I walked through the darkness to the
head of the ladder, where Ellison was on watch.
“Any news?” I asked the quartermaster.
“No, sir; all quiet,”
he answered, and as I made to go down he cried out,
“Where are you going, sir? Don’t do
that. You can’t go there.”
“It’s all right,”
I answered. “Keep your eyes open. Nothing
will happen to me. And don’t be lured from
the staircase, whatever occurs; and here, take my
revolver. I’m on a mission of peace.”
I slipped down the ladder and found myself in the
gloom of the orlop deck. A lantern was hanging
in the shrouds and I had not reached it before I was
challenged.
“It’s the doctor, Gray,”
said I, recognising his voice, “and come no
earlier than you want him, I’ll wager. There’s
more than one of you has got his gruel, I’m
thinking.”
He came into the light. “Are
you armed, doctor?” said he.
“You can feel,” said I,
and he clapped his hands down my pockets.
“Well, I don’t know,”
he said, in a hesitating way. “It’s
true enough. Davenport’s dead as mutton,
and Stephenson and Coyne are down in their bunks.
But it’s Mr. Holgate commands here. I’ll
call him.” He went forward and whistled,
and presently two other men approached, one of whom
I saw was Holgate by his rolling form.
“Glad to see you, doctor,”
he said cheerfully. “I was hoping to be
honoured by a visit, but, hang me! if I expected it.
Come along now, and let’s get some light on
the case.”
He led the way into the forecastle
quarters, and emerged into the room in which the hands
had their meals, which was lit by electricity, as
were all the cabins and saloons of the Sea Queen.
“These digs are not what I’m
accustomed to, doctor,” he said, taking a seat.
“I’m frank, you see; but of course I retire
only to jump better. Isn’t that how it
goes? We jumped too soon, you see; and that was
you. If it had not been for that fool Pierce!
Twice the essential ass played into your hands.
You were pretty smart, though I gave you a lead.
There I was the fool.”
“Well, Mr. Holgate, as between
man and man, you were,” I said.
He laughed. “Oh, it will
work out all right, but it makes it bloody. Now,
there was no need of blood in this little job, not
if it had been rightly managed, and I’ll take
blame for that. No, you were my mistake.”
He looked at me in his tense unblinking
way, as if he would have torn out of me on that instant
what I thought and what I really was.
“I shall not be your last,” I said indifferently.
“Have a drink,” he said.
“We’ve got some good champagne, all under
lock and key, you bet, my son. That’s not
going to be my mistake, at any rate. I’ve
not lived forty years for nothing. I’m going
to pull this off.”
“Thank you,” said I. “But it’s
business I’ve come on.”
“Business and ‘the boy’
go together in the city, I’ve heard,” he
answered. “Well, is it terms you want?”
“Oh, dear, no,” I replied.
“Only an affair of mercy. You’ve got
two wounded men, and there’s McCrae.”
He looked down for a moment.
“McCrae was another mistake, but not mine,”
he said. “You can’t do any good to
McCrae. But you can see the others, if you will.
Not that that’s what you’ve come for.
Shall I tell you what, doctor? You’ve come
like the gentlemen who went to the Holy Land, and
came back carrying grapes, eh? I remember the
picture when I was a boy a precious huge
bunch, too. Well, you can have the grapes if
you’ll take ’em in a liquefied form, and
carry them in your belly.”
I rose. “I’ll see these men,”
I said abruptly.
He led me to the bunks, and I examined
the wounded men. One was beyond hope; the other
was but slightly injured; and I told Holgate the truth.
He nodded.
“I don’t much want Coyne,”
he said musingly. “I’ve no use for
him. He’s a bungler.”
The cold-blooded way in which he delivered
this heartless criticism raised in me a feeling of
nausea. I was moving away when he stopped me.
“Stay; you’re not going
back empty-handed, doctor, after all your kindness.
Any one you’d like to see?”
I thought. “Yes,” said I. “Naylor
or Williams.”
Holgate moved out, and lifted the
hatch. “Naylor!” he called. “Granger,
let Naylor up.” He turned to me. “We
don’t starve ’em. It’s pretty
comfortable ’tween decks when you’re used
to it.”
I made no reply, and presently a voice
hailed us from below.
“Is that Naylor?” asked Holgate.
“Yes.”
“Naylor, here is the doctor
inquiring after your health. Any questions he
puts to you you are at liberty to reply to.”
He moved away whistling cheerfully,
and I called out, “Naylor, I only want to know
one thing. How many of you are there?”
“Six, sir,” said the man.
“All under hatch?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Very well; keep up your hearts. This is
not the end. Good-night.”
I went to Holgate. “Really,”
said I lightly, “I find there are more honest
men in this ship than I had anticipated.”
I don’t think he liked that.
“You’ve got twelve,” he said drily.
“And there’s more than thirty with us.”
“You forget one thing,”
I said. “We have the wheel, and to-morrow
you may find yourselves steaming cheerfully up the
river to Buenos Ayres, like any good liner.”
“That would be a pity, wouldn’t
it?” he said with a grin. “But you
also forget one thing doctor that is, I’ve
got the engines. Supposing those engines stopped?”
“Well, we can get a press of
canvas on her,” I suggested.
“Great heavens!” says he. “Can
you? What are we doing?”
“I think,” said I, “that we have
a good marksman on board.”
“You’re right,”
he said savagely, “and, by thunder, I won’t
forgive him for that. I had meant
By thunder, I’ll play Old Harry and merry Hades
to him for that. Lord, doctor!” he added
with a sneer, “to think of you sucking up to
a potty prince! or perhaps it’s the ladies.”
“Yes; I hope you remember the
ladies,” said I. “It’s not too
late, Holgate.”
He was silent a moment. “I
take no stock in women,” he said at length.
“They’re nothing to me. Let the little
innocent birds go free. I’ll tell you what,
doctor. I’ll offer terms, and generous terms,
considering I’ve got the trumps. I’ll
drop the whole pack of you at the mouth of the river,
ladies and all, and add all personal possessions of
every one save what’s in the Prince’s safes.
Now that’s fair. I’ll make you ambassador.
By gad, it will be the only chance you will ever have
of being a prince’s ambassador.” He
laughed.
“Holgate,” said I, “I’ve
met many generous men, but you appropriate the gingerbread,
as you might say. Now I wish you good-night.”
He advanced two steps towards me.
“Doctor,” said he gravely, “you’ve
got to consider this. It’s important.
I’m not here to play marbles. It’s
a sure thing. I give you up there” he
made a movement of his thumb to the quarterdeck “just
this chance. Strike a bargain and I’ll
see you through. There’s not a hap’orth
of harm will come to any. Otherwise”
He shrugged his shoulders.
“Mr. Holgate,” said I,
“I will deal with you as frankly as you seem
to desire. This spells for you, in my opinion
one thing, and that’s the dock.”
“Oh, dear, no,” he interrupted,
smiling. “The men were discontented, despatched
a deputation, and were fired on by the Prince.
English juries don’t like these arbitrary German
military ways.”
“You forget McCrae,” said I.
“No, I don’t. There
was an accident in the engine-room, and the second
engineer can bear witness to it, as well as some others.
Oh, we stand very well, doctor.”
Even as he spoke I saw a shadow steal
out of the deeper darkness and draw to his side.
I made it out for Pierce, the murderer. I will
say that that interruption of the ruffianly boatswain
turned unexpectedly the course of my blood. I
had seemed somehow to have been dealing with Holgate,
as a scoundrel, certainly, yet upon terms of fair warfare.
But that shadow struck us all down to a lower level.
Murder had been committed, and here was the murderer.
Without one word I turned and made my way towards
the ladder communicating with the upper deck.
I had no good news to offer to my
comrades; indeed, had I spoken quite what was in my
thoughts, it was a black prospect with which I must
present them. But I did not wish to increase the
tension of the situation, and merely recounted the
facts I had gathered.
“Thirty against twelve,”
mused Day, “and there are six true men in the
hold. Three head men. We have opened well,
gentlemen.”
He looked round sarcastically as he
spoke, but at once returned to his colder formal manner.
“They have the engine-room and we the bridge.
That means that their attack will be on the bridge.”
“I have no doubt that is what they mean,”
I said.
“Very well, gentlemen,”
said Day. “We know exactly where we are
now, thanks to Dr. Phillimore. You have your
stations. I shall be obliged if you will take
them. We are likely to have a lively night.”
“And let me say, gentlemen,”
said the Prince, raising his voice, “that I
do not conceive it possible that a pack of mutineers
can secure the control of their ship from their officers.
It is inconceivable, I repeat. I shall be at
your disposal, captain,” he turned to Day, “when
it is necessary. I will take my share in the common
danger and struggle.”
There was a murmur of applause at
this, and we dispersed to our quarters. Legrand
had the bridge, and the man at the wheel was turning
the spokes as calmly as if there had been no such thing
as an alarm or a rising. Down below all was quiet,
and the engines were moving slowly. It was now
about one in the morning, and on our beams the wind
was rising. The yacht was making about eight
knots and no more, and we were still a day’s
steam from Buenos Ayres. I paced the deck in cover
of the chart-house for an hour or more in a condition
of nervous impatience. Holgate, I knew, would
move deliberately, but when he moved this time he
would strike hard.
It was towards the dawn that, stopping
in my walk, I listened, and heard amid the whistling
of the wind and the wash of the water a little mutter
of sound somewhere in the disintegrating darkness below.
I called to Legrand under my breath, and I heard his
“hist.” He was at attention, his
ears straining in the wind to get news of what was
passing. Then there was a shot, and the noise
of a melee at the ladder. Oaths and shouts
and the reports of revolvers echoed from the wooden
walls.
“Can you see, Phillimore?”
screamed Legrand against the wind.
“They are attacking the gangway,”
I shouted back. One of the two men who stood
armed near me rushed forward.
“Go back, go back,” thundered
Legrand from the bridge. “Go to your post.”
I was aware that the Prince had come
out on the hurricane deck, which was on the level
of the bridge, and as I peered into the gloom, suddenly
a shout from the second man in my neighbourhood made
me wheel sharply about. I turned in time to see
him fire at some figures that came over the port side
of the yacht. Immediately I guessed that this
was the real attack, and that the assault on the ladder
was but a diversion, I ran forward, calling to Legrand,
I found Barraclough on the other side of the deck-houses,
using a cutlass, and I moved to his assistance.
Three men had reached the deck, and a fourth was clambering
over. The seaman who had called out fired wide,
and the next moment went down under a heavy blow from
the figure in front. I discharged a shot, but
missed the man as he made his rush. Barraclough
simultaneously gave way, and I saw him being pushed
backwards against the side of the saloon. I fired
again at one of his assailants, who fell away with
a curse, and just then the first flush of the coming
dawn moved over the waters, and shed a little light
on the scene. It disclosed the burly form of
Holgate in grips with Legrand, who had descended from
the bridge, and Barraclough still struggling with his
opponent. I had just time to make this out when
one of the mutineers struck at me with a heavy bar,
and the blow, owing to a movement on my part, fell
on my right arm and paralysed it. He raised his
weapon again while I fumbled to get the revolver out
of my useless hand into my left, when Day suddenly
emerged from somewhere with a levelled pistol.
My antagonist dropped like a log. Day fired again,
and then with an oath Holgate threw the second officer
heavily to the deck, and pointed a revolver.
There was a pause of two seconds, then a report, and
Day slipped, moved his arms helplessly, and slid along
the deck. A shout now came from the other side
of the ship where the struggle at the gangway had
been going on; and in a moment a stampede was upon
us.
I was forced back by sheer weight
of numbers to the head of the companion-way, using
my weapon with some wildness, for all was passing
before me in confusion. I had received a hard
crack on the head and scarcely knew what I was doing,
but was merely sustained in my resistance by a sense
of continuity, inherited, as it were, from the earlier
part of the struggle. Somehow I found myself in
the shelter of the corridor that led to the apartments
of the Prince, his sister and his guest, and, for
some reason I could not with my dizzy head conjecture,
I was alone. I looked down the corridor, which
was in gentle light, but saw nothing; it was as silent
as though it had been plunged in the profound peace
and slumber of the night. Without, the racket
of noises reached me as in a dream, and I remember
that I sat down on a couch in the corridor, my empty
revolver in my hand.
What ensued or how long I sat there
I do not know; but I think it could not have been
very long. I was aroused by a voice, and looked
up stupidly. A face floated in the mists before
me, and I nodded in a friendly way, smiling, and opened
my mouth to speak. Instead I lurched forward
and was conscious of warm arms, the soft pressure of
a human body, and the fragrance of a dress. There
was a time when I seemed to sway alone in a cold and
dreary vacancy, but soon there returned to my senses
the warmth and the fragrance and the ineffable comfort
of some presence. Some liquid was forced between
my lips, and I drank; and as I drank my brain cleared,
and I looked and was aware who was supporting me with
her arm. It was Princess Alix.
“Madam” I began stuttering.
“Hush! Drink this,”
she said quickly. “We have need of you.
We cannot spare a man like you. You have no dangerous
wound?”
“I think not,” I said
with difficulty. “A blow on the head
My hand went feebly to it as I spoke,
and came away with a patch of red. I rose and
totteringly picked up my revolver, which had fallen.
“What has happened?”
She shook her head. “I
was up in the hurricane-deck, but my brother sent
me down. There is nothing to be heard. I
was going out when I found you here.”
“It is good of you,” I
said vaguely. “Let us go out, then.
Take this weapon.”
“I have one,” said she quickly.
I nodded. “Brave girl!”
said I gravely. “Brave heart, as brave as
beautiful!” I felt vaguely I was paying her a
necessary compliment, but that was all. Yet the
corridor was clearing before me now, and the light
of dawn was filtering through the curtained windows.
Princess Alix had turned to the door
which gave on the deck.
“If they have won,” she
said suddenly in a low voice, “why have they
not come here?”
I shook my head. “They
do not want the saloon. They want other things,”
said I. “They want the strongrooms.”
“Then are they ?” she began.
“I cannot tell,” said I. “I
will go out.”
“No,” she said imperatively.
“Wait.” Of a sudden a voice was raised
in a scream from the farther end of the corridor.
“It is Mademoiselle,” said she, with a
little frown. “She is impatient of my return.
I must go back.”
She glided off swiftly, and I stood
by the door waiting for some moments. As she
did not return, I opened it softly, and the strong
wind off the morning sea took me in the face, refreshing
me. I stepped out upon the deck. The sky
was as grey as the sea, and the silhouette of the
spars and funnel was ghost-like. The Sea Queen
thundered on her course, heeling to the broad wash
of the water. As I stood watching, my ears alert
for any sound that would give me information, I saw
a figure detach itself from the bulwarks and move
uncertainly about, and as it drew near I discovered
it was Pye’s. His face was of a colour with
the gray steel of his revolver, which he held loosely,
as if he was not aware he held it.
“Oh, my God!” he said
in a hoarse whisper. “Oh, my God! I
didn’t know it was like this. Oh, my God!”
“Pye!” I called softly;
and he started and dropped his pistol.
“Pick it up, man, and keep silence,”
I whispered. “Come this way.”
I took his arm and stealthily withdrew him into the
corridor. “What has happened?”
He gazed at me wildly. “They’ve
got the ship,” he said with a whisper.
“Oh, I didn’t know it would be like this.”
I gave him a dose of the brandy which
the Princess had brought for me, and it seemed to
pull him together. He blinked at me through his
glasses, and eyed me with some terror and distrust.
“Do you know how things stand?” I asked.
He shook his head. “The
captain’s killed,” he said falteringly.
“I don’t know about the others.”
“We’ve got to find out,”
I said, and thought. Then, for I saw he would
be of little use to me in his present state, I said,
“Look here, Pye, I’m going to explore,
while you keep this door. Mind you let no one
in. We’ll bolt it, see.”
I did so as I spoke, and turning found
the Princess coming down the corridor. I explained
to her the situation, and added that Pye would be
placed on guard. She cast a glance at him, and
looked at me inquiringly.
“I’m going down to the
saloon below,” I said. “This set of
cabins is isolated, except for the doors at each end
to the deck and the door that gives on the staircase
to the saloon. Can I depend on you to hold out
for five minutes? A shout will bring me up at
a moment’s notice.”
“Yes,” she said breathlessly.
I opened the second door that admitted
to the staircase and glanced down. No one was
visible, and no sound was audible. I turned, nodded
reassuringly to the Princess, and descended. The
saloon was empty, and there were no signs of any struggle.
I passed along the passage towards the officers’
quarters, but everything was in order; and finally
retraced my way towards the kitchens, which abutted
on the engine-room, but were separated from it by
a thick partition of steel and wood. As I went,
the yacht rolled and sent me against a closed door
with a heavy bump. From within issued a sound,
subdued but unmistakable as that of a human voice.
I reflected that the mutineers would not be here, for
it was evident that the door was locked, and no mutineer
would secure himself in a cabin in the midst of his
triumph. I rapped loudly on the door and called
out:
“It’s Phillimore. Who is in here?”
After a pause I heard the bolt go
back and the door opened a little, disclosing the
face of Lane.
“You, doctor?” he said.
“Thank the Lord we’re not all done yet.”
He flung the door wide, and I could see now that his
companion was the head steward.
“Where’s the Prince?” I asked anxiously.
“I don’t know,”
he said, heaving a big sigh. “Thank the
Lord there’s some one else alive. I was
forced down the companion and fell. Lost my weapon,
too, or I’d ‘a’ showed more fight.
Great Scott, I rolled all the way down, not before
I’d done for one or two, I tell you.”
“Well, you’re wanted upstairs
now,” said I, “both of you. We’ve
got the ladies on our hands, and we’ve got to
find out where the Prince is. Day is dead.”
Lane whistled. “Poor beggar!”
he observed. “But Jackson must stay here.
This is our magazine, my boy where the grub
is. If we’ve got to stand a siege we’ve
got to seize the grub-chest. The storage chamber’s
along here.”
The advice seemed excellent.
“Yes,” I answered, “that is true.
Well, let Jackson wait here and lie low. He won’t
be discovered here.”
“I dare say the cook’s
somewhere hidden about here, sir,” observed
Jackson.
“All the better. Find him
if you can. And remember that, if we pull through,
this means a big business for you, Jackson, and cook,
too.”
“Yes, sir,” he assented mildly.
“Now, then, Lane,” I went
on, and the purser followed me into the saloon.
We mounted the staircase, and I took the chance of
closing the doors at the head that gave access to
the deck. Then I rapped on the door that gave
on the Prince’s corridor. It was opened
by the Princess eagerly.
“We are two more, Miss Morland,”
I said cheerfully, “and here is one of them.”
“But my brother!” she cried out.
“I’ve not discovered his whereabouts yet,”
I said evasively.
“Do you think that he’s”
She did not finish.
“Not a bit of it,” I said,
as decidedly as I could, for, to tell the truth, I
had my grave doubts. “I have unearthed Mr.
Lane and the steward. Why shouldn’t I unearth
Mr. Morland, too?”
Yet, if the others were alive, why was the yacht so
quiet?
She sighed, and then looked over at
the couch on which Pye sat huddled. “That
man’s no use,” she said contemptuously.
“He’s been doing nothing but drink brandy.”
Lane crossed over to him. “The beggar’s
drunk,” said he in disdain.
“Then you must hold one door and Miss Morland
the other,” said I.
“But you” She paused.
“I am going on another expedition.
You must let me out and in. Two knocks will warn
you.”
So saying, I slipped the bolt and
got out on deck. From the appearance of the sky
I judged that it was only half an hour since I had
found myself in the corridor. It was light enough
to make out things fairly well, and now I could discern
on the bridge the portly form of Holgate struck with
this light. The figure of a man was visible a
little in front of me by the chart-house. I heard
Holgate’s voice raised wheezily in orders, and
the replies of the men came back to me inarticulately.
As I crouched under the shelter of the cabins on the
lee side I became aware of a faint but continuous
line just over the bulwarks, and then the explanation
of the mysterious silence on the yacht dawned on me.
It was the coast line, from which we could not be
more than a couple of miles away, and in the confusion
of the fight, no doubt, the Sea Queen had lost
her course and been driven inshore. It had, therefore,
become imperative for Holgate to devote his attention
and the activities of his men to the danger that threatened,
more particularly as the heavy wind had threshed itself
into a gale abeam.
Now at this juncture I must confess
that I was entirely at a loss. I could not move
a foot across the deck without being discovered, since
it was merely the fact that I was in the lee of the
cabins and in the deeper shadows of the dawn that
enabled me to skulk where I was. Yet I was reluctant
to go back without having carried the search a stage
further. It was obvious from the calm which reigned
among the mutineers that the Prince and his following
were either dead or prisoners. Which had been
their fate? The shadow of the man in front of
me, scarcely a dozen paces away, turned and stopped
and seemed to put his ear to the woodwork. It
must be (I reflected) the chart-house door by which
he stood. What was he listening for? Was
it possible that some of our men were shut up in the
chart-house? I shuffled a step or two nearer and
watched him. He was fully armed, for I could make
out a weapon in his hand, and he had something by
his side, probably a cutlass. It was probable
that he was placed guard over the prisoners. I
drew two steps closer still. Holgate’s
voice still painfully dominated the wind and water,
and I ventured yet a pace nearer. Did he turn
now the man must see me, for I was in the gray light
of the dawn, a deeper shadow than the wooden walls
by which I lurked. My hands twitched, and I almost
seemed to have sprung before I did spring. Then
I knew I was on his back and had a leg twisted about
his legs. He fell heavily, and I thrust a hand
across his mouth. He struggled hard, writhing
upon the deck under the weight of my body like a snake,
and a choking sputter issued from his throat.
Hastily I dragged a handkerchief from my pocket and
pushed it into his mouth. The struggling increased.
I glanced up and found that we had fallen under the
door of the chart-house; also in that same glance
I observed that the key was in it. No doubt it
had been turned on the outside. I reached up
a hand, but missed the key by a few inches. The
endeavour had loosened my hold of my prisoner, and
I was flung against the door with a thud; but I hurled
myself upon him again just in time to prevent him
from withdrawing the gag. In the struggle which
ensued I managed to push him a little closer under
the door, and then, with a desperate effort, stretched
out and turned the key. I was fumbling for the
handle when the man once again evicted me from the
possession of his body, and I fell in a heap, jamming
the door, which opened outwards. But on that
I was aware that my back was being jarred and scored,
and the next instant I was tumbled over at the foot
of the mutineer, who had got on his legs at last.
The door was thrust open with a noise, and men issued
from it, stepping over my body.
“It is I Phillimore,” I gasped.
“Run for the cabins.”
Some one helped me to my feet, and
I saw the mutineer drop with a sword point through
him; and then we ran, I between two of the others,
one of whom I was conscious was Ellison. A shout
sailed down to us from the bridge, and there was the
noise of a revolver shot, but luckily it missed us,
and we gained the companion-way in safety, locked and
barred the door, and knocked on the entrance to the
corridor. Lane opened it.
“His Royal Highness, by gum!”
he cried excitedly, and for the first time I was able
to recognise my companions. The Prince was there,
safe and scathless, and with him Barraclough, Ellison,
and a fourth man, who was Grant.
Princess Alix rushed on her brother,
and was taken to his arms. He kissed her affectionately.
“Yvonne?” he said.
“She is safe,” said the
Princess, withdrawing herself. “She it safe,
dear, but frightened.”
She spoke in German, and he nodded.
“Ah, she would be frightened.
It is no woman’s work this, Alix. We must
be tender with her.”
“We have done our best,”
she replied, I thought a little coldly; and at that
a door down the corridor opened, and Mademoiselle herself
appeared.
“Frederic!” she cried
ecstatically, and hastened towards us with graceful
movements. “Ah, Frederic, it is cruel to
leave me so. I wish I were back in Paris.
Oh, mon Dieu! what a voyage, what a ship!”
As they embraced I turned my head
away, for this reunion of lovers was no sight for
public eyes, and as I did so I swept the Princess in
my vision. Her face had fallen dead and chill,
and I thought that a little curl of her lips betrayed
some impatience with these demonstrations. Meanwhile
Barraclough was narrating in his deliberate way the
adventures of the party; but I cut him short, only
asking one question:
“Where is Legrand?”
“They took him up and carried
him forward, but I couldn’t say if he were dead.”
“We have no time to lose,”
I said. “They may attack at any moment,
and we have too much space to defend for comfort.”
“Why, we can manage this well enough,”
said he easily.
“And be starved,” said
I. “No; we must keep the access to the saloon
and the kitchens, and that means precautions.
Look at the windows through which we may be approached.”
“Dr. Phillimore is right,”
said the Prince in his deep voice. “We must
guard the windows.”
“We must close them,”
said I. “Grant, you can use tools.
Ellison, you and Grant do what you can. There
is plenty of woodwork to draw on doors
and trappings in the cabins. The portholes are
useless to the mutineers, but they can enter by the
skylights or the windows. They must be all barred.
We are in a state of siege.”
“You hear your orders,”
said the Prince in his imperious voice. “The
doctor speaks sense. See that it is done.”
Barraclough and Lane and the Prince
himself were left on guard, and the rest of us sallied
down to hunt for tools and timber to carry out this
primitive fortification. In this we had the assistance
of the steward, Jackson, and the cook, who had been
discovered in one of his pantries. The work took
us a full hour or more, but at last it was decently
accomplished. The windows of the saloon and music-room
that gave on the deck were shuttered, as also the
windows of the cabins. Nothing but the skylights
remained unprotected, and these we could trust ourselves
to guard. I reckoned that we were in a position
to stand a siege indefinitely, unless something untoward
occurred. The fortifications completed, we stationed
our guards, two in the corridor, two in the saloon,
and sat down at last, wearied out with the fatigue
of that abominable night.