A few months ago I attended a banquet
and left it as I always leave such functions, hungry.
Entering an all-night lunch room I took a seat, and
gave my order to a waiter, who, when he had filled
it, sat down at the table with me. It was very
late, and his duties were light.
“You’re looking well,”
he remarked, as his glance traveled over my evening
clothes. “You’re dead swell, but the
last time I saw you, you were covered with mud, carrying
a stern line ashore in the Welland Canal.”
I took stock of him. He was white-haired,
but had the keen, intelligent face of a man of forty-five
who had not yet given up the fight; a lively, hopeful
face, one that comes to those who win oftener than
lose. His skin was brown, as though the sun and
wind of all the zones had smitten it. His eyes,
gray, steadfast and humorous, had in them when half
closed the twinkle of self-confidence, but also, in
their wide-open stare, the intensity of a man of initiative
and sudden action. In his voice were character,
individuality, and the habit of command; yet he wore
the short jacket of a waiter, and might have accepted
a tip. I could not recall having met him.
“You seem to have the advantage
of me,” I said. “I know the Welland
Canal, however, though I am trying to forget that ditch.”
“You can’t,” he
laughed. “No man can who ever went through
it. That trip with you in the old Samana
was my first and last. I struck for salt water
again when the old man paid me off at Port Colborne.
Don’t you remember going to school with me?”
He mentioned his name, and with a little effort I
recalled him-a schoolmate a little older
than myself, who had gone to sea early in life, and
returned a full-fledged salt-water navigator, to ship,
on his record, as first mate in the schooner that
carried me before the mast, and to meet his Waterloo
in the Welland Canal, the navigation of which demands
qualities never taught nor acquired in the curriculum
of sea-faring. After grounding the schooner several
times, parting every line on board, and driving us
to open revolt by the extra work coming of his mistakes,
he was discharged by the skipper. As I thought
of all this the grumbling sailor rose within me, and
there at the table, he a waiter, I a writer, we fought
out a grudge of twenty years’ standing.
But it ended amicably; I called him a farmer, he called
me a soldier, and we shook hands.
“I’ve learned,”
he said, as we settled back, “only in the last
month or so, that you’re the fellow that writes
these rotten sea stories. Why don’t you
write real sea stories?”
“For the same reason that you
don’t serve a real Welsh rabbit,” I answered,
tapping the now cold concoction he had served me.
“I couldn’t sell a real story. Truth
is too strange to pose as fiction.”
“That’s so,” he
answered, slowly. “Who’d think that
you could have become a writer, and I a hash slinger?
Making lots of money, I suppose.”
“No, I’m not, or I wouldn’t be in
your society to-night.”
“We’re all bluffers, I
guess. You are, here in this beanery with your
glad rags on. I am, too-no, not now.
I’m slinging hash, and glad of the chance.
But I was a millionaire for a time. Not long.
But while it lasted I had dreams-big dreams.”
I asked him about this, and there
followed his story. It was interrupted every
few moments by calls for “ham and-,”
“corn beef and-,” “mystery
and white wings,” and it kept me at the table
until daylight. He preluded it by the advice
to write it up as a real sea story, but asked that
I suppress his name until he had saved enough to get
him to Cuba, where he had new plans for advancement.
And now, after months of thought, I am following his
advice; for no effort of the creative mind, and no
flight of conventional fancy, can equal the weird,
grim yarn that he reeled off between orders.
“You must have read in the papers
a few weeks back,” he began, “about that
bunch of college men that chartered the old racer Mayflower,
filled her up with diving gear and dynamite, and went
down after the treasure in the Santa Margherita.”
I nodded assent. “Yes,
and a hurricane hit them and they barely escaped.”
“They’re keeping mum,”
he said, “and mean to try again; but it’s
no use. That treasure is seven hundred miles
to the nor-nor’east now, and I was about the
last man to look at it. It’s resting in
the hold of a small schooner, sunk in four hundred
fathoms. I never heard of that treasure ship
until about three years ago, when I quit a brigantine
at Cedar Keys and mixed in with the boarding-house
crowd. There was a fellow out of a job named
Gleason, and he had a chart in his pocket that he
talked about, but never showed. He told us all
about that old Spanish ship that went down with all
hands in the sixteenth century, carrying with her
about seven millions’ worth of gold, silver,
and jewels; and he knew the location. He had
got it from a drunken diver who had seen her on the
sea bottom, spelled her dingy old name on the stern,
and saved the news to himself while he wormed out of
the skipper the latitude and longitude of the place.
And now he wanted to enlist capital, or make up a
crew of men that would do the work. Dead easy,
he said. Just to get there, drag the bottom with
two boats and a length of chain until the wreck was
located, then to go down in a diving suit, hook on
to the chests and hoist them up.
“Well, in the crowd that he
talked to there wasn’t a dollar. We were
all dead broke, but we were all ambitious. There
was Pango Pete, a nigger six foot tall, who couldn’t
write his name, but he was a seaman from his feet
up; and a Dago named Pedro Pasqualai. These two
were the kind that will choke you before they ask
the time of night. Then there was Sullivan, old
man Sullivan, a decrepit old codger who had sailed
second mate all his life, and never got a first mate’s
berth because he couldn’t master navigation.
And there was Peters, a young fellow filled up with
the romance and the glory of the life at sea-rot,
as you and I know, but he was enthusiastic, and that
was enough. A trio of Dutchmen were taken in-Wagner,
Weiss, and Myers, three good fellows down on their
luck. A Portuguese named Christo, and two Sou’wegian
brothers named Swanson completed the bunch. We
talked it over down at the end of the fruit dock,
where the oyster boats come in and make fast, and where
the downs-and-outs congregate to smoke and boast of
the prosperous past.
“But this crowd talked of the
prosperous future. Seven millions, said Gleason,
lay down there off Turks Island in less than sixty
fathoms, and all we needed was some kind of a craft
to get us there, a diving suit, and a storage battery
to light up a bulb to search for the treasure.
These things seemed beyond our reach, until a schooner
came in for supplies. We sized her up, and Gleason
went wild as her different fittings and appliances
showed up. There were the diving dresses we needed;
there was the storage battery; there were the extra
anchors for mooring a craft over a certain spot, and
the air pumps and paraphernalia for diving operations,
scattered about the deck. She was a small craft,
and was manned by men who did not act and talk like
sailors. There seemed to be no skipper, and they
smoked on deck while working, and talked back and
forth as though all were equal.
“‘A company,’ said
Gleason, ’just like us, only they’ve got
the money, and possibly the secret. Well, the
company that gets the loot owns it and such matters
as the ownership of the schooner and the outfit can
be settled afterwards, possibly out of court.
What do you say? Are you game?’
“We were. We laid low,
but watched, and when that schooner was filled up
with grub, we were ready to raid her and chuck the
crew overboard; but it wasn’t necessary to do
the latter. They filled up too late for the tide
and went ashore for the evening, leaving no one aboard
but a Japanese cook. We remembered, as we climbed
aboard after dark, that we hadn’t a man among
us who could cook, and so, instead of dropping that
Jap over the rail, we simply locked him into a stateroom
and made sail.
“Naturally, as Gleason originated
the scheme, he was elected captain, but, as I was
the only navigator in the crowd, I was made first mate,
and the big nigger, Pango Pete, second mate.
It looked good for discipline, for even pirates recognize
the need of it, and the first man that growled or
kicked had to deal with Pete. He whaled a few
before we’d got around the Florida Cape, but
he also whaled the Jap for bad cooking and insolence-which
was a mistake. That Jap was an educated man,
a college graduate and a member of the Japanese Samurai,
a curious class in that country that never yield, never
forgive, and kill themselves when defeated. We
didn’t know this; we only knew that he was a
mighty poor cook.
“After we were around the Cape,
Gleason gave me the latitude and longitude of the
spot, and I made for it. It took me two or three
days of careful observations and calculations before
I announced that we were within six seconds of the
spot, which is all that navigation will do. Then
we dropped anchor and began to drag. We knotted
together every line we had, and in the middle we had
a length of mooring chain that would stick to the
bottom. We kept two small boats, to which this
was attached, a quarter of a mile apart and pulled
on parallel lines, and at last felt a drag; then we
pulled together, gathering in the slack, and when
we met, the schooner, under charge of Gleason, came
up and anchored, over the spot.
“I was the only man there who
had any diving experience, so I went down. Say,
have you ever been under water in a diving suit, trusting
your life to the fellows above who pump the air into
your helmet? No? Well, it’s a curious
experience. I had the feeling as I went down that
I was number thirteen of that bunch, and that they
only needed to shut off my air supply to make their
number twelve instead of thirteen. But that didn’t
happen; they pumped, and I breathed and saw the old
galleon, the Santa Margherita. She lay
there, heeled over to starboard, covered with the
ooze and the slime of the sea, with barnacles everywhere.
“I signaled for slack and walked
around her, taking note of her rig. She had three
masts, and three tops very much like the fighting tops
of our modern battleships. There were no royal
masts, but she had two sprit-sail yards under the
bowsprit and jib boom, and a huge lateen yard on the
mizzen that took the place of the cro’-jack.
But her poop deck was a wonder; five tiers of windows
one above the other, and on top three big lanterns
much like the ordinary street lamp. Of course,
all canvas and running gear had rotted away, but here
and there was a leg of standing rigging, preserved
by the tar. She was a big craft in her day, no
doubt, but not so big compared with present-day ships;
at any rate I could reach up to her channels, and
by this means climbed aboard.
“The deck and rail were a foot
thick with mud, and the small, spar-deck guns could
hardly be distinguished. I saw at once that I
would need help, and signaled to be hauled up.
On deck I told the news and all hands, even the Jap,
went crazy over it. We got out two more diving
suits, rigged a bulb for each, and Pango, Peters,
and myself went down again.
“Now, this isn’t a yarn
of the finding of that treasure. Anyone can invent
such yarns, and I’ve read dozens of them.
They all wind up successfully, with each man wealthy
and happy. This is a yarn of the men who found
that treasure, and what happened to them. So,
I’ll just say that we didn’t find a skeleton
or a ghost when we got below decks. All hands
were up, I suppose, when that ship went down, and the
rush of water as she plunged, washed them off.
We found seven big chests in the ’tween-decks
forward of the cabin, and in them all were coins, and
jewelry, and here and there in the mess, what might
have been an opal, or some kind of jewel. All
the stuff was black from the action of the salt water;
but we knew we had the real thing, and hooked on tackles.
We had to come up to help each time we lifted a chest,
for, after the chest was out of water, it was too
heavy for the crowd above; but at last they were all
up, and stowed snugly on the floor of the cabin.
Then, after final search for other loot worth taking,
we picked up our anchor and cleared out, not yet having
decided where we were going.
“We were pirates under the law,
and didn’t know but what all the revenue cutters
on the coast were looking for us, for the theft of
that schooner. But with seven millions of bullion
and jewels, melted down, counted up, and translated
into cash in some bank, we didn’t care for the
charge of piracy. The real trouble was to get
that stuff translated, and while we argued we sailed
due east, out into the broad Atlantic. Peters,
the young enthusiast, had been a jeweler, and he told
us that nothing short of a blast of air in conjunction
with the heat of a fire would melt gold and silver.
Well, where could we set up a blast furnace with not
a dollar in the party? My suggestion-and
I was backed by Gleason, Peters, and old man Sullivan-was
that we count out the loot, separate every salable
jewel, and make some big port like New York, Liverpool,
or Rio Janeiro, sell the jewels and get ready money
with which to plan for the disposal of the rest; but
we had to deal with men like Pango, Christo,
Pedro, and the three Dutchmen, who didn’t know
what they were up against. They wanted an immediate
count up and division; then, each man to go his way.
The nonsense of it did not strike them; thirteen men
to divide up seven heavy chests-each one
shouldering seven-thirteenths of a load that took the
whole thirteen to lift with a four-fold tackle.
We asked the Jap cook what he thought, but he had
no opinion.
“It’s somewhat curious
how the different men of that bunch had different
ideas of what they wanted. Young Peters wanted
to go back to his native town and win the girl that
had soured on him because he was poor. Pango,
Pedro, and the two Sou’wegians only wanted a
big drunk. Old man Sullivan wanted a course in
a Nautical School and a first mate’s certificate.
The three Germans wanted to get to New York and set
up in the saloon business. Gleason wanted to study
law, and I wanted to study medicine and be a doctor,
a gentleman who could enter any society in the world.
The Jap didn’t give out his aspirations.
“And so, growling like an unhappy
family in a menagerie, we sailed east, with the question
unsettled. But at last we won over the Dagoes
and the Dutchmen, and agreed upon New York as a port,
and the selling of the jewels in some Bowery pawnshop,
where no questions are asked. Then we shook hands
all round, gave the Jap hell about his cooking-for
we had been too worried to attend to that matter before-and
squared away before the trade wind for Sandy Hook
and a market.
“From jealousy and mutual distrust,
we all slept in the cabin. There were plenty
of staterooms for the crowd, though some of us doubled
up. None of us wanted to remain away from the
seven chests of treasure, and the Japanese cook, who
might have slept in the cook’s room next the
galley, still showed a preference for his room in the
cabin, and we did not contest it. But now we
were millionaires and easy-dead easy.
We stood watch, steered and trimmed sail with no man
for boss, for now the work was done, Gleason and myself
and the nigger Pango gave up our false positions.
We were a democracy, and loved and trusted one another,
only, when we roused out the watch below and found
that old man Sullivan did not come, and on investigation
found him stone dead in his berth without a sign of
violence, we forgot our brotherly love and began to
wonder.
“We did not know what he died
of, but we gave him sea burial that day, and Gleason
read a chapter from the book. We concluded that
the old man had died of heart failure, or old age,
and thought no more about it after the day had passed.
But, when we called the watch at eight bells next
mornin’, we couldn’t get one of the Swanson
brothers up. He was cold and stiff; and there
was nothing wrong with him either. That is, he
had turned in cheerful and healthy and died during
sleep, leaving no sign.
“The other Swanson raised merry
hell that day, raving about the deck, mourning for
his dead brother. But his grief was short-lived,
for when we tried to waken him next watch he was cold
and stiff. We buried him with the ceremonies,
and began to think-all of us. We wondered
whether men may rake up ill-gotten treasure from a
dead past without coming under influences of that
dead past. We thought of the conquered and enslaved
natives, laboring in the mines for the aggrandizement
and enrichment of Spain, and giving up their lives
in the work, unrecognized and forgotten, while their
exploiters, the children and relatives of Ferdinand
and Isabella, sat back in luxury and self-satisfaction.
We wondered as to what was killing our shipmates,
ghosts or poison.
“Naturally, we suspected the
cook, and Pango, the Dagoes, and the surviving
Sou’wegian were for tossing him overboard; but
the rest of us wouldn’t have it. There
was no evidence of poison, and as we’d done no
killing so far in our piratical venture, we’d
better keep clear of it now, with so much at stake.
A court that would acquit us as soldiers of fortune
that had merely borrowed a schooner might hang us as
pirates and murderers; but we watched the Jap.
We kept him away from the grub while we ate it.
He brought it on in two or more big dishes, and there
was no chance of his poisoning one without the rest.
We weren’t afraid of that.
“I examined Swanson thoroughly
before we buried him, and there wasn’t a mark
on him, or a sign of anything out of the way, except
what didn’t seem in any way important, just
below each ear, and back of the corner of the cheek
bone, was a little pink spot; but there was no blood,
and no sign of finger prints on the throat.
“Peters, the romantic young
fellow, got ghosts on his mind, and as he thought
about it, they got on his nerves. He couldn’t
sleep, and walked around, up and down from the cabin
to the deck. The others slept in their watch
below, and on that night nobody died. But the
next night Peters was too exhausted to stay awake,
and he went to sleep on the cabin floor alongside
the chests. We couldn’t waken him at eight
bells, and we knew his troubles were over. At
daylight I examined his body. Nothing wrong,
only the two little pink spots under the ears.
We buried him at daylight, with scant pretense of
a burial service. Things were looking serious.
“All this time we were plowing
along before the trade wind, but it soon panned out
and we had light, shifty airs from all directions,
with rain-regular Gulf Stream weather.
It made us bad-tempered, and Pango and Gleason
had a fight. It was a bad fight, and we couldn’t
stop them; both were powerful men, and as they brushed
into me in their whirling lunge along the deck, locked
tight, they knocked me six feet away. When I
got to my feet, Pango had Gleason down and was
choking him. I got a handspike and battered that
coon’s head with it; but he wouldn’t let
go, and before others came up to help he had killed
him. He went for me, but had to stop before the
handspikes of the crowd.
“Now, with Gleason dead, the
command devolved upon me or Pango, and this fellow
was in a mood to demand the place. He could lick
any three of us, but not all hands; but, while we
were growling about it and cooling down, we found
other troubles to keep us busy. We had piled
several tons’ weight on the weak cabin floor
timbers of an old schooner, and of a sudden, down
they crashed to the hold below, leaving a yawning
hole in the cabin floor and starting a butt or two
in the planking. It was pump, pump, pump, now,
for we couldn’t rig any kind of a purchase to
clear those busted chests away from the leak.
Pango was a good worker, and, under the pressure
of extreme fatigue, we forgot our grudges. I
did not care for the cheap position of command over
a bunch of foreigners, and so we made Pango skipper,
while I remained navigator and mate. Pango
promptly quit pumping, saying that skippers don’t
pump. And that night he quit everything.
As skipper he stood no watch, but at breakfast time
he was cold, with the same little marks under his ears.
On his skin, however, they showed a brownish black.
“Gleason had been choked to
death, and I had examined the imprint of Pango’s
fingers before we buried him. There was hardly
a sign; nothing at all to show that the little pink
spots came from the pressure of a strangler’s
grip. Besides, you cannot choke a man asleep without
waking him. He would make some kind of a fuss,
and apprise others; but that never happened.
“There were but seven of us
now, three Germans, two Dagoes, the Jap, and myself.
I talked with that Jap. He was an educated man,
highly trained in one of our universities; but he
couldn’t tell me anything, he said. It
was all mysterious and horrible-this quiet
taking off of men while they slept. As for poisoning,
of which he knew he was suspected, it was absurd.
There was no poison on board, to begin with; and why
should he, a landsman, seek to poison the men who could
take the ship and treasure to port? What could
he do alone on the sea? This was logical, and
as he was a small, weak, and confiding sort of creature,
I exonerated him in my mind from any suspicion of choking
the victims.
“That night the two Dagoes,
Pedro and Christo, passed into the land beyond.
There were the same little marks, but nothing else.
Weiss, Wagner, and Myers, the three Germans, got nutty
about this time, and talked together in their lingo
while they pumped; and when they were alone they talked
to themselves. I confess that I got nutty.
Who wouldn’t, with this menace hanging over
him? I walked around the deck when I was off
pump duty, and I remember that I planned a great school
where ambitious young sailor men could study medicine,
and escape the drudgery of a life ’fore the
mast. Then I planned free eating-houses for tramps,
and I was going to use some of my wealth to investigate
the private life of a Sunday school superintendent,
who, when I was a kid, predicted that I would come
to a bad end. You see, we never can judge of
our own mental condition at the time. It’s
only when you look back that you can take stock of
yourself. The result of this mental disturbance
upon me was insomnia. I couldn’t get to
sleep; but I kept track of the ship, and worried the
three Dutchmen and the Jap into trimming sail when
necessary.
“We’d got up to the latitude
of the Bermudas, I think, and I was beginning
to hope that the curse had left us; for we had passed
through three nights without a man dying. But
on a stormy morning, when the gaff topsails were blown
away, and we four men-for the Jap was useless
on deck-were trying to get a couple of reefs
in the mainsail, Wagner suddenly howled out a lot
of Dutch language and jumped overboard. I flung
him a line, but he wouldn’t take it, and passed
astern. The poor devil had taken the national
remedy for trouble. Did you ever notice it in
Germans, even the best? When things go wrong they
kill themselves. They’re something like
the Chinese in this.
“There were only four of us
now, counting the Jap, who still spoiled good grub,
and it took a long time to snug that schooner down
to double reefs and one head sail. The water
in the hold had gained on us, and we pumped while
we could stand it, then knocked off, and dropped down
on deck for a snooze. We were dead beat, and
told the cook to call us if the wind freshened or
if anything happened. He didn’t call us,
but something happened. I wakened in time, and
stood up, sleepy and stupid and cold; for you can’t
sleep on deck, even in the tropics, without getting
chilled; and we were up to thirty-six north. The
Jap was fooling round the galley, and the schooner,
with the wheel becketed, was lifting up and falling
off, practically steering herself, by-the-wind.
Of course, I thought of the water in the hold, and
sounded the well. There was four feet of wet
line, and I knew that things were bad. Then I
went to the two Dutchmen, to call them to the pumps,
and found them cold and stiff, each with the little
pink marks under the ears.
“Well, I naturally went more
or less crazy. I took that Jap by the throat
and asked him what had happened. He did not know,
he said. He had left us to sleep, and rest, sorry
for us, and trying to cook us a good meal when we
wakened. He was in a shaking fright, trembling
and quavering, and I eased up. What was the use
of anger and suspicion in the face of this horrible
threat of death while you slept? We hove the
two bodies overboard, and made a stagger at the pump;
but we could not lessen the water in the hold, and
at last I gave up, cleared away a boat, and stocked
it with water and grub for two. Meanwhile I shaped
a course for the Bermudas, and steered it after
a fashion, hoping that I might beach the schooner
and get, out of some court of salvage, a part of that
seven millions down in the hold.
“But I had to steer, and keep
the deck, for the Jap was useless. I kept it
up until we sighted land, and then flopped, done up,
tired out, utterly exhausted by work, and yet unable
to sleep. I sang out to the cook, as I lay down
on the hatch, to try and steer toward that blot of
blue on the horizon, and then passed into a semi-dazed
state of mind that was not sleep, nor yet wakefulness.
I could hear, and, through my half-opened eyelids,
could see; yet I was not awake, for I could not guard
myself. I saw that Jap creeping toward me.
I saw the furtive, murderous glint in his beady eyes.
I heard the soft pat of his feet on the wet deck,
and I heard his suppressed breathing. But I could
not move or speak.
“He came and stood over me,
then reached down and softly pressed the tips of his
forefingers into my throat, just below the ears and
back of the cheek bones. Softly at first, so
that I hardly felt it, then more strongly, and a sense
of weakness of body came over me, something distinct
from the weakness that I had felt while sinking down
to try and sleep. It seemed a stopping of breath.
I could not move, as yet, but could see, out of the
corners of my eye, and a more hateful, murderous face
never afflicted me than the face of that Japanese cook.
“He kept it up, steadily increasing
the pressure, and soon I realized that I was not breathing.
Then, I do not know why, there came to me the thought
of that Sunday school superintendent, and his advice,
to pray when in trouble. I forgot my grouch.
I said to myself, ’God help me, God help me,’
and I wakened. I found that I could move.
I shook off the Jap, and he staggered back, chuckling
and cluttering in his language. I rose to my
feet, weak and shaky, and he ran away from me; but
I found myself without power to follow. I was
more than weak; I was just alive, just able to breathe,
but I could not speak. I tried to, but the words
would not come. He shut himself into his galley,
and, with regard to the condition of the schooner,
and my own helplessness, I painfully climbed into
the boat I had stocked and cleared away the davit falls.
Then I lay down.
“I have a dim remembrance of
that sleep in the boat, of waking occasionally to
drive that cowardly Jap off with an upraised oar; of
my utter inability to speak to him, and the awful
difficulty of taking a long breath. But the final
plunge of the schooner stands out. I was awake,
or as nearly awake as I could be. The Jap was
forward, and the decks were awash. I knew that
she was going down, and got out my knife to cut the
falls when the boat floated. I did this successfully,
for, though I could not speak, I could move, and as
the schooner plunged under, and the screams of that
heathen rang in my ears, I cut the bow tackle, then
the stern tackle, and found myself adrift in a turmoil
of whirlpools.
“I was picked up a few days
later by a fruiter, and taken into New York.
I found my hair had turned white. I’ve been
working as waiter most of the time since, hoping to
enlist somebody’s interest toward salving that
schooner; but it’s no go. I’m going
to Cuba, where I’ve heard of a pot of money
in the Santiago hills. Want to go along?”
“No,” I answered. “But, tell
me, what killed those men?”
“The Jap must have been an expert
in jiu jitsu, the wrestling game of that country.
I’ve made a stagger at studying medicine since
then, and learned a little. The pneumogastric
nerve did the business. It passes from the base
of the brain, down past the heart and lungs and ends
near the stomach. It is motor, sensory, and sympathetic,
all in one. Gentle pressure inhibits breathing,
continued pressure, or stimulus, paralyzes the vocal
chords; a continuance of the stimulus renders you
unconscious, and a strong pressure brings about stoppage
of the heart action, and death.”