We were not interrupted during all
this time, and from the sound of the screw we could
tell that the yacht was still ploughing her way, but
clearly it was not now for Buenos Ayres. At six
we took some food prepared by the cook, and considered
the position with more equanimity. Counting the
cook, who had not been reckoned in our previous numbering,
we were now reduced to a party of ten men, if Pye could
be accounted a man after his cowardly behaviour.
There were six sailors in the hold at present useless,
and the mutineers, even after their losses, were not
far short of thirty. Of Legrand we knew nothing,
but could only hope for the best. So long as
we could hold the saloon we had plenty of food and
water, and our stock of ammunition was ample.
The outlook did not appear so bad. Only on the
other side we had to remember that Holgate had the
ship and could go whither he wished. Even if coal
failed him he had the auxiliary power of the sails.
Our main hope was to hold out until his provisions
should be exhausted and he should be obliged to put
into some port. Then would come the hour of reckoning,
for we were probably better supplied with provisions
than was the forecastle.
The ladies breakfasted in their cabins,
but the Prince was present at our common table, showing
a right democratic attitude.
“We are all in a common peril,
gentlemen,” he said with spirit. “We
must not make differences. But there must be discipline,”
he added.
There was, therefore, a certain camaraderie
reigning which had been foreign to the yacht before,
and Lane gave way to his native garrulity, enlivening
the table by some anecdotes, at which even Barraclough
condescended to smile.
“My hat!” cried the purser
suddenly, slapping his flank. “They’ve
not got what they fought for, and we’ve none
of us thought of it.”
There was a pause. It was true,
none of us had thought of it; we had been too busy
thinking of other things.
“Are you sure?” said I.
Lane rose. “Let’s
go and see,” said he. “But I’ve
all the keys, and I’ll swear no one came down
in the neighbourhood of the strong-room while I was
there.”
We trooped down, Prince and all, and
it was as the purser had said. The safes were
untouched. Barraclough elevated his eyebrows.
“The fools!” he commented.
“Well, it doesn’t seem
to me quite that,” said I slowly. “It
only looks as if Holgate was certain.”
“What do you mean?” he asked, and they
all looked at me.
“Why, if he did not take the
trouble to touch this, he cannot be in a hurry.
I never came upon a man with a cooler head. He’s
not in a hurry, that’s a fact. It’s
been deliberate all through, from the very moment
we left the Thames.”
We looked at each other now.
“Jerusalem!” said Lane. “What
a savage! He’s made sure of us, then.”
“He can wait his time,”
I said. “He has waited, and can wait longer.
The ship’s in his hands.”
“You take a gloomy view, sir,”
observed the Prince with a frown.
“Well, Mr. Morland,” I
replied drily. “I don’t think we’re
here to glaze matters over. We’ve got to
face things, and one of these things is that Holgate
hasn’t worried us since he got possession.
How are you going to account for that, save on my
hypothesis?”
“They shall be hanged every
one,” he exclaimed angrily, the German accent
emerging roughly now.
“Well, we’ll do our best, sir,”
I replied lightly.
I shut the strong-room door, and Lane
locked it; and, as I turned, I saw the white face
of Pye in the background. He had been missing
from breakfast, and he looked very sickly, very pale,
and very much abashed. The Prince noticed him,
too, and addressed him sharply.
“Why are you here, sir?
What do you mean by leaving your quarters? I
will have discipline kept on this ship.”
“I have no quarters,”
pleaded Pye humbly. “I was feeling sick,
and lay down in my bunk.”
“You shall get to your quarters
now, sir,” declared the Prince severely.
“Sir John, order this man to his post.”
The little man was so downcast, and
was obviously so unwell, that I took pity on him,
and cheered him as he went upstairs.
“Never mind, Pye,” I said. “We’ll
pull through.”
He shook his head. “Ah,
it isn’t that,” he said. “But
I disgraced myself, doctor. I’m not built
that way. It was awful awful.”
He shuddered.
“Yes, we’ll get our little
tum-tums full of it now, I guess,” remarked
Lane cheerfully. “You freeze on to your
barker, boy. You’ll need it before we fetch
up at Albert Docks again. It’s Execution
Docks for some of us, I’ll lay. Have a
cigar, doctor?”
I accepted, but Pye refused, turning
a sallow hue. His nerves had not yet recovered,
and he had certainly drunk a good deal of brandy.
Ellison and Jackson were on watch below, and when we
reached the corridor Grant signalled us in a whisper
from his peep-hole.
“Some one coming along this way, sir.”
Barraclough sprang to his side.
“By Heaven, it’s Holgate, damn him,”
he said, “with a flag of truce.”
“Open that door,” said the Prince evenly.
Grant turned the key and drew the
bolt, and the door fell ajar. Holgate’s
big form was stationed before it, and he waved a flag.
“A truce, gentlemen,” he said wheezily.
I looked at the Prince and Barraclough
for the answer, and to my amazement saw that the former
had his revolver at the level. His finger was
on the trigger. I leaped forward and struck it
up, and the bullet buried itself in the walls of the
cabin.
“What do you mean, sir?”
he thundered, turning on me savagely. “How
dare you?”
“Mr. Morland,” said I.
“You spoke of discipline a little ago. Well,
how do you keep it?”
“This is my ship,” he said furiously.
“Yes,” said I, “and
it is in the charge of Sir John Barraclough here,
who will tell you, perhaps, that it is against the
laws of equity, not to say common sense, to fire on
a flag of truce.”
Sir John looked uneasy. “The
doctor is right, sir,” he said. “We
ought to hear what he’s got to say.”
“He is a villainous murderer.
I will see that they are hanged,” said the Prince,
with a scowl at me. But he let his arm fall.
Behind him I could see the Princess, but her face
was averted.
Holgate’s figure blocked the
doorway. “If I may come in,” he said
smoothly, “and you’re quite done with your
pistol practice, gentlemen, I should like to make
a proposal to you.”
“It shall be unconditional surrender,
Sir John Barraclough,” said the Prince morosely;
“I will have no other terms.”
“You may come in,” said Barraclough shortly.
Holgate edged himself through.
“I claim the protection of this flag,”
said he flatly, and looked about him. “I
hope my men haven’t knocked you about too much.
Doctor, my respects to you. You’ve got a
head on you.”
“Come to business, sir,” said Barraclough
harshly.
“Sir John, I’ve saved
your ship, and I hope you’ll lay that to my
credit,” said Holgate in his leisurely voice.
“I found her drifting on a lee shore when I
took charge, and, by thunder, she’d have floundered
in another half-hour. So whatever you set on one
side of the ledger, there’s that lump on the
other.”
“We’re not here to talk
about these matters,” said Barraclough sternly.
“Excuse me, Sir John, we are,”
said Holgate sweetly. “We’re just
on that and nothing else. It’s pretty clear
how you stand, but if you like I’ll rehearse
the situation. And I want you to understand where
I stand. See? I don’t think
that’s so clear to you; and I want ventilation.
This is a duffing game for his Royal Highness there.
He stands to make nothing out of it, as things go,
and there’s precious little in it for any of
you. Here you are prisoners in these palatial
rooms, outnumbered by more than two to one, and not
a man of his hands among you, if I except the doctor.
Well, you can hold out, I daresay. I know all
about that. You’ve got a call on the food
cupboard, and you’re welcome to it. But
I’ve got the yacht, and she’ll canter under
my hands, not Sir John’s. Don’t you
make any mistake. You’re not in a first-class
position, gentlemen.”
“You’re a long time coming
to the point,” said Barraclough with exemplary
curtness. “We have no time to waste.”
“Well, gentlemen, I’m
willing to make a deal that’s the
short of it a deal that will suit both
parties. That’s the pith of the situation.”
He gazed from one to another of us
unembarrassed, and even with an expression of amiable
cheerfulness. “And my proposal’s this
“Unconditional surrender,”
broke in the Prince’s harsh voice.
“That so?” says Holgate
without concern, directing a glance at the speaker.
“I guess, Mr. Morland, you’re in this for
more than your health. So am I. But I should
like to know before starting whom I’ve got to
deal with, just by way of encouragement, so to say.”
He paused. “I don’t want to pry into
any secrets, but it would suit me better if I knew
whom to address. Owing to the unfortunate decease
of the late Captain Day
“You infernal ruffian; you murderer!”
broke fiercely out of Lane’s throat. “You’ll
hang yet, by heaven, or I’ll eat my hat.”
Holgate turned his heavy face and
still sombre eyes upon the purser, but said nothing
nor otherwise remarked his outburst. It was Barraclough
who spoke:
“Excuse me, Mr. Lane, this is
my affair, not yours,” he said abruptly.
“Go on, sir,” to Holgate.
“I can wait, of course,”
said the mutineer with cool irony. “There
isn’t much hurry about the matter now the ship
lays her course. But I should prefer a business
deal with business people, and I take it that that
means with you, Sir John.”
Barraclough nodded. “You
may address me,” he said. “And you
will get your answer from me.”
“That’s all right, then.
And having settled so much, this is what I’ve
got to lay before you,” proceeded Holgate placidly,
breathing out his words. “There’s
been a certain amount of pawn-taking in this game,
and we’ve both got to pass it over if we’re
coming to business. Now you know what I want,
and by this time you pretty well ought to know what
you want also. You’re in a tight fix.
Well, if you’ll hand over the contents of the
strong-room we’ll get out a proper contract,
as thus: self to take the said contents, agreeing
therewith to allow his Royal Highness, or Mr. Morland
(which you will), a moiety of the same, provided that
the party be landed at a suitable place not more than
ten miles from a civilised town, and provided always
that no more be heard of the steps leading up to this
contract.”
He came to a pause, and eyed us, with
a gaze divested of any eagerness, even of any significance.
The Prince uttered a loud laugh, but Barraclough,
as became his position, kept his expression. I
was a little out of the group, and I could pick out
the faces of the company. The Princess had moved
forward and leaned now with her chin on her open palm,
and one foot upon the settee near the door. She
was frankly staring at the mutineer who made these
astounding proposals. The Prince and Barraclough
conferred in whispers, and presently the latter resumed
his position.
“If you want the contents of
the strong-room,” he said, “it is suggested
that you had better come and take them.”
Holgate’s eyebrows went up.
“Well, I could do that, of course,” he
said slowly. “Don’t suppose I’ve
overlooked that solution of the little problem.
But I’m dealing with you squarely when I say
I’d rather not. For why? Because I
don’t want any further mess. We’ve
slopped about enough for the present, and I should
say you gentlemen know it.”
He paused again, as if to give us
an opportunity of revising our decision, and once
more the Prince and Sir John interchanged whispers.
Barraclough shook his head vigorously, and a frown
gathered on his features. In the fine light of
the skylights Princess Alix’s silhouette stood
out, and the soft hair on her forehead was ruffled
by the breeze. She was still gazing at Holgate.
His bull-neck turned and he faced towards her, and
their glances met. Neither gave way nor winced
before the salvos of the other, and I had the odd
thought that some strange duel was in progress, in
which the antagonists were that fair woman and that
villainous, gross man. Holgate’s eyes shifted
only when Barraclough spoke next.
“If you leave the yacht at the
next port or place of call we shall be powerless to
prevent you and the men under you,” said Barraclough
in a dry, formal voice. “But the mutiny
will be, of course, reported to the British Consul
at the most accessible port.”
“That’s a compromise,
I reckon,” observed Holgate with a grin, which
showed his fang. “That’s owner and
first officer commanding rolled into one and halved,
or I’m Dutch. Well, I’ll let it go;
but I’ve offered fair terms. And I’ll
tell you frankly that I wouldn’t even have offered
those had it not been for the doctor.” He
shook his head, wagging it at me. “Oh,
doctor, doctor, to think what I lost in you! Why,
we could have taken our time over the strong-room,
barring your little intervention. You’re
a real daisy, and I won’t forget it. But
now it’s in the hands of Providence. It’s
war. Sir John, I congratulate the double-barrelled
leaders. There’s two captains here, and
that’s one too many. I only allow one in
my quarters. All right, gentlemen.”
He took up his flag and waddled towards the door.
“Good-morning. I’ve done what I could.
Don’t blame me.”
On the threshold he paused, and his
glance marched deliberately over us all, landing at
last upon the Princess. “May the Lord help
you,” says he in his voice of suet. “May
the Lord be merciful to you all!”
The door went behind him with a snap.
I turned almost unconsciously in that direction in
which the last shafts of his eyes had flown. The
accent on the “all” had been perceptible.
Princess Alix had lifted her chin from her hand and
set down her foot. She held on to the arm of the
settee, and I could perceive her trembling. Her
face had gone white like paper, and she stared at
the closed door. I moved quickly towards her,
for I was a doctor, if I had no other right there.
My arrival broke upon her thought; she started, and
the colour flowed back slowly into her face.
“That man is the most awful
man I have ever seen,” she said with a shudder.
“He is not so awful as he thinks,” I said
encouragingly.
She shook her head, and moved away.
I followed her. “If I might suggest, I
would advise you to take a rest,” I said.
“You have had a most trying night.”
“Yes I will rest,”
she returned with a sigh; and then, as we walked down
the corridor together, “I thought you were right
when you spoke to to my brother in regard
to the revolver; but now I don’t know. I
think anything that would rid the world of such a monster
is justifiable.”
“Perhaps,” I replied.
“But he is making war, and we are on terms of
war, and more or less bound by them. At least,
that is one’s general notion. But who can
tell? The ethical boundaries, and the borders
of honour, are indefinable and intangible.”
“I think I would have shot him
myself,” she said vehemently.
“I hope we shall hang him yet,” I answered.
She looked at me out of her blue lustrous eyes, as
if deliberating.
“We depend a good deal on you, Dr. Phillimore,”
she said next.
“We are all dependent on one another,”
said I.
“Do you suppose that man meant what he said?”
she asked.
“No,” I said. “I
would distrust every statement of his. I can’t
determine what was in his mind or what he is aiming
at. But this I know, that to make a compact with
him would be to be at his mercy. He is ruthless;
he would not consider what blood he shed; and, besides,
he has committed himself too deeply, and is no fool
to ignore that.”
She sighed again. “I am
glad,” she murmured. “I thought perhaps
that it would be wise. But my brother would never
consent. Only I was afraid. But I am glad
it would have been of no use. That makes only
one course possible.”
“Only one,” I said gravely.
We came to a pause by the door of the cabin.
“I think I had better see to Mademoiselle,”
I said, “in case of emergencies.”
“Yes, please,” she said
with a start, and opened the door of the boudoir.
Mademoiselle, clad in a wonderful
dishabille, was seated under the electric light, engaged
in a game of dominoes with her maid, and just threw
a glance at us as we entered.
“There ... tenez ...
la, la ...” she said excitedly,
and marked her board and scrambled up the dominoes
in a heap.
“Juliette has won never,”
she cried in her broken English. “I have
won three times. Where is Frederic, ma chérie?
He is not fighting? Non?”
“There is no fighting now, Yvonne,”
replied the Princess with admirable restraint, as
seemed to me. “Frederic is well.”
“Oh, but the noise in the night,”
she rattled on in her own tongue. “It was
dreadful. I could not sleep for the guns.
It was abominable to mutiny. Ah, it is the doctor.
Pardon, this light is not good, and they have boarded
up the windows. We must live in darkness,”
she added peevishly. “But how are you,
doctor? You have not been to cheer us lately.
It is a dull ship.”
“Why, we consider it pretty
lively, Mademoiselle,” I answered lightly.
“It keeps us occupied.”
“Ah, yes,” she laughed.
“But that is over now, and you will only have
to dispose of the prisoners, to guillotine? ...
No, to hang?”
“It is we who are prisoners,”
said the Princess abruptly.
Mademoiselle stared. “Mon
Dieu! Prisoners! Oh, but it is not so, Alix.
Juliette, shuffle, or I will box your ears, silly...
Whose prisoners are we?”
“The anterooms, Mademoiselle,
are cut off from the rest of the ship,” I explained.
“Are you prepared to stand a siege?”
“Oh, but we have gallant defenders
enough,” she said with her pretty laugh.
“I am not afraid. It will be experience.
Juliette, open, open, stupid. Do not stare at
Monsieur like a pig. Play.”
I passed on, the Princess following
me. “When I left her she was in tears,”
she said in a low voice.
“She may be in tears again,”
I said. “But at present she wants no help
from me. She suffices entirely for herself.”
Our eyes encountered, and I am sure
of what I saw in hers; if we met on no other ground
we met on a curious understanding of Mademoiselle.
I took my leave ceremoniously.