I did not take Holgate’s advice,
although I had instinctively made up my mind that
he was sincere in offering it. What reason he
had for expressing kindliness for me if
he had any I could not say. I reflected
that it might very well be of a piece with his astute
plans. He might seek to serve some purpose by
it. I was useful as a doctor attending to his
wounded men, but I knew enough of him to guess that
that alone would not suffice to keep him friendly.
There must be another reason, unless, indeed, it was
as he said, and he really had been captivated by my
personal charm! This solution of the problem was
flattering, of course, but I was not disposed to accept
it. So deep was my mistrust of the arch schemer
that I racked my brain to find an explanation for
his conduct. This, needless to say, was not conducive
to sleep, and I passed a bad night. It was profoundly
still, but towards dawn the screw began to move again,
and I concluded that the fog had lifted. I got
up and looked out of the port, and could discern dimly
the white sheets of the mountains not two furlongs
distant. The Sea Queen began to tramp
along at a slow pace at first, but finally, getting
speed, resumed her normal rate of progress. If
I knew Holgate he was still on the bridge, and he
would remain there until the danger was over.
If he was an abominable scoundrel, he was indubitably
also an admirable seaman with a sense of duty to his
ship.
I fell asleep shortly after that,
and when I awoke the sun was full up, but setting
low in the east, glittering upon a field of snowy
pinnacles. I ascended to the state-rooms, and
there found Barraclough, who had just come on duty.
He had a cheerful eye, and scanned me curiously.
“Well, are we going to get through this?”
he asked.
“We’re going to get out of the Straits,
I believe,” I answered.
“Ah!” he said, and frowned,
as he was accustomed to do when thinking deeply.
He was not a man of much thought.
“And after that?” said he abruptly.
“The deluge,” said I, shrugging my shoulders.
“Look here, Phillimore, do you
believe we can hold out against Holgate’s forces?”
he asked seriously.
“I think we shall have to try,” I replied
evasively.
“I’m damned if we can,” he said
bluffly. “It’s all infernal nonsense.”
“Well, we’ve got to try,” I repeated
impatiently.
“Oh, well! yes, we’ve
got to try,” he admitted, “unless Holgate
will hear reason.”
“Good Lord, man, do you suppose
he’s risked all this to listen to reason now?”
I asked in amazement.
Barraclough turned away. “Well,
you see him. You ought to know,” he growled.
“If he doesn’t, we’re done.”
“I don’t advise you to
tell the others that,” I said drily.
He turned on me fiercely. “Who
said I would?” he snapped. “Do you
take me for a fool? And who’s captain here?
Dr. Phillimore, I’ll have you know your place,”
he cried, in a black passion, unusual in him.
“I’m commanding officer and responsible
to none, not even the Mr. Morland, by heaven,
no not on this ship, anyway!” And
with that remarkable tempest of unreasonable fury
he strode angrily away, leaving me annoyed and something
abashed. Assuredly the situation, the waiting,
the suspense, had played havoc with all our nerves,
even with this stolid English gentleman’s.
There was the development, in fact, as plain as a
pike-staff. This tension had worn on us.
Barraclough lost his temper for inadequate reasons;
the Prince shut himself in his room morosely, for
I shall come to that presently; and Lane growled and
grumbled so that it was difficult to avoid quarrelling
with him. Indeed, it was only by silence that
I averted an open collision on more than one occasion.
Little Pye was as nervous as a hen; a sound set him
jumping. As I came up the stairs noiselessly,
I encountered him, and his whole body started.
“Good gracious, man!”
said I, with good-humoured contempt, “you’ll
be skipping away from your own shadow next. How
do you expect to stand up against Holgate with a spirit
like that?”
He was pale even through the strong
colour that the sun had beaten into him. He eyed
me without replying for a moment, and then, with the
ghost of his old manner, answered: “I expect
I shall sit down to him.”
The fingers with which he readjusted
the glasses his favourite trick were
tremulous.
Pye was to be counted out in case
of an emergency, but Pye somehow set me thinking.
Pye’s cowardice was manifest rampant,
if one may use such a term; yet he had ventured into
the fog the night before; not only so, but upon a
deck which was filled in his eyes with horrid enemies,
prowling in search of victims. How had he achieved
that spirited action? It seemed incredible, yet
I had come upon him at the foot of the bridge stairs,
and I had his explanation. What induced the timid
rabbit to venture out of his hutch upon such a night
and in such circumstances? Frankly the riddle
beat me, and I should have worried over it had it
not been for other matters that seemed more immediately
important. I have spoken of the Prince’s
seclusion. I admit now that it had already made
an impression on me. He was, as became his nature
and his training, a disciplinarian. Each man
had his place and his duties, and Prince Frederic
appeared at due seasons and shared in the responsibilities.
He did not shirk, in accordance with his promise.
But for the rest he had withdrawn himself now for
three days from the general company. His meals
were served with his sister and Mademoiselle, but
from what I saw he was most often in his own cabin;
and here it was I got a glimpse of him once again a
glimpse, I mean, into that strange and compound character.
I forget the occasion, but it was
necessary that I should see him, and I entered the
cabin after knocking. When we were done he pulled
his papers before him and sat looking at them dully.
“Have you any literary qualities,
Dr. Phillimore?” he asked me, quite unexpectedly.
I hesitated. “If so, they
are quite undeveloped,” I replied. “I
have no reason to suppose so.”
“Ah!” he sighed, and taking
a volume which lay on the table he opened it.
“Do you know German?”
I told him that I could read the language. He
nodded.
“It has never been properly
appreciated,” he said slowly; “the German
literature is wonderful ah, wonderful!”
and he appeared to meditate over his page; then he
set the book down and looked across at me.
“You are married, doctor?
Ah, no!” He nodded again, and once more resumed
his meditations. I might have taken it for granted
that I was free to go, but for some reason I lingered.
He frowned deeply, and sighed again.
“There is a passage in Schiller,
but you would not know it
He gave me no chance of saying, and
I answered nothing; only sat and stared at him.
“There is more music in Germany’s
little finger than in all the world else in
composition, I mean,” he added.
“That has always been my opinion,” I ventured
at last.
He turned his dull blue eyes on me,
as if wondering what I did there. “So!”
he said, and heaved a bigger sigh from his very heart,
as it seemed. “When the attack is made,
doctor” he broke off, and
asked sharply, “When will they attack, do you
say?”
“Any moment now, sir,” I replied.
He rose. “We must remember the ladies,
doctor,” he said.
“Yes, we are not likely to forget
them,” I replied. He eyed me. “Do
you think ?” and paused.
“That is all, sir,” he said with a curt
nod.
It was not a ceremonious or even a
fitting dismissal seeing the common peril in which
we stood. In that danger surely we should have
drifted together more drifted into a situation
where princes and commoners were not, where employers
and hirelings did not exist. Yet I was not annoyed,
for I had seen some way into his soul, and it was turbid
and tortured. Black care had settled on Prince
Frederic, and he looked on me out of eyes of gloom.
The iron had entered into him, and he was no longer
a Prince, but a mortal man undergoing travail and anguish.
By the afternoon we were clear of
the Straits, and the nose of the yacht turned northward.
Still there was no sign from the mutineers, and that
being so, I felt myself at liberty to pay my accustomed
visit to Legrand in the forecastle. No one interfered
with me, and I did not see Holgate; but the man on
guard at the hatch made no difficulty about letting
me down. As I descended it came into my mind how
easy it would be to dispose of yet another fighting
man of the meagre force at the Prince’s disposal
by clapping the hatch over my head. It would have
been a grim joke quite in keeping with Holgate’s
character, and for a moment I turned as in doubt;
but the next second, banishing my misgivings, I went
down to the floor. Captivity was telling on the
prisoners beyond doubt, for here they got no sight
of sun, and the light was that of the gloaming.
I remembered that I had forgotten to take a lantern
from the sentry as soon as this twilight gloomed on
me, and I was turning back when I heard a sound.
“Hsst hsst!
I stopped. “Who is that?” I asked
in a whisper.
“It’s me, Jones, sir,” said one
of the hands.
I walked towards him, for the light
that streamed in by the open hatchway sufficed to
reveal him.
“Anything wrong with you?” said I casually.
“Well, I could do with a bit
more light and a smoke, sir,” said the man,
respectfully cheerful. But it was not his words;
it was his action that arrested me, for he jerked
his thumb incessantly as he spoke towards the darker
recesses of the hold.
“All right, my man,” said
I. “I’ll speak to Mr. Holgate.
He oughtn’t to keep you in such close confinement
if you are to remain human beings.”
So saying, I waded into the deeper
shadows, and as I did I felt my hand seized and dragged
downwards.
“S-s-s-h!” said a very still voice, and
I obeyed.
What was it? I was drawn downward,
and at last I knelt. I knew now, and somehow
my heart leaped within me. I had never really
understood Legrand; I had taken him for a very ordinary
ship’s officer; but I had come slowly to another
conclusion. I bent down.
“Heart pretty bad,” I said in a mechanical
way.
“There’s only one way
out,” whispered a voice below me, “and
that’s through the bulkheads into the engine-room.
I’ve been waiting, and I think I can do it.”
“I don’t like the look
of the eyes,” I remarked indifferently.
“Does he eat well?”
“Not very well, sir; it’s
a job to get him to take it,” said Jones.
“We’ve had four days at
it with a knife,” said the whisper, “and
by thunder we see light now. We’ll get
through, Phillimore. How do you stand?”
“Sleep at all well?” I inquired.
“I couldn’t say, sir,” said Jones,
“just lays there like a log.”
“Attack may be made at any moment,”
I whispered back. “There are some ten of
us holding the state-rooms and the ladies.”
He gripped my hand, and I rose to
my feet. “Well, I’m afraid I can’t
do any more,” I said. “He’s
going on pretty much the same. Good-bye, men.”
They returned the farewell, and I
made my way to the ladder and ascended. The guard
with emotionless face helped me out, and the first
man my eyes fell on was Holgate, standing with his
hands in his pockets, looking at me. He whistled
as he eyed me, and his teeth showed in his grin.
“For sheer arduous pursuit of
duty I don’t know your equal, doctor,”
said he. “You just hang on to work as if
you loved it. How’s the patient?”
I told him that it was a question
of time, but that there was no reason why Legrand
should not get over the injury to his spine “not
that he will ever be the same man again,” I
added.
“No,” said he reflectively,
“he won’t. And he wants time, does
he? Well, perhaps we can give him time though,
mark you, my lad, I don’t promise it,”
he said, with his ugly fang showing in a smile.
He took ten paces along the deck with
me, seeming to be wrapped up in his thoughts, and
then he paused.
“Tell me, doctor, are you in
this move?” he asked brusquely.
“What move?” I asked in turn. “What
do you mean?”
He waved a hand towards the upper
deck. “Why, Barraclough’s, of course,”
he replied. “Are you working with him?
Because, if so, I’d like to know, if only for
amusement.”
“I haven’t the faintest
idea what you’re talking of,” I replied.
“You’re not making terms,
eh?” said he, heavily leaden of face. “By
gosh, you might be, doctor, but you ain’t!
More fool you. Then it’s Barraclough, is
it, playing on his own.” He chuckled.
“That man treated me as pretty dirt all along,
didn’t he? I’ll go bail it was public
property. Barraclough’s real blue blood.
Prick him and see. My son, he’s got to
be pricked, but I’m no surgeon.”
“I understand nothing of all
this,” I replied. “You enjoy mystification,
Holgate, and your talents are remarkable. You
can beat Sir John out of his boots. But I wish
you’d used your talents elsewhere. Better
have buried them. For you’ve given us a
stiff job, and we’ve simply got to lick you.”
You will see that I broke out here
in his own vein. I had come to the conclusion
that this was my best card to play. I could sum
up Holgate to a point, but I did not know him all
through, and I was wise enough to recognise that.
I think if I had been under thirty, and not over that
sagacious age, I should have judged more rashly.
But I had that unknown area of Holgate’s character
to meet, and I thought to meet it by emulating his
own bearing. I am not by nature communicative,
but I feigned the virtue. I spoke to him as an
equal, exchanging views upon the situation as one
might exchange them on a cricket match. And I
believe he appreciated my tone.
“If you had as little character
as Sir John and more prudence, I would have bet on
your future, doctor,” he said soberly. “But
you must play your own cards. And if Sir John
wants terms, he must be generous. Generosity
becomes the victor.”
He smiled, and nodded farewell, and
I left him considerably puzzled. I had no guess
as to what he meant by his talk of Barraclough and
terms. It could only mean one thing on the face
of it, and that was that Barraclough had been in communication
with him. If so, was this by the Prince’s
desire? And if so again, why had not I heard of
it? Our company was so small and our plight so
desperate that it was unseemly to confine policy or
diplomacy within a narrow circle. Surely, we had
all a right to a knowledge of what was forward at
least, all of us who were in positions of responsibility.
As I went back I was consumed with annoyance that
such an important matter as a possible compromise with
the mutineers had been concealed from me. But
then, was it a compromise authorised by the Prince?
If I had read that obstinate and that fanatical proud
heart aright, I could not credit it.
When I reached the state-rooms I inquired
for Barraclough, and then remembered that he would
be on duty in the saloon. I immediately sought
him there, but found only Grant, who informed me that
he had relieved Sir John at his orders half an hour
earlier. He could not give any information beyond
that. It was possible Barraclough had gone to
his cabin, and so I repaired thither; but without
success. I made inquiries of Ellison, who had
not seen the first officer, and of the steward, who
was in a like case.
It was Lane who gave me the clue,
in a vein which I will set down without comment.
“He’s on a perch, and
crowing like a rooster, is the bart. You need
not look for flies on Barraclough, doctor. He’s
his own chauffeur this trip. I don’t fancy
the joy myself, but the bart. is rorty, and what would
you say to Mademoiselle, eh?”
“Oh, let’s be plain, Lane!” I said
impatiently.
He jerked his thumb across the corridor.
“Mademoiselle wants a partner at dominoes, matador,
or bridge, doctor, and the bart. plays a good game.
If you have to choose between your maid and a bart.,
you bet your life you’ll pocket the bart.
Oh, this trip’s about enough for me! Where’s
it going to end, and where are we?” He made a
wry face and sank in a heap on his chair. “If
you’ve got any influence with Holgate make him
come in. I’m sick of this damn sentry-go.
If it suits Germans, it don’t suit a true-born
Englishman.”
“Is Sir John with Mademoiselle?” I asked
simply.
“Guess again and you’ll
guess wrong,” said Lane moodily, kicking his
feet about.
I was not interested in his feelings
at the moment. My mind was occupied with other
considerations, but it certainly gave me pause that
what I had myself seen was apparently now common knowledge.
That Sir John had been fascinated by the coquettish
Parisian was obvious to me; if it was obvious to Lane,
was it hidden from others who were more concerned?
I had my answer as regards one almost immediately.
If Sir John were in the ladies’
boudoir, it was not for me to disturb him, and I turned
away and passed out of the corridor.
As I was preparing to descend to the
cabins I heard the low strains of the small organ
which the piety of a former owner of the Sea Queen
had placed at the end of the music gallery. I
entered, and in the customary twilight made out a
figure at the farther end of the room. Perhaps
it was the dim light that gave the old air its significance.
It had somewhat the effect upon me that music in a
church heard faintly and moving with simple solemnity
has always had. What is there that speaks so
gravely in the wind notes and reeds of an organ?
Ein feste burg ist unser
Gott.
I knew the words as familiarly as
I knew the music, and yet that was almost the last
place and time in which I should have expected to hear
it. It was not Mademoiselle who played so low
and soft to hear. Oh, I felt sure of that!
The touch was lighter, graver and quieter. I drew
near the player and listened. I had heard Mademoiselle
sing that wonderful song, “Adelaide,”
and she had sung it divinely. But I would have
given a dozen “Adelaide’s” for that
simple air, rendered by no voice, but merely by sympathetic
fingers on those austere keys. I listened, as
I say, and into my heart crept something I
know not what that gave me a feeling of
fulness of heart, of a surcharge of strange and not
wholly painful sentiment.
I was still battling with these sensations
when the music ceased and the player arose. She
started slightly on seeing me, and I found myself
stammering an excuse for my presence.
“I was looking for Sir John Barraclough.”
“Come,” she said, after a moment’s
pause, “I will find him for you.”
I followed her into the corridor,
until she paused outside a door and opened it abruptly
without knocking. I waited without, but I heard
her voice, strangely harsh and clear.
“Sir John Barraclough, you are being sought
by Dr. Phillimore.”
Three minutes later Barraclough joined
me, red and discomposed. “Anything the
matter?” he growled.
I knew now that I had been used as
a definite excuse to get rid of Barraclough, whose
presence was not welcome to the Princess Alix; and
with that knowledge I framed my answer.
“Yes; what terms have you made with Holgate?”
He started as if I had struck him,
stared at me, and his jaw came out in a heavy obstinate
fashion he had.
“What’s that to you?”
“Only this,” said I, “that
my life is as valuable to me as yours or the Prince’s
to you or him, and that therefore I have a right to
know.”
He laughed shortly. “I’m commanding
officer.”
“Oh, I’m sick of these
airs!” I replied. “If you will not
answer me, I will go to the Prince and get an answer
from him. He, at least, will see the reasonableness
of my request for information.”
He changed his attitude at that.
“You needn’t do that, Phillimore,”
said he. “I can tell you all you need know.
After all, as you say, you’ve a certain right.”
He looked at me with his hard unfriendly look, and
I met him with one of expectancy. “You know
what my opinion is,” he resumed. “It’s
only a bluff to say that we have a chance against
Holgate. He’s got the ship, and he’s
got the men. I want to see if we can’t
make some arrangement.”
“And he will?” I inquired sceptically.
Barraclough hesitated. “He’s
inclined to. He’s to let me know. I
think he’s a bit impressed by our bluff all
the same, and if we could hit on a suitable middle
course” He stopped.
“Hang it, there are the women, Phillimore!”
he said vehemently.
“And you suppose Holgate will
take them into consideration?” I said.
“Well, perhaps he may. I don’t think
either you or I really know much of Holgate.
But I think I know more than you. He’s sociable
and friendly, isn’t he? One wouldn’t
take him for a rascally mutineer.”
“He’s a most infernal ruffian,”
said he with an oath.
“Yet you would trust him in the matter of terms,”
I suggested.
Barraclough frowned. “We’ve
got to,” he said curtly, “unless you can
show me a way to hold out.”
“Oh! men have been in worse
cases than ours and emerged all right a
little battered, no doubt. And then there’s
the coal. We can’t cruise indefinitely.
Holgate’s got to put in somewhere.”
“Oh, he’s not going to
wait for that!” said Barraclough moodily.
“Look here, Phillimore; have you a guess at
what he means to do?”
“I have about ten guesses,”
I replied, shaking my head, “and none of them
fits the case. What’s he going to do with
us? That’s his real difficulty and ours.
The money problem’s simple. I can’t
see what’s at the back of that black mind, but
I don’t think it’s hopeful for us women
included.”
“There you are,” he exploded
savagely. “Anything if we can prevent the
worst.”
“Yes,” I assented.
“Provided you can trust to Holgate’s word.
But would he let us off at any price and run the risk?
And, moreover, the Prince. What of him?”
“He would refuse. He wouldn’t
budge. He’s a nuisance,” said Barraclough
moodily. “He’s our stumbling-block.”
“Quite so; and if we all caved
in but Mr. Morland, what must his fate be? And
we should look on, shouldn’t we? And then
go home in a tramp steamer, a happy family party with
a nice little secret of our own. Ten, twelve,
well, say, sixteen of us. I can see Holgate trusting
to that, and comfortably lolling back in Yokohama
deck-chairs; and I can also see Sir John Barraclough
reporting the total loss of the yacht Sea Queen,
captain and owner and so-and-so going down with her.
I can read it all in the papers here, and now; it will
be excellent food for the ha’pennies!”
The frown deepened on his face as
I proceeded, but, contrary to my expectation, he did
not display any temper at my mocking speech. He
shrugged his shoulders.
“I’ll admit the difficulties.
It looks like impossibility, but so’s the alternative.
I’m in despair.”
“There’s only one thing
will solve the problem,” I said. He looked
up. “Action.”
“You mean
“Holgate won’t wait till his coal’s
out. He’s free for an attack now.”
“In God’s name, let him!” said Barraclough
viciously.