THE “SUMTER”
LOSES A PRIZE.
While the majority of the Sabine’s
crew chafed and fretted like captive birds which beat
their wings against the bars of their cage to no purpose,
there were two who stood aloof from every one and from
each other; who never spoke a word, but who nevertheless
came to a perfect understanding through the interchange
of frequent and expressive glances. They were
the captain and Jack Gray. Each one knew as well
as if the other had explained it to him, that both
had resolved upon the same thing that before
the sun rose again the Sabine must be taken
out of the hands of the prize crew, and her course
shaped toward a Northern port, no matter what the
risk might be.
“I knew, although I had no chance
to speak to the old man about it, that our first hard
work must be to disarm those five rebels,” said
Jack, in telling his story. “I knew it
would be easy enough to do that if we all moved together,
for there was but one native American in the prize
crew the midshipman and he was
a little whiffet to be strangled with a finger and
thumb. Even the fact that we were in the middle
of the tow, the Sumter ahead and the Herndon
behind, wouldn’t have made any difference to
us if we had had control of the brig, because a few
lusty blows with an axe would have severed the two
hawsers and the darkness would have aided us in making
our escape; but the trouble was, the elements were
against us. The wind would not come up, and of
course it would be of no use for us to take the brig
unless we had a breeze to help us draw off.”
While the captain and his vigilant
second mate were waiting and watching in the hope
that something might unexpectedly turn up in their
favor, Captain Semmes came to their aid. The
Sumter with her heavy tow and little breeze
to help her, was making headway altogether too slowly
to suit him; and besides, it had occurred to him that
it might be well to run ahead and find out what the
authorities at Cienfuegos thought of him and his government,
and whether or not they would permit Yankee prizes
to be condemned and sold in that port. The first
intimation the brig’s crew had that Captain
Semmes was about to cast off his tow was a warning
whistle from the Sumter. This was followed
by a sudden slackening of the hawser, and a few minutes
later the Sumter’s black hulk showed
itself on the starboard bow. She was backing water.
“Sabine ahoy!” came the hail.
“On board the Sumter! replied the midshipman.
“Cast off the Herndon’s hawser
and stand by to pass it aboard of us.”
The midshipman responded with an “Ay,
ay, sir!” and ordered the brig’s crew
to lay aft and hold themselves in readiness to cast
off when they received the word. It took half
an hour to transfer the line from one vessel to the
other (it was accomplished by the aid of a small boat),
and then another order came to the prize-master of
the Sabine.
“Haul in your own hawser and
make sail and follow us into port,” were the
instructions he received, and which he at once proceeded
to act upon. He did not notice, however, that
the first man to seize the hawser and lay out his
strength upon it with a “Heave yo!
All together now,” was the surly second mate,
who seemed to take the loss of his vessel so much
to heart that he hadn’t said a word to anybody
since the prize crew was put aboard of her. But
Jack Gray was there with an object. When the
end of the hawser had been wound around the capstan,
and the bars were shipped, he took pains to place
himself next to a couple of Green Mountain boys, whose
courage had been proved in more than one trying ordeal.
“Heave yo! ’Round
she goes. Strike up a song, somebody,” shouted
Jack; and then he leaned over and spoke so that not
only the two men who were heaving at the bar with
him but also the three who were on the bar in front
could hear every word he said. “Listen,
boys,” said he earnestly. “We’re
going to take the ship out of the hands of these pirates.
Put a handspike or an axe where you can get your hands
on it, and be ready to jump the instant the old man
or I make a move.”
Jack could say no more just then,
for in his progress around the capstan he came opposite
the place where the midshipman was standing. He
breasted the bar manfully and joined in the song, looking
as innocent as though he had never thought of knocking
the midshipman overboard if the latter gave him even
the shadow of a chance to do it.
“I knew well enough that you
cabin fellows would never let these villains get away
with the brig,” said the man on his left, as
soon as it was safe for him to speak. “Jump
as soon as you get ready and we’ll be there.
What was it you read to us from that Mobile paper you
brought aboard at Rio that one Southern
gentleman is as good as five Northern mudsills?
We will give them a chance to prove it.”
“Pass the word among the boys
and tell them to stand by to bear a hand when the
time comes,” added the second mate. “But
be sly about it, for we must not arouse the suspicions
of these rebels. They are armed and we are not.”
In due time the hawser was hauled
aboard and stowed away, and then the midshipman prepared
to make sail and follow the Sumter which was
by this time so far off that her lights could not
be seen. It took a good while to do this, and
once, while working on the foreyard, Jack was delighted
to find himself by his captain’s side.
“I hope that rebel officer didn’t
see you come up,” said Jack. “If he
did he will be on his guard, and then good-by to all
our chances of taking the ship.”
“Do you take me for a dunce?”
asked the captain, in reply. “I came up
when he wasn’t looking, because I wanted a chance
to say a word to you.”
“I know what you would say if
you had time,” was Jack’s answer.
“So do the men. They have all been posted,
and are as eager to get the ship back as you can possibly
be.”
“Very good,” said the
captain, who was highly gratified. “Stand
by the companion-ladder and watch all that goes on
in the cabin.”
Having seen the last sail sheeted
home Jack obeyed the order to “lay down from
aloft,” and engaged the midshipman in conversation
to give the captain a chance to gain the deck without
being discovered. At the same time he noticed
that the long wished for breeze was springing up, and
that everything was beginning to draw beautifully.
At this moment the steward came up from the cabin
and approached the place where they were standing.
“You haven’t had any supper,
sir,” said he, saluting the midshipman.
“Won’t you come down and drink a cup of
coffee and eat an orange?”
Jack fairly trembled while he waited
for the officer’s reply. He was afraid
he would decline the invitation Jack knew
he would have done so if he had been in the midshipman’s
place, and that nothing short of an overpowering force
would have taken him from the deck so long as he was
prize-master of the brig. But the young officer’s
fears had not only been lulled to sleep by the orderly
conduct of the Sabine’s crew, which led
him to believe that they, like all the rest of their
countrymen, were too cowardly to show fight under any
circumstances, but he was tired and hungry, and he
thought that a cup of coffee and something good to
eat would take the place of the night’s sleep
which he knew he was going to lose. Accordingly
he followed the steward toward the cabin, and then
Jack told himself that something was about to happen that
this was a part of the captain’s plan for seizing
the vessel. Jack had been instructed to stand
at the top of the companion-ladder and watch all that
went on below, and in order that he might carry out
those instructions without attracting the midshipman’s
attention, he quietly removed his shoes and stood in
his stocking feet. As he was about to start for
the post that had been assigned him, he saw an opportunity
to aid the captain that was too good to be lost.
Standing within less than ten feet of him was one
of the Confederate sailors. He was leaning over
the rail looking down into the water, evidently in
a brown study. He held his musket clasped in
his arms in a position something like “arms
port,” and Jack knew that he carried his revolver
on the right side, that the butt was entirely out of
the holster, and that there was no strap to hold the
weapon in place. He had taken note of these facts
when the prize-crew first came aboard.
Before attempting to carry out the
desperate plan he had so suddenly conceived for securing
this particular rebel, Jack swept a hasty glance over
the deck to calculate his chances for success.
They could not have been better. There was not
another one of the prize-crew in sight; but just across
from him, on the other side of the deck, stood Stebbins,
one of the Green Mountain boys who had worked at the
capstan with him. Other members of the crew were
making a pretense of being busy at something in the
waist, but they were one and all keeping a close watch
on the second mate, and there were hand-spikes, axes,
or belaying-pins within easy reach. Jack made
a warning gesture to Stebbins, and the sailor at once
reached for his capstan-bar. With two quick, noiseless
steps Jack placed himself close behind the dreaming
rebel, and thrusting his left arm over his shoulder
seized his musket with a firm grasp, while at the same
time, with his right hand, he deftly slipped the revolver
from its holster.
“Not a word not a
whisper!” said Jack, placing the muzzle of the
heavy Colt close to the rebel’s head. “Let
go that gun. Stebbins, take off his cutlass and
buckle it around your own waist.”
When the captive recovered himself
sufficiently to look around, he was astonished to
find that he was confronted by four of the brig’s
foremast hands, all of whom carried weapons of some
sort, which they held threateningly over his head.
There was no help for it, and he was prompt to obey
both Jack’s orders; that is to say, he gave up
his gun and kept his lips closed.
“Lead him aft, Stebbins, and
stand guard over him with your cutlass,” commanded
Jack. “If he tries to run or give warning
to his companions, cut him down. Smith, take
this musket and keep a sharp eye on me. The officer
is in the cabin, and I don’t think the old man
means to let him come out very soon.”
Stebbins moved off with his prisoner.
Smith and the other two sailors stationed themselves
where they could see everything the second mate did,
and the latter advanced close to the companion-way
so that he could look down and obtain a view of the
interior of the cabin. At the very first glance
he saw something to discourage him.
“The moment the old man told
me to watch all that went on in the cabin, that moment
I understood his plan,” said Jack. “And
when I afterward compared notes with him and the steward,
I learned that I had made no mistake. The captain
was not denied the privilege of going in and out of
his cabin as often as he pleased, and that was one
place where the midshipman, who was really a sharp
officer, did wrong. Another wrong move he made
was in scattering his men about the deck. If he
had kept them close together, so that they could have
helped one another, we never could have taken the
brig.”
It was during one of these visits
to the cabin that the captain took his revolver from
the place in which he had concealed it when he saw
the prize-crew coming aboard, and put four pairs of
hand-cuffs into his pockets; for when the rebel boarding
officer hauled down his colors, he determined that
at sunrise the next morning the Stars and Stripes should
again float at his peak if he had to sacrifice half
his crew to get them there. His next move was
to order his steward to dish up supper, and when it
was ready he sent word to the midshipman to come down
and have a bite; but, although the brig was towing
at the stern of the Sumter and there was not
the smallest chance for her to escape, the officer
would not trust himself within reach of the skipper
and his mates. However, he was not afraid to
go into the cabin alone, and when the steward asked
him, in Jack’s hearing, to come below and drink
a cup of coffee and eat an orange, he accepted the
invitation; but his actions indicated that he was
very suspicious.
“Sit down here, sir,”
said the steward, drawing back the chair he had placed
for him.
“Well, hardly,” replied
the officer, glancing at the door behind him, which,
by the way, opened into the captain’s state-room.
“Move that chair and plate to the other side
of the table.”
“Certainly, sir,” said
the steward, in his politest tones; and the command
was promptly obeyed.
The first thing the midshipman did
after he had taken his seat, was to draw his revolver
from its holster and show it to the steward; and then
he placed it on the chair under his left leg.
“You will observe that I don’t
put it on the table and give you a chance to snatch
it while I am in the act of drinking my coffee,”
said he blandly.
“Certainly, sir,” said the steward again.
“You Yankees have the reputation
of being pretty sharp people,” continued the
officer, “and I believe you are somewhat famous
for the tricks you play upon unsuspecting strangers;
but you will find that there are smarter men south
of Mason and Dixon’s line than there are north
of it. Now, if we understand each other, trot
out your grub.”
The steward ran up the ladder, at
the top of which he found the second mate, standing
back out of the light so that the midshipman could
not see him if he chanced to look toward the deck.
“Did you notice that he would
not sit where I wanted him to?” whispered the
steward. “The old man is in his state-room,
waiting for a chance to rush out and grab him, but
I am afraid that move on the Confederate’s part
will knock the whole thing in the head.”
“Not by a long shot,”
replied Jack. “We’ve got firearms
of our own now, and if the worst is forced upon us,
we’ll engage them in a regular battle.
But we don’t want to shoot if we can help it,
for that might bring the Sumter upon us.”
The steward vanished in the galley,
and while he was gone Jack thought seriously of giving
him the revolver he had taken from the captured rebel,
and telling him to watch his chance to put it to the
head of the midshipman while he was eating his supper,
and demand his surrender on pain of death. That
would have been just the thing to do. Jack thought,
if he were only sure that the steward’s courage
would not fail him when the critical moment came;
but unfortunately he was not quite positive on that
point. He had never had an opportunity to see
how the steward would act in an emergency, and after
a little reflection he concluded that he had better
keep the weapon in his own possession.
In a few minutes the steward came
out of the galley, carrying a tray upon which he had
placed a tempting supper, and Jack saw him descend
into the cabin and put it on the table.
“Here, you fellow, that won’t
do,” he heard the midshipman exclaim. “Don’t
take quite so much pains to get behind me, if you please.
Stand around on the other side of the table, so that
I can see everything you do.”
“Certainly, sir,” answered
the steward, as he hastened to take the position pointed
out to him.
If Jack Gray had been in the cabin
at that moment he would have seen that he did a wise
thing when he decided to hold fast to his revolver
instead of handing it over to the steward and depending
upon him to capture the midshipman, for when the latter
emphasized his commands by pulling his six-shooter
from under his leg and raising and lowering the hammer
with one hand, keeping the muzzle pointed toward the
steward’s head all the while, the latter grew
as white as a sheet and trembled in every limb.
After he thought he had inflicted sufficient torture
upon the timid fellow, the Confederate put up his
weapon and demanded:
“What State are you from?”
“Massachusetts, sir.”
“Are all Massachusetts men as great cowards
as you are?”
“Certainly, sir,” answered
the steward, who was afraid to say anything else.
“Then we’re going to have
a walk-over, sure enough,” said the rebel.
“You Yankees are afraid to fight.”
“Certainly, sir.”
Every word of this conversation was
overheard by a man who, but for a most unfortunate
interruption, would have forced the Confederate officer
to swallow his words almost as soon as they had left
his lips. It was the skipper. He had come
down from aloft and reached his cabin without being
seen, and it was in obedience to his instructions that
the prize-master had been asked below to get some
supper. His plan was to have the steward seat
the officer with his back to a certain state-room,
so that he could be seized from behind and choked into
submission before he knew that there was a third party
in the cabin; but that could not be done now.
The rebel’s suspicions led him to change to the
other side of the table, and he now sat facing the
state-room door, on whose farther side stood the merchant
captain with rage in his heart and a cocked revolver
in his hand. The captain knew that he was going
to put himself in danger when he attempted to make
a prisoner of the midshipman, but that did not deter
him. When he heard that sweeping charge of cowardice
made against the men of his native State he could stand
it no longer, but jerked open the door and sprang
into the cabin.
Now came that unexpected interruption
to the skipper’s plan of which we have spoken.
The steward heard the door of the state room creak
softly behind him, and, knowing what was coming, he
made a quick jump to one side to get out of the skipper’s
way and leave him a clear field for his operations;
but he was so badly frightened that he hardly knew
what he was about, and consequently he did the very
thing he tried to avoid. He sprang directly in
front of his commander, and the two came together
with such force that they measured their length on
the cabin floor, the captain and his revolver being
underneath. For one single instant the prize-master
sat as motionless in his chair as if he had been turned
into a block of wood; but it was for one instant only.
He was quick to comprehend the situation, and equally
quick to act. He sprang to his feet, and before
either of the prostrate men could make a move he ran
around the end of the table and covered them with his
revolver.
“If you stir or utter a word
I will shoot you as quickly as I would shoot a couple
of dogs which disputed my right to use the highway,”
said he, in tones that could not have been steadier
if he had been ordering the boatswain’s mate
of the Sumter to pipe sweepers. “Captain,
drop that revolver on the floor without moving your
hand a hair’s-breadth.”
“Let go your own revolver,”
said a voice in his ear: and to his infinite
amazement the Confederate suddenly found himself in
a grasp so strong that it not only rendered him incapable
of action, but brought him to his knees in a second.
One vise-like hand was fastened upon the back of his
neck and the other upon his wrist, turning the muzzle
of the revolver upward, so that it pointed toward
the roof of the cabin.
This is what we referred to when we
stated that if it had not been for Jack Gray’s
courage and prompt action, it is probable that the
brig would never have been recaptured. When the
midshipman jumped from his chair and ran around the
table, he turned his back toward the companion-way;
and the moment he did so, Jack Gray, who saw that the
critical time had come and that the next few seconds
would decide who were to be masters of the brig, made
a spring for the ladder. As he was in his stocking
feet his movements were noiseless, and so rapid, too,
that he had the Confederate prize-master in his grasp
before the latter was fairly done speaking. Then
he was powerless, for the second mate had a grip that
few who knew him cared to contend against.
“Didn’t you have the revolver
you took from the captured sailor in your pocket?”
inquired Marcy, when Jack reached this point in his
story.
“I did, but I didn’t think
it best to depend upon it, for this reason: Although
the midshipman wasn’t much to look at, he had
showed himself to be possessed of any amount of pluck,
and I was afraid that even if I succeeded in getting
the drop on him he might shoot any way, for the double
purpose of disabling me and calling his men to his
assistance. So I made all haste to get a hold
on him.”
“Now that I think of it,”
continued Marcy, who was deeply interested in the
narrative, “why did Captain Semmes keep the Herndon
in tow when he cast off the Sabine? Why didn’t
he let both vessels go?”
“I have never been able to account
for that except upon the supposition that he had more
confidence in our prize-master than he had in the one
he put aboard the Herndon,” replied sailor
Jack. “The Herndon was a heavy vessel,
and had a much larger crew than we had; and perhaps
that had something to do with it. I think we
taught Semmes a lesson he will remember. I don’t
believe he will ever again trust a Yankee prize and
a Yankee crew out of reach of his big guns.”
The master of the brig and his frightened
steward got upon their feet as soon as they could,
and found that the Confederate officer had been secured
beyond all possibility of escape. The second mate
had twisted his revolver from his grasp; Smith, the
man to whom Jack had given the captured musket, was
holding a bayonet close to his nose, and another sailor
was threatening him with a handspike.
“Did you really think that nine
Yankee sailors would permit five traitors to work
their sweet will on them?” demanded the skipper,
as he let down the hammer of the officer’s revolver
and dropped the weapon into his own pocket. “I
think you will learn to your cost that you have been
very much mistaken in the opinions you have formed
of Northern people. I shall have to ask you to
go into my state-room and remain there, leaving the
door open. Smith, stay here and watch him, while
the rest of us go on deck, and attend to the other
four.”
“There are but three left, Captain,”
observed Jack. “One is already a prisoner,
and Stebbins is keeping guard over him.”
At that moment a body of men marched
aft from the forecastle, came to a halt at the top
of the ladder, and a hoarse voice hailed the cabin.
It was the voice of the first mate.
“Tumble up, Cap’n,”
said the officer. “We’ve got the rest
of ’em hard and fast. Tumble up and take
command of your ship. She’s your’n
once more.”
That was the most gratifying piece
of news Jack Gray had ever heard.