The Sea Queen was making way
on her northerly course athwart the long rollers of
the Pacific. The wind blew briskly from the west,
and the sea ran high, so that the yacht lay over with
a strong list as she battled through the rough water.
My watch began at twelve o’clock that night,
and I took the precaution to lie down for a rest about
eight. I fell asleep to the sound of the sea
against my porthole window, but awoke in good time.
It was full dark, and, save for the screw and the
eternal long wash without, there was silence.
Somehow the very persistence of these sounds seemed
profounder silence. I groped my way into the
passage, with the screw kicking under my feet, and
passed Barraclough’s cabin. Still there
was no sound or sign of life, but I perceived the
glimmer of a light beyond, and seeing that it issued
from Pye’s cabin I turned the handle of the
door. It was locked.
“Who is that?” demanded a tremulous voice.
“It’s I. Let me in,” I called back.
The door was opened slowly and little
Pye stood before me. In the illumination of the
incandescent wire he stood out ghastly white.
“It’s you, doctor,” he said weakly.
The smell of spirits pervaded the
cabin. I looked across and saw a tumbler in the
rack, half full of whisky and water. He noticed
the direction of my gaze.
“I can’t sleep,”
said he. “This heavy water has given me
a touch of sea-sickness. I feel awfully queer.”
“I don’t suppose whisky will do you any
good,” said I.
He laughed feebly and vacantly.
“Oh, but it does! It stays the stomach.
Different people are affected different ways, doctor.”
As he spoke he took down the glass with quivering
fingers and drank from it in a clumsy gulp.
“I shall be better if I can
get to sleep,” he said nervously, and drank
again.
“Pye, you’re making trouble
for yourself,” said I. “You’ll
be pretty bad before morning.”
“Oh, for goodness’ sake,
don’t talk about morning!” he broke out
in a fit of terror.
I gazed at him in astonishment, and
he tried to recover under my eyes.
“That’s not your first glass,” said
I.
He did not deny it. “I
can’t go on without it. Let me alone, doctor;
for heaven’s sake let me alone.”
I gave him up. “Well, if
you are going to obfuscate yourself in this foolish
manner,” I said, my voice disclosing my contempt,
“at least take my advice and don’t lock
yourself in. None but hysterical women do that.”
I was closing the door when he put a hand out.
“Doctor, doctor....”
I paused, and he looked at me piteously. “Could
you give me a sleeping draught?”
“If you’ll leave that
alone, I will,” I said; and I returned to my
cabin and brought some sulphonal tabloids.
“This will do you less harm
than whisky,” I said. “Now buck up
and be a man, Pye.”
He thanked me and stood looking at
me. His hands nervously adjusted his glasses
on his nose. He took one of the tabloids and shakily
lifted his whisky and water to wash it down his throat.
He coughed and sputtered, and with a shiver turned
away from me. He lifted the glass again and drained
it.
“Good-bye, doctor good-night,
I mean,” he said hoarsely, with his back still
to me. “I’m all right. I think
I shall go to sleep now.”
“Well, that’s wise,”
said I, “and I’ll look in and see how you
go on when my watch is over.”
He started, turned half-way to me
and stopped. “Right you are,” he
said, with a struggle after cheerfulness. His
back was still to me. He had degrading cowardice
in his very appearance. Somehow I was moved to
pat him on the shoulder.
“That’s all right, man. Get to sleep.”
For answer he broke into tears and
blubbered aloud, throwing himself face downwards on
his bunk.
“Come, Pye!” said I. “Why,
what’s this, man?”
“I’m a bit upset,”
he said, regaining some control of himself. “I
think the sea-sickness has upset me. But I’m
all right.” He lay on his face, and was
silent. And so (for I was due now in the corridor)
I left him. As I turned away, I could have sworn
I heard the key click in the door. He had locked
himself in again.
Lane was on duty at the farther end
of the corridor, and I had the door near the entrance
connecting with the music balcony. Two electric
lights shed a faint glow through the length and breadth
of the corridor, and over all was silence. As
I sat in my chair, fingering my revolver, my thoughts
turned over the situation helplessly, and swung round
finally to the problem of Barraclough and Mademoiselle.
The Princess and I had guessed what was forward, and
Lane also had an inkling. Only the Prince was
ignorant of the signal flirtation which was in progress
under his nose. I suppose such a woman could not
remain without victims. It did not suffice for
her that she had captured a prince of the blood, had
dislocated the policy of a kingdom, and had ruined
a man’s life. She must have other trophies
of her beauty, and Barraclough was one. I was
sorry for him, though I cannot say that I liked him.
The dull, unimaginative and wholesome Briton had toppled
over before the sensuous arts of the French beauty.
His anxiety was for her. He had not shown himself
timorous as to the result before. Doubtless she
had infected him with her fears. Possibly, even,
it was at the lady’s suggestion that he had
made advances to Holgate.
Suddenly my thoughts were diverted
by a slight noise, and, looking round, I saw Lane
advancing swiftly towards me.
“I say, Phillimore,” he
said in a hoarse whisper, “I’ve lost the
key.”
“Key!” I echoed.
“What key?” For I did not at once take
in his meaning.
“Why, man, the purser’s
key the key of the strong room,” he
said impatiently.
I gazed in silence at him. “But
you must have left it below,” I said at last.
“Not I,” he answered emphatically.
“I’m no juggins. They’re always
on me. I go to bed in them, so to speak.
See here.” He pulled a ring of keys from
his pocket. “This is how I keep ’em on
my double chain. They don’t leave me save
at nights when I undress. Well, it’s gone,
and I’m damned if I know when it went or how
it went.”
He gazed, frowning deeply at his bunch.
“That’s odd,” I commented.
“It puts me in a hole,”
said he. “How the mischief can I have lost
it? I can’t think how it can have slipped
off. And it’s the only one gone, too.”
“It didn’t slip off,” said I.
“It’s been stolen.”
He looked at me queerly. “That
makes it rather worse, old chap,” he said hesitatingly.
“For it don’t go out of my hands.”
“Save at night,” said I.
He was silent. “Hang it,
what does any blighter want to steal it for?”
he demanded in perplexity.
“Well, we know what’s in the strong room,”
I said.
“Yes but”
There was a sound.
“To your door,” said I. “Quick,
man.”
Lane sped along the corridor to his
station, and just as he reached it a door opened and
Princess Alix emerged. She hesitated for a moment
and then came towards me. It was bitterly cold,
and she was clad in her furs. She came to a pause
near me.
“I could not sleep, and it is
early yet,” she said. “Are you expecting
danger?”
“We have always to act as if we were,”
I said evasively.
She was examining my face attentively,
and now looked away as if her scrutiny had satisfied
her.
“Why has this man never made
any attempt to get the safes?” she asked next.
“I wish I knew,” I replied,
and yet in my mind was that strange piece of information
I had just had from Lane. Who had stolen the key?
The Princess uttered a little sigh,
and, turning, began to walk to and fro.
“It is sometimes difficult to
keep one’s feet when the floor is at this angle,”
she remarked as she drew near to me; and then she paced
again into the distance. She was nervous and
distressed, I could see, though her face had not betrayed
the fact. Yet how was I to comfort her? We
were all on edge. Once again she paused near me.
“What are our chances?”
“They are hopeful,” said
I, as cheerfully as I might. “The fortress
has always more chances than the leaguers, providing
rations hold out, and there is no fear of ours.”
“Ah, tell me the truth!” she cried with
agitation.
“Madam, I have said what is
exactly true,” I replied gravely. “I
have spoken of chances.”
“And if we lose?” she asked after a pause.
Her eyes encountered mine fully.
“I have no information,” I said slowly,
“and very little material to go on in guessing.
But I hope we shall not lose,” I added.
“This can’t go on forever,
Dr. Phillimore,” she said with a little catch
in her voice. “It has gone on so long.”
My heart bled for her. She had
been so courageous; she had shown such fortitude,
such resistance, such common sense, this beautiful
proud woman; and she was now breaking down before
one of her brother’s employees.
“It can’t go on much longer,”
I said, again gravely. “It will come to
its own conclusion presently.”
“Ah, but what conclusion?”
she cried. “Who knows! Who knows?”
The sight of her agitation, of that
splendid woman nigh to tears, thrilled me to the marrow
with a storm of compassion and something more.
I was carried out of myself.
“God be witness,” I cried,
“that while I live you shall be safe from any
harm. God be my witness for that.”
She uttered a tiny sob and put out her hand impulsively.
“You are good,” she said
brokenly. “I am a coward to give way.
But I was alone. I have brooded over it all.
And Frederic Thank you, oh, thank you!
To have said so much, perhaps, has helped me.
Oh, we shall all live live to talk of these
days with shudders and thankfulness to God. You
are right to call God to witness. He is our witness
now He looks down on us both, and He will
help us. I will pray to Him this night, as I
have prayed three times a day.”
She spoke in a voice full of emotion,
and very low and earnest, and her hand was still in
mine. And, as she finished, the two electric lights
in the corridor went out, leaving us in pitch darkness.
I felt the Princess shudder.
“Be brave,” I whispered.
“Oh, be brave! You have called to God.
He will hear you.”
“Yes, yes,” she whispered
back, and clutched my hand tighter, drawing nearer
me till her furs rested against my breast. “But
what is it? What does it mean?”
“It may mean nothing,” I replied, “but
it may mean
I put my ear to the door, still holding
her, and listened. Through the noises of the
sea I could make out other and alien sounds. “They
come... You must go. Can you find your way?”
“Let me stay,” she murmured breathlessly.
“No, no; go,” I said.
“Your place is in your cabin just now. Remember,
I know where it is and I can find you.”
“Yes, find me,” she panted.
“Please find me. See, I I have
this.” She put the butt of a revolver into
my hand. “That has been by me since the
first. But come; find me if if
it is necessary.”
I raised her hand to my lips and she
melted away. I turned to the door.
“Lane!” I called. “Lane!”
His voice sailed back to me. “What’s
gone wrong with the lights?”
“They’re coming,”
I said. “Look to your door.”
And even as I spoke a bar crashed upon mine from without.
In an instant the corridor was full of noises.
The mutineers were upon us, but they had divided their
forces, and were coming at different quarters.
It remained to be seen at which spot their main attack
was to be delivered. I put my revolver through
one of the holes we had drilled in the door, and fired.
It was impossible to say if my shot took effect, but
I hoped so, and I heard the sound of Lane’s
repeater at the farther end. The blows on the
door were redoubled, and it seemed to me to be yielding.
I emptied two more cartridges through the hole at
a venture, and that one went home I knew, since I
had touched a body with the muzzle as I pulled the
trigger. Ellison was on guard in the saloon below,
and Grant and the cook in the music saloon; and I
judged from the sounds that reached me in the melee
that they also were at work. By this time Barraclough
and Jackson and the Prince had arrived on the scene,
the last with a lantern which he swung over his head.
Barraclough joined me, and Jackson was despatched
to grope his way into the saloon to assist Ellison.
The Prince himself took his station with Lane, and
I heard the noise of his weapon several times.
My door had not yet given way, but I was afraid of
those swinging blows, and both Barraclough and I continued
to fire. The corridor filled with smoke and the
smell of powder.
“Do you think he’s made
up his mind to get through here?” asked Barraclough.
“I don’t know,”
I shouted back. “He’s attacking in
three places, at any rate. We can’t afford
to neglect any one of them.”
“Confound this darkness!”
he exclaimed furiously. “Oh, for an hour
of dawn!”
The blows descended on the door, but
still it held, and I began to wonder why. Surely
a body of men with axes should have destroyed the
flimsy boards by this time. It looked as if this
was not the real objective of the attack. I sprang
to the bolt and was drawing it when Barraclough called
out, for he could see in the dim light of the lantern.
“Good heavens, man, are you mad?”
“No,” I called back.
“Stand ready to fire. I believe there’s
practically no one behind this”; and, having
now released the bolt, I flung open the door.
Simultaneously Barraclough fired through the open darkness,
and a body took the deck heavily, floundering on the
threshold. The rest was silence. No one
was visible or audible. But at my feet lay two
bodies.
“I thought so,” I said
excitedly. “This was mere bluff. And
so’s the attack on Lane’s door. See,
there’s no force there. I will settle that.”
I delivered a pistol shot along the
deck in the direction of some shadows, and retreated,
bolting the door behind me.
“Where is it?” gasped Barraclough, out
of breath.
“One at each door will do,”
said I. “Fetch Lane here. I think its
the music-room. You and I had better get there
as fast as we can.”
Without disputing my assumption of
authority, he ran down the corridor, and explained
our discovery, returning presently with Lane.
Then we made for the music-room.
It was pitch black on the stairs,
but we groped our way through, guided by the sounds
within. Barraclough struck a match and shed a
light on the scene. For an instant it flared
and sputtered, discovering to us the situation in
that cockpit. The place was a shambles. Grant
was at bay in a corner, the cook lay dead, and half
a dozen mutineers were struggling in the foreground
with some persons I could not see: while through
the broken boards of the windows other men were climbing.
With an oath Barraclough dropped his match and rushed
forward. My revolver had barked as he did so,
and one of the ruffians who was crawling through the
window toppled head first into the saloon. But
the darkness hampered us, for it was impossible to
tell who was friend or enemy; and I believe it had
hampered the mutineers also, or they must have triumphed
long ere this. I engaged in a hand-to-hand struggle
with some one who gripped me by the throat and struck
at me with a knife. I felt it rip along my shoulder,
and a throb of pain jumped in my arm. But the
next moment I had him under foot and had used the last
cartridge in my chamber.
“Where are you, Grant, Barraclough,
Ellison?” I called out, and I heard above the
din of oaths and feet and bumping a voice call hoarsely
to me. Whose it was I could not say and upon
that came an exclamation of pain or cry. “My
God!”
With the frenzy of the lust of blood
upon me, I seized some one and drove my revolver heavily
into his skull. I threw another man to the floor
from behind, and was then seized as in a grasp of a
vice. I turned about and struggled fiercely,
and together my assailant and I rocked and rolled
from point to point. Neither of us had any weapon,
it appeared, and all that we could do was to struggle
in that mutual and tenacious grip and trust to chance.
I felt myself growing weaker, but I did not relax
my hold and, indeed, came to the conclusion that if
I was to survive it must be by making a superhuman
effort. With all the force of my muscles and
the weight of my body I pushed my man forward, at the
same time striving to bend him backward. He gave
way a little and struck the railings that surrounded
the well of the saloon, bumping along them heavily.
Then recovering, he exerted all his strength against
me, and we swayed together. Suddenly there was
a crack in my ears, the rail parted asunder, and we
both toppled over into space. A thud followed
which seemed to be in my very brain, and then I knew
nothing.
When I was next capable of taking
in impressions with my senses I was aware of a great
stillness. Vacantly my mind groped its way back
to the past, and I recalled that I had fallen, and
must be now in the saloon. Immediately on that
I was conscious that I was resting upon some still
body, which must be that of my opponent who had fallen
under me. What had happened? I could hear
no sounds of any conflict in progress. Had the
enemy taken possession of the state-rooms, and were
all of our party prisoners or dead? I rose painfully
into a sitting posture, and put out a hand to guide
myself. It fell on a quiet face. The man
was dead.
It was with infinite difficulty that
I got to my feet, sore, aching, and dizzy, and groped
my way to the wall. Which way was I to go?
Which way led out? The only sound I seemed to
hear was the regular thumping of the screw below me,
which was almost as if it had been in the arteries
of my head, beating in consonance with my heart.
Then an idea struck me, flooding me with horror, and
bracing my shattered nerves. The Princess!
I had promised to go to her if all was lost. I
had betrayed my trust.
As I thought this I staggered down
the saloon, clutching the wall, and came abruptly
against a pillar which supported the balcony above.
From this I let myself go at a venture, and walked
into the closed door forthright. Congratulating
myself on my luck, I turned the handle and passed
into the darkness of the passages beyond. And
now a sound of voices flowed toward me, voices raised
in some excitement, and I could perceive a light some
way along the passage in the direction of the officers’
cabins. As I stood waiting, resolute, not knowing
if these were friends or foes, and fearing the latter,
a man emerged toward me with a lantern.
“If that fool would only switch
on the light it would be easier,” he said in
a voice which I did not recognise. But the face
over the lantern was familiar to me. It was Pierce,
the murderer of McCrae, and the chief figure after
Holgate in that mutiny and massacre. I shrank
back behind the half-open door, but he did not see
me. He had turned and gone back with an angry
exclamation.
“Stand away there!” I
heard, in a voice of authority, and I knew the voice
this time.
It was Holgate’s. The mutineers had the
ship.
What, then, had become of the Prince’s
party? What fate had enveloped them? I waited
no longer, but staggered rather than slipped out of
the saloon and groped in the darkness toward the stairs.
Once on them, I pulled myself up by the balustrade
until I reached the landing, where the entrance-hall
gave on the state-rooms. I was panting, I was
aching, every bone seemed broken in my body, and I
had no weapon. How was I to face the ruffians,
who might be in possession of the rooms? I tried
the handle of the door, but it was locked. I
knocked, and then knocked louder with my knuckles.
Was it possible that some one remained alive?
Summoning my wits to my aid, I gave the signal which
had been used by me on previous occasions on returning
from my expeditions. There was a pause; then
a key turned; the door opened, and I fell forward into
the corridor.