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diff --git a/8992.txt b/8992.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..cc93bbc --- /dev/null +++ b/8992.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2920 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Blockade Runners, by Jules Verne + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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 + + +Title: The Blockade Runners + +Author: Jules Verne + +Posting Date: March 22, 2013 [EBook #8992] +Release Date: September, 2005 +First Posted: August 30, 2003 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BLOCKADE RUNNERS *** + + + + +Produced by Norman M. Wolcott + + + + + + + +The Blockade Runners by Jules Verne + + +[Redactor's Note: _The Blockade Runners_ (number V008 in the T&M +numerical listing of Verne's works) is a translation of _Les forceurs +de blocus_ (1871). _The Blockade Runners_, a novella, was included +along with _A Floating City_ in the first english and french editions +of this work. This translation, which follows that of Sampson and Low +(UK) and Scribners (US) is by "N. D'Anvers", pseudonymn for Mrs. Arthur +Bell (d. 1933) who also translated other Verne books. It is also +included in the fifteen volume Parke edition of the works of Jules +Verne (1911). There is another translation by Henry Frith which was +published by Routledge (1876). + +Both of these stories are about ships; _Floating City_ about the +largest ship of the time, the _Great Eastern_, and _Blockade Runners_ +about one of the fastest, the _Dolphin_. + +This text version was prepared from public domain sources by Norman M. +Wolcott, 2003, nwolcott2@post.harvard.edu] + + + + + +The Blockade Runners + +Table of Contents + + + + + I THE _DOLPHIN_ + II GETTING UNDER SAIL + III THINGS ARE NOT WHAT THEY SEEM + IV CROCKSTON'S TRICK + V THE SHOT FROM THE _IROQUOIS,_ AND MISS JENNY'S ARGUMENTS + VI SULLIVAN ISLAND CHANNEL + VII A SOUTHERN GENERAL + VIII THE ESCAPE + IX BETWEEN TWO FIRES + X ST. MUNGO + + + + + +THE BLOCKADE RUNNERS + + + + +Chapter I + +THE _DOLPHIN_ + +The Clyde was the first river whose waters were lashed into foam by a +steam-boat. It was in 1812 when the steamer called the _Comet_ ran +between Glasgow and Greenock, at the speed of six miles an hour. Since +that time more than a million of steamers or packet-boats have plied +this Scotch river, and the inhabitants of Glasgow must be as familiar +as any people with the wonders of steam navigation. + +However, on the 3rd of December, 1862, an immense crowd, composed of +shipowners, merchants, manufacturers, workmen, sailors, women, and +children, thronged the muddy streets of Glasgow, all going in the +direction of Kelvin Dock, the large shipbuilding premises belonging to +Messrs. Tod & MacGregor. This last name especially proves that the +descendants of the famous Highlanders have become manufacturers, and +that they have made workmen of all the vassals of the old clan +chieftains. + +Kelvin Dock is situated a few minutes' walk from the town, on the right +bank of the Clyde. Soon the immense timber-yards were thronged with +spectators; not a part of the quay, not a wall of the wharf, not a +factory roof showed an unoccupied place; the river itself was covered +with craft of all descriptions, and the heights of Govan, on the left +bank, swarmed with spectators. + +There was, however, nothing extraordinary in the event about to take +place; it was nothing but the launching of a ship, and this was an +everyday affair with the people of Glasgow. Had the _Dolphin_, +then--for that was the name of the ship built by Messrs. Tod & +MacGregor--some special peculiarity? To tell the truth, it had none. + +It was a large ship, about 1,500 tons, in which everything combined to +obtain superior speed. Her engines, of 500 horse-power, were from the +workshops of Lancefield Forge; they worked two screws, one on either +side the stern-post, completely independent of each other. As for the +depth of water the _Dolphin_ would draw, it must be very +inconsiderable; connoisseurs were not deceived, and they concluded +rightly that this ship was destined for shallow straits. But all these +particulars could not in any way justify the eagerness of the people: +taken altogether, the _Dolphin_ was nothing more or less than an +ordinary ship. Would her launching present some mechanical difficulty +to be overcome? Not any more than usual. The Clyde had received many a +ship of heavier tonnage, and the launching of the _Dolphin_ would take +place in the usual manner. + +In fact, when the water was calm, the moment the ebb-tide set in, the +workmen began to operate. Their mallets kept perfect time falling on +the wedges meant to raise the ship's keel: soon a shudder ran through +the whole of her massive structure; although she had only been slightly +raised, one could see that she shook, and then gradually began to glide +down the well greased wedges, and in a few moments she plunged into the +Clyde. Her stern struck the muddy bed of the river, then she raised +herself on the top of a gigantic wave, and, carried forward by her +start, would have been dashed against the quay of the Govan +timber-yards, if her anchors had not restrained her. + +The launch had been perfectly successful, the _Dolphin_ swayed quietly +on the waters of the Clyde, all the spectators clapped their hands when +she took possession of her natural element, and loud hurrahs arose from +either bank. + +But wherefore these cries and this applause? Undoubtedly the most eager +of the spectators would have been at a loss to explain the reason of +his enthusiasm. What was the cause, then, of the lively interest +excited by this ship? Simply the mystery which shrouded her +destination; it was not known to what kind of commerce she was to be +appropriated, and in questioning different groups the diversity of +opinion on this important subject was indeed astonishing. + +However, the best informed, at least those who pretended to be so, +agreed in saying that the steamer was going to take part in the +terrible war which was then ravaging the United States of America, but +more than this they did not know, and whether the _Dolphin_ was a +privateer, a transport ship, or an addition to the Federal marine was +what no one could tell. + +"Hurrah!" cried one, affirming that the _Dolphin_ had been built for +the Southern States. + +"Hip! hip! hip!" cried another, swearing that never had a faster boat +crossed to the American coasts. + +Thus its destination was unknown, and in order to obtain any reliable +information one must be an intimate friend, or, at any rate, an +acquaintance of Vincent Playfair & Co., of Glasgow. + +A rich, powerful, intelligent house of business was that of Vincent +Playfair & Co., in a social sense, an old and honourable family, +descended from those tobacco lords who built the finest quarters of the +town. These clever merchants, by an act of the Union, had founded the +first Glasgow warehouse for dealing in tobacco from Virginia and +Maryland. Immense fortunes were realised; mills and foundries sprang up +in all parts, and in a few years the prosperity of the city attained +its height. + +The house of Playfair remained faithful to the enterprising spirit of +its ancestors, it entered into the most daring schemes, and maintained +the honour of English commerce. The principal, Vincent Playfair, a man +of fifty, with a temperament essentially practical and decided, +although somewhat daring, was a genuine shipowner. Nothing affected him +beyond commercial questions, not even the political side of the +transactions, otherwise he was a perfectly loyal and honest man. + +However, he could not lay claim to the idea of building and fitting up +the _Dolphin_; she belonged to his nephew, James Playfair, a fine young +man of thirty, the boldest skipper of the British merchant marine. + +It was one day at the Tontine coffee-room under the arcades of the town +hall, that James Playfair, after having impatiently scanned the +American journal, disclosed to his uncle an adventurous scheme. + +"Uncle Vincent," said he, coming to the point at once, "there are two +millions of pounds to be gained in less than a month." + +"And what to risk?" asked Uncle Vincent. + +"A ship and a cargo." + +"Nothing else?" + +"Nothing, except the crew and the captain, and that does not reckon for +much." + +"Let us see," said Uncle Vincent. + +"It is all seen," replied James Playfair. "You have read the _Tribune_, +the _New York Herald, The Times_, the _Richmond Inquirer_, the +_American Review_?" + +"Scores of times, nephew." + +"You believe, like me, that the war of the United States will last a +long time still?" + +"A very long time." + +"You know how much this struggle will affect the interests of England, +and especially those of Glasgow?" + +"And more especially still the house of Playfair & Co.," replied Uncle +Vincent. + +"Theirs especially," added the young Captain. + +"I worry myself about it every day, James, and I cannot think without +terror of the commercial disasters which this war may produce; not but +that the house of Playfair is firmly established, nephew; at the same +time it has correspondents which may fail. Ah! those Americans, +slave-holders or Abolitionists, I have no faith in them!" + +If Vincent Playfair was wrong in thus speaking with respect to the +great principles of humanity, always and everywhere superior to +personal interests, he was, nevertheless, right from a commercial point +of view. The most important material was failing at Glasgow, the cotton +famine became every day more threatening, thousands of workmen were +reduced to living upon public charity. Glasgow possessed 25,000 looms, +by which 625,000 yards of cotton were spun daily; that is to say, fifty +millions of pounds yearly. From these numbers it may be guessed what +disturbances were caused in the commercial part of the town when the +raw material failed altogether. Failures were hourly taking place, the +manufactories were closed, and the workmen were dying of starvation. + +It was the sight of this great misery which had put the idea of his +bold enterprise into James Playfair's head. + +"I will go for cotton, and will get it, cost what it may." + +But, as he also was a merchant as well as his uncle Vincent, he +resolved to carry out his plan by way of exchange, and to make his +proposition under the guise of a commercial enterprise. + +"Uncle Vincent," said he, "this is my idea." + +"Well, James?" + +"It is simply this: we will have a ship built of superior sailing +qualities and great bulk." + +"That is quite possible." + +"We will load her with ammunition of war, provisions, and clothes." + +"Just so." + +"I will take the command of this steamer, I will defy all the ships of +the Federal marine for speed, and I will run the blockade of one of the +southern ports." + +"You must make a good bargain for your cargo with the Confederates, who +will be in need of it," said his uncle. + +"And I shall return laden with cotton." + +"Which they will give you for nothing." + +"As you say, Uncle. Will it answer?" + +"It will; but shall you be able to get there?" + +"I shall, if I have a good ship." + +"One can be made on purpose. But the crew?" + +"Oh, I will find them. I do not want many men; enough to work with, +that is all. It is not a question of fighting with the Federals, but +distancing them." + +"They shall be distanced," said Uncle Vincent, in a peremptory tone; +"but now, tell me, James, to what port of the American coast do you +think of going?" + +"Up to now, Uncle, ships have run the blockade of New Orleans, +Wilmington, and Savannah, but I think of going straight to Charleston; +no English boat has yet been able to penetrate into the harbour, except +the _Bermuda_. I will do like her, and, if my ship draws but very +little water, I shall be able to go where the Federalists will not be +able to follow." + +"The fact is," said Uncle Vincent, "Charleston is overwhelmed with +cotton; they are even burning it to get rid of it." + +"Yes," replied James; "besides, the town is almost invested; Beauregard +is running short of provisions, and he will pay me a golden price for +my cargo!" + +"Well, nephew, and when will you start?" + +"In six months; I must have the long winter nights to aid me." + +"It shall be as you wish, nephew." + +"It is settled, then, Uncle?" + +"Settled!" + +"Shall it be kept quiet?" + +"Yes; better so." + +And this is how it was that five months later the steamer _Dolphin_ was +launched from the Kelvin Dock timber-yards, and no one knew her real +destination. + + + + +Chapter II + +GETTING UNDER SAIL + +The _Dolphin_ was rapidly equipped, her rigging was ready, and there +was nothing to do but fit her up. She carried three schooner-masts, an +almost useless luxury; in fact, the _Dolphin_ did not rely on the wind +to escape the Federalists, but rather on her powerful engines. + +Towards the end of December a trial of the steamer was made in the gulf +of the Clyde. Which was the more satisfied, builder or captain, it is +impossible to say. The new steamer shot along wonderfully, and the +patent log showed a speed of seventeen miles an hour, a speed which as +yet no English, French, or American boat had ever obtained. The +_Dolphin_ would certainly have gained by several lengths in a sailing +match with the fastest opponent. + +The loading was begun on the 25th of December, the steamer having +ranged along the steamboat-quay a little below Glasgow Bridge, the last +which stretches across the Clyde before its mouth. Here the wharfs were +heaped with a heavy cargo of clothes, ammunition, and provisions which +were rapidly carried to the hold of the _Dolphin_. The nature of this +cargo betrayed the mysterious destination of the ship, and the house of +Playfair could no longer keep it secret; besides, the _Dolphin_ must +not be long before she started. No American cruiser had been signalled +in English waters; and, then, when the question of getting the crew +came, how was it possible to keep silent any longer? They could not +embark them, even, without informing the men whither they were bound, +for, after all, it was a matter of life and death, and when one risks +one's life, at least it is satisfactory to know how and wherefore. + +However, this prospect hindered no one; the pay was good, and everyone +had a share in the speculation, so that a great number of the finest +sailors soon presented themselves. James Playfair was only embarrassed +which to choose, but he chose well, and in twenty-four hours his +muster-roll bore the names of thirty sailors who would have done honour +to her Majesty's yacht. + +The departure was settled for the 3rd of January; on the 31st of +December the _Dolphin_ was ready, her hold full of ammunition and +provisions, and nothing was keeping her now. + +The skipper went on board on the 2nd of January, and was giving a last +look round his ship with a captain's eye, when a man presented himself +at the fore part of the _Dolphin_, and asked to speak with the Captain. +One of the sailors led him on to the poop. + +He was a strong, hearty-looking fellow, with broad shoulders and ruddy +face, the simple expression of which ill-concealed a depth of wit and +mirth. He did not seem to be accustomed to a seafaring life, and looked +about him with the air of a man little used to being on board a ship; +however, he assumed the manner of a Jack-tar, looking up at the rigging +of the _Dolphin_, and waddling in true sailor fashion. + +When he had reached the Captain, he looked fixedly at him, and said, +"Captain James Playfair?" + +"The same," replied the skipper. "What do you want with me?" + +"To join your ship." + +"There is no room; the crew is already complete." + +"Oh, one man, more or less, will not be in the way; quite the contrary." + +"You think so?" said James Playfair, giving a sidelong glance at his +questioner. + +"I am sure of it," replied the sailor. + +"But who are you?" asked the Captain. + +"A rough sailor, with two strong arms, which, I can tell you, are not +to be despised on board a ship, and which I now have the honour of +putting at your service." + +"But there are other ships besides the _Dolphin_, and other captains +besides James Playfair. Why do you come here?" + +"Because it is on board the _Dolphin_ that I wish to serve, and under +the orders of Captain James Playfair." + +"I do not want you." + +"There is always need of a strong man, and if to prove my strength you +will try me with three or four of the strongest fellows of your crew, I +am ready." + +"That will do," replied James Playfair. "And what is your name?" + +"Crockston, at your service." + +The Captain made a few steps backwards in order to get a better view of +the giant who presented himself in this odd fashion. The height, the +build, and the look of the sailor did not deny his pretensions to +strength. + +"Where have you sailed?" asked Playfair of him. + +"A little everywhere." + +"And do you know where the _Dolphin_ is bound for?" + +"Yes; and that is what tempts me." + +"Ah, well! I have no mind to let a fellow of your stamp escape me. Go +and find the first mate, and get him to enrol you." + +Having said this, the Captain expected to see the man turn on his heels +and run to the bows, but he was mistaken. Crockston did not stir. + +"Well! did you hear me?" asked the Captain. + +"Yes, but it is not all," replied the sailor. "I have something else to +ask you." + +"Ah! You are wasting my time," replied James, sharply; "I have not a +moment to lose in talking." + +"I shall not keep you long," replied Crockston; "two words more and +that is all; I was going to tell you that I have a nephew." + +"He has a fine uncle, then," interrupted James Playfair. + +"Hah! Hah!" laughed Crockston. + +"Have you finished?" asked the Captain, very impatiently. + +"Well, this is what I have to say, when one takes the uncle, the nephew +comes into the bargain." + +"Ah! indeed!" + +"Yes, that is the custom, the one does not go without the other." + +"And what is this nephew of yours?" + +"A lad of fifteen whom I am going to train to the sea; he is willing to +learn, and will make a fine sailor some day." + +"How now, Master Crockston," cried James Playfair; "do you think the +_Dolphin_ is a training-school for cabin-boys?" + +"Don't let us speak ill of cabin-boys: there was one of them who became +Admiral Nelson, and another Admiral Franklin." + +"Upon my honour, friend," replied James Playfair, "you have a way of +speaking which I like; bring your nephew, but if I don't find the uncle +the hearty fellow he pretends to be, he will have some business with +me. Go, and be back in an hour." + +Crockston did not want to be told twice; he bowed awkwardly to the +Captain of the _Dolphin_, and went on to the quay. An hour afterwards +he came on board with his nephew, a boy of fourteen or fifteen, rather +delicate and weakly looking, with a timid and astonished air, which +showed that he did not possess his uncle's self-possession and vigorous +corporeal qualities. Crockston was even obliged to encourage him by +such words as these: + +"Come," said he, "don't be frightened, they are not going to eat us, +besides, there is yet time to return." + +"No, no," replied the young man, "and may God protect us!" + +The same day the sailor Crockston and his nephew were inscribed in the +muster-roll of the _Dolphin_. + +The next morning, at five o'clock, the fires of the steamer were well +fed, the deck trembled under the vibrations of the boiler, and the +steam rushed hissing through the escape-pipes. The hour of departure +had arrived. + +A considerable crowd, in spite of the early hour, flocked on the quays +and on Glasgow Bridge; they had come to salute the bold steamer for the +last time. Vincent Playfair was there to say good-bye to Captain James, +but he conducted himself on this occasion like a Roman of the good old +times. His was a heroic countenance, and the two loud kisses with which +he gratified his nephew were the indication of a strong mind. + +"Go, James," said he to the young Captain, "go quickly, and come back +quicker still; above all, don't abuse your position. Sell at a good +price, make a good bargain, and you will have your uncle's esteem." + +On this recommendation, borrowed from the manual of the perfect +merchant, the uncle and nephew separated, and all the visitors left the +boat. + +At this moment Crockston and John Stiggs stood together on the +forecastle, while the former remarked to his nephew, "This is well, +this is well; before two o'clock we shall be at sea, and I have a good +opinion of a voyage which begins like this." + +For reply the novice pressed Crockston's hand. + +James Playfair then gave the orders for departure. + +"Have we pressure on?" he asked of his mate. + +"Yes, Captain," replied Mr. Mathew. + +"Well, then, weigh anchor." + +This was immediately done, and the screws began to move. The _Dolphin_ +trembled, passed between the ships in the port, and soon disappeared +from the sight of the people, who shouted their last hurrahs. + +The descent of the Clyde was easily accomplished, one might almost say +that this river had been made by the hand of man, and even by the hand +of a master. For sixty years, thanks to the dredges and constant +dragging, it has gained fifteen feet in depth, and its breadth has been +tripled between the quays and the town. Soon the forests of masts and +chimneys were lost in the smoke and fog; the noise of the foundry +hammers and the hatchets of the timber-yards grew fainter in the +distance. After the village of Partick had been passed the factories +gave way to country houses and villas. The _Dolphin_, slackening her +speed, sailed between the dykes which carry the river above the shores, +and often through a very narrow channel, which, however, is only a +small inconvenience for a navigable river, for, after all, depth is of +more importance than width. The steamer, guided by one of those +excellent pilots from the Irish sea, passed without hesitation between +floating buoys, stone columns, and _biggings_, surmounted with +lighthouses, which mark the entrance to the channel. Beyond the town of +Renfrew, at the foot of Kilpatrick hills, the Clyde grew wider. Then +came Bouling Bay, at the end of which opens the mouth of the canal +which joints Edinburgh to Glasgow. Lastly, at the height of four +hundred feet from the ground, was seen the outline of Dumbarton Castle, +almost indiscernible through the mists, and soon the harbour-boats of +Glasgow were rocked on the waves which the _Dolphin_ caused. Some miles +farther on Greenock, the birthplace of James Watt, was passed: the +_Dolphin_ now found herself at the mouth of the Clyde, and at the +entrance of the gulf by which it empties its waters into the Northern +Ocean. Here the first undulations of the sea were felt, and the steamer +ranged along the picturesque coast of the Isle of Arran. At last the +promontory of Cantyre, which runs out into the channel, was doubled; +the Isle of Rattelin was hailed, the pilot returned by a shore-boat to +his cutter, which was cruising in the open sea; the _Dolphin_, +returning to her Captain's authority, took a less frequented route +round the north of Ireland, and soon, having lost sight of the last +European land, found herself in the open ocean. + + + + +Chapter III + +THINGS ARE NOT WHAT THEY SEEM + +The _Dolphin_ had a good crew, not fighting men, or boarding sailors, +but good working men, and that was all she wanted. These brave, +determined fellows were all, more or less, merchants; they sought a +fortune rather than glory; they had no flag to display, no colours to +defend with cannon; in fact, all the artillery on board consisted of +two small swivel signal-guns. + +The _Dolphin_ shot bravely across the water, and fulfilled the utmost +expectations of both builder and captain. Soon she passed the limit of +British seas; there was not a ship in sight; the great ocean route was +free; besides, no ship of the Federal marine would have a right to +attack her beneath the English flag. Followed she might be, and +prevented from forcing the blockade, and precisely for this reason had +James Playfair sacrificed everything to the speed of his ship, in order +not to be pursued. + +Howbeit a careful watch was kept on board, and, in spite of the extreme +cold, a man was always in the rigging ready to signal the smallest sail +that appeared on the horizon. When evening came, Captain James gave the +most precise orders to Mr. Mathew. + +"Don't leave the man on watch too long in the rigging; the cold may +seize him, and in that case it is impossible to keep a good look-out; +change your men often." + +"I understand, Captain," replied Mr. Mathew. + +"Try Crockston for that work; the fellow pretends to have excellent +sight; it must be put to trial; put him on the morning watch, he will +have the morning mists to see through. If anything particular happens +call me." + +This said, James Playfair went to his cabin. Mr. Mathew called +Crockston, and told him the Captain's orders. + +"To-morrow, at six o'clock," said he, "you are to relieve watch of the +main masthead." + +For reply, Crockston gave a decided grunt, but Mr. Mathew had hardly +turned his back when the sailor muttered some incomprehensible words, +and then cried: + +"What on earth did he say about the mainmast?" + +At this moment his nephew, John Stiggs, joined him on the forecastle. + +"Well, my good Crockston," said he. + +"It's all right, all right," said the seaman, with a forced smile; +"there is only one thing, this wretched boat shakes herself like a dog +coming out of the water, and it makes my head confused." + +"Dear Crockston, and it is for my sake." + +"For you and him," replied Crockston, "but not a word about that, John. +Trust in God, and He will not forsake you." + +So saying, John Stiggs and Crockston went to the sailor's berth, but +the sailor did not lie down before he had seen the young novice +comfortably settled in the narrow cabin which he had got for him. + +The next day, at six o'clock in the morning, Crockston got up to go to +his place; he went on deck, where the first officer ordered him to go +up into the rigging, and keep good watch. + +At these words the sailor seemed undecided what to do; then, making up +his mind, he went towards the bows of the _Dolphin_. + +"Well, where are you off to now?" cried Mr. Mathew. + +"Where you sent me," answered Crockston. + +"I told you to go to the mainmast." + +"And I am going there," replied the sailor, in an ununconcerned tone, +continuing his way to the poop. + +"Are you a fool?" cried Mr. Mathew, impatiently; "you are looking for +the bars of the main on the foremast. You are like a cockney, who +doesn't know how to twist a cat-o'-nine-tails, or make a splice. On +board what ship can you have been, man? The mainmast, stupid, the +mainmast!" + +The sailors who had run up to hear what was going on burst out laughing +when they saw Crockston's disconcerted look, as he went back to the +forecastle. + +"So," said he, looking up the mast, the top of which was quite +invisible through the morning mists; "so, am I to climb up here?" + +"Yes," replied Mr. Mathew, "and hurry yourself! By St. Patrick, a +Federal ship would have time to get her bowsprit fast in our rigging +before that lazy fellow could get to his post. Will you go up?" + +Without a word, Crockston got on the bulwarks with some difficulty; +then he began to climb the rigging with most visible awkwardness, like +a man who did not know how to make use of his hands or feet. When he +had reached the topgallant, instead of springing lightly on to it, he +remained motionless, clinging to the ropes, as if he had been seized +with giddiness. Mr. Mathew, irritated by his stupidity, ordered him to +come down immediately. + +"That fellow there," said he to the boatswain, "has never been a sailor +in his life. Johnston, just go and see what he has in his bundle." + +The boatswain made haste to the sailor's berth. + +In the meantime Crockston was with difficulty coming down again, but, +his foot having slipped, he slid down the rope he had hold of, and fell +heavily on the deck. + +"Clumsy blockhead! land-lubber!" cried Mr. Mathew, by way of +consolation. "What did you come to do on board the _Dolphin!_ Ah! you +entered as an able seaman, and you cannot even distinguish the main +from the foremast! I shall have a little talk with you." + +Crockston made no attempt to speak; he bent his back like a man +resigned to anything he might have to bear; just then the boatswain +returned. + +"This," said he to the first officer, "is all that I have found; a +suspicious portfolio with letters." + +"Give them here," said Mr. Mathew. "Letters with Federal stamps! Mr. +Halliburtt, of Boston! An Abolitionist! a Federalist! Wretch! you are +nothing but a traitor, and have sneaked on board to betray us! Never +mind, you will be paid for your trouble with the cat-o'-nine-tails! +Boatswain, call the Captain, and you others just keep an eye on that +rogue there." + +Crockston received these compliments with a hideous grimace, but he did +not open his lips. They had fastened him to the capstan, and he could +move neither hand nor foot. + +A few minutes later James Playfair came out of his cabin and went to +the forecastle, where Mr. Mathew immediately acquainted him with the +details of the case. + +"What have you to say?" asked James Playfair, scarcely able to restrain +his anger. + +"Nothing," replied Crockston. + +"And what did you come on board my ship for?" + +"Nothing." + +"And what do you expect from me now?" + +"Nothing." + +"Who are you? An American, as letters seem to prove?" Crockston did not +answer. + +"Boatswain," said James Playfair, "fifty lashes with the +cat-o'-nine-tails to loosen his tongue. Will that be enough, Crockston?" + +"It will remain to be seen," replied John Stiggs' uncle without moving +a muscle. + +"Now then, come along, men," said the boatswain. + +At this order, two strong sailors stripped Crockston of his woollen +jersey; they had already seized the formidable weapon, and laid it +across the prisoner's shoulders, when the novice, John Stiggs, pale and +agitated, hurried on deck. + +"Captain!" exclaimed he. + +"Ah! the nephew!" remarked James Playfair. + +"Captain," repeated the novice, with a violent effort to steady his +voice, "I will tell you what Crockston does not want to say. I will +hide it no longer; yes, he is American, and so am I; we are both +enemies of the slave-holders, but not traitors come on board to betray +the _Dolphin_ into the hands of the Federalists." + +"What did you come to do, then?" asked the Captain, in a severe tone, +examining the novice attentively. The latter hesitated a few seconds +before replying, then he said, "Captain, I should like to speak to you +in private." + +Whilst John Stiggs made this request, James Playfair did not cease to +look carefully at him; the sweet young face of the novice, his +peculiarly gentle voice, the delicacy and whiteness of his hands, +hardly disguised by paint, the large eyes, the animation of which could +not bide their tenderness--all this together gave rise to a certain +suspicion in the Captain's mind. When John Stiggs had made his request, +Playfair glanced fixedly at Crockston, who shrugged his shoulders; then +he fastened a questioning look on the novice, which the latter could +not withstand, and said simply to him, "Come." + +John Stiggs followed the Captain on to the poop, and then James +Playfair, opening the door of his cabin, said to the novice, whose +cheeks were pale with emotion, "Be so kind as to walk in, miss." + +John, thus addressed, blushed violently, and two tears rolled +involuntarily down his cheeks. + +"Don't be alarmed, miss," said James Playfair, in a gentle voice, "but +be so good as to tell me how I come to have the honour of having you on +board?" + +The young girl hesitated a moment, then, reassured by the Captain's +look, she made up her mind to speak. + +"Sir," said she, "I wanted to join my father at Charleston; the town is +besieged by land and blockaded by sea. I knew not how to get there, +when I heard that the _Dolphin_ meant to force the blockade. I came on +board your ship, and I beg you to forgive me if I acted without your +consent, which you would have refused me." + +"Certainly," said James Playfair. + +"I did well, then, not to ask you," resumed the young girl, with a +firmer voice. + +The Captain crossed his arms, walked round his cabin, and then came +back. + +"What is your name?" said he. + +"Jenny Halliburtt." + +"Your father, if I remember rightly the address on the letters, is he +not from Boston?" + +"Yes, sir." + +"And a Northerner is thus in a southern town in the thickest of the +war?" + +"My father is a prisoner; he was at Charleston when the first shot of +the Civil War was fired, and the troops of the Union driven from Fort +Sumter by the Confederates. My father's opinions exposed him to the +hatred of the slavist part, and by the order of General Beauregard he +was imprisoned. I was then in England, living with a relation who has +just died, and left alone, with no help but that of Crockston, our +faithful servant, I wished to go to my father and share his prison with +him." + +"What was Mr. Halliburtt, then?" asked James Playfair. + +"A loyal and brave journalist," replied Jenny proudly, "one of the +noblest editors of the _Tribune_, and the one who was the boldest in +defending the cause of the negroes." + +"An Abolitionist," cried the Captain angrily; "one of those men who, +under the vain pretence of abolishing slavery, have deluged their +country with blood and ruin." + +"Sir!" replied Jenny Halliburtt, growing pale, "you are insulting my +father; you must not forget that I stand alone to defend him." + +The young Captain blushed scarlet; anger mingled with shame struggled +in his breast; perhaps he would have answered the young girl, but he +succeeded in restraining himself, and, opening the door of the cabin, +he called "Boatswain!" + +The boatswain came to him directly. + +"This cabin will henceforward belong to Miss Jenny Halliburtt. Have a +cot made ready for me at the end of the poop; that's all I want." + +The boatswain looked with a stupefied stare at the young novice +addressed in a feminine name, but on a sign from James Playfair he went +out. + +"And now, miss, you are at home," said the young Captain of the +_Dolphin_. Then he retired. + + + + +Chapter IV + +CROCKSTON'S TRICK + +It was not long before the whole crew knew Miss Halliburtt's story, +which Crockston was no longer hindered from telling. By the Captain's +orders he was released from the capstan, and the cat-o'-nine-tails +returned to its Place. + +"A pretty animal," said Crockston, "especially when it shows its +velvety paws." + +As soon as he was free, he went down to the sailors' berths, found a +small portmanteau, and carried it to Miss Jenny; the young girl was now +able to resume her feminine attire, but she remained in her cabin, and +did not again appear on deck. + +As for Crockston, it was well and duly agreed that, as he was no more a +sailor than a horse-guard, he should be exempt from all duty on board. + +In the meanwhile the _Dolphin_, with her twin screws cutting the waves, +sped rapidly across the Atlantic, and there was nothing now to do but +keep a strict look-out. The day following the discovery of Miss Jenny's +identity, James Playfair paced the deck at the poop with a rapid step; +he had made no attempt to see the young girl and resume the +conversation of the day before. + +Whilst he was walking to and fro, Crockston passed him several times, +looking at him askant with a satisfied grin. He evidently wanted to +speak to the Captain, and at last his persistent manner attracted the +attention of the latter, who said to him, somewhat impatiently: + +"How now, what do you want? You are turning round me like a swimmer +round a buoy: when are you going to leave off?" + +"Excuse me, Captain," answered Crockston, winking, "I wanted to speak +to you." + +"Speak, then." + +"Oh, it is nothing very much. I only wanted to tell you frankly that +you are a good fellow at bottom." + +"Why at bottom?" + +"At bottom and surface also." + +"I don't want your compliments." + +"I am not complimenting you. I shall wait to do that when you have gone +to the end." + +"To what end?" + +"To the end of your task." + +"Ah! I have a task to fulfil?" + +"Decidedly, you have taken the young girl and myself on board; good! +You have given up your cabin to Miss Halliburtt; good! You released me +from the cat-o'-nine-tails; nothing could be better. You are going to +take us straight to Charleston; that's delightful, but it is not all." + +"How not all?" cried James Playfair, amazed at Crockston's boldness. + +"No, certainly not," replied the latter, with a knowing look, "the +father is prisoner there." + +"Well, what about that?" + +"Well, the father must be rescued." + +"Rescue Miss Halliburtt's father?" + +"Most certainly, and it is worth risking something for such a noble man +and courageous citizen as he." + +"Master Crockston," said James Playfair, frowning, "I am not in the +humour for your jokes, so have a care what you say." + +"You misunderstand me, Captain," said the American. "I am not joking in +the least, but speaking quite seriously. What I have proposed may at +first seem very absurd to you; when you have thought it over, you will +see that you cannot do otherwise." + +"What, do you mean that I must deliver Mr. Halliburtt?" + +"Just so. You can demand his release of General Beauregard, who will +not refuse you." + +"But if he does refuse me?" + +"In that case," replied Crockston, in a deliberate tone, "we must use +stronger measures, and carry off the prisoner by force." + +"So," cried James Playfair, who was beginning to get angry, "so, not +content with passing through the Federal fleets and forcing the +blockade of Charleston, I must run out to sea again from under the +cannon of the forts, and this to deliver a gentleman I know nothing of, +one of those Abolitionists whom I detest, one of those journalists who +shed ink instead of their blood!" + +"Oh, it is but a cannon-shot more or less!" added Crockston. + +"Master Crockston," said James Playfair, "mind what I say: if ever you +mention this affair again to me, I will send you to the hold for the +rest of the passage, to teach you manners." + +Thus saying, the Captain dismissed the American, who went off +murmuring, "Ah, well, I am not altogether displeased with this +conversation: at any rate, the affair is broached; it will do, it will +do!" + +James Playfair had hardly meant it when he said an Abolitionist whom I +detest; he did not in the least side with the Federals, but he did not +wish to admit that the question of slavery was the predominant reason +for the civil war of the United States, in spite of President Lincoln's +formal declaration. Did he, then, think that the Southern States, eight +out of thirty-six, were right in separating when they had been +voluntarily united? Not so; he detested the Northerners, and that was +all; he detested them as brothers separated from the common +family--true Englishmen--who had thought it right to do what he, James +Playfair, disapproved of with regard to the United States: these were +the political opinions of the Captain of the _Dolphin_. But, more than +this, the American war interfered with him personally, and he had a +grudge against those who had caused this war; one can understand, then, +how he would receive a proposition to deliver an Abolitionist, thus +bringing down on him the Confederates, with whom he pretended to do +business. + +However, Crockston's insinuation did not fail to disturb him; he cast +the thought from him, but it returned unceasingly to his mind, and when +Miss Jenny came on deck the next day for a few minutes, he dared not +look her in the face. + +And really it was a great pity, for this young girl, with the fair hair +and sweet, intelligent face, deserved to be looked at by a young man of +thirty. But James felt embarrassed in her presence; he felt that this +charming creature who had been educated in the school of misfortune +possessed a strong and generous soul; he understood that his silence +towards her inferred a refusal to acquiesce in her dearest wishes; +besides, Miss Jenny never looked out for James Playfair, neither did +she avoid him. Thus for the first few days they spoke little or not at +all to each other. Miss Halliburtt scarcely ever left her cabin, and it +is certain she would never have addressed herself to the Captain of the +_Dolphin_ if it had not been for Crockston's strategy, which brought +both parties together. + +The worthy American was a faithful servant of the Halliburtt family; he +had been brought up in his master's house, and his devotion knew no +bounds. His good sense equalled his courage and energy, and, as has +been seen, he had a way of looking things straight in the face. He was +very seldom discouraged, and could generally find a way out of the most +intricate dangers with a wonderful skill. + +This honest fellow had taken it into his head to deliver Mr. +Halliburtt, to employ the Captain's ship, and the Captain himself for +this purpose, and to return with him to England. Such was his +intention, so long as the young girl had no other object than to rejoin +her father and share his captivity. It was this Crockston tried to make +the Captain understand, as we have seen, but the enemy had not yet +surrendered; on the contrary. + +"Now," said he, "it is absolutely necessary that Miss Jenny and the +Captain come to an understanding; if they are going to be sulky like +this all the passage we shall get nothing done. They must speak, +discuss; let them dispute even, so long as they talk, and I'll be +hanged if during their conversation James Playfair does not propose +himself what he refused me to-day." + +But when Crockston saw that the young girl and the young man avoided +each other, he began to be perplexed. + +"We must look sharp," said he to himself, and the morning of the fourth +day he entered Miss Halliburtt's cabin, rubbing his hands with an air +of perfect satisfaction. + +"Good news!" cried he, "good news! You will never guess what the +Captain has proposed to me. A very noble young man he is. Now try." + +"Ah!" replied Jenny, whose heart beat violently, "has he proposed to--" + +"To deliver Mr. Halliburtt, to carry him off from the Confederates, and +bring him to England." + +"Is it true?" cried Jenny. + +"It is as I say, miss. What a good-hearted man this James Playfair is! +These English are either all good or all bad. Ah! he may reckon on my +gratitude, and I am ready to cut myself in pieces if it would please +him." + +Jenny's joy was profound on hearing Crockston's words. Deliver her +father! She had never dared to think of such a plan, and the Captain of +the _Dolphin_ was going to risk his ship and crew! + +"That's what he is," added Crockston; "and this, Miss Jenny, is well +worth an acknowledgment from you." + +"More than an acknowledgment," cried the young girl; "a lasting +friendship!" + +And immediately she left the cabin to find James Playfair, and express +to him the sentiments which flowed from her heart. + +"Getting on by degrees," muttered the American. + +James Playfair was pacing to and fro on the poop, and, as may be +thought, he was very much surprised, not to say amazed, to see the +young girl come up to him, her eyes moist with grateful tears, and, +holding out her hand to him, saying: + +"Thank you, sir, thank you for your kindness, which I should never have +dared to expect from a stranger." + +"Miss," replied the Captain, as if he understood nothing of what she +was talking, and could not understand, "I do not know--" + +"Nevertheless, sir, you are going to brave many dangers, perhaps +compromise your interests for me, and you have done so much already in +offering me on board an hospitality to which I have no right whatever--" + +"Pardon me, Miss Jenny," interrupted James Playfair, "but I protest +again I do not understand your words. I have acted towards you as any +well-bred man would towards a lady, and my conduct deserves neither so +many thanks nor so much gratitude." + +"Mr. Playfair," said Jenny, "it is useless to pretend any longer; +Crockston has told me all!" + +"Ah!" said the Captain, "Crockston has told you all; then I understand +less than ever the reason for your leaving your cabin, and saying these +words which--" + +Whilst speaking the Captain felt very much embarrassed; he remembered +the rough way in which he had received the American's overtures, but +Jenny, fortunately for him, did not give him time for further +explanation; she interrupted him, holding out her hand and saying: + +"Mr. James, I had no other object in coming on board your ship except +to go to Charleston, and there, however cruel the slave-holders may be, +they will not refuse to let a poor girl share her father's prison; that +was all. I had never thought of a return as possible; but, since you +are so generous as to wish for my father's deliverance, since you will +attempt everything to save him, be assured you have my deepest +gratitude." + +James did not know what to do or what part to assume; he bit his lip; +he dared not take the hand offered him; he saw perfectly that Crockston +had compromised him, so that escape was impossible. At the same time he +had no thoughts of delivering Mr. Halliburtt, and getting complicated +in a disagreeable business: but how dash to the ground the hope which +had arisen in this poor girl's heart? How refuse the hand which she +held out to him with a feeling of such profound friendship? How change +to tears of grief the tears of gratitude which filled her eyes? + +So the young man tried to reply evasively, in a manner which would +ensure his liberty of action for the future. + +"Miss Jenny," said he, "rest assured I will do everything in my power +for--" + +And he took the little hand in both of his, but with the gentle +pressure he felt his heart melt and his head grow confused: words to +express his thoughts failed him. He stammered out some incoherent words: + +"Miss--Miss Jenny--for you--" + +Crockston, who was watching him, rubbed his hands, grinning and +repeating to himself: + +"It will come! it will come! it has come!" + +How James Playfair would have managed to extricate himself from his +embarrassing position no one knows, but fortunately for him, if not for +the _Dolphin_, the man on watch was heard crying: + +"Ahoy, officer of the watch!" + +"What now?" asked Mr. Mathew. + +"A sail to windward!" + +James Playfair, leaving the young girl, immediately sprang to the +shrouds of the mainmast. + + + + +Chapter V + +THE SHOT FROM THE _IROQUOIS,_ AND MISS JENNY'S ARGUMENTS + +Until now the navigation of the _Dolphin_ had been very fortunate. Not +one ship had been signalled before the sail hailed by the man on watch. + +The _Dolphin_ was then in 32 deg. 51' lat., and 57 deg. 43' W. longitude. For +forty-eight hours a fog, which now began to rise, had covered the +ocean. If this mist favoured the _Dolphin_ by hiding her course, it +also prevented any observations at a distance being made, and, without +being aware of it, she might be sailing side by side, so to speak, with +the ships she wished most to avoid. + +Now this is just what had happened, and when the ship was signalled she +was only three miles to windward. + +When James Playfair had reached the cross-trees, he saw distinctly, +through an opening in the mist, a large Federal corvette in full +pursuit of the _Dolphin_. + +After having carefully examined her, the Captain came down on deck +again, and called to the first officer. + +"Mr. Mathew," said he, "what do you think of this ship?" + +"I think, Captain, that it is a Federal cruiser, which suspects our +intentions." + +"There is no possible doubt of her nationality," said James Playfair. +"Look!" + +At this moment the starry flag of the North United States appeared on +the gaff-yards of the corvette, and the latter asserted her colours +with a cannon-shot. + +"An invitation to show ours," said Mr. Mathew. "Well, let us show them; +there is nothing to be ashamed of." + +"What's the good?" replied James Playfair. "Our flag will hardly +protect us, and it will not hinder those people from paying us a visit. +No; let us go ahead." + +"And go quickly," replied Mr. Mathew, "for, if my eyes do not deceive +me, I have already seen that corvette lying off Liverpool, where she +went to watch the ships in building: my name is not Mathew, if that is +not the _Iroquois_ on her taffrail." + +"And is she fast?" + +"One of the fastest vessels of the Federal marine." + +"What guns does she carry?" + +"Eight." + +"Pooh!" + +"Oh, don't shrug your shoulders, Captain," said Mr. Mathew, in a +serious tone; "two out of those eight guns are rifled, one is a +sixty-pounder on the forecastle, and the other a hundred-pounder on +deck." + +"Upon my soul!" exclaimed James Playfair, "they are Parrott's, and will +carry three miles." + +"Yes, and farther than that, Captain." + +"Ah, well! Mr. Mathew, let their guns be sixty or only four-pounders, +and let them carry three miles or five hundred yards, it is all the +same if we can go fast enough to avoid their shot. We will show this +_Iroquois_ how a ship can go when she is built on purpose to go. Have +the fires drawn forward, Mr. Mathew." + +The first officer gave the Captain's orders to the engineer, and soon +volumes of black smoke curled from the steamer's chimneys. + +This proceeding did not seem to please the corvette, for she made the +_Dolphin_ the signal to lie to, but James Playfair paid no attention to +this warning, and did not change his ship's course. + +"Now," said he, "we shall see what the _Iroquois_ will do; here is a +fine opportunity for her to try her guns. Go ahead full speed!" + +"Good!" exclaimed Mr. Mathew; "she will not be long in saluting us." + +Returning to the poop, the Captain saw Miss Halliburtt sitting quietly +near the bulwarks. + +"Miss Jenny," said he, "we shall probably be chased by that corvette +you see to windward, and as she will speak to us with shot, I beg to +offer you my arm to take you to your cabin again." + +"Thank you, very much, Mr. Playfair," replied the young girl, looking +at him, "but I am not afraid of cannon-shots." + +"However, miss, in spite of the distance, there may be some danger." + +"Oh, I was not brought up to be fearful; they accustom us to everything +in America, and I assure you that the shot from the _Iroquois_ will not +make me lower my head." + +"You are brave, Miss Jenny." + +"Let us admit, then, that I am brave, and allow me to stay by you." + +"I can refuse you nothing, Miss Halliburtt," replied the Captain, +looking at the young girl's calm face. + +These words were hardly uttered when they saw a line of white smoke +issue from the bulwarks of the corvette; before the report had reached +the _Dolphin_ a projectile whizzed through the air in the direction of +the steamer. + +At about twenty fathoms from the _Dolphin_ the shot, the speed of which +had sensibly lessened, skimmed over the surface of the waves, marking +its passage by a series of water-jets; then, with another burst, it +rebounded to a certain height, passed over the _Dolphin_, grazing the +mizzen-yards on the starboard side, fell at thirty fathoms beyond, and +was buried in the waves. + +"By Jove!" exclaimed James Playfair, "we must get along; another slap +like that is not to be waited for." + +"Oh!" exclaimed Mr. Mathew, "they will take some time to reload such +pieces." + +"Upon my honour, it is an interesting sight," said Crockston, who, with +arms crossed, stood perfectly at his ease looking at the scene. + +"Ah! that's you," cried James Playfair, scanning the American from head +to foot. + +"It is me, Captain," replied the American, undisturbed. "I have come to +see how these brave Federals fire; not badly, in truth, not badly." + +The Captain was going to answer Crockston sharply, but at this moment a +second shot struck the sea on the starboard side. + +"Good!" cried James Playfair, "we have already gained two cables on +this _Iroquois_. Your friends sail like a buoy; do you hear, Master +Crockston?" + +"I will not say they don't," replied the American, "and for the first +time in my life it does not fail to please me." + +A third shot fell still farther astern, and in less than ten minutes +the _Dolphin_ was out of range of the corvette's guns. + +"So much for patent-logs, Mr. Mathew," said James Playfair; "thanks to +those shot we know how to rate our speed. Now have the fires lowered; +it is not worth while to waste our coal uselessly." + +"It is a good ship that you command," said Miss Halliburtt to the young +Captain. + +"Yes, Miss Jenny, my good _Dolphin_ makes her seventeen knots, and +before the day is over we shall have lost sight of that corvette." + +James Playfair did not exaggerate the sailing qualities of his ship, +and the sun had not set before the masts of the American ship had +disappeared below the horizon. + +This incident allowed the Captain to see Miss Halliburtt's character in +a new light; besides, the ice was broken, henceforward, during the +whole of the voyage; the interviews between the Captain and his +passenger were frequent and prolonged; he found her to be a young girl, +calm, strong, thoughtful, and intelligent, speaking with great ease, +having her own ideas about everything, and expressing her thoughts with +a conviction which unconsciously penetrated James Playfair's heart. + +She loved her country, she was zealous in the great cause of the Union, +and expressed herself on the civil war in the United States with an +enthusiasm of which no other woman would have been capable. Thus it +happened, more than once, that James Playfair found it difficult to +answer her, even when questions purely mercantile arose in connection +with the war: Miss Jenny attacked them none the less vigorously, and +would come to no other terms whatever. At first James argued a great +deal, and tried to uphold the Confederates against the Federals, to +prove that the Secessionists were in the right, and that if the people +were united voluntarily they might separate in the same manner. But the +young girl would not yield on this point; she demonstrated that the +question of slavery was predominant in the struggle between the North +and South Americans, that it was far more a war in the cause of morals +and humanity than politics, and James could make no answer. Besides, +during these discussions, which he listened to attentively, it is +difficult to say whether he was more touched by Miss Halliburtt's +arguments or the charming manner in which she spoke; but at last he was +obliged to acknowledge, among other things, that slavery was the +principal feature in the war, that it must be put an end to decisively, +and the last horrors of barbarous times abolished. + +It has been said that the political opinions of the Captain did not +trouble him much. He would have sacrificed his most serious opinion +before such enticing arguments and under like circumstances; he made a +good bargain of his ideas for the same reason, but at last he was +attacked in his tenderest point; this was the question of the traffic +in which the _Dolphin_ was being employed, and, consequently, the +ammunition which was being carried to the Confederates. + +"Yes, Mr. James," said Miss Halliburtt, "gratitude does not hinder me +from speaking with perfect frankness; on the contrary, you are a brave +seaman, a clever merchant, the house of Playfair is noted for its +respectability; but in this case it fails in its principles, and +follows a trade unworthy of it." + +"How!" cried James, "the house of Playfair ought not to attempt such a +commercial enterprise?" + +"No! it is taking ammunition to the unhappy creatures in revolt against +the government of their country, and it is lending arms to a bad cause." + +"Upon my honour, Miss Jenny, I will not discuss the right of the +Confederates with you; I will only answer you with one word: I am a +merchant, and as such I only occupy myself with the interests of my +house; I look for gain wherever there is an opportunity of getting it." + +"That is precisely what is to be blamed, Mr. James," replied the young +girl; "profit does not excuse it; thus, when you supply arms to the +Southerners, with which to continue a criminal war, you are quite as +guilty as when you sell opium to the Chinese, which stupefies them." + +"Oh, for once, Miss Jenny, this is too much, and I cannot admit--" + +"No; what I say is just, and when you consider it, when you understand +the part you are playing, when you think of the results for which you +are responsible, you will yield to me in this point, as in so many +others." + +James Playfair was dumfounded at these words; he left the young girl, a +prey to angry thoughts, for he felt his powerlessness to answer; then +he sulked like a child for half an hour, and an hour later he returned +to the singular young girl who could overwhelm him with convincing +arguments with quite a pleasant smile. + +In short, however it may have come about, and although he would not +acknowledge it to himself, Captain James Playfair belonged to himself +no longer; he was no longer commander-in-chief on board his own ship. + +Thus, to Crockston's great joy, Mr. Halliburtt's affairs appeared to be +in a good way; the Captain seemed to have decided to undertake +everything in his power to deliver Miss Jenny's father, and for this he +would be obliged to compromise the _Dolphin_, his cargo, his crew, and +incur the displeasure of his worthy Uncle Vincent. + + + + +Chapter VI + +SULLIVAN ISLAND CHANNEL + +Two days after the meeting with the _Iroquois_, the _Dolphin_ found +herself abreast of the Bermudas, where she was assailed by a violent +squall. These isles are frequently visited by hurricanes, and are +celebrated for shipwrecks. It is here that Shakespeare has placed the +exciting scene of his drama, _The Tempest_, in which Ariel and Caliban +dispute for the empire of the floods. + +The squall was frightful; James Playfair thought once of running for +one of the Bermudas, where the English had a military post: it would +have been a sad waste of time, and therefore especially to be +regretted; happily the _Dolphin_ behaved herself wonderfully well in +the storm, and, after flying a whole day before the tempest, she was +able to resume her course towards the American coast. + +But if James Playfair had been pleased with his ship, he had not been +less delighted with the young girl's bravery; Miss Halliburtt had +passed the worst hours of the storm at his side, and James knew that a +profound, imperious, irresistible love had taken possession of his +whole being. + +"Yes," said he, "this brave girl is mistress on board; she turns me +like the sea a ship in distress--I feel that I am foundering! What will +Uncle Vincent say? Ah! poor nature, I am sure that if Jenny asked me to +throw all this cursed cargo into the sea, I should do it without +hesitating, for love of her." + +Happily for the firm of Playfair & Co., Miss Halliburtt did not demand +this sacrifice; nevertheless, the poor Captain had been taken captive, +and Crockston, who read his heart like an open book, rubbed his hands +gleefully. + +"We will hold him fast!" he muttered to himself, "and before a week has +passed my master will be quietly installed in one of the best cabins of +the _Dolphin_." + +As for Miss Jenny, did she perceive the feelings which she inspired? +Did she allow herself to share them? No one could say, and James +Playfair least of all; the young girl kept a perfect reserve, and her +secret remained deeply buried in her heart. + +But whilst love was making such progress in the heart of the young +Captain, the _Dolphin_ sped with no less rapidity towards Charleston. + +On the 13th of January, the watch signalled land ten miles to the west. +It was a low-lying coast, and almost blended with the line of the sea +in the distance. Crockston was examining the horizon attentively, and +about nine o'clock in the morning he cried: + +"Charleston lighthouse!" + +Now that the bearings of the _Dolphin_ were set, James Playfair had but +one thing to do, to decide by which channel he would run into +Charleston Bay. + +"If we meet with no obstacles," said he, "before three o'clock we shall +be in safety in the docks of the port." + +The town of Charleston is situated on the banks of an estuary seven +miles long and two broad, called Charleston Harbour, the entrance to +which is rather difficult. It is enclosed between Morris Island on the +south and Sullivan Island on the north. At the time when the _Dolphin_ +attempted to force the blockade Morris Island already belonged to the +Federal troops, and General Gillmore had caused batteries to be erected +overlooking the harbour. Sullivan Island, on the contrary, was in the +hands of the Confederates, who were also in possession of Moultrie +Fort, situated at the extremity of the island; therefore it would be +advantageous to the _Dolphin_ to go as close as possible to the +northern shores to avoid the firing from the forts on Morris Island. + +Five channels led into the estuary, Sullivan Island Channel, the +Northern Channel, the Overall Channel, the Principal Channel, and +lastly, the Lawford Channel; but it was useless for strangers, unless +they had skilful pilots on board, or ships drawing less than seven feet +of water, to attempt this last; as for Northern and Overall Channels, +they were in range of the Federalist batteries, so that it was no good +thinking of them. If James Playfair could have had his choice, he would +have taken his steamer through the Principal Channel, which was the +best, and the bearings of which were easy to follow; but it was +necessary to yield to circumstances, and to decide according to the +event. Besides, the Captain of the _Dolphin_ knew perfectly all the +secrets of this bay, its dangers, the depths of its water at low tide, +and its currents, so that he was able to steer his ship with the +greatest safety as soon as he entered one of these narrow straits. The +great question was to get there. + +Now this work demanded an experienced seaman, and one who knew exactly +the qualities of the _Dolphin_. + +In fact, two Federal frigates were now cruising in the Charleston +waters. Mr. Mathew soon drew James Playfair's attention to them. + +"They are preparing to ask us what we want on these shores," said he. + +"Ah, well! we won't answer them," replied the Captain, "and they will +not get their curiosity satisfied." + +In the meanwhile the cruisers were coming on full steam towards the +_Dolphin_, who continued her course, taking care to keep out of range +of their guns. But in order to gain time James Playfair made for the +south-west, wishing to put the enemies' ships off their guard; the +latter must have thought that the _Dolphin_ intended to make for Morris +Island Channel. Now there they had batteries and guns, a single shot +from which would have been enough to sink the English ship; so the +Federals allowed the _Dolphin_ to run towards the south-west, +contenting themselves by observing her without following closely. + +Thus for an hour the respective situations of the ships did not change, +for James Playfair, wishing to deceive the cruisers as to the course of +the _Dolphin_, had caused the fires to be moderated, so that the speed +was decreased. However, from the thick volumes of smoke which escaped +from the chimneys, it might have been thought that he was trying to get +his maximum pressure, and, consequently his maximum of rapidity. + +"They will be slightly astonished presently," said James Playfair, +"when they see us slip through their fingers!" + +In fact, when the Captain saw that he was near enough to Morris Island, +and before a line of guns, the range of which he did not know, he +turned his rudder quickly, and the ship resumed her northerly course, +leaving the cruisers two miles to windward of her; the latter, seeing +this manoeuvre, understood the steamer's object, and began to pursue +her in earnest, but it was too late. The _Dolphin_ doubled her speed +under the action of the screws, and distanced them rapidly. Going +nearer to the coast, a few shell were sent after her as an acquittal of +conscience, but the Federals were outdone, for their projectiles did +not reach half-way. At eleven o'clock in the morning, the steamer +ranging near Sullivan Island, thanks to her small draft, entered the +narrow strait full steam; there she was in safety, for no Federalist +cruiser dared follow her in this channel, the depth of which, on an +average, was only eleven feet at low tide. + +"How!" cried Crockston, "and is that the only difficulty?" + +"Oh! oh! Master Crockston," said James Playfair, "the difficulty is not +in entering, but in getting out again." + +"Nonsense!" replied the American, "that does not make me at all uneasy; +with a boat like the _Dolphin_ and a Captain like Mr. James Playfair, +one can go where one likes, and come out in the same manner." + +Nevertheless, James Playfair, with telescope in his hand, was +attentively examining the route to be followed. He had before him +excellent coasting guides, with which he could go ahead without any +difficulty or hesitation. + +Once his ship was safely in the narrow channel which runs the length of +Sullivan Island, James steered bearing towards the middle of Fort +Moultrie as far as the Pickney Castle, situated on the isolated island +of Shute's Folly; on the other side rose Fort Johnson, a little way to +the north of Fort Sumter. + +At this moment the steamer was saluted by some shot which did not reach +her, from the batteries on Morris Island. She continued her course +without any deviation, passed before Moultrieville, situated at the +extremity of Sullivan Island, and entered the bay. + +Soon Fort Sumter on the left protected her from the batteries of the +Federalists. + +This fort, so celebrated in the civil war, is situated three miles and +a half from Charleston, and about a mile from each side of the bay: it +is nearly pentagonal in form, built on an artificial island of +Massachusetts granite; it took ten years to construct and cost more +than 900,000 dollars. + +It was from this fort, on the 13th of April, 1861, that Anderson and +the Federal troops were driven, and it was against it that the first +shot of the Confederates was fired. It is impossible to estimate the +quantity of iron and lead which the Federals showered down upon it. +However, it resisted for almost three years, but a few months after the +passage of the _Dolphin_ it fell beneath General Gillmore's three +hundred-pounders on Morris Island. + +But at this time it was in all its strength, and the Confederate flag +floated proudly above it. + +Once past the fort, the town of Charleston appeared, lying between +Ashley and Cooper Rivers. + +James Playfair threaded his way through the buoys which mark the +entrance of the channel, leaving behind the Charleston lighthouse, +visible above Morris Island. He had hoisted the English flag, and made +his way with wonderful rapidity through the narrow channels. When he +had passed the quarantine buoy, he advanced freely into the centre of +the bay. Miss Halliburtt was standing on the poop, looking at the town +where her father was kept prisoner, and her eyes filled with tears. + +At last the steamer's speed was moderated by the Captain's orders; the +_Dolphin_ ranged along the end of the south and east batteries, and was +soon moored at the quay of the North Commercial Wharf. + + + + +Chapter VII + +A SOUTHERN GENERAL + +The _Dolphin_, on arriving at the Charleston quay, had been saluted by +the cheers of a large crowd. The inhabitants of this town, strictly +blockaded by sea, were not accustomed to visits from European ships. +They asked each other, not without astonishment, what this great +steamer, proudly bearing the English flag, had come to do in their +waters; but when they learned the object of her voyage, and why she had +just forced the passage Sullivan, when the report spread that she +carried a cargo of smuggled ammunition, the cheers and joyful cries +were redoubled. + +James Playfair, without losing a moment, entered into negotiation with +General Beauregard, the military commander of the town. The latter +eagerly received the young Captain of the _Dolphin_, who had arrived in +time to provide the soldiers with the clothes and ammunition they were +so much in want of. It was agreed that the unloading of the ship should +take place immediately, and numerous hands came to help the English +sailors. + +Before quitting his ship James Playfair had received from Miss +Halliburtt the most pressing injunctions with regard to her father, and +the Captain had placed himself entirely at the young girl's service. + +"Miss Jenny," he had said, "you may rely on me; I will do the utmost in +my power to save your father, but I hope this business will not present +many difficulties. I shall go and see General Beauregard to-day, and, +without asking him at once for Mr. Halliburtt's liberty, I shall learn +in what situation he is, whether he is on bail or a prisoner." + +"My poor father!" replied Jenny, sighing; "he little thinks his +daughter is so near him. Oh that I could fly into his arms!" + +"A little patience, Miss Jenny; you will soon embrace your father. Rely +upon my acting with the most entire devotion, but also with prudence +and consideration." + +This is why James Playfair, after having delivered the cargo of the +_Dolphin_ up to the General, and bargained for an immense stock of +cotton, faithful to his promise, turned the conversation to the events +of the day. + +"So," said he, "you believe in the triumph of the slave-holders?" + +"I do not for a moment doubt of our final success, and, as regards +Charleston, Lee's army will soon relieve it: besides, what do you +expect from the Abolitionists? Admitting that which will never be, that +the commercial towns of Virginia, the two Carolinas, Georgia, Alabama, +fall under their power, what then? Will they be masters of a country +they can never occupy? No, certainly not; and for my part, if they are +ever victorious, they shall pay dearly for it." + +"And you are quite sure of your soldiers?" asked the Captain. "You are +not afraid that Charleston will grow weary of a siege which is ruining +her?" + +"No, I do not fear treason; besides, the traitors would be punished +remorselessly, and I would destroy the town itself by sword or fire if +I discovered the least Unionist movement. Jefferson Davis confided +Charleston to me, and you may be sure that Charleston is in safe hands." + +"Have you any Federal prisoners?" asked James Playfair, coming to the +interesting object of the conversation. + +"Yes, Captain," replied the General, "it was at Charleston that the +first shot of separation was fired. The Abolitionists who were here +attempted to resist, and, after being defeated, they have been kept as +prisoners of war." + +"And have you many?" + +"About a hundred." + +"Free in the town?" + +"They were until I discovered a plot formed by them: their chief +succeeded in establishing a communication with the besiegers, who were +thus informed of the situation of affairs in the town. I was then +obliged to lock up these dangerous guests, and several of them will +only leave their prison to ascend the slope of the citadel, where ten +confederate balls will reward them for their federalism." + +"What! to be shot!" cried the young man, shuddering involuntarily. + +"Yes, and their chief first of all. He is a very dangerous man to have +in a besieged town. I have sent his letters to the President at +Richmond, and before a week is passed his sentence will be irrevocably +passed." + +"Who is this man you speak of?" asked James Playfair, with an assumed +carelessness. + +"A journalist from Boston, a violent Abolitionist with the confounded +spirit of Lincoln." + +"And his name?" + +"Jonathan Halliburtt." + +"Poor wretch!" exclaimed James, suppressing his emotion. "Whatever he +may have done, one cannot help pitying him. And you think that he will +be shot?" + +"I am sure of it," replied Beauregard. "What can you expect? War is +war; one must defend oneself as best one can." + +"Well, it is nothing to me," said the Captain. "I shall be far enough +away when this execution takes place." + +"What! you are thinking of going away already." + +"Yes, General, business must be attended to; as soon as my cargo of +cotton is on board I shall be out to sea again. I was fortunate enough +to enter the bay, but the difficulty is in getting out again. The +_Dolphin_ is a good ship; she can beat any of the Federal vessels for +speed, but she does not pretend to distance cannon-balls, and a shell +in her hull or engine would seriously affect my enterprise." + +"As you please, Captain," replied Beauregard; "I have no advice to give +you under such circumstances. You are doing your business, and you are +right. I should act in the same manner were I in your place; besides, a +stay at Charleston is not very pleasant, and a harbour where shells are +falling three days out of four is not a safe shelter for your ship; so +you will set sail when you please; but can you tell me what is the +number and the force of the Federal vessels cruising before Charleston?" + +James Playfair did his best to answer the General, and took leave of +him on the best of terms; then he returned to the _Dolphin_ very +thoughtful and very depressed from what he had just heard. + +"What shall I say to Miss Jenny? Ought I to tell her of Mr. +Halliburtt's terrible situation? Or would it be better to keep her in +ignorance of the trial which is awaiting her? Poor child!" + +He had not gone fifty steps from the governor's house when he ran +against Crockston. The worthy American had been watching for him since +his departure. + +"Well, Captain?" + +James Playfair looked steadily at Crockston, and the latter soon +understood he had no favourable news to give him. + +"Have you seen Beauregard?" he asked. + +"Yes," replied James Playfair. + +"And have you spoken to him about Mr. Halliburtt?" + +"No, it was he who spoke to me about him." + +"Well, Captain?" + +"Well, I may as well tell you everything, Crockston." + +"Everything, Captain." + +"General Beauregard has told me that your master will be shot within a +week." + +At this news anyone else but Crockston would have grown furious or +given way to bursts of grief, but the American, who feared nothing, +only said, with almost a smile on his lips: + +"Pooh! what does it matter?" + +"How! what does it matter?" cried James Playfair. "I tell you that Mr. +Halliburtt will be shot within a week, and you answer, what does it +matter?" + +"And I mean it--if in six days he is on board the _Dolphin_, and if in +seven days the _Dolphin_ is on the open sea." + +"Right!" exclaimed the Captain, pressing Crockston's hand. "I +understand, my good fellow, you have got some pluck; and for myself, in +spite of Uncle Vincent, I would throw myself overboard for Miss Jenny." + +"No one need be thrown overboard," replied the American, "only the fish +would gain by that: the most important business now is to deliver Mr. +Halliburtt." + +"But you must know that it will be difficult to do so." + +"Pooh!" exclaimed Crockston. + +"It is a question of communicating with a prisoner strictly guarded." + +"Certainly." + +"And to bring about an almost miraculous escape." + +"Nonsense," exclaimed Crockston; "a prisoner thinks more of escaping +than his guardian thinks of keeping him; that's why, thanks to our +help, Mr. Halliburtt will be saved." + +"You are right, Crockston." + +"Always right." + +"But now what will you do? There must be some plan: and there are +precautions to be taken." + +"I will think about it." + +"But when Miss Jenny learns that her father is condemned to death, and +that the order for his execution may come any day--" + +"She will know nothing about it, that is all." + +"Yes, it will be better for her and for us to tell her nothing." + +"Where is Mr. Halliburtt imprisoned?" asked Crockston. + +"In the citadel," replied James Playfair. + +"Just so! . . . On board now?" + +"On board, Crockston!" + + + + +Chapter VIII + +THE ESCAPE + +Miss Jenny, sitting at the poop of the _Dolphin_, was anxiously waiting +the Captain's return; when the latter went up to her she could not +utter a word, but her eyes questioned James Playfair more eagerly than +her lips could have done. The latter, with Crockston's help, informed +the young girl of the facts relating to her father's imprisonment. He +said that he had carefully broached the subject of the prisoners of war +to Beauregard, but, as the General did not seem disposed at all in +their favour, he had thought it better to say no more about it, but +think the matter over again. + +"Since Mr. Halliburtt is not free in the town, his escape will be more +difficult; but I will finish my task, and I promise you, Miss Jenny, +that the _Dolphin_ shall not leave Charleston without having your +father on board." + +"Thank you, Mr. James; I thank you with my whole heart." + +At these words James Playfair felt a thrill of joy through his whole +being. + +He approached the young girl with moist eyes and quivering lips; +perhaps he was going to make an avowal of the sentiments he could no +longer repress, when Crockston interfered: + +"This is no time for grieving," said he; "we must go to work, and +consider what to do." + +"Have you any plan, Crockston?" asked the young girl. + +"I always have a plan," replied the American: "it is my peculiarity." + +"But a good one?" said James Playfair. + +"Excellent! and all the ministers in Washington could not devise a +better; it is almost as good as if Mr. Halliburtt was already on board." + +Crockston spoke with such perfect assurance, at the same time with such +simplicity, that it must have been the most incredulous person who +could doubt his words. + +"We are listening, Crockston," said James Playfair. + +"Good! You, Captain, will go to General Beauregard, and ask a favour of +him which he will not refuse you." + +"And what is that?" + +"You will tell him that you have on board a tiresome subject, a scamp +who has been very troublesome during the voyage, and excited the crew +to revolt. You will ask of him permission to shut him up in the +citadel; at the same time, on the condition that he shall return to the +ship on her departure, in order to be taken back to England, to be +delivered over to the justice of his country." + +"Good!" said James Playfair, half smiling, "I will do all that, and +Beauregard will grant my request very willingly." + +"I am perfectly sure of it," replied the American. + +"But," resumed Playfair, "one thing is wanting." + +"What is that?" + +"The scamp." + +"He is before you, Captain." + +"What, the rebellious subject?" + +"Is myself; don't trouble yourself about that." + +"Oh! you brave, generous heart," cried Jenny, pressing the American's +rough hands between her small white palms. + +"Go, Crockston," said James Playfair; "I understand you, my friend; and +I only regret one thing--that is, that I cannot take your place." + +"Everyone his part," replied Crockston; "if you put yourself in my +place you would be very much embarrassed, which I shall not be; you +will have enough to do later on to get out of the harbour under the +fire of the Feds and Rebs, which, for my part, I should manage very +badly." + +"Well, Crockston, go on." + +"Once in the citadel--I know it--I shall see what to do, and rest +assured I shall do my best; in the meanwhile, you will be getting your +cargo on board." + +"Oh, business is now a very unimportant detail," said the Captain. + +"Not at all! And what would your Uncle Vincent say to that? We must +join sentiment with work; it will prevent suspicion; but do it quickly. +Can you be ready in six days?" + +"Yes." + +"Well, let the _Dolphin_ be ready to start on the 22nd." + +"She shall be ready." + +"On the evening of the 22nd of January, you understand, send a gig with +your best men to White Point, at the end of the town; wait there till +nine o'clock, and then you will see Mr. Halliburtt and your servant." + +"But how will you manage to effect Mr. Halliburtt's deliverance, and +also escape yourself?" + +"That's my look-out." + +"Dear Crockston, you are going to risk your life then, to save my +father!" + +"Don't be uneasy, Miss Jenny, I shall risk absolutely nothing, you may +believe me." + +"Well," asked James Playfair, "when must I have you locked up?" + +"To-day--you understand--I demoralise your crew; there is no time to be +lost." + +"Would you like any money? It may be of use to you in the citadel." + +"Money to buy the gaoler! Oh, no, it would be a poor bargain; when one +goes there the gaoler keeps the money and the prisoner! No, I have +surer means than that; however, a few dollars may be useful; one must +be able to drink, if needs be." + +"And intoxicate the gaoler." + +"No, an intoxicated gaoler would spoil everything. No, I tell you I +have an idea; let me work it out." + +"Here, my good fellow, are ten dollars." + +"It is too much, but I will return what is over." + +"Well, then, are you ready?" + +"Quite ready to be a downright rogue." + +"Let us go to work, then." + +"Crockston," said the young girl, in a faltering voice, "you are the +best man on earth." + +"I know it," replied the American, laughing good-humouredly. "By the +by, Captain, an important item." + +"What is that?" + +"If the General proposes to hang your rebel--you know that military men +like sharp work--" + +"Well, Crockston?" + +"Well, you will say that you must think about it." + +"I promise you I will." + +The same day, to the great astonishment of the crew, who were not in +the secret, Crockston, with his feet and hands in irons, was taken on +shore by a dozen sailors, and half an hour after, by Captain James +Playfair's request, he was led through the streets of the town, and, in +spite of his resistance, was imprisoned in the citadel. + +During this and the following days the unloading of the _Dolphin_ was +rapidly accomplished; the steam cranes lifted out the European cargo to +make room for the native goods. The people of Charleston, who were +present at this interesting work, helped the sailors, whom they held in +great respect, but the Captain did not leave the brave fellows much +time for receiving compliments; he was constantly behind them, and +urged them on with a feverish activity, the reason of which the sailors +could not suspect. + +Three days later, on the 18th of January, the first bales of cotton +began to be packed in the hold: although James Playfair troubled +himself no more about it, the firm of Playfair and Co. were making an +excellent bargain, having obtained the cotton which encumbered the +Charleston wharves at very far less than its value. + +In the meantime no news had been heard of Crockston. Jenny, without +saying anything about it, was a prey to incessant fears; her pale face +spoke for her, and James Playfair endeavoured his utmost to ease her +mind. + +"I have all confidence in Crockston," said he; "he is a devoted +servant, as you must know better than I do, Miss Jenny. You must make +yourself quite at ease; believe me, in three days you will be folded in +your father's arms." + +"Ah! Mr. James," cried the young girl, "how can I ever repay you for +such devotion? How shall we ever be able to thank you?" + +"I will tell you when we are in English seas," replied the young +Captain. + +Jenny raised her tearful face to him for a moment, then her eyelids +drooped, and she went back to her cabin. + +James Playfair hoped that the young girl would know nothing of her +father's terrible situation until he was in safety, but she was +apprised of the truth by the involuntary indiscretion of a sailor. + +The reply from the Richmond cabinet had arrived by a courier who had +been able to pass the line of outposts; the reply contained Jonathan +Halliburtt's death-warrant. The news of the approaching execution was +not long in spreading through the town, and it was brought on board by +one of the sailors of the _Dolphin_; the man told the Captain, without +thinking that Miss Halliburtt was within hearing; the young girl +uttered a piercing cry, and fell unconscious on the deck. James +Playfair carried her to her cabin, but the most assiduous care was +necessary to restore her to life. + +When she opened her eyes again, she saw the young Captain, who, with a +finger on his lips, enjoined absolute silence. With difficulty she +repressed the outburst of her grief, and James Playfair, leaning +towards her, said gently: + +"Jenny, in two hours your father will be in safety near you, or I shall +have perished in endeavouring to save him!" + +Then he left the cabin, saying to himself, "And now he must be carried +off at any price, since I must pay for his liberty with my own life and +those of my crew." + +The hour for action had arrived, the loading of the cotton cargo had +been finished since morning; in two hours the ship would be ready to +start. + +James Playfair had left the North Commercial Wharf and gone into the +roadstead, so that he was ready to make use of the tide, which would be +high at nine o'clock in the evening. + +It was seven o'clock when James left the young girl, and began to make +preparations for departure. Until the present time the secret had been +strictly kept between himself, Crockston, and Jenny; but now he thought +it wise to inform Mr. Mathew of the situation of affairs, and he did so +immediately. + +"Very well, sir," replied Mr. Mathew, without making the least remark, +"and nine o'clock is the time?" + +"Nine o'clock, and have the fires lit immediately, and the steam got +up." + +"It shall be done, Captain." + +"The _Dolphin_ may remain at anchor; we will cut our moorings and sheer +off, without losing a moment." + +"Just so." + +"Have a lantern placed at the mainmast-head; the night is dark, and +will be foggy; we must not risk losing our way in returning. You had +better have the bell for starting rung at nine o'clock." + +"Your orders shall be punctually attended to, Captain." + +"And now, Mr. Mathew, have a shore-boat manned with six of our best +men. I am going to set out directly for White Point. I leave Miss Jenny +in your charge, and may God protect us!" + +"May God protect us!" repeated the first officer. + +Then he immediately gave the necessary orders for the fires to be +lighted, and the shore-boat provided with men. In a few minutes the +boat was ready, and James Playfair, after bidding Jenny good-bye, +stepped into it, whilst at the same time he saw volumes of black smoke +issuing from the chimneys of the ship, and losing itself in the fog. + +The darkness was profound; the wind had fallen, and in the perfect +silence the waters seemed to slumber in the immense harbour, whilst a +few uncertain lights glimmered through the mist. James Playfair had +taken his place at the rudder, and with a steady hand he guided his +boat towards White Point. It was a distance of about two miles; during +the day James had taken his bearings perfectly, so that he was able to +make direct for Charleston Point. + +Eight o'clock struck from the church of St. Philip when the shore-boat +ran aground at White Point. + +There was an hour to wait before the exact time fixed by Crockston; the +quay was deserted, with the exception of the sentinel pacing to and fro +on the south and east batteries. James Playfair grew impatient, and the +minutes seemed hours to him. + +At half-past eight he heard the sound of approaching steps; he left his +men with their oars clear and ready to start, and went himself to see +who it was; but he had not gone ten feet when he met a band of +coastguards, in all about twenty men. James drew his revolver from his +waist, deciding to make use of it, if needs be; but what could he do +against these soldiers, who were coming on to the quay? + +The leader came up to him, and, seeing the boat, asked: + +"Whose craft is that?" + +"It is a gig belonging to the _Dolphin_," replied the young man. + +"And who are you?" + +"Captain James Playfair." + +"I thought you had already started, and were now in the Charleston +channels." + +"I am ready to start. I ought even now to be on my way but--" + +"But--" persisted the coastguard. + +A bright idea shot through James's mind, and he answered: + +"One of my sailors is locked up in the citadel, and, to tell the truth, +I had almost forgotten him; fortunately I thought of him in time, and I +have sent my men to bring him." + +"Ah! that troublesome fellow; you wish to take him back to England?" + +"Yes. + +"He might as well be hung here as there," said the coast-guard, +laughing at his joke. + +"So I think," said James Playfair, "but it is better to have the thing +done in the regular way." + +"Not much chance of that, Captain, when you have to face the Morris +Island batteries." + +"Don't alarm yourself. I got in and I'll get out again." + +"Prosperous voyage to you!" + +"Thank you." + +With this the men went off, and the shore was left silent. + +At this moment nine o'clock struck; it was the appointed moment. James +felt his heart beat violently; a whistle was heard; he replied to it, +then he waited, listening, with his hand up to enjoin perfect silence +on the sailors. A man appeared enveloped in a large cloak, and looking +from one side to another. James ran up to him. + +"Mr. Halliburtt?" + +"I am he," replied the man with the cloak. + +"God be praised!" cried James Playfair. "Embark without losing a +minute. Where is Crockston?" + +"Crockston!" exclaimed Mr. Halliburtt, amazed. "What do you mean?" + +"The man who has saved you and brought you here was your servant +Crockston." + +"The man who came with me was the gaoler from the citadel," replied Mr. +Halliburtt. + +"The gaoler!" cried James Playfair. + +Evidently he knew nothing about it, and a thousand fears crowded in his +mind. + +"Quite right, the gaoler," cried a well-known voice. "The gaoler is +sleeping like a top in my cell." + +"Crockston! you! Can it be you?" exclaimed Mr. Halliburtt. + +"No time to talk now, master; we will explain everything to you +afterwards. It is a question of life or death. Get in quick!" + +The three men took their places in the boat. + +"Push off!" cried the captain. + +Immediately the six oars dipped into the water; the boat darted like a +fish through the waters of Charleston Harbour. + + + + +Chapter IX + +BETWEEN TWO FIRES + +The boat, pulled by six robust oarsmen, flew over the water. The fog +was growing dense, and it was with difficulty that James Playfair +succeeded in keeping to the line of his bearings. Crockston sat at the +bows, and Mr. Halliburtt at the stern, next the Captain. The prisoner, +only now informed of the presence of his servant, wished to speak to +him, but the latter enjoined silence. + +However, a few minutes later, when they were in the middle of the +harbour, Crockston determined to speak, knowing what thoughts were +uppermost in Mr. Halliburtt's mind. + +"Yes, my dear master," said he, "the gaoler is in my place in the cell, +where I gave him two smart blows, one on the head and the other on the +stomach, to act as a sleeping draught, and this when he was bringing me +my supper; there is gratitude for you. I took his clothes and his keys, +found you, and let you out of the citadel, under the soldiers' noses. +That is all I have done." + +"But my daughter--?" asked Mr. Halliburtt. + +"Is on board the ship which is going to take you to England." + +"My daughter there! there!" cried the American, springing from his seat. + +"Silence!" replied Crockston, "a few minutes, and we shall be saved." + +The boat flew through the darkness, but James Playfair was obliged to +steer rather by guess, as the lanterns of the _Dolphin_ were no longer +visible through the fog. He was undecided what direction to follow, and +the darkness was so great that the rowers could not even see to the end +of their oars. + +"Well, Mr. James?" said Crockston. + +"We must have made more than a mile and a half," replied the Captain. +"You don't see anything, Crockston?" + +"Nothing; nevertheless, I have good eyes; but we shall get there all +right. They don't suspect anything out there." + +These words were hardly finished when the flash of a gun gleamed for an +instant through the darkness, and vanished in the mist. + +"A signal!" cried James Playfair. + +"Whew!" exclaimed Crockston. "It must have come from the citadel. Let +us wait." + +A second, then a third shot was fired in the direction of the first, +and almost the same signal was repeated a mile in front of the gig. + +"That is from Fort Sumter," cried Crockston, "and it is the signal of +escape. Urge on the men; everything is discovered." + +"Pull for your lives, my men!" cried James Playfair, urging on the +sailors, "those gun-shots cleared my route. The _Dolphin_ is eight +hundred yards ahead of us. Stop! I hear the bell on board. Hurrah, +there it is again! Twenty pounds for you if we are back in five +minutes!" + +The boat skimmed over the waves under the sailors' powerful oars. A +cannon boomed in the direction of the town. Crockston heard a ball whiz +past them. + +The bell on the _Dolphin_ was ringing loudly. A few more strokes and +the boat was alongside. A few more seconds and Jenny fell into her +father's arms. + +The gig was immediately raised, and James Playfair sprang on to the +poop. + +"Is the steam up, Mr. Mathew?" + +"Yes, Captain." + +"Have the moorings cut at once." + +A few minutes later the two screws carried the steamer towards the +principal channel, away from Fort Sumter. + +"Mr. Mathew," said James, "we must not think of taking the Sullivan +Island channel; we should run directly under the Confederate guns. Let +us go as near as possible to the right side of the harbour out of range +of the Federal batteries. Have you a safe man at the helm?" + +"Yes, Captain." + +"Have the lanterns and the fires on deck extinguished; there is a great +deal too much light, but we cannot help the reflection from the +engine-rooms." + +During this conversation the _Dolphin_ was going at a great speed; but +in altering her course to keep to the right side of the Charleston +Harbour she was obliged to enter a channel which took her for a moment +near Fort Sumter; and when scarcely half a mile off all the guns +bearing on her were discharged at the same time, and a shower of shot +and shell passed in front of the _Dolphin_ with a thundering report. + +"Too soon, stupids," cried James Playfair, with a burst of laughter. +"Make haste, make haste, Mr. Engineer! We shall get between two fires." + +The stokers fed the furnaces, and the _Dolphin_ trembled all over with +the effort of the engine as if she was on the point of exploding. + +At this moment a second report was heard, and another shower of balls +whizzed behind the _Dolphin_. + +"Too late, stupids," cried the young Captain, with a regular roar. + +Then Crockston, who was standing on the poop, cried, "That's one +passed. A few minutes more, and we shall have done with the Rebs." + +"Then do you think we have nothing more to fear from Fort Sumter?" +asked James. + +"Nothing at all, but everything from Fort Moultrie, at the end of +Sullivan Island; but they will only get a chance at us for half a +minute, and then they must choose their time well, and shoot straight +if they want to reach us. We are getting near." + +"Right; the position of Fort Moultrie will allow us to go straight for +the principal channel. Fire away then, fire away!" + +At the same moment, and as if in obedience to James Playfair, the fort +was illuminated by a triple line of lightning. A frightful crash was +heard; then a crackling sound on board the steamer. + +"Touched this time!" exclaimed Crockston. + +"Mr. Mathew!" cried the Captain to his second, who was stationed at the +bows, "what has been damaged?" + +"The bowsprit broken." + +"Any wounded?" + +"No, Captain." + +"Well, then, the masts may go to Jericho. Straight into the pass! +Straight! and steer towards the island." + +"We have passed the Rebs!" cried Crockston; "and, if we must have balls +in our hull, I would much rather have the Northerners; they are more +easily digested." + +In fact, the _Dolphin_ could not yet consider herself out of danger; +for, if Morris Island was not fortified with the formidable pieces of +artillery which were placed there a few months later, nevertheless its +guns and mortars could easily have sunk a ship like the _Dolphin_. + +The alarm had been given to the Federals on the island, and to the +blockading squadron, by the firing from Forts Sumter and Moultrie. The +besiegers could not make out the reason of this night attack; it did +not seem to be directed against them. However, they were obliged to +consider it so, and were ready to reply. + +It occupied James Playfair's thoughts whilst making towards the passes +of Morris Island; and he had reason to fear, for in a quarter of an +hour's time lights gleamed rapidly through the darkness. A shower of +small shell fell round the steamer, scattering the water over her +bulwarks; some of them even struck the deck of the _Dolphin_, but not +on their points, which saved the ship from certain ruin. In fact, these +shell, as it was afterwards discovered, could break into a hundred +fragments, and each cover a superficial area of a hundred and twenty +square feet with Greek fire, which would burn for twenty minutes, and +nothing could extinguish it. One of these shell alone could set a ship +on fire. Fortunately for the _Dolphin_, they were a new invention, and +as yet far from perfect. Once thrown into the air, a false rotary +movement kept them inclined, and, when falling, instead of striking on +their points, where is the percussion apparatus, they fell flat. This +defect in construction alone saved the _Dolphin_. The falling of these +shells did her little harm, and under the pressure of her over-heated +boilers she continued to advance into the pass. + +At this moment, and in spite of his orders, Mr. Halliburtt and his +daughter went to James Playfair on the poop; the latter urged them to +return to their cabins, but Jenny declared that she would remain by the +Captain. As for Mr. Halliburtt, who had just learnt all the noble +conduct of his deliverer, he pressed his hand without being able to +utter a word. + +The _Dolphin_ was speeding rapidly towards the open sea. There were +only three miles more before she would be in the waters of the +Atlantic; if the pass was free at its entrance, she was saved. James +Playfair was wonderfully well acquainted with all the secrets of +Charleston Bay, and he guided his ship through the darkness with an +unerring hand. He was beginning to think his daring enterprise +successful, when a sailor on the forecastle cried: + +"A ship!" + +"A ship?" cried James. + +"Yes, on the larboard side." + +The fog had cleared off, and a large frigate was seen making towards +the pass, in order to obstruct the passage of the _Dolphin_. It was +necessary, cost what it might, to distance her, and urge the +steam-engine to an increase of speed, or all was lost. + +"Port the helm at once!" cried the Captain. + +Then he sprang on to the bridge above the engine. By his orders one of +the screws was stopped, and under the action of the other the +_Dolphin_, veering with an extraordinary rapidity, avoided running foul +of the frigate, and advanced like her to the entrance of the pass. It +was now a question of speed. + +James Playfair understood that in this lay his own safety, Miss +Jenny's, her father's, and that of all his crew. + +The frigate was considerably in advance of the _Dolphin_. It was +evident from the volumes of black smoke issuing from her chimneys that +she was getting up her steam. James Playfair was not the man to be left +in the background. + +"How are the engines?" cried he to the engineer. + +"At the maximum speed," replied the latter; "the steam is escaping by +all the valves." + +"Fasten them down," ordered the Captain. + +And his orders were executed at the risk of blowing up the ship. + +The _Dolphin_ again increased her speed; the pistons worked with +frightful rapidity; the metal plates on which the engine was placed +trembled under the terrific force of their blows. It was a sight to +make the boldest shudder. + +"More pressure!" cried James Playfair; "put on more pressure!" + +"Impossible!" replied the engineer. "The valves are tightly closed; our +furnaces are full up to the mouths." + +"What difference! Fill them with cotton soaked in spirits; we must pass +that frigate at any price." + +At these words the most daring of the sailors looked at each other, but +did not hesitate. Some bales of cotton were thrown into the +engine-room, a barrel of spirits broached over them, and this expensive +fuel placed, not without danger, in the red-hot furnaces. The stokers +could no longer hear each other speak for the roaring of the flames. +Soon the metal plates of the furnaces became red-hot; the pistons +worked like the pistons of a locomotive; the steamgauge showed a +frightful tension; the steamer flew over the water; her boards creaked, +and her chimneys threw out volumes of smoke mingled with flames. She +was going at a headlong speed, but, nevertheless, she was gaining on +the frigate--passed her, distanced her, and in ten minutes was out of +the channel. + +"Saved!" cried the Captain. + +"Saved!" echoed the crew, clapping their hands. + +Already the Charleston beacon was disappearing in the south-west; the +sound of firing from the batteries grew fainter, and it might with +reason be thought that the danger was all past, when a shell from a +gun-boat cruising at large was hurled whizzing through the air. It was +easy to trace its course, thanks to the line of fire which followed it. + +Then was a moment of anxiety impossible to describe; every one was +silent, and each watched fearfully the arch described by the +projectile. Nothing could be done to escape it, and in a few seconds it +fell with a frightful noise on the fore-deck of the _Dolphin_. + +The terrified sailors crowded to the stern, and no one dared move a +step, whilst the shell was burning with a brisk crackle. + +But one brave man alone among them ran up to the formidable weapon of +destruction. It was Crockston; he took the shell in his strong arms, +whilst showers of sparks were falling from it; then, with a superhuman +effort, he threw it overboard. + +Hardly had the shell reached the surface of the water when it burst +with a frightful report. + +"Hurrah! hurrah!" cried the whole crew of the _Dolphin_ unanimously, +whilst Crockston rubbed his hands. + +Some time later the steamer sped rapidly through the waters of the +Atlantic; the American coast disappeared in the darkness, and the +distant lights which shot across the horizon indicated that the attack +was general between the batteries of Morris Island and the forts of +Charleston Harbour. + + + + +Chapter X + +ST. MUNGO + +The next day at sunrise the American coast had disappeared; not a ship +was visible on the horizon, and the _Dolphin_, moderating the frightful +rapidity of her speed, made quietly towards the Bermudas. + +It is useless to recount the passage across the Atlantic, which was +marked by no accidents, and ten days after the departure from +Queenstown the French coast was hailed. + +What passed between the Captain and the young girl may be imagined, +even by the least observant individuals. How could Mr. Halliburtt +acknowledge the devotion and courage of his deliverer, if it was not by +making him the happiest of men? James Playfair did not wait for English +seas to declare to the father and daughter the sentiments which +overflowed his heart, and, if Crockston is to be believed, Miss Jenny +received his confession with a happiness she did not try to conceal. + +Thus it happened that on the 14th of February, 18--, a numerous crowd +was collected in the dim aisles of St. Mungo, the old cathedral of +Glasgow. There were seamen, merchants, manufacturers, magistrates, and +some of every denomination gathered here. There was Miss Jenny in +bridal array and beside her the worthy Crockston, resplendent in +apple-green clothes, with gold buttons, whilst Uncle Vincent stood +proudly by his nephew. + +In short, they were celebrating the marriage of James Playfair, of the +firm of Vincent Playfair & Co., of Glasgow, with Miss Jenny Halliburtt, +of Boston. + +The ceremony was accomplished amidst great pomp. Everyone knew the +history of the _Dolphin_, and everyone thought the young Captain well +recompensed for his devotion. He alone said that his reward was greater +than he deserved. + +In the evening there was a grand ball and banquet at Uncle Vincent's +house, with a large distribution of shillings to the crowd collected in +Gordon Street. Crockston did ample justice to this memorable feast, +while keeping himself perfectly within bounds. + +Everyone was happy at this wedding; some at their own happiness, and +others at the happiness around them, which is not always the case at +ceremonies of this kind. + +Late in the evening, when the guests had retired, James Playfair took +his uncle's hand. + +"Well, Uncle Vincent," said he to him. + +"Well, Nephew James?" + +"Are you pleased with the charming cargo I brought you on board the +_Dolphin_?" continued Captain Playfair, showing him his brave young +wife. + +"I am quite satisfied," replied the worthy merchant; "I have sold my +cotton at three hundred and seventy-five per cent. profit." + + + + +End of The Blockade Runners + + + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Blockade Runners, by Jules Verne + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BLOCKADE RUNNERS *** + +***** This file should be named 8992.txt or 8992.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/8/9/9/8992/ + +Produced by Norman M. 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