Two men walked side by side down the
steps of the Criminal Court Building. They were
dressed in “store clothes”; and, while
they were alike in type, yet they were unlike:
one could not be mistaken for the other. But
they had the same facial angle; they were of about
the same age, thirty-five; each was tall, square-shouldered,
and erect, and each had the same curious gait that
betokens long experience in the saddle. The man
to the right had gray eyes; the one to the left black.
The one to the right was jubilant of face; the other
downcast and chagrined. As they reached the sidewalk
a man hurried out of the crowd and confronted them.
His face was perspiring, and he breathed hard.
“I’ve got you, Bill!”
he said, laying his hand on the shoulder of the downcast
man to the left. “You’re my prisoner!”
“Not much, he isn’t!”
answered the man to the right. “He’s
mine. Here’s proof.” He half
turned, disclosing the butt of a large pistol under
his coat.
“Oh, I’ve got that kind
of proof, too,” rejoined the newcomer, stepping
back and eying them with anger and disgust in his face.
It was a face that must have been unused to such emotional
expressions; it was smooth shaved, pink, and healthy,
with keen blue eyes, the face of a man not yet grown
up, or of a boy matured before his time. He was
of about the same age, size, and build as the other
two, and with the same horseman’s gait.
“Who are you,” he asked,
“and what have you got that man for?”
“I’m Jack Quincy, Deputy
Sheriff of Maricopa County, Arizona; and I’ve
got this man, Bill Rogers, for stage robbery.
Who are you?”
“I’m Walter Benson, of
the Northwest Mounted Police, and I want this man
for murder. I’ve just come from Washington
with extradition papers, and I don’t see how
you can hold him.”
“Possession is nine points of
the law in this country, Mr. Benson, and, while I
only went to Albany for extradition papers, they’re
good. Left ’em inside with the Judge.”
“I’ll contest this case.
I’ve come down from Manitoba for this man.
My chief put the New York police onto him, and he’s
our meat. Why, man, we want him for murder, a
capital offense!”
“But I’ve got him for
robbing the Wickenburg stage, a capital offense, too.”
While this confab was going on the
prisoner had been keenly and furtively looking about,
and had caught the eye of a nearby policeman, then
had significantly reached his hand behind him and patted
his hip pocket while nodding almost imperceptibly
toward the disputants. The officer summoned another
policeman by the same sign language, and at this juncture
they approached.
“What you two chewin’
the rag about?” demanded one, passing his hands
rapidly up and down and around the rear clothing of
Quincy, while the other as quickly “frisked”
Benson. “Got a gun, I see! Got a license?”
“Here’s another gun man,”
said the second policeman, his hand on Benson’s
collar. “Got a license?”
“Yes, where’s yer license?”
repeated the first officer, reaching for Quincy’s
collar.
And now a surprising thing happened.
First, Bill Rogers, wanted for stage robbery and murder,
took to his heels and sped down the street. Then
Benson wriggled under the policeman’s grasp,
and by some lightning-like trick of jiu jitsu, sent
him sprawling on his back, his limbs waving in the
air like the legs of a turtle similarly upset.
Then Benson started after Rogers. Quincy tried
no jiu jitsu: instead he whipped out his gun,
a long, heavy Colt’s forty-five, and jammed it
into the policeman’s face before the hand had
reached his collar. Involuntarily the officer
started back, away from that murderous blue tube,
and before he could recover from his surprise Quincy
had started after Benson. Then the policeman
followed Quincy, and his fallen compatriot, picking
himself up, followed after; but neither for long;
they were fat, and these men of the West could run
as well as ride.
Down Centre Street went the chase,
pursued and pursuers bowling over pedestrians who
got in the way, dodging in front of and around trolley
cars as Rogers led the way diagonally across the street.
He turned into the first cross street and reached
Park Row, Benson about a hundred feet behind, and
Quincy as far in the rear of Benson. Across Park
Row went Rogers, and down the eastern walk to Catharine
Street, into which he turned, Benson after him, and
Quincy keeping Benson in sight. Rogers seemed
to know where he was going. He raced down Catharine
Street into Cherry, and when halfway to the next corner
burst into a small saloon, whose proprietor, a large,
beetle-browed man, stood behind the bar.
“Sailors’ boarding-house,
isn’t it?” panted Rogers. “Hide
me and ship me! I’ve been to sea.
North America’s too hot for me.”
“Yes,” responded the proprietor,
with quick comprehension. “Into that back
room and up the stairs. Hide anywhere. I’ll
stall the police.”
But before Rogers could reach the
back room Benson burst in, his blue eyes flashing
with excitement, and in his hand a revolver as large
and heavy as Quincy’s.
“Hold on, Bill!” he snapped.
“Hands up! I’ve got a bead on you!”
Rogers halted and turned, his hands
over his head and his features drooping in despair.
Benson, still covering him, advanced and laid hold
of his collar. Then in burst Quincy, also with
drawn revolver.
“Got him, have you? Good enough! I’ll
take him.”
“Oh, no, you won’t,”
answered Benson. “He’s mine.
Possession’s nine points of the law, you say.”
With his hand still on Rogers’s collar he covered
Quincy with his weapon.
Quincy had not raised his; and he
stood still, leaning forward, his pistol pointed to
the floor, while he glared at Benson.
“Now, then, stop this!”
said the proprietor, sternly, as he leveled a bright,
nickel-plated revolver at Benson. “Lower
that gun-quick! Lower it-”
Benson saw out of the corner of his
eye, and slowly lowered the pistol.
“You, too,” he said to
Quincy, as he looked at him. “Don’t
you raise that shootin’ iron! I’m
boss here. Put ’em both on the bar, handles
first, both of you!”
There was deadly earnestness in the
big man’s voice, and they obeyed him. Handles
first the weapons were placed on the bar. Then
Quincy said:
“You’re makin’ trouble
for yourself. This man is my prisoner, and you’re
interfering with an officer.”
“You a p’liceman?”
asked the big man, as he placed the weapons under
the bar.
“I’m Deputy Sheriff of Maricopa County,
Arizona.”
“And I’m a member of the Northwest Mounted
Police,” said Benson.
“You’re a long way from
home, and you’ve got no friends here. This
man has. He says he’s a sailor, and I’m
a friend o’ sailors. Been one myself, and
I make my livin’ off ’em. And when
a sailor runs into my place askin’ to hide from
anyone, police or not, I’m on his side every
time.”
“He’s no sailor,”
said Quincy. “He’s Bill Rogers, an
outlaw I came East for.”
“How about it?” asked
the proprietor, turning to Rogers. “You
a sailor?”
“Have been. Can be again,” answered
Rogers calmly.
“Box the compass.”
“North, nor’-an’-by-east, nor’-nor’east,
nor’east-an’-by-”
“That’s good. Which side does the
main topgallant halyards lead down?”
“Port side. Fore and mizzen to starboard.”
“This man’s a sailor,
all right. And he’s not goin’ out
o’ my place under any man’s gun, ’less
he’s a policeman with a warrant.”
“Well, we’ll get the policeman
with a warrant,” said Quincy, “unless
this will do.” He drew forth a receipt made
out by the clerk of the court for extradition papers.
Benson stiffened up. “Here’s
something better,” he said: “Extradition
papers issued by the authorities at Washington.
It’s a warrant, if anything is.”
He drew forth his evidence of official integrity.
The big man examined both. “Beyond
me, just now,” he commented. “However,
I’m not goin’ to see a sailor railroaded
out o’ my place till I’m sure it’s
all right. Come into the back room. We’ll
all have a drink and talk it over. Casey!”
he yelled at the top of his voice, and when a voice
from upstairs answered he added: “Come down
here an’ tend bar.”
Casey, a smaller edition of the proprietor,
appeared, and the three men were led to the back room,
where they seated themselves at a round table, while
the proprietor himself took their orders. The
drinks were soon served, the big man bringing one
for himself, and joining them.
“Now, then,” he said,
lifting his glass, “we’ll drink to a good-natured
settlement o’ this job. What’s this
man done out West?”
They all drank.
“Robbed the Wickenburg stage
of the first cleanup of Jim Mahar’s placer mine.
About ten thousand dollars he got away with.”
“Jim Mahar!” said Benson.
“Why, that’s the name of the man he murdered
in Manitoba.”
“How about it, mate?”
said the big man, turning to Rogers.
“Same man,” he said quietly.
“I shot him; but I never robbed him.”
“You didn’t?” answered
Quincy, derisively. “You were recognized!”
“The mine was mine, and the
dust I took I had washed out with my own hands.
He got that mine away from me on a technicality, Quincy,
and you know it.”
“Oh, I know there was some dispute;
but that’s not my business. I’m here
to take you back, and I’ve got to do it.”
“What’s the use,”
said Benson, “if you haven’t got a clear
case against him? Now, I have. He shot Mahar
on sight, in the presence of a dozen witnesses.”
“You mean,” said Rogers,
“that I was quickest. He pulled first; but
I beat him to it, that’s all.”
“Well,” said the big proprietor,
“we’ll have to think on this a little.
So, let’s do a little thinking.”
They responded to the extent of doing
no more talking. Yet it could hardly be said
that they were thinking. A fog closed down on
their faculties, the room and its fittings grew misty,
and in a few moments Benson’s head sagged to
the table, Quincy lay back in his chair, and Rogers
slid to the floor.
“Casey,” called the big
man, and Casey appeared. “You needn’t
go to South Brooklyn for the three men we need for
the crew to-morrow mornin’. Here’s
three. One’s a sure sailorman, anxious to
ship, and the other two’ll do. Get Tom
to help you upstairs with ’em and get ’em
ready. You know the trick. Change their clothes,
give ’em a bagful each, and dip their hands
in that tar bucket, then wipe most of it off with
grease. Get some from the kitchen.”
And so were shanghaied a Deputy Sheriff
of Arizona, a member of the Northwest Mounted Police,
and a desperate outlaw and fugitive from justice.
They wakened about ten next morning
with throbbing headaches, and clad in greasy canvas
rags, each stretched out in a forecastle bunk with
a bag of other greasy rags for a pillow. Rogers
was the first to roll out, and after a blear-eyed
inspection of the forecastle, which included the other
two, he ejaculated, “Well, I’ll be blanked!”
Then he shook each into sitting posture, listened
to their groaning protests, and sat down on a chest,
shaking with silent laughter, while the other two
resumed the horizontal.
But he did not laugh long. Certain
sounds from on deck indicated that he would soon be
wanted, and certain indications of wintry weather in
the shape of snow flurrying into the forecastle reminded
him of his raiment. He hauled out the clothes
bag from his bunk and opened it. To his surprise
he found, neatly folded, his suit of store clothes;
but as this would not do for shipboard wear he sought
farther, and found a warm monkey jacket and guernsey,
the property, no doubt, of some sailor who had died
in the boarding-house or run away from his board bill.
He also found a note addressed to Bill Rogers, which
he read, and again ejaculated, “I’ll be
blanked!” adding to it, however, the comment,
“A square boarding master.” Then
he punched and felt of the bag’s contents, and
smiled.
Donning the guernsey and jacket, he
went on deck just in time to meet a big, bearded man
who was hurrying to the forecastle door.
“So, you’ve sobered up,
have you?” he said. “Got the whisky
out o’ you?”
“Wasn’t whisky, Sir,”
answered Rogers, recognizing an officer. “I
was doped and shanghaied, even though willing to ship.
I’m an able seaman, Sir.”
“You don’t look it.”
“Fifteen years at sea, Sir,
though the last ten ashore. I’m a bit tender;
but I know my work.”
“How about the other two? Are they sailors?”
“I don’t think they are,
Sir,” answered Rogers, with a slight grin.
“They were with me when I was doped; but I don’t
know much about them.”
“Go aft and take the wheel.
There’s a farmer there that can’t steer.
Let’s see what you can do. I’ll tend
to your friends.”
Rogers went to the wheel, received
the spokes and the course from the rather distressed
incumbent, and, even though the ship was riding along
before a stiff quartering breeze and following sea,
steered a course good enough to win silence from the
skipper-another big, bearded man-when
he next looked into the binnacle. Silence, on
such occasions, is a compliment.
The cold, fresh breeze soon cleared
Rogers’s head of its aches and throbs, and he
took stock of the ship and her people. She seemed
to be about twelve hundred tons’ register, with
no skysails, stunsails, or other kites to make work
for her crew, an easy ship, as far as wind and weather
were concerned. Rogers counted her crew-sixteen
men scattered about the decks and rigging, lashing
casks, stowing lines and fenders, and securing chafing
gear aloft. The big man that had spoken to him
was undoubtedly the first mate, as was evidenced by
his louder voice. The second mate, a short, broad,
square-jawed man with a smooth face, spoke little
to the men, but struck them often. Rogers saw
three floored before six bells. As for the crew,
they were of all nations and types, and by these signs
he knew that she was an American ship; but nothing
yet of her name or destination. Astern was a blue
spot on the horizon which he recognized as the Highlands
of Navesink, and scattered about at various distances
were out- and in-bound craft, sail and steam.
But none was within hailing range.
Just before noon he saw two men thrown
out of the forecastle by the huge first mate, and
in spite of their canvas rags he recognized his two
enemies. Involuntarily Rogers smiled; but the
smile left his face when he saw that they were showing
fight, and that in the fight they were being sadly
bested by the mate, aided by his confrere, the second
officer. Yet they fought as they could, and as
the whirl of battle drifted aft Rogers could hear
their voices.
“I want to see the Captain!”
they each declared explosively, whenever a moment’s
respite enabled them to speak, and in time the reiterated
demand bore results. The Captain himself appeared,
watched the conflict for a moment, then roared out:
“Mr. Billings, that’ll
do! Send those men up here, and let’s see
what they want.”
The two mates stood back, and the
disfigured Sheriff of Maricopa and the almost unrecognizable
mounted policeman climbed the poop steps and faced
the Captain in the weather alley. They were game-still
full of fight, and in no way abashed by the autocrat
of the ship.
“You the Captain o’ this
boat?” demanded Quincy, his eyes flaming green
from the rage in his soul. “If you are,
put me ashore, or I’ll make you sweat!”
“Steady as you go,” answered
the Captain, quietly. “I’m too big
a man to sweat. It’s dangerous to make
me sweat. What’s on your mind?”
“Put us ashore!” yelled
Benson, insanely. “Those fellows that hammered
us just now said we shipped in this boat. We did
not. We were drugged and abducted.”
“Whew!” whistled the big
skipper, turning his back on them for the moment.
Then he turned back and said, “What d’you
want?”
“To go ashore and take our prisoner
with us. We’ll settle between ourselves
as to which one gets him.”
“Your prisoner? Where is he?”
“That fellow standing there-steering,
I suppose,” answered Quincy.
The skipper turned toward Rogers.
“You a prisoner?” he asked, with the good
humor coming of size and self-confidence.
“I’m wanted, Sir,”
said Rogers, grimly, “in Arizona and in Manitoba.
These men are what they say, officers of the law.”
“What crime have you committed?”
“None, Sir,” answered
Rogers; “though I’m indicted in one place
for stage robbery and in the other place for murder.”
“Well, well!” commented
the big man. “You seem to be a dangerous
character. What are you doing aboard my ship?”
“These fellows chased me, and
I went to a boarding master to get a ship. They
followed and were shanghaied with me-though
I do not see why he drugged me, Sir; I was willing
to ship.”
“But did you,” demanded
the skipper, his voice growing tense and forceful,
“rob a stage and kill a man, somewhere in the
West?”
“I robbed a stage of what I
owned-my own gold-dust. I killed the
man who thought I robbed him; but he pulled his gun
first, and I shot in self-defense.”
“And I’ve come all the
way from Arizona,” interrupted Quincy, “to
bring this man back for trial. And-I
want him!”
“And I’ve come from Manitoba,”
added Benson, “where he’s wanted for murder.”
The skipper turned to Rogers and said
calmly, “By your own admission you are a fugitive
from justice; hence, entitled to no sympathy from
me.” Then he turned to the two others and
said, “You men put up a plausible story of being
shanghaied. If you told it at the dock where I
could get two men to replace you, I might put you ashore.
As it is, fifty miles outside of Sandy Hook, I can
do nothing of the kind. This ship’s time
is valuable, worth about a hundred dollars a day, and
I can’t stop to signal and put you aboard an
inbound craft. You’re signed on my articles-John
Quincy and Walter Benson; though I don’t know
which is which. But the fact is that here you
stay, and you work, and earn your grub and what pay
I choose to put you on.”
“But we did not agree,”
yelled Quincy. “You have no warrant in law
for this procedure.”
“I have my articles. I
did not ship you, as I was not in the shipping office;
but I bargained with a crimp for sixteen men, and he
gave me fourteen and you two.”
“Well,” said Quincy, quietly,
“you seem to be in power here, and responsible
to no one that we can reach. But I’ll tell
you that the State of Arizona will swarm about your
ears, and that you’ll sweat, big as you are!”
“And I’ll tell you,”
spoke up Benson, “that the Secretary of State
at Washington will hear from the Governor General
at Ottawa!”
“Get out o’ this!”
exploded the Captain. “Get off the poop,
you four-legged farmers! Sweat, will I?
All right; but you’ll sweat, the both of you,
before you see your friends again! Here, Mr. Billings,”
he roared to the first mate amidships, “and
Mr. Snelling! Come up here, and turn these men
to!”
The two mates answered and appeared.
“Turn them to,” said the
Captain, speaking slowly and softly. “Take
the starch out of ’em, and make ’em sweat.”
The scene that ensued was too painful
even for Rogers to witness or describe, except in
its salient points. Billings and Snelling pounced
upon the two insurgents, struck, buffeted, kicked,
and vilified them with foul-mouthed abuse, until they
had borne them off the poop, forward along the main
deck, and to the vicinity of the forecastle, where
the two victims, subdued and quiescent, were willing
to dart for cover, when the two mates gave over and
went aft.
Rogers at the wheel had watched the
scene, at first with a smile; but the smile grew less
as he saw the battered men hurled right and left under
the blows of the mates, and when at last the punishment
was ended his face was serious and resentful.
Some criminals do not lose the qualities of forgiveness
and mercy. His mood was increased when the big
skipper faced him and said:
“A fugitive from justice, are
you? Well, I’ll see that the Consul at
Melbourne gets you. I want no jailbirds in my
ship.”
Which gave Rogers occasion to think.
Rogers was relieved at one bell (half-past
twelve), and went forward to his dinner. As he
descended the poop steps he met the big first mate,
coming out of the forward companion picking his teeth.
“So,” he said to Rogers,
“you’re a bad man from the West, I hear.
Held up a stage and then killed the man you robbed!”
“You’ve got things wrong,
Sir,” answered Rogers respectfully.
“None o’ your lip!”
thundered the officer. “You may be a bad
man from the West; but I’m a bad man from the
East, and I’m here to take the badness out o’
bad men!”
Then, before Rogers could dodge, he
launched forth his fist and struck him. The blow
knocked him off his feet, and he rose with nose bleeding
and eyes closing.
“Just to show you,” commented
the mate, “that I’m a badder man than
you.”
Rogers did not answer; in fact, no
answer was necessary or wise. He walked forward,
and, partly from his half-blindness, partly from his
disorganized state of mind, passed to windward of Snelling,
the second mate, who was coming aft to dinner.
Snelling said nothing in the way of prelude, but crashed
his fist on Rogers’s already mutilated face,
and sent him again to the deck. As Rogers struggled
to his feet he said:
“You pass to looward o’
me when we meet, or I’ll make you jump overboard!”
And again Rogers saw the wisdom of
silence and went on to the forecastle.
The watches had not yet been chosen;
but half the crew had eaten, and he joined the other
half, finding in his clothes bag a new sheath knife
and belt, a tin pan, pannikin, and spoon, which articles
are always furnished to a shipped man by the boarding
masters, no matter how he has been shipped. To
his surprise, as he attacked the dinner, he found
Quincy and Benson, each with a similar outfit of tinware,
toying with the food, and paying no attention to the
polyglot discourse of the other men regarding the
ship, the mates, and the food. But they glared
menacingly at Rogers as he entered.
“This your work, Rogers?”
demanded Quincy. “Were you in cahoots with
that saloonkeeper?”
“Shut up!” answered Rogers,
stabbing at a piece of salt beef with his knife.
“We won’t shut up!”
said Benson, spooning up pea soup with his brand new
tin spoon. “This increases your sentence
to the extent of a shorter shrift.”
“Go to the devil, the pair of
you! I was doped and shanghaied myself, and I’ve
run foul o’ the mates, same as you did-and
for less reason, too.”
“Well, they’ll sweat for
this, and you, too, Rogers!” said Quincy.
“Shut up! You’re
up against something now that gunplay doesn’t
figure in. You’re aboard a Yankee hell
ship, and you’ve got to make the best of it.”
“I wouldn’t if I had my gun,” said
Quincy, moodily.
“Yes,” added Benson, “with a gun
I could have my own way.”
Rogers straightened back, looked them
steadily in their faces, and said, “If you had
your guns, what would you do?”
“Make this ship put back and land us,”
answered Quincy.
“Benson,” said Rogers, “what would
you do with a gun?”
“Shoot ’em full of holes until they turned
this boat back.”
“Are you game?” said Rogers.
“Understand that you’ll be alone.
I wouldn’t help you; for, having been a sailor,
I know what mutiny means in the courts. I’d
rather go back with either of you to stand trial than
to engage in open mutiny.”
“Hang your mutiny!” said
Quincy. “We’re not sailors; we never
agreed to make this voyage. I’m an officer
of the law.”
“Feel the same way, Benson?” asked Rogers.
“The same. Give me a gun,
and I’ll make that Captain and his two assistants
walk a chalkline.”
The rest of the men, engaged with
their dinner, had paid no attention to this discourse,
and Rogers rose up, reached into his bag, and produced
the note he had found there on wakening. “Listen,”
he said:
“’BILL ROGERS:-You
seem to be a square fellow and up against it.
I had to dope you because you would not have signed
if you knew the other two would have gone along.
But I needed just three men; so I doped you all.
You’ll find their guns and belts in your bag.
Of course, you will know what to do if you get
in trouble. Good luck.’
“Now,” said Rogers, “those
guns are not now in my bag, and you can’t find
them without my say-so; but, if I put you onto them,
will you call it off? Will you let up, and go
back reporting that I had escaped? If you get
ashore by any means, will you take me with you and
turn me loose?”
They each looked steadily at Rogers
for a moment or two; then Quincy spoke.
“If you can furnish me my gun,
Bill, it’s all off. I’ll resign my
job, if necessary; but I won’t hunt you any
more.”
“Benson?” asked Rogers.
“The Canadian Mounted Police
and the whole Colonial Government can go hang.
Give me a gun, Rogers, and I’ll trouble you no
more!”
Rogers was about to speak, when the
big first mate appeared at the forecastle door, and
said in the forceful manner of deep-water mates:
“Turn to. Where’s
that bloody-minded stage robber? Hey! Here
you are! Get aft to the wheel again. You
can steer, if you are a murderer.”
“All right, Sir,” answered
Rogers, deferentially, and then, in a whisper to the
two, he said, “In my bag, halfway down.
Two guns and two belts.”
Then Bill Rogers, desperado, outlaw,
and fugitive from justice, went to the wheel, and
as he steered he smiled again, grimly and painfully,
for his nose hurt.
Billings had followed him aft, up
on the poop, and to the vicinity of the after companion,
where he stood, waiting for the Captain. Snelling,
having finished his dinner, had gone forward to oversee
the men, all of whom were now on deck and scattering
to their various tasks. That is, all but two.
Quincy and Benson, each one girdled with a beltful
of cartridges, each carrying a heavy revolver, each
scowling wickedly, were marching up to Snelling.
“Hands up!” said Quincy,
sternly. “Up with ’em and go back
to the other end of the boat!”
Involuntarily, it seemed, the second
mate obeyed. Up went his hands over his head.
Then, remembering that he was second mate, he answered,
“What’s this? Mutiny! Put them
guns down!”
Quincy’s gun spat out a red
tongue, and Snelling’s cap left his head.
“Next time I’ll aim lower,”
said Quincy. “Right about face! March!”
Snelling was impressed. With
his hands aloft he wheeled and preceded them to the
poop steps, up which he climbed.
But Billings had noticed, and acted.
With a shout down the companion to the Captain, he
whipped out a pocket revolver and hurried forward in
the alley to meet the procession. But he did not
use that revolver. Benson took quick aim and
fired, and coincident with the report the nickel-plated
weapon left his hand, whirling high in air before falling
overboard. Billings whinnied in pain, and, rubbing
his benumbed hand, backed aft before the advancing
Snelling.
Then, up the companion on a run, came
the Captain, a fat cigar in his mouth and a look of
wonder and astonishment on his face. Benson and
Quincy were now in the alley, and again a pistol spoke-Quincy’s,
this time-and the fat cigar left the Captain’s
mouth in two pieces.
“Hands up, all three of you,”
yelled Quincy, “or we’ll shoot to kill!
Found out, haven’t you, that we can shoot-some?
That’s our trade. Up with your hands!”
Both Captain and mate raised their
hands, but the former protested.
“This is mutiny, you scoundrels!
D’you know the penalty? Ten years!”
“It won’t be ten minutes,”
answered Quincy. “Call it what you like,
mutiny, burglary, or pistol practice. But I’ll
tell you what it sure will be, if you don’t
come to time. It’ll be a pig killing, and
justifiable manslaughter in the courts. I know
something about law, and I’ve got you for abduction.
A man abducted has a right to defend himself, and
I’ll kill you if you don’t head this boat
for land and put us ashore.”
“Yes,” added Benson, “and
we’ll take our prisoner with us, too!”
“Sure,” said Quincy.
“Bill Rogers goes, too. Come, now, what
do you say?”
“I say, by Gawd,” roared
the Captain, red in the face with rage and the strain
on his muscles, “that I won’t! If
this ship goes back, you’ll take her back yourself,
with me and my mates under duress. It’s
ruinous to agree to such a proposition. I’d
lose this ship and never get another.”
“Very well,” said Quincy,
quietly. “Then we’ll put you fellows
under arrest. And if you resist we’ll shoot
you to pieces. Rogers,” he turned to the
smiling helmsman, “can you steer this boat back
to the United States?”
“I can’t find New York,”
answered Rogers; “but the United States is due
west.”
“Can you steer due west?”
“Yes; but the yards must be
braced. The wind is hauling to the north, and
we could make a fair wind of it.”
“Can you attend to this-bracing of
the yards?”
“Yes. I’ve been second mate.”
“Right, Benson, go through them
all and take away their guns, if they have any!”
Then he raised his voice and called forward to the
men, who had stopped work and were watching curiously
the strange scene on the poop. “One of
you fellows get a piece of small rope cord. Bring
it up here and tie these fellows’ hands behind
their backs.”
While Benson searched the pockets
of the trio-finding no weapons, however-a
man had secured a ball of spun yarn from the booby
hatch and ran up the poop steps with it. Then,
under the influence of those long, blue tubes, the
Captain and the two mates lay down on their faces,
while the sailor securely bound their wrists behind
them.
“Now, then,” said Quincy,
“you’re in command, Rogers. We’ll
police this boat, and make these men obey all your
orders.”
“Take the wheel here!”
said Rogers to the sailor. “Stand by to
wear ship!” Then he mounted the cabin, and emitted
a sailorly yell to the crew. “All hands
down from aloft! Weather main and lee crowjack
braces!”
In the dawn of the following morning
some early rising fishermen of the Jersey coast saw
a black ship with all canvas set resting quietly on
the sands about two hundred yards from the beach, a
white boat, empty of everything but oars, hauled out
above high-water mark, and on boarding the ship they
found and released three chilled, hungry, and angry
men from the lazaret. But not a sign of her
crew did they see.