I think it was from that hour that
I began to get on badly with Barraclough. It
was in his power as acting captain, no doubt, to remit
certain precautions, but the remission of those precautions
was not to the credit of his head. He had been
beguiled by the Siren, and she, doubtless, by her
vanity or her freakishness. When she had gone
he turned on me.
“What the devil do you want
interfering, Phillimore?” he demanded. “I’m
in charge here.”
There never was a man so insensate.
I shrugged my shoulders. “Well, it was
not my interference that was successful,” I said
curtly.
He walked abruptly to the window and
opened it wider I could not be mistaken as to the
bulky form that blocked it.
“Nice music, captain,” said Holgate’s
wheezing voice.
“I’ll give you just three
seconds to quit, or I’ll put a hole through
you, you infernal rascal,” said Barraclough savagely,
raising his revolver.
“Oh, we’re in no hurry,”
said the mutineer cheerfully, and moved away.
I suppose that some gleam of reason
prevented Barraclough from firing. He barred
the windows afresh, and came back to me.
“Why the mischief doesn’t
he attack?” he exclaimed peevishly.
I did not know, but I was near guessing
just then. In point of fact, I did guess that
afternoon. I paid my usual visit to the forecastle
and the hold. Legrand played the same farce with
remarkable persistence, and I was no longer puzzled
by him. He was biding his time, like Holgate,
and his reasons were obvious. Holgate’s
dawned on me just then but some of them
only, as you shall see during the progress of this
narrative.
He maintained his friendliness, inquired
civilly after our health, and how the ladies bore
the seclusion.
“I wish I could make it easier
for them, but I can’t, doctor,” he said
amiably.
He was an abominable liar, but I had
a certain admiration for his effrontery. I was
glad I could meet him on his own ground, so I answered
deliberately:
“Of course, it would spoil your
plans to get the job over.”
He eyed me smiling. “As how, my friend,”
he asked.
“You would rather have us in
charge of the treasure than yourself,” I replied.
He laughed. “Doctor, there’s
imagination in you, as I’ve always said.
It’s a pity I made that blunder about you.
Not that it matters now. Well, you’ve nicked
it. What’s the odds? You are welcome
to the truth now.”
There was a perceptible emphasis on his last word.
“You’re not afraid of the attack?”
I said.
He shook his head. “Not
much. While we have a common object we’re
all right. I’m afraid of success.
Doctor, you’ve a penetrating eye. Why,
the treasure might break us up. If you had sent
it down to me I believe I’d have sent it back.
That would have been your best chance. I wonder
you didn’t think of it. But you’ve
got your flaws. If you’d sent that treasure
down I’d have had to take it; and you might have
sat down and waited on events. But it’s
too late now. I know where I am.”
“And where’s that?” I asked bluntly.
He smiled craftily. “We
enter the Straits of Magellan this extra special night,”
he said. “Let’s put it at that.”
“And what’s to come?” I asked in
the same voice.
“Lord, one would suppose you
in the counsels,” he said equably. “And
in a way you are. Well, you can hand over that
treasure which you have been good enough to guard
for me better than I could myself as soon as you will.
I’ve no objection now. Good-evening, doctor.”
He wheeled about and went off humming
a tune. But I was staggered. That meant,
if he were not lying again, that we were near the end
of our tether, that the truce was up, and that....
My mind shuddered in its train of
thought. There was only one possible end for
us if Holgate was to secure himself; and he was capable
of any infamy. As I looked at his broad back
and bull neck I felt rage and hatred gather in me
and surge together. But I was impotent then and
there. I went back to our quarters sick at heart.
It was falling dark when I reached
the state-rooms, and all was as usual. The same
vacant face of quietude was presented to me in the
corridor. Leaving the two men, of whom one was
Grant, on guard, I went below to my cabin; and, as
I did so, thought to look in upon Pye. Faint
shafts of light streamed in by the open port, but I
could see no one.
“Pye!” I called, and received no answer.
Well, it was of small consequence
to us if Pye recovered or not, for he was negligible
as a unit of our defence. But I was glad that
the little man had sufficiently resumed what what
might be called his manhood to be up and about again.
Maybe, I thought with some amusement, I should find
him airing himself in the corridor or disporting in
the music-room. Coming out of my cabin, I groped
my way along the passage in the direction of the stairs.
When I reached the foot of them it was quite dark,
and I stopped, arrested suddenly by a murmur of voices
from the saloon beyond. I knew that some one
must be on guard there, but I did not quite understand
the murmur. I hesitated, making some inquiries
in my mind. From the hour, I came to the conclusion
that Barraclough was on duty, and I turned and entered
the saloon, the door of which was ajar.
“Is that you, Barraclough?” I called.
My voice penetrated the darkness,
which was here alleviated by the dull gleam from the
port-holes. I heard a rustling, and I was sure
it was of a woman’s skirts.
“What do you want?” asked Barraclough
in a leaden voice.
“Oh, nothing,” said I as coldly; “I
only thought I heard voices.”
“Now what the”
He pulled himself up sharply, for with all his faults
(and heaven knows I had yet to find how many they were)
he was a gentleman.
“It is the doctor,” came
in Mademoiselle’s pretty accents. “Oh,
it is so cold upstairs, doctor. You must make
us some machinery to warm us.”
“We shall be colder yet, Mademoiselle,”
I replied indifferently; “we shall have the
ices of Magellan refrigerating us to-morrow.”
“Magellan,” said Barraclough.
“What the mischief does that mean?”
“Ask Mr. Holgate,” I answered.
“It’s his affair, or he thinks it is.
He has taken it on himself.” I made my
way to the electric-light knobs. “As it
seems to be getting dark,” I said, not without
irony, “I will take the liberty of illuminating.”
“Oh, it’s none so dark,”
growled Barraclough. “We ought to be used
to darkness by this time. We’re not all
children at nurse,” he sneered palpably.
I turned the catch, but no light came.
“It’s gone wrong,” I exclaimed.
“Yes, I did try it a little
time ago,” said Mademoiselle sweetly, “when
Sir John and I were in so deep argument.”
Of course it was a lie, but what did
that matter. If I could have seen Barraclough’s
face at that moment I felt sure it would have advertised
a sense of shame, despite his passivity. But Mademoiselle....
Well, I could see in the dusk the shadow of her face,
and it was a handsome shadow. Almost I could
see her smile. They were seated in the recesses
of the saloon. I moved towards them.
“I suppose you understand the
hang of this, Sir John,” I said drily.
“I’m not a patent detective,”
he answered with his arrogant sneer, but I paid no
heed, for I felt sure of settling him then and there.
“I suppose it has occurred to
you to reflect on whose grace we have depended for
our electric supply,” I said mildly.
“I know that it comes from the
engine-room, if that’s what you mean,”
he replied bluntly.
“And now it’s cut off,” I said.
There was a pause, and it was the lady who broke it.
“What is it that you mean, doctor?”
I addressed her. “The mutineers
cut off the light preparatory to an attack.”
“You are the most wonderful
sleuth-hound, Dr. Phillimore,” said Barraclough
with a hard laugh; “your talents are quite thrown
away.”
“I regret to say they are here,”
I answered sharply. “And where would he
be if he had paid some attention to the patent detective?
I tell you again, Sir John Barraclough, that we’ve
got to expect an attack to-night, and that’s
why the light is gone.”
A man may endure hostility and defeat;
he may suffer shame and injustice; he may undergo
pangs of jealousy and remorse. All these things
are dispiriting or humiliating, but I declare that
I would willingly experience them all if I might save
myself from the supreme dishonour of appearing in
a ridiculous rôle. I had spoken strongly
because I felt warmly, and there was a note of dictatorial
assurance in my voice which might have convinced,
or at least silenced, Barraclough. But I had
left the keys down, and to my shocking discomfiture
as I finished my declamation the saloon was at a stroke
flooded with light.
The radiance discovered to me Mademoiselle’s
piquante face, her eyes smiling, her lips full
and pouting, and close beside her Barraclough’s
fair Saxon jowl. He grinned at me, but said nothing,
for which perhaps I should have been grateful.
But I was not.
“But this is in our honour,
then?” suggested Mademoiselle Yvonne prettily.
I had no fancy for her, but I did
not mind her little sarcasm.
I bowed. “No doubt to celebrate
my oratory,” I said, recovering myself.
“But as we do not know how long Mr. Holgate will
condescend to continue his compliment we may as well
make the most of it.”
“You’re a cool hand, Phillimore,”
said Barraclough, now with the good temper of one
who has triumphed.
“But none so cool as Holgate,”
I returned him in the same spirit, “for he has
just warned me that his reasons for not attacking us
are at an end.” He regarded me interrogatively.
“Holgate is not only a cool hand, but a cunning
hand, a far-reasoning hand. He has let us take
care of his treasure until he was ready for it.”
“What do you mean?” asked Barraclough
in astonishment.
“His men might have become demoralised
if he had seized the safe. He has, therefore,
feigned to them that it was not practicable. That
has been his reason for our security not
tender mercy for us, you may guess. So we have
kept his treasure safe, and now he wants
it.”
“Why now?” queried Barraclough, who frowned.
“That’s Holgate’s
secret. I suppose he knows what he is going to
do and what destination he wants. We don’t.
Anyway, we’re turning through Magellan to-night,
and he has no further use for us.”
“I wish I’d shot that
fiend to-day,” said Barraclough savagely.
Mademoiselle looked from one to the
other, a curious expression on her face.
“He is a remarkable man, this ’Olgate?”
she asked.
“He is pardon, Mademoiselle the
devil,” said Barraclough.
She laughed her fluting laughter.
“Oh, but the devil may be perhaps converted,”
she said. “He may be tamed. You say
music have powers to tame the savage breast.”
She tapped her bosom dramatically, and smiled.
“There is many men that may be tamed.”
She cast a soft glance at Barraclough and then at
me.
But I only got the edge of it, for
at that moment I caught sight of a gray face, with
little tufts of whisker under the ears, and glancing
glasses that hung over the railings of the music balcony
above. It was Pye. Had he been there long
in the darkness or had he only just arrived, attracted
by the light and the voices? The latter seemed
the more probable assumption, for as I looked up he
made an awkward movement as if he was embarrassed
at being discovered. Yet if he had been eavesdropping,
where was the harm? But somehow I felt annoyed.
The others followed my glance, but the clerk had gone.
Mademoiselle Trebizond sighed and
put her small hand over her mouth to hide a yawn.
“It is so what you call dull,
Sir John,” she protested in her coquettish way.
“Nothing but sea, sea, and not even the chance
to go on deck. I would sooner have the mutineers.
Oh, but it was insensate to leave Europe and France.
No, it is a country the most diabolic this side of
the ocean. What is there under the sea, Sir John?”
“Why, the fishes, Mademoiselle,” said
he, grinning.
“No, no; understand me, Monsieur.
I mean under the ground. What is there?”
She waved her hands. “Sea, sea, sea, nothing
else, and savages,” she added thoughtfully.
“They would be interesting,” I suggested
drily.
She looked at me. “My good
friend, doctor, you are right,” she said charmingly.
“More interesting than this company. Monsieur
’Olgate, he is interesting, is it not?”
“We may have an opportunity
of judging presently,” said I lightly.
Mademoiselle got up and peered out
of the port-holes. The glow of the electric light
in the luxurious saloon threw into blueness the stark
darkness of the evening. Nothing was visible,
but through the ports streamed the cadences of the
water rising and falling about the hull. It had
its picturesque side, that scene, and looked at with
sympathetic eyes the setting was romantic, whatever
tragedy might follow. That it was to be tragedy
I was assured, but this pretty, emotional butterfly
had no such thoughts. Why should she have?
She was safeguarded by the prince of a regnant line;
she was to be the mistress of millions; and she could
coquette at will in dark corners with handsome officers.
She was bored, no doubt, and when dominoes with her
maid failed her, she had Barraclough to fall back
on, and there was her art behind all if she had only
an audience. I began to see the explanation of
that astonishing scene earlier in the day. She
was vain to her finger-tips; she loved sensations;
and it was trying even to be the betrothed of a royal
prince if divorced from excitements to her vanity.
After all, Prince Frederic, apart from his lineage,
was an ordinary mortal, and his conversation was not
stimulating. In Germany or in Paris Mademoiselle
would have footed it happily as the consort even of
a dethroned prince; but what was to be got out of
the eternal wash and silence of the ocean, out of
the sea, sea, sea, as she herself phrased it?
She came back from the port-hole.
“It is so dull,” she said, and yawned
politely. Well, it was dull, but perhaps dulness
was more pleasant than the excitements which we were
promised. With a flirt of her eyes she left us.
When she was gone Barraclough eyed
me coldly and steadily.
“You didn’t say all you had to say,”
he remarked.
“No, I didn’t. Lights
or no lights, Holgate will attack presently I
will not pin myself to to-night. He is where he
wants to be, or will be soon. Then he has no
use for us” I paused “women
or men.”
“Good God, do you think him
that sort of scoundrel?” he inquired sharply.
“What has he done? Played
with us as a cat with mice. Oh, he’s the
most unholy ruffian I’ve ever struck. And
you know it. Look at his face. No, Barraclough,
it’s death, it’s death to every man jack.”
“And the women?” he said hesitatingly.
I too hesitated. “No, I
don’t credit him with that. He threatened,
but I don’t quite believe. Yet I don’t
know. No; I think it’s a question of a
terminus for all of us, man and woman” I
paused “including your pretty friend
there.”
He turned sharply on me, but made
no remark. His eyelids were drawn and heavy and
his eyes surcharged. He appeared to be under the
stress of some severe thought. I moved away,
leaving it at that, for it was obvious that he was
moved. As I reached the door I happened to glance
back. Barraclough stood where I had left him,
his brows knitted; but my eyes passed from him to
the gallery, and there lighted on Mademoiselle, who
stood with one hand on the railing gazing down at Barraclough.
She had her hand to her heart, and her face was white
like death, but that may have been the effect of the
electric light. I wondered, as I had wondered
about Pye, how long she had been there, and if she
had heard. Had she spied on us of a set purpose?
If so (God help her!) she had taken no good of her
eavesdropping. A pity for her seized me.
She was still and silent in the course of my gaze,
but, as I looked, the ship heeled, her bosom struck
the railing heavily, and she uttered a tiny cry.
Barraclough glanced up and saw her. As I went
out a cold blast streamed off the sea and entered
the open ports; the waters rocked and roared.
I guessed that we were entering the channel.
I had made my report to Barraclough,
but I had to report to the Prince. When I reached
his cabin I found him seated before his table, engaged
in sorting a number of documents. He wore glasses,
which I had never seen on him before, and he proffered
me a severe frown as I entered. I have never
to this day rightly assessed the character of Prince
Frederic of Hochburg, so many odd ingredients
entered into it. He was dictatorial, he was even
domineering, he was hard-working, and he was conscientious.
About these qualities I had already made up my mind.
But his acts had been wholly in disregard of the rhythmical
and regular conventions which he should thus have
associated with himself. He had broken with his
fatherland, he had thrown over dynastic laws, he had
gone by his will alone, and no red tape. Perhaps
there was the solution. He had gone by his conscience.
I have said I was convinced of his conscientiousness,
and possibly in these strange departures from the
code of his fathers he was following a new and internal
guide, to the detriment of his own material interests.
He had abandoned the essence while retaining the forms
of his birth and breeding. At least, this is
but my assumption; his actions must explain him for
himself. I have set down faithfully how he behaved
from the first moment I met him. Let him be judged
by that.
The Prince, then, who had violated
the traditions of his house by his proposed alliance,
was occupied in his accounts. That, at any rate,
is what I gathered from the hasty glance I got at
the sheets of figures before him.
“Well, sir?” said he brusquely.
“I report, sir, that we have
entered the Straits of Magellan, and that we have
every reason to look for an attack at any moment,”
I said formally.
He dropped his pen. “So!”
he said, nodding quite pleasantly.
“It is just as well that it
comes, doctor. We have been too long on the rack.
It has done us no good.”
“I think you are right, sir,”
I answered; “and, on the other hand, it has
been of service to the mutineers.”
He looked perplexed. “We
have taken charge of the safes for them,” I
explained.
He sat silent awhile, and then mechanically
curled his moustache upwards.
“Yes yes yes,”
he said. “You are right. That, then,
is the reason. This man is clever.”
It seemed the echo of what his lady-love
had said a quarter of an hour before. I made
no reply, as none seemed necessary. He went to
the barred window, in which a gap was open, letting
in the night, and the act recalled again to me Mademoiselle.
Was this scion of royalty perishing for an idea?
He looked very strong, very capable, and rather wonderful
just then. I had never been drawn to him, but
I had at the moment some understanding of what it
might be to be the subject of so masterful and unreasonable
a man. Yet now he was not at all unreasonable,
or even masterful. He turned back to me.
“Doctor,” he said gently,
“we must see that the ladies are not incommoded.”
“We will all do our best,”
I answered, wondering if he knew how inadequate a
word he had used. Incommoded! Good heavens!
Was my knowledge of Holgate to go for nothing?
What would be the end? Was the man an idealist?
He seemed sunk in a dream, and I saw his face soften
as he stared out at the sea. Compassion gushed
in my heart. I turned away.