quelling the panic, that we sighted something dead ahead. The
-squalls were still whirling over us with longer intervals between, but
-with still undiminished vigor. The great sea began to show in front now
-through the dim light, and it was all the full-powered liner could do
-to hold her own head to it. To swerve to either side meant falling off
-into the dangerous trough, with the hazard of not being able to regain
-her course. Even as it was, we had to more than once slow the port or
-starboard engine to enable her to point her nose straight into the
-hurricane.
-
-Upon the crest of a giant hill of water something showed black. It was
-a momentary glimpse, but Boldwin and I saw it instantly. It was close
-aboard and, as we yelled to each other and strained our eyes ahead,
-we made out the thin line of a mast. Boldwin dropped on his hands and
-knees and was blown to the pilot-house door. I waved my hand to ease
-her to starboard a little. Just then a sea struck us heavily upon the
-starboard bow, and held her with its rush. The next moment the shape
-ahead was high upon the crest of a mighty sea, and I recognized the
-stern of a vessel outlined against the gray pall.
-
-I looked over the side. The foam was lying dead with us, showing we
-were not going ahead more than a knot or two. Boldwin saw it also, and
-knew that to slew his ship now would mean to get struck a blow in the
-side which in that sea would probably prove fatal. He thought of his
-passengers. They must be considered first. Whatever was ahead was going
-to hit us, and it was due to those we had aboard that it must strike
-us as fairly upon the stem as we could land it. God help them, we must
-save our own!
-
-We plunged headlong into the trough, and right above us upon the
-following crest rose the stern of that sailing vessel. She was plainly
-in view now; so close that I recognized the sawed-off shape of an
-old-time fishing schooner. Upon her main a bit of rag like a trysail
-showed white. She was heading the sea at the end of her sea anchor, a
-long drag-rope, and as her deck showed, I saw she had been badly swept.
-
-There was no one in sight. She was going astern fast, much faster than
-we thought, for even while Boldwin tried to edge to starboard, and did
-all he could to swing his ship without getting his head thrown off with
-the sea, the stern sank just ahead of us in the hollow of a sea, and
-our stem rose above. I leaned forward and held my breath. The _Prince
-Alfred_ fell headlong into the hollow, and just as we struck I read the
-name _Flying Star_ painted large and white right across the transom.
-
-A dull grinding thud, which shook the _Prince Alfred_ but slightly, was
-all that came to us. A sea swung the wreck to port, and as she heeled
-and settled, I saw Johnny Sparks spring from the companionway, followed
-by several men. The next instant a great comber roared over them and
-the schooner disappeared, leaving nothing above the foam to show where
-she had floated a moment before. Something caught in my throat. I shut
-my eyes, and held my head down for I don't know how long.
-
-We came into port four days later with Boldwin on the bridge, his face
-lined and haggard. Below, thirty thousand dollars' worth of bananas
-slushed about in a ghastly mess, in spite of the pens and shorings. But
-the passengers were happy. Women in gay dresses came on deck and smiled
-and chatted, and children romped and played. The captain did not look
-at me--he had not since the collision--but he spoke to me for the first
-time.
-
-"See that everything is shipshape when we dock," said he, "and then
-meet me at the company's office at four o'clock. I'll probably not take
-her out next voyage--take a lay-off for a while--understand?"
-
-
-
-
-PIRATES TWAIN
-
-
-At last I was back in the regular liners of the Prince ships. My work
-on the _Heraldine_ had been appreciated by Lord Hawkes, the manager,
-and his lordship was no piker.
-
-He refused Boldwin my company when that worthy but thirsty skipper
-asked to have me back in the old _Prince Alfred_, where a certain lady
-whom I admired greatly was stewardess.
-
-The new _Prince George_, twenty-five thousand tons and a
-twenty-two-knot vessel, was wanting a first officer, and old man Hall
-was somewhat disposed to give me "a chance," as the saying is at sea
-when an officer applies for a berth.
-
-"You may report to the captain to-morrow at the dock," said his
-lordship, and our interview was at an end. Boldwin looked sour, for I
-had been a good mate to him, and he wanted me badly, but the manager's
-word was law.
-
-I found the giant liner all that modern improvements could make her.
-From her six-hundred-foot keel to her four immense funnel tops, she was
-a beauty.
-
-It would take a week to describe her many qualities, and I must admit
-it gave me a feeling of responsibility when I stepped upon her flying
-bridge and looked her over.
-
-There I would be in command every four hours, and when I gazed over her
-immense length and breadth it seemed indeed that I must be a person of
-some small ability to hold the job.
-
-No flippant remarks here, no joking about the passengers or the
-company. It was silence and dignity.
-
-How I stood it at first is more of a wonder to me, when I look back
-at the time, than the actual work, for really a ship's officer is not
-considered a mighty position, even though he does hold the lives of a
-couple of thousand folks in his keeping during his watch on deck.
-
-But I was not too old, and had ambition, for some day I wanted to have
-a little farm of my own and raise chickens and hogs--the true ambition
-of every seaman I ever met--and I wanted to ask a certain lady to run
-the said farm for me, or rather do the cooking, which is probably the
-same thing.
-
-Our crew was shipped by the agents. Old man Hall had nothing whatever
-to do but act as overseer of the navigators, which same were myself and
-a second officer named MacFarland.
-
-Mac was a good seaman, although he had never been in sail, but had
-risen from the apprentice school of officers established by the company
-to train men for its ships--and they were of course all steam.
-
-I must admit he knew more of express ships than I, but I had ten years
-more sea duty done, and I was something of a windjammer in my time.
-This gave me the rating with the older men who had served the same way
-in the old sailing vessels.
-
-We knew each other, and could depend always upon certain things in each
-other that no school could develop the same way. I sat at the head of
-the chief officers' table, and I bought a book of table etiquette to
-get the lay of the whack just right.
-
-It taught me many things I hadn't learned in a ship's forecastle, and
-soon I was able to speak to the prosperous-looking passengers without
-feeling that my tongue was in the way of my teeth.
-
-We carried three hundred first-class--that was some when you think
-of it--and we often herded fifteen hundred to two thousand in the
-steerage. Four hundred seconds added sometimes put our total complement
-over three thousand souls, counting, of course, our crew, stokers, and
-waiters.
-
-You will realize at once the inability of a chief mate getting even the
-slightest acquaintance with hundreds of the people who used the _Prince
-George_ for transportation across the ocean, and, if I could not get
-a line on them, it was equally impossible for the pursers, pursers'
-clerks, and stewards to do so.
-
-Mr. Samuels, the head purser, had a memory that was said to be
-infallible. He said he never forgot a face. Of the million or two
-people he came in contact with during his runs, he boasted that he
-could always tell if he had ever seen one of them before.
-
-I didn't believe it, of course; but, then, pursers have a way that
-many seamen can't understand, anyhow.
-
-Being an express ship, and carrying the first-class mail, we also had
-an express safe. This was built into the body of the vessel, and was
-like the new bank safes, with solid steel doors and time locks.
-
-Two watchmen took charge, alternating night and day, and the massive
-doors were not to be opened by any one alone. In that safe we often
-carried three or four million dollars in solid gold bars or gold coin.
-
-Sometimes the banking houses of the United States shipped as much as
-two million at a time in coin. Precautions were of the modern banking
-sort, and the giant safe caused no comment.
-
-The other safes of the purser and captain were just plain, every-day
-affairs, and seldom held more than a few thousand dollars. These were
-very different from the "through" safe.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I had been in the ship four months before I noticed a man who sat at
-my table. He had made a voyage with us the first run I made, and I
-remembered him as a clergyman who had relatives abroad in Europe, but
-who was himself an American.
-
-He was a very dignified man, about fifty-five years of age, and he
-knew a great deal. I enjoyed talking to him, for he told me of many
-places and events that were most interesting. But he never at any time
-discussed religion, or even spoke of subjects relating to it.
-
-Once on his second trip over, he came to my room, and presented me
-with a box of fine Havana cigars and, although it was against custom, I
-asked him in, and he came.
-
-We smoked while I should have been sleeping, but I was not by any means
-overworked, and I rather enjoyed his society, flattered of course that
-a man of such vast experience and learning should single out the chief
-officer for a companion.
-
-But then I knew many folks looked upon a master navigator as a likely
-person to know, and was not very much surprised, setting it down to his
-good taste and discernment--for I had gone a mile or two myself in my
-day, and had seen a few things both ashore and afloat.
-
-Once I remember he talked of finance and the great gold shipments that
-were disturbing the country. He had followed the administration in its
-effort to curb a panic that was threatened, and spoke of the money we
-carried in gold coin that was for the purpose of staying a run at that
-time upon a banking house that had many foreign affiliations.
-
-"The express safe is generally full, is it not, during times like
-these?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, we carry millions every voyage now," I answered, and noticed that
-the Reverend Mr. Jackson made a peculiar grimace as if amused at the
-news.
-
-The conversation immediately drifted off to Cape Town, where the
-minister had lately spent much time, and he soon left me to my slumber
-and cigars.
-
-I noticed that he had remarkable hands, immensely strong, as though he
-had done much hard work, and afterward I wondered at a small tattoo
-mark on his wrist just beneath the edge of his cuff. He had powerful,
-hairy wrists, and the blue mark showed very indistinctly through the
-black hair, but it caused me to think of him as a strange man.
-
-I asked him about it the next day when at the table, but he made an
-evasive answer, smiling at my compliment to his strong physique.
-
-"I was something of an athlete in my younger days," he finally
-admitted, "and you must not think that because of my profession I live
-a sedentary life. I work very hard among my parishioners, and play golf
-a great deal. Of course, you, as a seaman, would hardly appreciate the
-mysteries of this manly game."
-
-"I confess that it seems rather tame," I admitted; "seems like a poor
-sort of 'shinny' we used to play in America when I was a lad."
-
-"My wife plays it also, and she is very strong and agile from the
-exercise," said Mr. Jackson; "I hope you will meet her next month when
-I return, as she will probably go to London with me."
-
-I expressed pleasure at the thought, and noticed that Doctor Jackson
-was really quite a good-looking man, and there was no reason in the
-world why he should not possess a very pretty wife.
-
-His clean-shaven face, lined, it is true, as though he had spent much
-time at physical exertion of the heavier sort, was handsome enough. A
-large, high nose, not badly shaped, set in between two steel-blue eyes,
-wide apart, and his mouth, although thin-lipped and hard-looking, was
-not ugly, and his teeth were large, even, and snow-white.
-
-Altogether he was a man of strength and character from his appearance,
-and I remembered him for his kindness--and cigars.
-
-Three weeks later, upon the return voyage, he came aboard and told me
-he would bring his wife aboard the next morning, and was just then
-seeing to his room, which was amidships, and upon the lower or main
-deck, just above the express room and over the steel safe.
-
-He asked me if I thought the noise from below would disturb them, his
-wife being a nervous woman and irritable. I knew no sounds of any
-consequence would penetrate the deck, which was steel, and assured him
-that the voyage would be most pleasant, as the time of year was fine
-upon the western ocean.
-
-The next day I was too busy to notice the couple, but when we were at
-sea and had made our departure, allowing me to go below to dinner, I
-found that Doctor Jackson and his wife were seated at my table about
-midway down the row of seats.
-
-The minister nodded to me, and his wife smiled pleasantly. Her back
-was to the ports, and the light was bad, but I saw that she was about
-thirty, and very masculine in her appearance.
-
-She had a very good complexion, rosy and healthy, but her face had a
-peculiar hardness, a settling about the corners of the mouth that boded
-ill for any one who crossed her temper. I made up my mind to feel sorry
-for the doctor. Her voice I could hear very indistinctly, but it had a
-sort of hardness, a suppressed tone of assumed smoothness which I did
-not like.
-
-At eight bells that night when the day's work allowed me to get my time
-below, I met them as I left the bridge. The doctor introduced me to
-the lady, who stood tall and commanding in the darkness. She murmured
-something indefinite, but acknowledged me without offering her hand.
-
-I believed this coldness was more cultivated than natural, but, as I
-had learned since being in express ships that ladies did, or did not
-shake hands, according to their training, I passed it up for what it
-was worth.
-
-Doctor Jackson seemed a bit annoyed at the strained feeling, but I saw
-no reason why a woman, a wife of a minister, should find much in common
-with a seaman, even if he did happen to be the chief mate of the liner.
-
-Our ways would naturally be different. Her topics of conversation would
-not fit in with mine, and I was mortally afraid of offending her by
-some sailor's slip in my tongue.
-
-I really was glad when they left me to go to my room, and I hoped that
-I would not have to entertain them any more than the rules of the
-liner's etiquette called for.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The next day the doctor informed me that his wife had succumbed to the
-rigors of the sea and the motion had made her deathly ill. I saw her no
-more, and it was the fifth day out when the steward came to my room at
-night and asked to speak to me privately.
-
-"The couple in Room Sixty-two will not allow their bed to be made up
-nor any one to enter. Doctor Jackson said to see you and it would be
-all right; but you know, sir, it's against the rules not to allow
-inspection. If you will attend to the matter, it will take the weight
-off the old man--he tried to enter, but he was told he could not, owing
-to the lady's indisposition."
-
-"Aw, they're all right," I said. "Tell the captain I know the old
-sky-pilot well, and that he's a minister who has been across twice
-before with us. I'll go down there myself to-morrow and inspect. Give
-the doctor my compliments and tell him I'm sorry the rules make the
-inspection necessary."
-
-"There's a strong smell of whisky, alcohol, sir, all the time, coming
-from the room--don't know what it can be, but I'm afraid of fire. It's
-probably some of those patent traveling stoves they use for heating
-certain medicines or something."
-
-"Well, cut it out--I'll go down in the morning--that's all," I said,
-and then I turned in and forgot all about the incident.
-
-The next day when I went below, I found the doctor and his wife waiting
-for me. The lady had her face wrapped up in towels, and the doctor was
-reading, sitting near the bed, which was a brass one, bolted to the
-deck.
-
-I excused myself, and was just on the point of leaving when I noticed
-the smell of alcohol. It was mixed with one similar to the heated odor
-of a red-hot stovepipe, burning metal.
-
-"Have any trouble with the lights?" I asked.
-
-"Oh, no, everything is all right--one of the electrics broke and made a
-little smell--no, all is as comfortable as one could wish, thank you,"
-said the doctor.
-
-"I suppose you'll go the route all the way up?" I asked.
-
-"No, we'll transship at Queenstown--there's a yacht waiting for me
-there, and we'll take her for the rest of the way to the African coast,
-by way of Gibraltar. You might help us with our luggage to-morrow--our
-little trunk is very heavy, you see." And he tried to raise one end of
-a small steamer trunk that was allowed in the room.
-
-"Oh, that will be all right--the steward will fix you up--I'll see you
-before you go," I said, turning away.
-
-"I hope so," returned the doctor, with a most peculiar intonation in
-his voice that made me look at him. But he was now turning the leaves
-of the book again, and a moan from the bed made me hesitate no longer.
-
-I left them, and sent word to the head steward to see to my friends
-getting ashore in the morning.
-
-As we entered the Channel, the passengers who were to go ashore came on
-deck. Doctor Jackson and his wife appeared at the gangway, and waited
-quietly for the boat.
-
-The lady was now wrapped up in shawls, and her face was heavily veiled.
-The clergyman himself seemed a bit nervous, but they finally went over
-the side with their luggage all right.
-
-What he had told about that steamer trunk was no joke. Two assistant
-stewards could hardly lift it.
-
-Bound with iron and stoutly strapped, it seemed as though it would
-burst of its own weight before it was placed in the lugger that
-would take it ashore or rather to the small schooner that lay a few
-miles distant and which the doctor had pointed out as the vessel he
-had chartered as a yacht to take them on their summer cruise to the
-beautiful Mediterranean.
-
-I waved my hand, and then went below to turn in, for the last night is
-always a bad one for the chief mate when making the land.
-
-"Bang, bang, bang," came blows upon my door, followed by a yell from
-without. I expected to find the ship in collision, and leaped from my
-bunk half asleep. The express messenger stood without, accompanied by
-four assistants and the steward, the purser, and the second officer.
-
-"Safe blown, sir!" yelled the messenger. "It's bloomin' well half
-empty, sir! Nearly a quarter of a million gone. Party from above--you
-knew them, the steward says!"
-
-I ran with them to Room Sixty-two, and burst in where the captain stood
-gazing at a hole in the deck. He turned to me, but said nothing. The
-rug which had been placed over the opening was thrown aside, and there
-lay a hole eighteen inches wide right in the floor.
-
-Upon the sides the charred wood told of some fierce heat to which it
-had been exposed. The heavy steel plate beneath had been melted and
-burned as if the blast of a volcano had seared it.
-
-Ragged-edged, melted, and bent lay the plate, and beneath it again
-lay the hole in the express safe right in the treasure room beneath.
-Down and through all led the seared hole. Some mighty heat had melted,
-burned, and blown away the plates of hard steel.
-
-I leaned over, and gazed down into the room where the gold had been
-packed in the short, stout boxes of the bank. It was scattered about,
-thrown all around in confusion as though the robbers had at last given
-up all hope of getting more out.
-
-They had taken all that two men could lift or carry for a few rods,
-stopping only at the limit of their endurance; and, though the amount
-was not so large as the express messenger had at first stated, it ran
-well over one hundred thousand dollars.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For a moment I stood staring from the hole to Captain Hall and back,
-too amazed to speak, while the old man looked at me keenly.
-
-"Nice little job," he commented dryly.
-
-"The doctor and his wife--do you think?" I asked. I was beginning to
-see light.
-
-"Wife, thunder! That was a young man of tremendous strength," snarled
-the express messenger. "Look how he used that electric burner--look how
-he bent and tore at the plate--he was a giant--had the current on his
-hot chisel all day--that's the smell you noticed. Probably the two
-most expert safe-crackers alive, and our outfit gave them the chance
-to work the hot knife, burn their way in where they never could have
-blown. They connected with the light--got current enough to work with,
-and covered up with the rug----"
-
-"Well, we won't waste time seeing how it was done; we'll get a move
-after them", said the old man. "Jump on deck, and blow the siren--blow
-the alarm for fire, police--set the signals----"
-
-I was gone before he had finished, and by the time the uproar was well
-under way I had time to gaze toward the little schooner the doctor had
-marked out as his yacht.
-
-She was still lying at anchor, but beyond her and about five miles
-distant lay a fishing schooner with very tall spars and a very able
-look. She was hoisting her foresail, and I could just make out that she
-was getting under way at once.
-
-I waited no longer. Jumping to the upper deck, I yelled for the crew
-of the first cutter, boat number one, and gave the signal for her men.
-They came scrambling as to the drill, and as they came I yelled to
-young Smith, the third officer, to get arms and join me.
-
-He dashed into his room, and came back with a heavy revolver. The
-express messenger came up while we were lowering away, and handed me
-another.
-
-"We'll go with you," he said.
-
-"No! No use loading her down with men," I replied; "we want to get some
-speed on her--row six oars double banked, and that'll fill her up--you
-can come, you, Smith, and myself--it won't take a ship's crew to get
-them--lower away," I called, and the boat dropped.
-
-We followed, and in less time than it takes to tell it we were going
-through the sea at seven knots an hour with the best-drilled boat in
-the ship. Three men aft armed, and that was all.
-
-It was a bright summer morning, with almost no wind, and I was certain
-that we would soon overhaul the runaways. The schooner lifted her
-anchor, and stood out to the westward and southward, and soon appeared
-to be making good headway.
-
-"By Jupiter, she's got a motor in her!" said Smith.
-
-She was going ahead, almost straight in the eye of the wind, just close
-enough to keep her sails full, and she was moving a good five knots.
-She was a good four miles distant, and we would have to do some fine
-rowing to catch her.
-
-I looked my men over, and wondered if they could stand it. They pulled
-steadily, and the boat went along swiftly, but even a heavy ship with
-an engine has a distinct advantage over oars.
-
-The schooner's motor was but an auxiliary, to be sure, but five or six
-knots under motor was something desperate to catch by rowing when we
-were so far astern.
-
-At the end of another mile I was getting anxious. Our bearings were not
-changed to any extent, and the third officer looked askance at me.
-
-"Give it to her, bullies--there's a hundred apiece if we get them," I
-said, and swung my body with the stroke of the oars. This had an effect
-upon the men. A hundred dollars was more than three months' pay.
-
-They put their weight upon the ash, and the boat fairly lifted under
-the strain. The sweat began to pour down their faces, and the wind died
-away, until the swell ran oily and smooth.
-
-"Give it to her," I cried again, as we gained a little.
-
-The two men at the bow oar swung mightily upon it. There was a sharp
-crack. The bow oar snapped off at the rowlock, and the boat eased up
-her speed, leaving two good men idle.
-
-"Great snakes!" howled Smith, and the express messenger looked at me in
-despair.
-
-"We can't catch her now," he muttered.
-
-I knew it was true. We were now dropping back, and I kept on only
-because I felt that it would not do to give up. I scanned the sea for
-signs of a boat.
-
-There were some fishing to the northward, and it was our only chance. I
-swung her around toward them.
-
-"We've got to try for one--maybe there's one with a good motor in her,"
-I said. In a quarter of an hour we were up to one boat, and saw she was
-not fit. We swept past without slowing up.
-
-"Any boat about here with a strong motor?" I asked, as we came close.
-
-A fisherman waved his hand to the northward.
-
-"Boat up there--_Seawave_--she's fast; what's the matter?" he replied.
-
-But we were gone without further words, and soon came to the boat. She
-was long and narrow, built like a seiner, only not so heavy. Two men
-sat in her with lines out I hailed them as we came up.
-
-"Want to catch that schooner out there," I yelled, pointing to the
-vessel. "Give you a hundred dollars if you land us alongside--quick."
-
-"Got the money?" asked the man who appeared to own her.
-
-We came alongside without delay, and I felt rather foolish for a
-moment. But the express messenger had the cash with him. He handed it
-over without a word, and the fisherman turned quickly to his engine.
-
-The other man pulled up the anchor at once, and in half a minute we
-were under way, with the motor roaring out its glad sound in a series
-of rapid shots that were like the discharges of a rapid-fire gun.
-
-"Take the boat and follow," I called to the men, and then Smith, the
-messenger, and myself were away in the wake of the schooner that was
-now a good five miles off and going steadily seaward. It would be a
-chase for fair.
-
-"Can you make it?" I asked the owner, who sat in his oilskins at the
-engine.
-
-"Sure t'ing we make 'em--'bout two, three hours, if the gas holds out."
-
-We were now going along at eight knots and running steadily. After
-all, there's nothing like machinery to get things done.
-
-"This is something like," said Smith. "There'll be some shooting inside
-of an hour if the signs hold."
-
-The messenger said nothing. The men of the boat had not asked a
-question. They had taken us at our word, and were doing what they could
-to put us alongside.
-
-Perhaps it would be different when we came to close quarters. We had
-better tell them what our errand was before they stopped the motor
-at the beginning of hostilities. They might take us for what we were
-after--burglars, and spoil our chance to make a catch.
-
-We drew near the schooner after two hours' chase. The land was lost
-astern, and we had run fully fifteen miles off shore.
-
-The breeze began to freshen, but not enough to give the schooner her
-full, or even half, speed. She plugged along steadily at about five
-knots, and we drew up close enough to see a man at the wheel and no one
-else on deck.
-
-Smith and the messenger told our skipper how matters stood, and the
-fisherman seemed to hardly relish the game after he knew it. There was
-certain to be trouble.
-
-"Schooner ahoy!" I yelled, as we drew near enough to hail.
-
-The man at the wheel paid no attention until I had repeated it several
-times. Then he turned and asked us what we wished in no pleasant tone.
-
-"You stop your engine and let us board," I yelled. "You have two
-robbers aboard, and we want them in the name of the law."
-
-"Who are you?" asked the man, spitting over the rail. "Go away--I don't
-know you."
-
-"Run alongside--we'll jump her," I said to the skipper. The messenger,
-Smith, and myself drew our revolvers, and stood ready as the small
-craft came up to the main channels. The schooner kept right along. We
-sprang aboard without meeting resistance, and gained the deck.
-
-"Where're your passengers? Don't fool with us," I snapped. "There's an
-old man and a young one dressed as a woman."
-
-"Oh, Doctor Jackson and the young feller--they're down below--asleep.
-What do you want with them?"
-
- * * * * *
-
-We wasted no time talking. All three jumped down the companionway and
-into the little cabin. Doctor Jackson was in a bunk, apparently fast
-asleep, and a young man, whom I instantly recognized as the "wife," lay
-reclining upon a transom.
-
-"Well, what's the row--what's up?" asked the young fellow, rising at
-the sight of three armed men.
-
-"We want you--you know what for," said the messenger quietly. "Don't
-make any trouble--we won't stand it--come right along back with us, you
-and the other fellow there."
-
-The doctor awoke, and sat up, seemingly amazed. He expostulated, was
-dumfounded at the charge, couldn't understand it--we must all be
-crazy. Two men came from forward and joined our group. It was all
-hands, just three men and two passengers--five in all to work the ship.
-
-"Stop the engine," I ordered, "and either come with us or turn the
-schooner back, and we'll go with you."
-
-They turned her around, and stood back toward the shore. On the way,
-while one of us stood guard over the two, the rest searched the
-schooner for the treasure, for the trunk. There was not a sign of gold
-anywhere aboard her.
-
-We took turns, but found nothing, leaving not a bolt hole unsearched.
-It was disheartening, and looked like we had lost, after all.
-
-"Well, what do you make of it?" I asked the messenger.
-
-"Looks like they got us right, after all," he said; "we haven't the
-slightest clew to the money, and won't get it after they once get in to
-the police. They'll buy their way out, for there's not the slightest
-evidence they did the job, although I know it was them as well as they
-themselves."
-
-"Plant it, you think?"
-
-"Sure as death, they dropped it somewhere, and they only know just
-where. They'll take a chance at going up for a spell, doing their bit,
-and then getting the cache. It's on the course out somewhere, but just
-where who knows? We're out of sight of land now, and it'll take a
-wizard to locate it on the schooner's course."
-
-"That's right enough," I asserted, "but how about trying them for a
-confession?"
-
-"Go ahead," he replied gloomily.
-
-I put it right up to the doctor. I promised him complete immunity if he
-would just tell where they had dropped that four hundred and odd pounds
-of gold.
-
-The pair simply grinned in amusement. It seemed to tickle them
-immensely.
-
-"And so you'd be a party to a felony?" asked the doctor, with great
-regret in his tone. "I didn't think that of you, captain--you surely
-disappoint me greatly. Now, if I knew where the gold lay, I should
-tell you at once, but warn you not to touch it, for I don't believe in
-mixing up with things of this sort. The men you are after must surely
-have taken the stuff on the previous voyage--or some other time----"
-
-"All right," I interrupted, "if you want it that way, you'll get it. We
-have enough evidence to send you up for twenty years at least--direct
-evidence."
-
-"I hate to hear you take on in this terrible manner, my dear captain,
-but I don't see what I can do about it. What makes you think I had
-anything to do with that gold?"
-
-It was of no use. They would not talk about it. I began to study the
-schooner's course and try to figure out where in that vast area of
-sea they could have let the stuff go overboard with the certainty of
-getting hold of it again.
-
-In a short time we met our own boat being rowed rapidly after us, and
-then we took her in tow and dismissed our motor boat, which had been
-dragging along at the main channels. The men had earned their hundred,
-and they departed, highly pleased at their luck, which represented more
-than a month's profits fishing.
-
-As our boat came alongside, we were hailed joyfully by Jim Sanders, the
-coxswain, during my absence, and he held up a long line, at the end of
-which was fastened a small buoy. The other we saw was fast to the small
-trunk.
-
-"We found it all right", said Jim. "We was rowing along fast after
-you, an' suddenly my eye catches sight o' this here float. I grabs it,
-and up comes that trunk fast to the other end in about ten fathoms of
-water. That trunk is sure some heavy, and I reckon it's got the stuff
-in it."
-
-"Very good, very good indeed," cried the messenger. "Now things look
-better."
-
-"Yes," said the third officer, "this is what we are looking for--no
-mistake."
-
-"Hoist it right on deck," I said, and a line was passed to it. It was
-all two men could do to get it aboard. When it was safe on the deck, I
-went below and saw the doctor.
-
-"We have the trunk with the gold all safe--now, what have you to say?"
-I said.
-
-"Indeed?" asked the doctor, in surprise.
-
-"Not really, say not so," remarked the younger man, in mock alarm.
-"Why, then you seem to have what you've been after, what you are
-looking for. If that is all, you better let us turn the ship about
-and continue our journey. Why didn't you say you were looking for that
-trunk?"
-
-A yell from the deck told me something was not right. I came up the
-companion, and looked out, holding my pistol ready for trouble. The
-messenger was standing at the side of the trunk. So also was Smith.
-
-Two men had just opened it, and had dumped a lot of old iron and bolts
-onto the deck, where they lay in a pile of rusty, wet junk.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For a moment I gazed in amazement at the littered deck. Then I smiled.
-
-"Do you suppose we could have made a mistake by any possible means?" I
-asked the express messenger.
-
-"Not by any chance, not a chance. This is a plant--why should they sink
-this trunk with a line and buoy to it? It proves beyond all doubt they
-have got the stuff somewhere. They dropped it, hoping we would stop and
-haul it up, and they'd gain just so much time by the device."
-
-"Then where in Davy Jones is the swag? Where could they have hidden it?"
-
-"That's for us to find out--I don't know."
-
-As we came in, a dozen boats came to meet us. The police took charge,
-and the two prisoners were ironed and taken ashore. The schooner was
-put in charge of detectives, and no one allowed aboard her.
-
-We went back to the ship in our boat, and reported the capture of the
-men, but the loss of the money. Whereat Captain Hall was so angry that
-he would not speak to me that day. I felt that I had done what I could
-and that I was not at fault.
-
-I could do no less--nor no more, for that matter. I went below, and the
-ship went on to her dock, the passengers were sent ashore, and the dull
-routine of the lay-up began.
-
-I had some time now to myself, and studied the situation carefully.
-It would be a month before the trial, and we would have made another
-voyage before then. I was served, however, with a subpoena to appear
-as a principal witness, and I put the paper away and took up the study
-of the case with vigor.
-
-The three men aboard the schooner who had acted as crew were not in the
-game. That was evident, for they proved to be just plain fishermen who
-had chartered their craft to the doctor upon an agreement made on his
-former voyage. He had planned the coup, and made the vessel ready for
-the getaway. That was certain. The men were discharged.
-
-Every portion of the schooner capable of hiding a gold piece was
-thoroughly probed. Even her masts were bored at intervals, and she was
-hauled out and her keel searched for a hollow that might contain the
-treasure. Everything that men could do was apparently done. But not a
-sign of gold.
-
-The two men, the doctor and his accomplice, were sent to trial, and had
-the best lawyer in England to defend them, a man who did not work for
-small amounts. I noted that fact and waited.
-
-They were sent up for two years each solely on the circumstantial
-evidence that they had occupied the room above the safe on that voyage
-and that if any one had committed the theft upon a former voyage it
-must necessarily have been discovered, as the safe was thoroughly
-cleaned and refilled with a new cargo of gold for that single trip.
-
-The schooner was sold at auction by the fishermen who owned her, as
-they were afraid to run her under the continual scrutiny which the
-company put upon her. She was broken up and her gear sold for junk.
-That was the end of her.
-
-It was thoroughly believed that the treasure was planted somewhere on
-the course we had taken during the chase, and many fishermen dragged
-the sea on that line in the hope of reward. But nothing came of it, and
-a year passed.
-
-The time came for the doctor and his pal to get out, for the law which
-cut the prison term to one-half for good behavior was now in force. I
-watched the papers, and tried to keep posted, but nothing was printed
-about the convicts.
-
-One day the doctor and his partner came aboard just as we were leaving,
-and spoke pleasantly to me. They had taken second class and return to
-New York. It was pure nerve, I thought, but the regulations allowed
-them the privilege, as they might not, under the "undesirable-citizen"
-act, be allowed to land in the States.
-
-They took no pains at all to hide their identity, and greeted me most
-cordially when I met them on deck the first day out. I asked them about
-their sojourn in Dartmoor, and they talked freely, telling of the
-rigors of prison life.
-
-"But it is all over now," said the doctor. "We will live our lives as
-we always have, clean, honest, without fear and without reproach. We
-were innocent, as you know."
-
-"Perhaps so--but what became of the gold?" I asked cynically.
-
-"Ah, yes, the gold," murmured the doctor. "To be sure there was some
-doubt about the--what shall I call it?--the disposition of the treasure
-that the robbers worked so hard for. That will always be a mystery."
-
-I thought differently. I had by the process of elimination long ago
-come to the conclusion that the gold never left the ship in Europe.
-
-The strange way they had taken their baggage ashore, their ostentatious
-manner of taking out the heavy trunk and lowering it over the side in
-full view of all was evidently meant for a purpose.
-
-Why had they taken so much trouble to let all see its weight? Why had
-they dragged it with them when, after all, it contained apparently
-nothing but old iron? That it was to cover up the real effort of
-disposition was growing more and more plain to me, but, then, where
-could they have planted the heavy weight of gold?
-
-They could not have dropped it in mid-ocean--that was absurd. It did
-not occur to me for a long time that the hour down the bay from New
-York out to the lightship might suffice to enable them to cut into the
-through safe, which, of course, would not be opened until the other
-side was reached.
-
-It was upon a return voyage that an incident occurred that started my
-line of research upon the American channel.
-
-I noticed that in going down the bay we were forced--owing to the great
-length of the ship--close to the Southwest Spit Buoy. The turn here
-is abrupt, and, while the tide runs swiftly, there is a certainty of
-position always for a large ship.
-
-A smaller vessel might swing well out, but a vessel of the _Prince's_
-size could not. Then the idea of the buoys marking the line at close
-intervals came to me. It was just what they would desire for marking
-their cache.
-
-They could make a note of position, and drop their swag so closely
-to an established position that there would be no trouble at all in
-picking it up, even after a year's submersion.
-
-The trunk must have carried the hot-chisel outfit, the electrical tools
-for cutting, and these the burglars had tossed into the sea at the
-first opportunity, afterward filling the trunk with junk for a blind,
-feeling sure we would think it held the treasure.
-
-I had studied the process of cutting with an electrical jimmy, the
-melting of the plates, and I soon came to the conclusion that the job
-was done, finished before the ship left soundings off Sandy Hook.
-
-The pair were seemingly not well supplied with money, and I determined
-to watch them after they got ashore. By some strange freak the
-inspectors passed them, and they disappeared in the city, leaving no
-trace.
-
-"I want a two-weeks' leave of absence," I said to the old man that
-night, "and I want it right away--I'll get the gold we lost or lose my
-job. I'll take the third mate with me. Smith knows them."
-
-There was some trouble getting officers to fill our berths on such
-short notice, but the old man had some faith in me, and let us go.
-I drew a hundred dollars in pay, and we went right to Brooklyn and
-chartered a fast and powerful launch.
-
-Then we ran over the course the ship always steered on her run out the
-main ship channel, going close to the Southwest Spit Buoy.
-
-We did not come back to town again, but remained in the boat for two
-days and nights, coming in only to get gasoline and supplies, and then
-keeping right on the run in and out to sea.
-
-It was lonesome work, and we passed many small boats daily, but none
-had the men we hoped for in them.
-
-The third evening, just about dark, we noticed a launch running for the
-red buoy at the turn of the channel near Sandy Hook. We both were much
-disguised, being rigged with false beards and uncouth clothes.
-
-In daylight no one would have recognized us thirty feet distant, and at
-night we might have talked to our best friends without detection.
-
-As we came in, running very slow, we noticed a boat with two men in her
-near the Southwest Spit Buoy. The boat had stopped, and the men were
-doing nothing. They seemed to be waiting for something.
-
-We came past, sitting well below the gunwales of our craft, but
-watching the other boat. When we came within fifty feet Smith sank
-below the coamings.
-
-"That's them all right," he whispered.
-
-I watched the pair from the corner of my eye, and headed away from the
-vicinity, keeping well down in our boat, and showing nothing but the
-back of an old battered hat.
-
-It was the doctor and his pal, and they were at work. They stood back
-and forth across the channel a few times, and one of them held a line
-towing astern. It was evident that they were dragging a grapnel over a
-certain part of the channel marked by the buoy and bearings upon Sandy
-Hook.
-
-Before we were half a mile away, they were hauling in the drag, both at
-it with all their strength, and we knew they had struck something.
-
-It was necessary to decide at once what to do. If they had the cache,
-we would find it; if they had hold of something else or were simply
-playing to throw any one off the scent, they would keep their secret.
-We decided to take the chance.
-
-I swung the launch around, and opened her up to the limit. In an
-instant we were flying toward them at fifteen miles an hour, and
-within two minutes were in hailing distance. They saw us coming, and
-hesitated. That hesitation made me sure of our game. They would not let
-go the cache unless something dangerous was about to happen, the danger
-of losing it altogether being too great. Smith jumped up, revolver in
-hand, as the launch came tearing up.
-
-"Hands up--stop that drag," he yelled. "We've got you, Doctor Jackson."
-
-A flash flicked the gloom, and a sharp "pop" sounded, followed by
-another and another. Smith dropped his gun, and fell into the bottom of
-the boat.
-
-"They got me," he gasped.
-
-Then he raised himself upon his knees and, while I headed the flying
-craft straight for them and opened fire, Smith rested his revolver upon
-the coamings, and shot the doctor through the head.
-
-Then the launch crashed into their craft, going at full speed, and her
-sharp nose cut straight in a full foot and a half before she stopped.
-
-The young man who had shot my third mate was snapping an empty gun at
-me as he went over the side into the sea. I stopped the engine, and
-jumped for him.
-
-He dived, but as he came up I hit him over the head with a boat hook
-that lay handy, and before he sank I had caught the hook into his
-collar and dragged him alongside.
-
-Then I lifted him into our boat, and as his face came close to mine I
-recognized him as the former "wife" of the doctor, the robber who had
-masqueraded as a woman and who was evidently the electrical expert of
-the pair.
-
-I passed a lashing upon him quickly, and then went to Smith. My poor
-friend and shipmate was gasping in pain, lying upon the boat's bottom.
-I examined him, and found two wounds, one through his arm and another
-through his chest, both bullets being from a high-powered automatic and
-having passed cleanly through.
-
-In a few minutes I had anchored the wreck of the launch which had
-swamped to the gunwales, and was running for the fort at the Hook,
-where I arrived fifteen minutes later, with Smith unconscious.
-
-Here I turned him over to the surgeon and, getting help from the
-officer in charge, I ran quickly back to the buoy. The dead body of the
-doctor was still lying in the swamped boat, and the men removed it.
-
-Then I got a pull upon the drag line, and was not surprised to find it
-caught to something very heavy. Three men helped me haul it in, and it
-came slowly.
-
-A bight of chain appeared upon the surface. We caught hold of this,
-and hove it in also. At each end were iron boxes weighing at least two
-hundred and fifty pounds each. In spite of our misfortunes I gave a
-yell. It was the gold at last.
-
-Young Simpson told how it was done after he had been turned over to the
-authorities. He had already been sentenced for the crime, and would
-therefore not have to suffer again, having served his term.
-
-He told glibly how they had done the job during the two hours they
-had after the treasure room was closed and the ship warping out and
-down the channel. The time had been ample, and the rest of the voyage
-was just to cover up, to throw us off the track. They had the cutting
-outfit in the trunk that had weighed so heavy, and had taken it away to
-throw overboard, which they did long before we came near them in the
-schooner.
-
-They had kept the trunk, but when they saw we were after them they
-had sunk it with a buoy, knowing that we would probably see it in the
-smooth sea and were aware of the old smuggler trick of sinking treasure
-down at the end of a fine line and small mark.
-
-Then they had decided to make no resistance, believing rightly that
-the easiest way was the best. They had taken their sentence based upon
-the circumstantial evidence in the case, and they were just about to
-get their treasure when we nabbed them. They had originally intended
-to get it in their schooner at their leisure, but we had stopped that.
-The location of the buoy at the turn of the channel marking the run to
-sea was a safe place to drop anything. It would hardly be disturbed for
-some time.
-
-The heavy, small iron boxes had been made purposely for the work, and
-the chains connecting them had been long enough to cover fifty feet, or
-cross enough space to insure picking it up without delay when dragged
-for.
-
-The old man smiled when I reported for duty, but was sad at the thought
-of our young third officer, who would be an invalid for many days.
-
-"They are going to give him the first mate's berth in the new ship to
-be out next season," said he, "and I'm mighty glad of it--he deserves
-something."
-
-"That's correct--he sure does, he worked hard, and took risks--and
-Smith is a good man anywhere, a good navigator also. But did you hear
-anything about me?" I asked.
-
-"Sure; you're to stay right on here--chief officer, but they're going
-to hand you one thousand dollars for taking one hundred and twenty-five
-from the bottom--don't that satisfy you?"
-
-"Mighty well indeed--mighty well indeed," I replied. "Shake, captain."
-
-
-
-
-THE JUDGMENT OF MEN[A]
-
-
-I had rowed in for fresh beef. The weather was cold, the water rough
-and when Wilson asked permission to go up town to get tobacco, I let
-him go and made my own way to the ship-chandler's, where we men of the
-sea usually bought our supplies and sometimes spent an hour or two
-discussing primage freights and other things pertaining to shipping.
-
-There were two big five-masters lying just outside of us in the
-channel and their masters were known to me. One of them had picked me
-up at sea from a derelict and the other was Bull Simpson, well known
-on the coast. Simpson was much given to gregariousness. Johnson was
-companionable, but quiet, and I knew they would be in Jackson's store
-that morning, for they would clear the next day.
-
-The day was in midwinter. The gloomy sky whipped by the nor'wester
-showed signs of snow. How one hates snow at sea! The nasty white stuff
-making the decks like glass, hiding everything from view. The harbor
-was white with the scrape of the cold wind, and the salt water froze
-where it struck in spray. Yes, I would go to Jackson's store. The
-shipping looked too gloomy to contemplate any longer. I thought of the
-frozen fingers handling canvas stiff as tin.
-
-The stove, a ship's bogie, was red hot in the back room. Simpson was
-there, long, lean and solemn. So was Johnson there, but he was smiling,
-smoking and so glad to be in harbor that it stuck out all over him.
-Captain Cone, master of a tramp steamer, sat near and warmed his fat
-toes, his pudgy hands red with frost.
-
-"Go back, they're all there," grinned Jackson to me, as I passed the
-desk. "Thought you'd gone to sea--sech fine wedder--for gulls--what? Go
-back an' set in, Cap; I'll come back for your order presently."
-
-"Hello, you look cool," said Johnson, smiling up at me from his chair.
-
-"Glad to see you--set in," said Simpson, making room for a chair near
-the bogie. "Shake hands with Captain Cone of the _Prince Albert_--Cone
-has a good tea-kettle for this weather--don't you wish you ran a tramp?
-Please? No, I didn't hear that last----"
-
-I bowed to the Captain. A captain of a tramp was something new to us.
-We seldom had any but sailormen in the group and British skippers
-were always looked upon as a rarity. Still they were always welcome.
-Cone stuck out his pudgy hand. I squeezed the fat fingers until he
-winced and withdrew them. I never cared for pudgy-handed seamen--just
-prejudice, a meanness, but it couldn't be helped. We can't help
-everything, we must be human, and Cone took it good-naturedly--was way
-above such things. He showed it by spitting voluminously at the bogie
-and remarking it was very cold to go to sea.
-
-Simpson didn't like it at all. He showed it, grumbled something about
-Yankees and stiff-necked folks, then subsided while I lit up and gazed
-complacently at Johnson. We talked of various things until Cone rose,
-buttoned his coat and went into the office to fill his order. Simpson
-glared at me for a moment.
-
-"What's the use of being so damned short with the Britisher? What's he
-done?" he asked.
-
-"It's what he hasn't done I object to," I answered. "Stupid, heavy
-brute----"
-
-Captain Cone came back and extended his hand. "Good-by,
-Simpson--good-by, gentlemen--hope you'll have better weather of it
-to-morrow."
-
-I noticed that he held out his left hand; it was the left hand that was
-so pudgy, so fat and soft. His right hand was gloved and the fingers of
-the glove were stiff, straight.
-
-"Good day," I said, rising, "and good luck to you." Johnson nodded also
-and the stranger withdrew, followed by Jackson who saw him to the door.
-
-"Wake up," I said to Simpson. "Don't think I meant anything, but these
-Britisher tramp skippers are the limit. High ideals! lots of feeling!
-Human as a beef and twice as heavy--after dinner. Where did he blow in
-from?"
-
-"He came in for coals to take him to Brunswick--he'll load for lumber
-there and go back home--hope he'll get a better reception than he got
-here--he's a member of the English Masters' Association; you might have
-been kind to him," said Simpson.
-
-"Was he the man they fired from the Association last month? Seems to me
-I heard of a Cone--seems like he was accused of brutality or something,
-lacks humanity--looks like it, anyway," said Johnson.
-
-"Yes, he was fired--yes--by God, he was," snapped Simpson, "and it
-was just such judgment that gets lots of good men into trouble.
-'Lacked human sentiment'--lacked human sentiment--well, that's a
-charge for you! Hell! you fellows get narrower and narrower--I
-happen to know Cone, knew him years ago--he was fired for losing the
-_Champion_--'lacked human sentiment,' bah! Oh, now you remember him,
-heh?"
-
-"Yes, we remember him--the man who lost a fine ship in collision in a
-clear night," said I, with something of a sneer. "But that wasn't the
-worst of it----"
-
-"Yes, you read the damned papers--you got a fine idea of it all,"
-snapped Simpson. The old seaman turned and spat viciously at the bogie
-as if the poor old stove, red-hot, had done him some grievous wrong.
-Then he turned scornfully to Johnson.
-
-"You remember the _Champion_? You know something about her, you ain't
-so damned stuck about yourself. I happened to be aboard of her the day
-she sailed, talking to Redding, her chief mate--Redding, that was lost
-in the _Arctic_--yes, Redding was as straight as a string--and he told
-me the details of that accident after he came from the hospital--too
-late. He was nearly a year in the insane ward from a blow that smashed
-his head, but he told me about Cone.
-
-"Yes, it was Cone who left his wife--so they said--left her, deserted
-her and the children. It was Cone who acted in every disgraceful way
-the old women tell about, Cone who raised hell and paid the devil
-wherever he went, Cone who only got command of the _Champion_ after
-pulling shares and playing the game for all it was worth--no, don't
-tell me--don't, I say--I don't want to hear about what he did. I'll
-tell you how he lost the ship, and you say you'll believe anything poor
-Redding said--so would I. If there was truth in any man it was in Dan
-Redding--poor devil."
-
-"Yes," I assented, "Redding was all right."
-
-Simpson scorned to notice me. He talked at Johnson, or rather talked
-at me through Johnson, over him, and--Simpson could talk, talk like an
-Admiralty lawyer with two noggins of rum under his ribs. Jackson came
-in and took Cone's vacated chair. He rubbed his hands. Cone had been a
-good buyer, had needed plenty of stuff--and he got it at the highest
-rates. Jackson approved of Redding also, approved of him for the sake
-of memory--Redding had always paid a full bill--never asked rake-off,
-_pourboire_, "graft," or other money from him.
-
-"You heard all that stuff about Cone, too," said Simpson, sneeringly at
-Jackson; "and I dare say you believe it like a good old woman you are,
-but I'll tell you just how he lost the ship--if you believe Redding.
-
-"They cleared at daylight, bound for St. John's--had twenty passengers
-first class and about seventy second--no steerage those days. Redding
-said the weather was hell and something worse from the time they
-dropped the land, and you men know how it is on the coast in the winter
-time. The old _Champion_ came across and poked her nose into the fog
-bank off Sable Island--bad place? Well, I reckon it is. Bad because you
-can't tell where the devil you are and can't keep any kind of reckoning
-in that current. That Sable Island bank is nearly as bad as Hatteras
-for us windjammers.
-
-"Cone slowed his ship that last morning--according to Redding--slowed
-her down to a few knots, made the passengers keep off the decks in
-order to have peace and quiet aboard. One old lady didn't like it at
-all. She insisted she had a right to go where she pleased aboard--told
-the skipper so to his face and dared him to put her below. Some of the
-other women folks followed her example--did Cone do it? Well, he just
-called his quartermaster and told him to remove the objectionable old
-women, told him to carry them below if necessary--and that square-head
-did. Yes, sir, he just picked up the leader and carried her off in his
-arms while she screamed and clawed him, calling to the men to save her
-from the brutal assault.
-
-"Oh, yes, he got a nice name for that. The passengers told how
-he acted, told how he brutally made his men remove innocent and
-unoffending females--oh, what's the use? He was a brute and they made
-it out plain--it was all published in the papers.
-
-"It was along about five o'clock and the sun must have been well along
-to the nor'west horizon, tho' of course he couldn't see it in the
-fog--that a horn blared out faintly right ahead. The man on lookout
-heard it--for it was now quiet on deck--and the siren roared out its
-reply. Then he got a faint blow right off his starboard bow, a blow as
-if from a small fishing schooner. He kept along blowing regular blasts,
-kept along very slow.
-
-"Right out of the setting sun a bit of wind seemed to make. It lifted
-the bank enough to show him a four-masted ship standing right into him
-not two hundred feet from his bow. She was heeling with the growing
-breeze and going about six knots or better with just a white bone
-across her forefoot. Cone rang off his engines.
-
-"It is in these moments, you know, that things happen. Had Cone rang
-ahead full speed like Chambers did in the old _Lawrence_, rang and
-shoved into her full swing, he would have either gone clear or cut
-out enough to give her his stern on the turn and probably not sink
-either ship. He kept to the rules by British force of habit of abiding
-by them--and, well, the _Potomack_, under three skysails and shoving
-along with four thousand tons of cargo in her, hit him fair upon the
-side while he was swinging to port. The ship's jibboom reached over
-and drove a hole through the deckhouse first, poked right through and
-ripped off his blowoff pipe, letting the steam come roaring out of
-her, and then the heavy forefoot sunk like a wedge fair in her, right
-in the wake of her engines. It was the worst possible place to get
-it--you know that--right in the wake of the engines and close enough
-to the engine-room bulkhead to smash it so it was useless. Then it
-cut, shore down under the water line, and there he was with a hole in
-him big enough to drive in a trolley car, a hole and nothing but the
-forward bulkheads to hold him up--no, he was badly hit, hit right in
-the vitals, and the roar of the steam told him plainly that the ship
-was going to be put to it to float.
-
-"Then came the usual panic.
-
-"Cone tried to stop it, tried to stem the tide of passengers. His
-officers were good, but Redding was hit on the head by a block from the
-maingaff vang and while Cone was trusting to him to take charge aft, he
-set to work forward to get the boats out in ship-shape and seamanlike
-order. His second was a new man--Billings--a blue-nose he knew nothing
-about, but a good enough fellow to take charge. He and the third
-officer stood the crowd back for a time and got the port boats over.
-
-"You see, it was smooth and there wouldn't have been much trouble, but
-the passengers had a grouch against Cone, hated him. The women thought
-him a brute and the men had heard so much from them about his private
-life, his affairs, his general rascality, they wouldn't stand it any
-longer. They rushed it and two were shot, one fell overboard and
-another was badly hurt. These were the only casualties--strange, wasn't
-it? Only passengers hurt were those who were trying to save themselves
-from the brutal and overbearing Cone.
-
-"The _Champion_ settled quickly by the head, her nose getting well
-down. This had the evil tendency of lifting her stern so high that the
-boats couldn't be handled easily. It stopped the flow of the sea to a
-certain extent, but it was too late to do anything to help that now.
-The fireroom force came up, they were literally drowned out, forced to
-quit, and the engineers came forward and told of the useless steam--not
-enough to run the pumps. Then Cone knew it was get away while he could.
-
-"Cone stood on the port side of the flying bridge, stood there and
-roared out his orders, wondering why Redding didn't respond to the work
-cut out aft. He saw no boats going over where Redding should be tending
-to them, and when the crowd finally surged forward he had to let them
-come, had to let them get into the boats there. Oh, yes, he was charged
-with not holding them back, not being able to command his ship, but
-man, he had to let them come forward, it was only the fighting ones who
-insisted in getting first places and taking charge that got hurt.
-
-"The _Potomack_ lay to and sent in her boats, sent in four big
-whaleboats and one dinghy. The water wasn't rough--any good boat would
-live a long time--and Cone let them take off his passengers as fast
-as they could. He was well scored for it afterward; they told how he
-couldn't do it himself, and if it hadn't been for the _Potomack_ he
-would have lost all his passengers.
-
-"When the _Champion_ settled Cone was still standing there on the
-bridge, standing there and he knew what it meant to him.
-
-"'You'd better go along, sir,' said Billings, 'we're going in the next
-boat.'
-
-"But Cone just looked at him for a minute, just stood there watching
-things and saw the last passenger get away.
-
-"'You hound,' the fellow yelled, 'you cowardly rascal--you insulter of
-women!'
-
-"You see, passengers get excited in such cases, get to lose their
-heads. Cone never even looked at him, never took his eyes from the
-settling ship.
-
-"The engineer force had gone, the only men left aboard were the
-quartermasters and mates. Cone spoke to Billings.
-
-"'Get Redding and the rest--get in the boat, I'll come along in a
-moment.'
-
-"The _Champion_ was settling fast now. The roar of the steam and air
-from between decks was deafening. Billings didn't quite get the words,
-but he knew he was told to go--and he went. The third officer found
-Redding lying with a broken head and dragged him to the side, lowered
-him down and started after him. Just as he did this, there was a
-ripping noise from below. It was like a tearing sort of explosion, a
-rending. Cone had disappeared from the bridge and they waited no longer
-but shoved clear. At that instant the _Champion_ surged ahead, lifted
-her stern and dropped--she was gone.
-
-"The suction whirled about, sucked the boat first one way and then
-another, bringing her right over the foundering ship. Billings saw a
-form jammed under the topmast backstay, saw a hand clutching something
-white and he reached for it as the topmast went under.
-
-"It was Cone. It was the skipper.
-
-"They hauled him into the boat and he still clutched that thing in
-his hand. He had been drawn under, been badly strangled and he was
-unconscious, but his hand hold was firm and no one took notice of what
-he held. It was the photograph of a woman.
-
-"Billings didn't know anything about him; didn't know but what
-the tales told were true--so he took the thing away from him and
-said nothing about it; but Redding knew, Redding knew after he saw
-it--months afterward when it was shown him--too late to stop the nasty
-stories--oh, yes, it was the picture of his wife.
-
-"Of course, Cone was living alone, had many affairs--so they said--and
-it would not do to drag a woman into his ugly life. He had gone into
-his room to get it--the picture--gone in to get it with that ship
-sinking under him, the unsentimental and brutal Cone--oh, well, what's
-the use?
-
-"Yes, his hand was jammed between the backstay and the mast and
-Billings just got him clear in time--funny, is it? Well, I don't know,
-some men wouldn't have been so particular over a photograph, would have
-used both their hands to fight clear with--what? But then, that's what
-you call sentiment. No, you wouldn't expect it from Cone, wouldn't
-expect to find it in a seaman with ruddy cheeks and quiet manner, soft
-and a bit fat----"
-
-"No," said Jackson, "you wouldn't expect a thing like that from Captain
-Cone--that's right."
-
-"No, you expect sentiment from the thin, poetical, big-eyed, tender
-men, the men who slush and slobber it over at all occasions. You find
-women looking for it in the tender talkers, the soft-spoken, the
-amorous--oh, hell! did you ever see a man who looked the part--what?"
-
-"I've sometimes had my doubts concerning heroes," said Johnson, "but
-they are--the real ones--generally most common-looking, most quiet and
-unassuming; but that Cone--well, he is a hard dose to swallow, and
-that's a fact."
-
-"Well, treat him decently when he comes back," said Simpson.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Some years later I met Cone at the dinner given by the Manager of the
-Southern Fruit Company to the Captains of the West India fleet who ran
-the steamers chartered under contract to fill the winter schedule.
-There were as usual many British vessels in the trade, some Norwegian
-and a few American, including myself.
-
-Cone had passed entirely out of my ken and this time I took his hand
-with the feeling that perhaps I had done the man an injustice by the
-human judgment passed upon him. He was a very old man now and his hand
-was still in a glove to hide the deformity which the accident had
-caused. He looked very much the kindly old-time shipmaster, bright
-of eye and vigorous to the last. He sat near me and remained silent
-during the opening of the somewhat formal repast. The Manager had been
-discussing some subject, for he seemed to wish to follow it at once.
-
-"A thing's either right or wrong," said the Manager didactically, as he
-looked over the gathering. He paused for the effect of his words to be
-felt. He loved platitudes, although the leading man in his business and
-a millionaire. "A thing is either right or wrong," he repeated, "and
-a man is either right or wrong. There's a difference between them as
-plain as between black and white."
-
-Captain Cone squirmed in his chair. He had listened to this sort of
-thing before from the Manager. The Company, the greatest shipping firm
-in the whole world, had paid him his salary, given him his liner and
-here was the Manager setting forth again against the manner of trusted
-employees who should know these self-evident truths. He interrupted.
-
-"In fifty-five years spent knocking about the world upon every sea,
-I've come to a different conclusion," said he quietly.
-
-It was so different from the usual applause, the applause which
-had already started and which would follow the Manager's splendid
-appreciation of the obvious. Several diners--there were twelve at the
-table--looked up quickly and wondered at the Captain.
-
-"What--what do you mean?" asked the Manager softly, amazed at the
-interruption. He had been coming to a point where he expected to
-hurl a smashing argument against the methods of some men who handled
-millions, and here he had been held up by a Captain, an employee of
-his Company. There was a silence, awkward, impressive--and the old
-seaman felt it, causing him to blush through his mahogany tan. He had
-committed himself, and he was essentially a modest man.
-
-"I don't know exactly how to explain," said the Captain slowly. "These
-questions of human analysis are so very subtle, so elusive--I am only a
-sailorman after all, and perhaps I see things differently from the view
-taken by landsmen. There is much in the point of view. But it seems
-that I am still reasonable, still logical--and I am able to perform my
-duties even though I'm seventy."
-
-He paused, passed his brown hand across his grizzled forehead, where
-the hair still hung thickly. Then he let it drop slowly down over his
-beard and his eyes seemed to have an introspective look. He spoke very
-slowly and with considerable hesitation as one not used to the ready
-flow of language, words every one of which had a meaning.
-
-"There was a small matter," he continued, "which called my attention
-to the human judgment. I don't know how to tell it, but--well, you
-remember Jones, Captain Jones, who had an interest in the oil ships?
-Yes; well, I was thinking of him.
-
-"Jones was one of the first oil carriers. That was before the Standard
-took charge. I had sailed with him as mate long before the war.
-He got a great tank ship--lost her. Then came the squeeze of the
-Consolidated, then the death of competition--and, well, Jones lost one
-thing after another. Froze out. They made him watchman at the office,
-made him night watchman, a man who had once run a ten-thousand-ton
-oiler, a man who had made them millions by his care and industry. Then
-he sank to the gutter and on forty dollars a month he tried to wrest a
-living for seven children--four of them girls. You know the old story,
-the sordid details. Jones had to take on liquor once in a while. He
-would have gone mad without a drunk at least once a month. He figured
-that it was best to get drunk than go mad, best for his family. It's
-all well enough to talk, for the chicken-souled loafers who preach
-to their flocks and then get their living through the generosity of
-silly women, to call poor Jones a drunken reprobate, a useless loafer,
-because he drank. But the red-hearted men, the men who knew him, knew
-what he was suffering, knew what weight was pulling him down. In two
-years he never bought a suit of clothes. He never spent anything
-upon himself--except at certain times he felt that he must undergo
-relaxation, must get away from himself--then he would get drunk, very
-drunk.
-
-"His wife--oh, yes, he had his wife. She knew him, knew what he had
-gone through--she saw he got enough money for rum, helped him, stinted
-herself, slaved, worked--well, she did everything a poor, high-spirited
-woman could do."
-
-Cone paused, took a drink, a mere sip, from his glass of water,
-then pushed it from him. The looks of the guests annoyed him. A
-prohibitionist from Maine glared at him and made him uncomfortable.
-There was a half-suppressed sneer upon the lips of the Manager, but he
-was a gentleman--and a host.
-
-"Yes--I was speaking of his wife," he went on. "She helped him, held
-him up with a mighty soul, a tremendous strength for a woman. All
-through the dark and gloomy life he led, sleeping in the daytime and
-wandering about the desolate offices at night, she was always ready,
-always willing to lend a hand, steadying, guiding, always sound in
-judgment and above all ready at all times to make any sacrifice for
-either him or the children--yes, she was a great woman--may the God of
-the sea hold her gently where she lies in its bosom--dead? Oh, yes,
-she died long ago. The worst of the affair came about when Jones fell
-sick. He finally broke down under the awful strain, couldn't stand
-it--no, the liquor didn't hurt him, he was used to that. It was the
-despair, the dead weight of crushed hopes, the knowledge of an old
-man unable to make good against the tide, the tide which was sweeping
-his children down to hell. The oldest girl was twenty and forced to
-work at a place where--well, never mind, it was the same old sordid
-story of a young woman staying, sticking out at a place where it was
-impossible for her to come out as she went in. Ruin, and hell for her
-afterward--convention, we call it--but what's the use? She was the old
-man's favorite, and it hit him very hard, very hard indeed.
-
-"Yes, I remember it very well. Poor old Jones, captain of a
-ten-thousand-ton ship, owner of a quarter interest in one of the
-biggest commercial enterprises in the world--six children and a wife
-starving on forty dollars a month and the seventh child--yes, it
-was pretty bad, especially bad for Jones, for he had done nothing
-to deserve his fate, nothing but fight a combination which knew no
-mercy. The relentless, implacable cruelty of corporations is well
-enough known to you gentlemen. Their laws are like the laws of
-Nature--transgress them and you must die. The laws of life are supposed
-to be just, therefore it is probable that those of some corporations
-are so likewise--I don't know. But they had smashed Jones. Crushed him
-down--yes, there he was at forty a month, trying to forget, trying to
-do something to keep his family alive, and then under the heaviest
-strain he broke one day--broke and went down."
-
-Many of the guests at the Manager's table had now resumed their
-poise. Some at the farther end resumed conversation, overlooking the
-story-teller and wondering a little at his bad form to monopolize the
-talk of the complaisant dinner humor. But some of the men nearest
-the Manager still listened and the old Captain watched them with his
-dark bright eyes, eyes which seemed to sparkle like diamonds in the
-light. They were the eyes which had pointed the way to many millions
-of dollars' worth of cargo, many thousand passengers, and they watched
-over them through many a wild and stormy night upon the bridge of his
-ship in mid-ocean where the mind has much time to ponder over the
-methods, the ethics of the commercial human.
-
-"I found him at the hospital," went on Cone. "He was shaky, but he
-fought his weakness back and went home at the end of two weeks to find
-his wife down with pneumonia and the house full of famished children."
-
-Cone stopped speaking for a moment and gazed across the table at the
-polished buffet, seeming to see something in the mirror back of it. The
-Manager looked up, saw his gaze and spoke:
-
-"I know there's lots of hardships, Captain," said he, "and I don't lay
-it all to the drink habit. Let your glass be filled--what?"
-
-"Pardon me," said the old seaman. "I am old and forgetting my
-story--I was just thinking a bit. This is not a temperance lecture at
-all--no, no, that is not what I was thinking of." And he gazed at the
-prohibitionist across the board who was fingering his napkin.
-
-"No, the thing that I was coming to is this. Jones found things in a
-desperate condition at his home. He must have money. It was an absolute
-necessity to have medical attendance at once for his wife, and he
-dreaded the free ward of the hospitals--he had gone into one once
-himself and knew what it meant. He must have money for his children."
-
-"A man might steal under those conditions without being very bad,"
-interrupted a man sitting next to him.
-
-"That isn't what he did," said the old Captain. "He met a friend on
-the street while on his way to a pawnshop--and the friend heard his
-tale. His friend was a bank messenger, at least he was carrying the
-proceeds of a ship's cargo in a bag. You see, in those days, captains
-were allowed to collect freights at certain points, being in the
-companies, and these moneys were carried aboard the ship until she
-reached her home port. Sometimes there were many thousand dollars. This
-friend had been with Jones in the old days and he knew his history.
-The money he carried was freights from an oil ship just arrived. There
-was fifteen thousand dollars of it in gold, and it was the property of
-the very corporation which had squeezed Jones and ruined him. Well,
-the friend did the obvious, did the human thing. He opened the bag
-and gave Jones just five hundred dollars in gold and then went along
-to try and fix the matter up with the firm--it required lying--that
-is bad; it required many other things which we will not discuss here,
-but they are eminently bad, bad as they can be--and by dint of lying,
-and pilfering, and--well, the friend made good the loss without ever
-getting found out--yes, a horrible example, I admit. He made good the
-five hundred and no one ever knew he was a thief. No one knows to this
-day--except--anyway, Jones saved his wife, and at the end of the money
-the friend helped him to buy into a schooner and he got command. They
-paid twenty-five per cent. in those days and he pulled out making
-enough to save the rest from abject poverty."
-
-"But you don't mean you approve of that fellow, that thief who
-appropriated other people's money, his employers' money, do you?" asked
-the Manager in amazement. "The thing for him to have done was to have
-gone to the firm and stated the case, told of the poverty of Jones,
-told how he should be helped. No human being would have refused him."
-
-"On the contrary, the friend did just those things--afterward--and
-as I said before, corporations know no laws but their own. They are
-relentless as the laws of Nature, as implacable as the laws of health.
-Go where there is cholera, get the germ into your system, and you
-will understand what I mean. No human feeling, no sympathy--nothing
-will save you but your own powers of resistance. You will necessarily
-die unless you can stand it. Most people die. And it may be right to
-have things this way--I don't know, I don't set up as a judge; I am a
-sailor. But I am human--and I don't hate my neighbor, I don't look upon
-my friend as my enemy. Perhaps I am wrong. Still the thief in this case
-suffered much. He was for years afraid of being found out. That shows
-the whole horrible futility of it all. He suffered more than Jones,
-for Jones knew from where the money came, knew it was money which by
-his judgment should have gone to him anyway. Jones refused to pay it
-back and wanted to publish the fact that he had gotten even with the
-corporation to the extent of five hundred dollars.
-
-"Of course, he didn't do it. The friend persuaded him not to, and when
-he went into the coaster he forgot to talk about it even when under the
-effects of his drinks.
-
-"You see, it was about that time the insurance troubles came about.
-Marine insurance had a tumble owing to the loss of several heavy
-ships and other matters not worth discussing now. You were badly hit
-yourself, I believe,"--and the old Captain nodded to the Manager,
-who smiled acquiescence--"you told me at the time--if I remember
-rightly--that one more vessel gone and you would go to the wall.
-
-"The friend owned shares in that schooner, owned more than half of
-her, and he it was that let her go out, made her go to sea after
-her policies ran out. He would not stop her carrying, for it meant
-laying her up and Jones would have to go ashore again until things
-straightened out. It was the hurricane season and she had to go light
-to Cuba.
-
-"I remember something of the affair, for I happened to be on the dock
-when she sailed. Jones was standing aft giving orders, and his wife,
-with her three daughters, were below in the cabin. It was a pretty
-picture of commercial life, a picture of a man doing his work with his
-family or part of it around him, and I almost envied him his place.
-What does an old liner skipper ever have of domestic life? Never gets
-home, never sees his wife but once or twice a year, and the company
-never lets her go aboard the ship at all if they can help it. Well,
-she sailed out that August day, and the next thing we heard of him was
-that his schooner was driven ashore during a gale. She rammed up on
-one of the Bahamas, Castle Rock, I believe, and then broke up. Some of
-the crew and his daughters were saved--he and his wife went down--lost
-before they could get them ashore.
-
-"And so there it is--did the men do all that was right or did they
-do all that was wrong? That's the question. Where is the line of
-demarkation, where does the wrong leave off and right begin, or how is
-the mixture to be sifted down? We go by rules, we must play according
-to rules or the game becomes chaos. But do the rules always hold, do
-they always cover every emergency? I don't know, but I believe there is
-bad, or what is called bad, in all men, also there is good--it depends
-upon the man--not the rule."
-
-There was a long pause. The Manager gazed curiously at his guest.
-
-"You say the schooner went ashore on Castle Rock?"
-
-"I said--well, it was somewhere about there, I don't know exactly,"
-replied the old seaman, annoyed.
-
-"There never was a wreck on Castle Rock that I ever heard of," said the
-Manager, eying the old Captain curiously, "but there was the _Hattie
-Davis_ that was lost on the Great Inagua Bank--she wasn't insured, I
-believe."
-
-"Yes, she was lost on the Great Inagua," assented the Captain, leaning
-back, as though the story were closed.
-
-"You had a large interest in her, I believe," said the Manager slowly,
-"and I recollect, now, you lost all in her----"
-
-"The light was not so good as it is now," quickly put in the old
-seaman. "It used to show only in clear weather--and it's almost always
-clear through the passage--I remember how the passengers used to be
-glad when we entered the passage coming up from Cuba in the old Panama
-ships--rough in the tumble off Maysi when the wind holds nor'east for
-a spell."
-
-The Manager was gazing at the old skipper strangely. Then he suddenly
-turned and started to discuss other matters with his guests. The
-dinner went along without incident and afterward we arose to go to the
-smoking-room for our cigars.
-
-"Come along with me, Cone," said the Manager, "I have a new orchid I
-picked up I want to show you; you always liked flowers, you know."
-Afterward I passed them and overheard the Manager saying in a low
-tone--"Well, you always had a hell of a reputation, Cone, anyway,
-but under the circumstances--well, there might be some sort of
-justification. You are too full of that damned sentiment for any
-business whatever. Still, I'll admit that it isn't so much what a man
-does that matters--that is, it doesn't matter so much as _how_ it is
-done--and _who_ does it."
-
-And so this was Cone? This was the master who had earned a reputation
-for some very queer things as seamen see them. I remember the old days,
-the words of poor old Simpson who had long gone to the port of missing
-ships. Sentimental Captain Cone, stout, grizzled, bronzed, the man who
-lost his hand holding to the picture of a wife who had been false to
-him and who had accused him of many things too hard to print. It was
-strange.
-
-I suddenly felt I would like to see Simpson, to acknowledge he was not
-so far wrong after all.
-
-"The judgment of man is not good," I said in answer to some question
-relative to nothing concerning Cone, and with this platitude upon my
-lips I went home.
-
-
-
-
-ON GOING TO SEA
-
-
-We sat together upon the quarter-deck under the awning of the _Harvest
-Queen_. My own ship lay in the berth opposite, and I had come over for
-a quiet smoke with Captain Large. He sailed in the morning, and was
-bound for Frisco around Cape Horn. I would not see him again for a year
-or two--probably never; but he and I had sailed together and I had been
-his mate. We talked of things, confidences, the talk of old shipmates
-who know each other very well, and who are passing to know each other
-as memories. I had shipped five apprentices, two sons of prominent men
-in the shipping circles of New York, and I wondered at the outcome.
-
-"I never take them any more," said Large. "I took one out of here a few
-years ago, and--well, I don't care to repeat the job."
-
-"But the boys are good--signed on regular--what can they do?" I asked.
-
-"I don't know, but I'll tell you what one did in the _Wildwood_ when I
-took him to China. I don't know how to explain it. The strangeness of
-it all, the peculiar development that came about under seeming natural
-causes--hereditary, you will say, and perhaps that is right I have
-often studied it over, often lain awake in my bunk wondering at it all,
-what peculiar ideas grew in a brain that was almost human--almost,
-for when you think of what he did you cannot believe he was quite so,
-even though his father was the President of the Marine Association and
-had commanded the best American ships in his day." The old skipper sat
-quiet for some minutes and seemed to be thinking, studying over some
-problem. His cigar shone like a spark in the warm night, but the smoke
-was invisible. I waited. Apprentices were new to me. I had not had much
-chance to study the training of youth. My own way had been rough. I had
-at last gotten my ship after a life of strenuous endeavor and often
-desperate effort, and I wanted to learn all I could. Men I knew. I had
-handled them by and large from every part of the globe, and discipline,
-iron discipline, was a thing my ship was noted for. She had a bad name.
-
-"You see," said Large, his deep voice booming softly in the night,
-"there is something intangible that a human being inherits from his
-forbears. We look at the successful man as a target to aim at, an
-idol we point out for youth to emulate. We don't always analyze the
-greatness. A successful man is often so from the stress he puts upon
-others. He will not stay in equilibrium. He keeps going on up, up
-beyond the place his own production entitles him. He becomes predatory,
-but unlike wolves or felines he preys upon his own kind.
-
-"When President Jackson of the Bengal Line asked me to take Willie,
-his son, I did so with the feeling that it was an honor conferred upon
-me, the captain of one of the ships. Jackson had earned his position
-by his own efforts and fought his way up to the top. I remembered him
-well enough when he was a master, but he was now President of the Line.
-He had a very sinister reputation in the old ships, but that was all
-forgotten now.
-
-"Willie came aboard looking like a physical wreck. He was a slight
-youth of fifteen, stoop-shouldered, pale of face, but with the eye
-of his father, and the peculiar settling of the corners of his mouth
-noticeable in the old man. 'Be sure you bring him back safely,' said
-his father, giving me a look I long remembered. 'Be sure you take good
-care of him--and bring him back.' I didn't quite know what he meant. I
-don't yet; but I know why he said it. I began to think of it before we
-were at sea a week.
-
-"Yes, he was only a boy, a mere lad, but he was all of his father--his
-father as we remembered him in the South Sea. Degenerate? He was the
-ablest lad of his size I ever saw. He stood right there on the main
-deck the day we went out and took little or no notice of him while the
-tug had our line. He was signed on, mind you, signed on regular, so
-as not to excite the comment of 'pull.' Hell! why do they send boys
-to sea when the shore is the place to train them? He stood there and
-saw me looking at him, thinking of the words 'be sure and bring him
-back'--yes, I would.
-
-"'Say, Cap, dis is fine. Let's put de rags on her an' let her slide.
-I wants to see her slip erlong--t'hell wid towin', says me,' and he
-came up the poop steps on the starboard side to chat with me--a thing
-no one, as you know, can do aboard a ship without a reprimand. Every
-one heard him talking to me. He yelled it out in a shrill voice--yes,
-talking to me, the captain, on the poop. 'See here, young man,' I said
-to him, 'you mustn't talk to me while I'm on deck. Go down on the main
-deck, and when you want anything, you ask the mate--he will talk with
-you or get you what you want--you understand? It's not the thing to
-ever speak to the captain of a ship without permission.'
-
-"'Aw, fergit it, cully! Don't youse make no mistake erbout me. I spoke
-fair an' civil to youse, an' if youse don't want to answer you kin go
-to hell, you stuck-up old fool! D'ye git that right?' he said shrilly.
-
-"Well, you can imagine what that sounded like to the men. Twenty of
-them were grinning and both mates aghast. I was the master, a man known
-the world over as a 'driver.' There was nothing to do but take the lad
-in hand at once.
-
-"'Take him forward and rope's-end him,' I said to Bowles, the second
-officer, a man weighing two hundred pounds and a 'bucko' of the
-strongest type. You remember him, the toughest mate afloat?
-
-"But Willie looked up at me with a sneer.
-
-"'You try it, you sea loafer. I'll sweat youse fer it if youse do. You
-ain't de whole thing aboard here. Youse don't know me, I guess.'
-
-"I had to do it. The affair had gone too far. Bowles grabbed him by
-the collar and lifted him off his feet, and he let out a scream like a
-wildcat--a most unearthly shriek. Bowles whipped him good and hard,
-tanned him so he could scarcely sit down; but he just cursed and swore
-at the officer, telling him what he'd do to him afterward. He got an
-extra lick or two for this. Bowles paid no attention, but went back to
-his station to attend lines. Half an hour later he was standing at the
-rail when I saw a form shoot out of the galley door and drive a long
-knife into his back. He sank down without a word, and Willie stood over
-him ready for the finish. The mate knocked him down with a belaying pin
-before he could kill.
-
-"It was a terrible thing, an awful state of affairs beginning within
-five minutes after the tug had let go. It was uncanny. A young boy
-doing such things aboard a ship. I would have put him ashore at
-once, but remembered the articles he had signed and the words of the
-president of the line. I hesitated and the opportunity was lost----"
-
-"I would have made another," I interrupted. "I would have sent the
-young villain to prison at once. No good could possibly happen from
-such an agreement, no good come from a horrible little devil like that."
-
-"I don't know. I don't quite know yet what to make of it all.
-According to the usual rule there could be no good from a boy who
-would deliberately commit such a crime; but we men who know life, the
-real life, know that rules are not good to follow. You know that. I've
-tried to figure it all out, but there is no answer, no accounting for
-the strangeness of character that develop under certain conditions. We
-tied Willie up while he was unconscious from the blow of the pin, and
-instead of putting Bowles ashore we endeavored to bring him around. I
-took him aft and sewed up the cut. It was an awful wound, but Bowles
-was a very strong man. It took a month before he could get about the
-deck again. We had run clear to the equator.
-
-"In the meantime Willie had had another run in, and I had him brought
-aft to have a little talk with him, to try and explain to him how a
-ship must be run, the iron discipline and the custom of the master not
-to associate with any one, either boy or man, from forward.
-
-"'Aw, cut it out, cully--cut de langwidge! It don't go none wid
-me--see? I comes aboard dis ship an' gets it in de neck de foist round.
-Den I slings inter de bloke wot does the trick--'n by rights I ought
-ter take a fall outer youse, Cap--'n I've a good mind to do it, too.
-Dem sea tricks don't go none wid me.'
-
-"'But don't you know I could hang you if I wanted to? Don't you know
-my word is law here? I am in absolute command. If you don't follow the
-rules of the ship I'll have to punish you severely.'
-
-"'Nothin' doin', Bo, nothin' doin' at all. Youse kin cut all that sort
-o' talk out when youse chins wid me--see? Say, Bo, whatcher take me
-fer, anyways? Er "come on," er what? Whatcher t'ink I am, anyways,
-hey? Go tell de little choild stories to yer gran'mother--don't
-spring dem on me, don't try to hand me nothin' funny--I'm a MAN! An'
-don't youse t'ink youse kin take de call of me, neider, Bo, fer youse
-makes a mistake mixin' it wid me! I'm a fightin' MAN--me fader'll
-tell youse dat, an' dat's why he sends me wid youse when I might
-be goin' to school. De old man is a lulu, an' I am his son, Bo, a
-son of a dog--nothin' yaller in de breed; 'n if youse t'ink you kin
-razzle-dazzle me you'll sure fall down. Youse take dat from me, Bo!
-D'youse git it straight?'
-
-"'I'll turn you loose if you'll promise to do the right thing from now
-on,' I said.
-
-"'Aw, no, Bo, I don't have to promise nothin'. Youse ain't got me right
-yet. I ain't no child. What de hell's the matter wid youse, anyhow?'
-
-"'All right, then, you'll stay locked up until the end of the voyage
-and then I'll turn you over to the police, and----'
-
-"'An' you'll pay like hell fer that 'f I does. Youse see!' he snarled.
-
-"Well, what could I do? What would you have done under the
-circumstances? The boy was not afraid. I knew his breed too well. I
-knew his father. He would not suffer the smallest infringement of what
-he believed to be his rights. He would resist to the death. He had
-gone with a gang of young ruffians and had developed a certain sense
-of what he believed to be right. He saw no law but that of absolute
-equality; and there is no such thing. He was at fault. It was absurd
-for men who ran a ship whose name was 'hard' to allow a little boy to
-take charge, a little fellow not weighing a hundred pounds. I decided
-to give him a real whipping--a whipping that would make a permanent
-mark in his memory. I hated to think of it--hated to really believe
-it was necessary, for there is nothing so horrible as whipping a
-man--and the lad was a man in his own opinion. There is absolutely
-nothing so soul-killing, so fearfully degrading. I prefer the bloodiest
-fighting always to the cold-blooded lash. I have seen men lose their
-self-respect under the degrading stroke of the lash; and a man without
-self-respect had better be dead. I studied the case and remembered his
-father. He was a small man physically--I never knew a big man make a
-good seaman; but he could take charge of a ship, no matter what kind of
-creatures were forward, and he never spoke but once in giving an order.
-The father had the same idea in regard to right and wrong--he never
-forgave one, never forgot. Yet he had been a staunch friend of mine. He
-had many friends who swore by him--and he was always to be relied upon,
-you could always count upon him no matter what the cost to himself in
-any emergency. It was his idea of duty--and he feared nothing at all.
-
-"It was just a week later on a hot day when I had gone below to work
-the noon sight that I became aware of a pair of eyes looking at me from
-the top of the companionway, and as I looked up I gazed right into
-those of Willie; but it was along the blue barrel of my own forty-five
-caliber six-shooter. The gun had always been hanging close to my bunk
-head--ready for emergencies.
-
-"'Bang!' The shot came without a second's warning. The bullet tore
-through my arm. I sprang through the bulkhead into the forward cabin
-just as the second shot ripped me across the neck. I was rushing for
-the doorway to the main deck and the third shot threw splinters in my
-face as it hit the edge of the door. Willie was coming right along
-behind me, and firing as he came--and I--well, I confess it, I was
-running for my life. I heard his yell of derision, a shrill scream----
-
-"The mate heard the firing, and as Willie came through the doorway he
-kicked him in the back and knocked him over. Then he jumped upon him
-and stamped all but the very life out of him by driving his boot-heels
-into his face."
-
-I shivered with the intensity of the tale, the horror of it all. The
-old man sat silent in the gloom and the spark of light from his cigar
-end flared and faded as he drew upon it. He was thinking of the past. I
-waited.
-
-"Well, what was I to do? I was a man, a ship master, and here I was
-with my arm shattered by a heavy bullet from a mere boy--or devil! What
-could I do?
-
-"Yes, then I whipped him--whipped him until the men turned away. I will
-not tell you of it--it was too horrible.
-
-"It was four weeks before I could get about the deck from the effects
-of that pistol shot. I had little medicine aboard. There I was limping
-about with a broken arm, and there was Bowles limping about with the
-tendons of his back cut through. It was awful. The men grinned. Yes,
-the men grinned at us. I had an extra padlock put upon the stateroom
-where Willie stayed, and he was kept tight after that.
-
-"At the end of a month Willie was all but dead. The terrific heat,
-the gases from the cargo and the close confinement told upon his weak
-frame. I saw that he would not last much longer. He would die in the
-ship, and I remembered the words of his father--'bring him back; be
-sure and bring him back!' There was an old man in the crew named Jim.
-He was half fish and the rest salt and rope-yarn. He offered to take
-the boy in hand and try to train him. I let him have a chance, always
-having him close at hand to stop any trouble with a pair of irons. And
-when he turned in the boy was locked up again. But there was no talk
-of doing right, no promise to be fair or obey orders from the little
-chap. I saw he would break out at the first opportunity and refused to
-give him one. I had old Jim read the Bible to him every day to see if I
-couldn't get him interested in religion. He liked that part of the Old
-Testament where it is especially bloody and deals with the desperate
-fighting of men, but when it came to other parts he lost interest.
-
-"'Say, cull, do youse believe dat yarn erbout de whale--say? Aw, gwan!
-don't spring nothin' funny on me, Bo. Gimme some of de hot stuff or
-cut it--see? Dat kid David was de stuff! Gimme some more o' his work,
-or let it go at dat. He might have hove de rock an' hit de giant in
-de neck--but I doubts it; but maybe so, maybe so. Dat giant warn't
-no bigger'n Bowles, I reckon--'n I c'u'd do fer him easy enough, as
-youse know. Yes, I c'u'd a dun up dat giant all right wid any sort er
-weaping--knife or rock--I'm a sort o' giant killer myself----'
-
-"'You ain't got de nerve to do nothing like that, boy. Shut up and
-listen!' said Jim.
-
-"'Say, Bo, don't youse make no mistake erbout me noive. I got de whole
-gang of youse beat to a gantline. I c'u'd stick youse all back in de
-lazereet an' not half woik. Aw, say, Jimmy, youse ain't got me measure
-quite right--see? Guess onct more, old boy; but go erlong an' read some
-more of de fight to me. I likes it all right.' And so they would chat
-together and I would listen to try and fathom the boy's mind. It was
-peculiar. And yet under it all was that vast ego, that immense regard
-for the opinions of others--not alone himself--he was too young yet,
-but for himself was the greatest, the self-respect. He was a leader, a
-boy with a soul--you may laugh when you think him a fiend, a perfect
-devil, if you will, but he was all right in some things.
-
-"I was more afraid of Rose, my mate.
-
-"Rose was a quiet man, a driver, and he had struck down the boy and
-beaten him to a jelly. The boy never alluded to it, never spoke of
-it even to Jim. That's where the danger lay. I felt that they would
-finish the fight when I let the lad loose, and dared not do so for a
-long time. Once when Jim had the boy on deck I caught Rose gazing at
-him with a peculiar steady light in his eyes. He just stood looking
-at the boy for nearly a full minute--then the lad turned and looked
-right into his eyes with the same peculiar steadiness--a stare that
-was unblinking, yet not strained. Willie had those light eyes, almost
-colorless, like his father. So had Rose, and they told each other so
-plainly what was behind their eyes that I almost smiled; but it was no
-smiling work, even if there was a boy in it. Rose showed plainly that
-he would wring the boy's neck at the first outfly, and was regardless
-of consequences. Rose was not a man to trifle with, yet when you
-remember that I was shot and the second mate cut, there was reason
-for the chief to throw out all sentiment. And so I kept Willie under
-Jim's care until we reached Hong-Kong. Then the old seaman wanted to go
-ashore and take the boy with him, promising not to go near a grog-shop.
-You can't trust a windjammer ashore after a long voyage, no matter how
-good a man he is. Jim came back to the ship that night the worse for
-wear, and told a tale of the boy slipping away from him in the streets.
-The man was drunk and I had him sent down in irons. Then I sent out a
-call for the police.
-
-"They found Willie, who had wandered off while Jim was drinking. The
-boy had walked the streets all night, not caring much about the ship,
-and because a Chinaman would not cut off his queue and make him a
-present of it, the boy had jumped him with a knife he had procured and
-tried to take it by force. The interference of the police was all that
-saved the boy's life, for the man's friends helped him hold the lad,
-and they were just in the act of cutting his throat when help arrived.
-I was almost sorry for the interference, but I remembered the words of
-his father.
-
-"Jim being unable to take further care of him for the present, I locked
-him up myself and turned in, being tired from the night's work. The
-next evening I saw Mr. Rose dragging Willie aboard the ship. How he got
-adrift I don't know, but he carried in each hand an oil can, while the
-mate, holding him, forced him aboard.
-
-"'Say, Bo, whatcher think I done--hey? Just watch dat junk dere lyin'
-in de next dock--see? Aw, chee, dem Chinks is de limit. Dat feller
-what got me in Dutch last night is aboard dere, an'--well, you jest
-watch him now and tell me what youse t'ink o' me, anyways. I remembers
-him, but most all Chinks looks alike to me. Anyhow, I fire her up fer
-fair--you watch her--see? Oh, say, Bo, what a pipe----'
-
-"Even while he spoke the black smoke poured from the fated junk. She
-burned like a box of matches. She was full of camphor wood and grease,
-and she fired the entire dock, burning six other vessels and making it
-so hot we were forced to warp into the stream.
-
-"No, I didn't give the boy up. I suppose I might have done so and seen
-him hung properly. I said nothing, and Rose was a very quiet man.
-The damage he had done apparently took the lad's mind off his former
-troubles, and on the way home I let him go back to his watch. He took
-to the rigging like a monkey. I will say here he was the best sailor I
-had ever seen. There was nothing he could not learn about seamanship.
-He would always take the weather earing in a blow and no man dared to
-send him in. When Jim was on deck the old seaman kept him under his eye
-in case of trouble, and Mr. Rose was always most vigilant. The mate had
-determined to kill the lad at the first sign of danger. I tried again
-and again to win his confidence, but he seemed to look upon me as his
-enemy. He refused to take me for a friend, and my little talks were
-futile.
-
-"'Aw, tell it to yer gran'mother,' he would say to me. 'Don't try to
-stuff me, Bo. Youse had your innings at that--now fergit it before you
-git inter the soup ag'in. I knows youse, an' I ain't done wid youse
-yet, either--see? Youse done me dirt--youse done me when I first come
-in de ship. I ain't decided just what I'll do to youse yet, but youse
-better keep yer eye liftin' fer me. Don' try to razzle-dazzle me none.
-I ain't afraid of youse at all. You ain't got de noive to do me--see?
-But I got it in fer youse all hunk, now don't make no mistake erbout
-dat. I'll let youse off easier the better we gets erlong--see? If we
-gets erlong all right I may let youse down easy--if not, I'll kill you
-as sure as I breathe, an' that goes as it lays. Do youse git it right?'
-
-"Here was a boy, now sixteen, telling the master of a ship he would
-kill him if things were not to his liking. What do you think of it,
-anyway? I never could work it out I couldn't lock him up any more for
-it would have killed him--and I must not kill the lad--I don't know----
-
-"The whole affair was insane. It was grotesque. But there was my
-shattered arm, and there was Bowles limping about--that fire at
-Hong-Kong--and I must bring Willie back home. I'm telling you a true
-story. I'm telling you of a boy, an apprentice.
-
-"When we struck the rough weather of the high latitudes Willie was
-happy. He was worked out to a gantline by Jim, and he was beginning to
-run the men a bit. It was amazing and absurd to hear that kid yelling
-orders to the men aloft. Slack-away' or 'clew up,' whatever the order
-was, and he was very smart. He could beat the best of them to the royal
-yard; and he was taking pride in it. His voice was at that stage when
-it cracks and goes into a treble, and no one laughed. Even the mate
-watched it all with gloomy eyes, never saying a thing, and never even
-smiling. And it was amazing how the men obeyed him. If a man failed
-to do so, only an apology and the reception of a kick upon the stern
-would save him from a fracas, for Willie kept right after them. Yes,
-he inherited all the masterly qualities of his father. He was a wonder
-at seamanship. One day a dago didn't like the way Willie trod upon his
-feet when they were both hauling a brace. They mixed, and it was the
-closest shave for the lad. He came out with a bad cut, for the dago
-at sea takes to a knife like a babe to milk. That night, while in his
-bunk, the dago was slammed over the head with a handspike, and we had
-to keep him off duty until the ship docked.
-
-"When we came in Jim brought his charge aft to sign off, as is the
-custom, you know, for their slop chest accounts. Willie came up.
-
-"I haven't got much against you, Willie; you owe me for a couple of
-plugs of tobacco, but we'll let that go," I said.
-
-"'No, we don't, Bo; youse charge it all up right an' proper. Den I got
-a small account agin de ship--which I'll settle right now----'
-
-"But old Jim was too quick for him.
-
-"'Take him forward and keep him in irons until we get in. We'll get
-inside before dark,' I ordered. You know how it is when a ship comes
-in. The land sharks were there in swarms, but among them was old man
-Jackson waiting for his son. They went away hand in hand, the old man
-never even speaking to me--I always thought he knew.
-
-"Our cargo was valued at about half a million. It was nearly all
-Jackson's, as he owned the greatest shares in all the ships. We docked
-and were forced to lay right behind a barge loaded with dynamite,
-nearly two tons of it ready for taking out in the morning to blow Hell
-Gate rock.
-
-"Bowles had gone ashore with the rest, and Rose had stepped up the
-street for a 'first night' off. He was not due until midnight. I always
-suspected the second officer or the dago--I don't know, only neither
-of them ever showed up again. They both had seen the President of the
-line take his son, his young hopeful, away with him. They both had
-suffered much from his hands. Perhaps it was revenge--to try to get
-even with the father for the son's sins. Anyhow, I had hardly turned in
-that night, leaving old Jones, the shipkeeper, on deck, when the old
-fellow ran below and told me the ship was afire forward. I turned out
-instantly and was on deck.
-
-"The ship was burning like a beacon from the foremast to the t'gallant
-forecastle. She seemed to be spread with oil. Jones was seventy and
-unable to do much. I ran forward and yelled for help. In ten minutes
-the engines were playing a stream upon the ship and a fireboat was
-flooding her from aft. Jackson came down on the run to see his vessel
-being destroyed and his cargo vanishing in black smoke. He had had
-trouble with the insurance, and he was worried. Then while he stood
-upon the dock and spoke to me as I stood upon the rail amidships, I was
-aware of a small figure near him.
-
-"'Aw, say, Bo, youse better get away from there--cut out, see? There's
-powder to blow youse to hell and back right there in that lighter.
-Youse ain't got more'n a minute, cully. Better git gay wid de lines.'
-
-"Then I recognized Willie. He had come down to see the blaze and was
-calling attention to the thing we had forgotten for the moment.
-
-"'Call de watch, an' I'll lend youse a hand.'
-
-"I called for Jones to slack off the after lines, and then I ran as
-far as I could into the smoke and managed to cast off forward, getting
-nearly drowned with the engine water. Jackson came aboard and worked
-like mad. The stern lines were cast off, but before we could do
-anything the ship began to swing right down upon the barge. The slip
-was too narrow to get the dynamite past the vessel, and there she was
-now surging ahead upon it. She had both blocked the slip and surged
-into it. I began to yell to the men standing about to get away from the
-place before the explosion. They had crowded about as close as they
-could to see the fire, not knowing anything about what was on the barge.
-
-"Jackson rushed aft and howled to the fireboat to pass a line, as the
-wind was now blowing her slowly across the slip and right upon the
-dynamite. Every one who could understand me began to run. The dock
-cleared off quickly. Then, just as I was about to jump ashore myself, I
-heard a voice close to the rail.
-
-"'Aw, say, Bo, give me a heavin' line--I kin swim acrost the slip--den
-hurry up an' bend de hawser, youse can heave her over easy enough.
-Don't get nutty.'
-
-"I saw Willie standing there, and without further ado I threw him the
-end of a small line. He jumped in without a word and swam rapidly
-across the narrow stretch of water to the other dock. A man on the pier
-reached down and took the line from the lad. I had already bent on the
-hawser, and it went across lively. Then taking the end to the midship
-capstan, I got old Jones to hold the turns while I walked her around as
-fast as I could.
-
-"But I was not strong enough to warp a heavy ship across a slip even
-in still water. The ship surged ahead slowly in spite of all I could
-do, and Jackson grabbed a capstan bar to help. It was a poor chance at
-best, but we worked on. I caught a glimpse of a slight figure working
-upon the deck of the barge, throwing cases of powder overboard. A man
-appeared with him, but I could not take time to see much. The boxes
-were cases of about a hundred pounds each, and they were rapidly
-going overboard, and with the tide through the dock. Minutes passed,
-but nothing happened. We seemed to be getting way upon the ship, and
-Jackson swore and strove mightily to save her, with no thought of
-leaving even in the face of a terrific explosion. We would have gone
-clear all right but for the fact we had our port anchor over and
-hanging from the cathead. We had warped the ship clear of the barge,
-and her bow swung over, the line being too far aft and the fire and
-water too dangerous to work in forward. The fluke of the anchor swept a
-pile of boxes--about three hundred pounds---and then came the crash. It
-was terrific. The fluke was clear of the ship's hull by several feet,
-but it was blown through the deck, the five-thousand-pound anchor flung
-like a toy through her side. She shook from end to end. We were all
-blown flat, stunned, although we had many feet of solid vessel between
-us and the blast.
-
-"When we came around from the shock of the explosion Jackson had the
-pleasure of seeing his ship without a bowsprit, her nose blown clear
-off, but the fire was blown out. There was not even much smoke left.
-The barge had entirely vanished.
-
-"The firemen came aboard afterward, and so did many shipmasters, whose
-vessels lay in the vicinity. Jackson met them dumbly. He said nothing.
-
-"'Good thing they got the dynamite overboard quick enough,' said
-Captain Smith of the _Sunnerdun_. 'That boy, whoever he was, was all
-right. The watchman ran away just before the smash.'
-
-"'What boy?' asked a fireman.
-
-"But it was no use to tell us what boy--we knew, we felt, it all along.
-
-"Yes, that was the end of him. He had tried to save the ship, his
-father's ship--and he had done it when men failed--I don't know--I
-can't judge him. Old man Jackson left without a word, and I never saw
-him again."
-
-The old seaman paused, and the night showed his cigar end flaming
-again. I sat there thinking over the tale, the true tale of that boy,
-for I knew Large was telling me only facts. It was all very strange,
-all like a horrid nightmare the old seaman had suffered from; but it
-was not a dream, it was the truth about a boy, just a rough, tough boy
-whose ideals had been a bit peculiar. I looked over across the berth
-at my own ship, where five boys were already signed on for the voyage
-around the Cape, and I began to wonder if I had done a wise thing
-to ship them. Then I determined right there to give them some extra
-thought and study, to try to fathom what lay behind their "going to
-sea."
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[A] Copyright, 1911, by Doubleday, Page & Co.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
-
-
- Text in italics is surrounded with underscores: _italics_.
-
- Incorrect page numbers in the Table of Contents have been corrected.
-
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been retained from the original.
-
- Inconsistencies in spelling and punctuation have been standardized.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Chief Mate's Yarns, by Mayn Clew Garnett
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