The match burnt out, and I dropped
it. I remember mechanically extinguishing the
glowing end with my heel, and then straightening to
such a sense of horror as I have never felt before
or since. I groped for the door; I wanted air,
space, the freedom from lurking death of the open
deck.
I had been sleeping with my revolver
beside me on the pantry floor. Somehow or other
I got back there and found it. I made an attempt
to find the switch for the cabin lights, and, failing,
revolver in hand, I ran into the chart-room and up
the after companionway. Charlie Jones was at
the wheel, and by the light of a lantern I saw that
he was bending to the right, peering in at the chartroom
window. He turned when he heard me.
“What’s wrong?”
he asked. “I heard a yell a minute ago.
Turner on the rampage?” He saw my revolver
then, and, letting go the wheel, threw up both his
hands. “Turn that gun away, you fool!”
I could hardly speak. I lowered
the revolver and gasped: “Call the captain!
Vail’s been murdered!
“Good God!” he said.
“Who did it?” He had taken the wheel
again, and was bringing the ship back to her course.
I was turning sick and dizzy, and I clutched at the
railing of the companionway.
“I don’t know. Where’s the
captain?”
“The mate’s around.” He raised
his voice. “Mr. Singleton!” he called.
There was no time to lose, I felt.
My nausea had left me. I ran forward to where
I could dimly see Singleton looking in my direction.
“Singleton! Quick!” I called.
“Bring your revolver.”
He stopped and peered in my direction.
“Who is it?”
“Leslie. Come below, for God’s sake!”
He came slowly toward me, and in a
dozen words I told him what had happened. I
saw then that he had been drinking. He reeled
against me, and seemed at a loss to know what to do.
“Get your revolver,” I said, “and
wake the captain.”
He disappeared into the forward house,
to come back a moment later with a revolver.
I had got a lantern in the mean time, and ran to the
forward companionway which led into the main cabin.
Singleton followed me.
“Where’s the captain?” I asked.
“I didn’t call him,”
Singleton replied, and muttered something unintelligible
under his breath.
Swinging the lantern ahead of me,
I led the way down the companionway. Something
lay huddled at the foot. I had to step over it
to get down. Singleton stood above, on the steps.
I stooped and held the lantern close, and we both
saw that it was the captain, killed as Vail had been.
He was fully dressed except for his coat, and as he
lay on his back, his cap had been placed over his
mutilated face.
I thought I heard something moving
behind me in the cabin, and wheeled sharply, holding
my revolver leveled. The idea had come to me
that the crew had mutinied, and that every one in
the after house had been killed. The idea made
me frantic; I thought of the women, of Elsa Lee, and
I was ready to kill.
“Where is the light switch?”
I demanded of Singleton, who was still on the companion
steps, swaying.
“I don’t know,”
he said, and collapsed, sitting huddled just above
the captain’s body, with his face in his hands.
I saw I need not look to him for help,
and I succeeded in turning on the light in the swinging
lamp in the center of the cabin. There was no
sign of any struggle, and the cabin was empty.
I went back to the captain’s body, and threw
a rug over it. Then I reached over and shook
Singleton by the arm.
“Do something!” I raved.
“Call the crew. Get somebody here, you
drunken fool!”
He rose and staggered up the companionway,
and I ran to Miss Lee’s door. It was closed
and locked, as were all the others except Vail’s
and the one I had broken open. I reached Mr.
Turner’s door last. It was locked, and
I got no response to my knock. I remembered that
his room and Vail’s connected through a bath,
and, still holding my revolver leveled, I ran into
Vail’s room again, this time turning on the
light.
A night light was burning in the bath-room,
and the door beyond was unlocked. I flung it
open and stepped in. Turner was lying on his
bed, fully dressed, and at first I thought he too had
been murdered. But he was in a drunken stupor.
He sat up, dazed, when I shook him by the arm.
“Mr. Turner!” I cried.
“Try to rouse yourself, man! The captain
has been murdered, and Mr. Vail!”
He made an effort to sit up, swayed,
and fell back again. His face was swollen and
purplish, his eyes congested. He made an effort
to speak, but failed to be intelligible. I had
no time to waste. Somewhere on the Ella the murderer
was loose. He must be found.
I flung out of Turner’s cabin
as the crew, gathered from the forecastle and from
the decks, crowded down the forward companionway.
I ran my eye over them. Every man was there,
Singleton below by the captain’s body, the crew,
silent and horror-struck, grouped on the steps:
Clarke, McNamara, Burns, Oleson, and Adams.
Behind the crew, Charlie Jones had left the wheel
and stood peering down, until sharply ordered back.
Williams, with a bandage on his head, and Tom, the
mulatto cook, were in the group.
I stood, revolver in hand, staring
at the men. Among them, I felt sure, was the
murderer. But which one? All were equally
pale, equally terrified.
“Boys,” I said, “Mr.
Vail and your captain have been murdered. The
murderer must be on the ship one of ourselves.”
There was a murmur at that. “Mr. Singleton,
I suggest that these men stay together in a body,
and that no one be allowed to go below until all have
been searched and all weapons taken from them.”
Singleton had dropped into a chair,
and sat with his face buried in his hands, his back
to the captain’s body. He looked up without
moving, and his face was gray.
“All right,” he said. “Do
as you like. I’m sick.”
He looked sick. Burns, who had
taken Schwartz’s place as second mate, left
the group and came toward me.
“We’d better waken the
women,” he said. “If you’ll
tell them, Leslie, I’ll take the crew on deck
and keep them there.”
Singleton seemed dazed, and when Burns
spoke of taking the men on deck, he got up dizzily.
“I’m going too,”
he muttered. “I’ll go crazy if I
stay down here with that.”
The rug had been drawn back to show
the crew what had happened. I drew it reverently
over the body again.
After the men had gone, I knocked
at Mrs. Turner’s door. It was some time
before she roused; when she answered, her voice was
startled.
“What is it?”
“It’s Leslie, Mrs. Turner. Will
you come to the door?”
“In a moment.”
She threw on a dressing-gown, and opened the door.
“What is wrong?”
I told her, as gently as I could.
I thought she would faint; but she pulled herself
together and looked past me into the cabin.
“That is ?”
“The captain, Mrs. Turner.”
“And Mr. Vail?”
“In his cabin.”
“Where is Mr. Turner?”
“In his cabin, asleep.”
She looked at me strangely, and, leaving
the door, went into her sister’s room, next.
I heard Miss Lee’s low cry of horror, and almost
immediately the two women came to the doorway.
“Have you seen Mr. Turner?” Miss Lee demanded.
“Just now.”
“Has Mrs. Johns been told?”
“Not yet.”
She went herself to Mrs. Johns’s
cabin, and knocked. She got an immediate answer,
and Mrs. Johns, partly dressed, opened the door.
“What’s the matter?”
she demanded. “The whole crew is tramping
outside my windows. I hope we haven’t
struck an iceberg.”
“Adele, don’t faint, please. Something
awful has happened.”
“Turner! He has killed some one finally!”
“Hush, for Heaven’s sake!
Wilmer has been murdered, Adele and the
captain.”
Mrs. Johns had less control than the
other women. She stood for an instant, with
a sort of horrible grin on her face. Then she
went down on the floor, full length, with a crash.
Elsa Lee knelt beside her and slid a pillow under
her head.
“Call the maids, Leslie,”
she said quietly. “Karen has something
for this sort of thing. Tell her to bring it
quickly.”
I went the length of the cabin and
into the chartroom. The maids’ room was
here, on the port-side, and thus aft of Mrs. Turner’s
and Miss Lee’s rooms. It had one door
only, and two small barred windows, one above each
of the two bunks.
I turned on the chart-room lights.
At the top of the after companionway the crew had
been assembled, and Burns was haranguing them.
I knocked at the maids’ door, and, finding it
unlocked, opened it an inch or so.
“Karen!” I called and,
receiving no answer: “Mrs. Sloane!”
(the stewardess).
I opened the door wide and glanced
in. Karen Hansen, the maid, was on the floor,
dead. The stewardess, in collapse from terror,
was in her bunk, uninjured.