She was the largest, fastest, and
latest thing in seagoing destroyers, and though the
specifications called for but thirty-six knots’
speed, she had made thirty-eight on her trial trip,
and later, under careful nursing by her engineers,
she had increased this to forty knots an hour-five
knots faster than any craft afloat-and,
with a clean bottom, this speed could be depended
upon at any time it was needed.
She derived this speed from six water-tube
boilers, feeding at a pressure of three hundred pounds
live steam to five turbine engines working three screws,
one high-pressure turbine on the center shaft, and
four low-pressure on the wing shafts. Besides
these she possessed two “astern” turbines
and two cruising turbines-all four on the
wing shafts.
She made steam with oil fuel, there
being no coal on board except for heating and cooking,
and could carry a hundred and thirty tons of it, which
gave her a cruising radius of about two thousand miles;
also, with “peace tanks” filled, she could
steam three thousand miles without replenishing.
This would carry her across the Atlantic at thirteen
knots’ speed, but if she was in a hurry, using
all turbines, she would exhaust her oil in two days.
When in a hurry, she was a spectacle
to remember. Built on conventional lines, she
showed at a mile’s distance nothing but a high
bow and four short funnels over a mighty bow wave
that hid the rest of her long, dark-hued hull, and
a black, horizontal cloud of smoke that stretched
astern half a mile before the wind could catch and
rend it.
She carried four twenty-one-inch torpedo
tubes and a battery of six twelve-pounder, rapid-fire
guns; also, she carried two large searchlights and
a wireless equipment of seventy miles reach, the aerials
of which stretched from the truck of her short signal
mast aft to a short pole at the taffrail.
Packed with machinery, she was a “hot
box,” even when at rest, and when in action
a veritable bake oven. She had hygienic air space
below decks for about a dozen men, and this number
could handle her; but she carried berths and accommodations
for sixty.
Her crew was not on board, however.
Newly scraped and painted in the dry dock, she had
been hauled out, stored, and fueled by a navy-yard
gang, and now lay at the dock, ready for sea-ready
for her draft of men in the morning, and with no one
on board for the night but the executive officer,
who, with something on his mind, had elected to remain,
while the captain and other commissioned officers
went ashore for the night.
Four years at the Naval Academy, a
two years’ sea cruise, and a year of actual
service had made many changes in Denman. He was
now twenty-five, an ensign, but, because of his position
as executive, bearing the complimentary title of lieutenant.
He was a little taller and much straighter
and squarer of shoulder than when he had gone to the
academy. He had grown a trim mustache, and the
sun and winds of many seas had tanned his face to the
color of his eyes; which were of a clear brown, and
only in repose did they now show the old-time preponderance
of white beneath the brown.
In action these eyes looked out through
two slits formed by nearly parallel eyelids, and with
the tightly closed lips and high arching eyebrows-sure
sign of the highest and best form of physical and moral
courage-they gave his face a sort of “take
care” look, which most men heeded.
Some women would have thought him
handsome, some would not; it all depended upon the
impression they made on him, and the consequent look
in his eyes.
At Annapolis he had done well; he
was the most popular man of his class, had won honors
from his studies and fist fights from his fellows,
while at sea he had shown a reckless disregard for
his life, in such matters as bursting flues, men overboard,
and other casualties of seafaring, that brought him
many type-written letters from Washington, a few numbers
of advancement, and the respect and admiration of all
that knew or had heard of him.
His courage, like Mrs. Caesar’s
morals, was above suspicion. Yet there was one
man in the world who was firmly convinced that Lieutenant
Denman had a yellow streak in him, and that man was
Denman himself.
He had never been home since his departure
for Annapolis. He had promised a small girl that
if he came back there would be another fight, in which,
as he mentally vowed, he would redeem himself.
In this he had been sincere, but as the months at
the academy went on, with the unsettled fight still
in the future, his keen resentment died away, leaving
in its place a sense of humiliation and chagrin.
He still meant to go back, however,
and would have done so when vacation came; but a classmate
invited him to his home, and there he went, glad of
the reprieve from an embarrassing, and, as it seemed
to him now, an undignified conflict with a civilian.
But the surrender brought its sting, and his self-respect
lessened.
At the next vacation he surrendered
again, and the sting began eating into his soul.
He thought of the overdue redemption he had promised
himself at all times and upon all occasions, but oftenest
just before going to sleep, when the mental picture
of Jack Forsythe swaggering around the corner, while
he lay conquered and helpless on the ground,
would accompany him through his dreams, and be with
him when he wakened in the morning.
It became an obsession, and very soon
the sudden thought of his coming fight with Forsythe
brought the uplift of the heart and the slight choking
sensation that betokened nothing but fear.
He would not admit it at first, but
finally was compelled to. Honest with himself
as he was with others, he finally yielded in the mental
struggle, and accepted the dictum of his mind.
He was afraid to fight Jack Forsythe, with no reference
to, or regard for, his standing as an officer and
a gentleman.
But now, it seemed, all this was to
leave him. A month before, he had thought strongly
of his child friend Florrie, and, with nothing to do
one afternoon, he had written her a letter-a
jolly, rollicking letter, filled with masculine colloquialisms
and friendly endearments, such as he had bestowed
upon her at home; and it was the dignity of her reply-received
that day-with the contents of the letter,
which was the “something on his mind”
that kept him aboard.
His cheeks burned as he realized that
she was now about twenty years old, a young lady,
and that his letter to her had been sadly conceived
and much out of place. But the news in the letter,
which began with “Dear Sir,” and ended
with “Sincerely yours,” affected him most.
It read:
“I presume you know that your
enemy, Jack Forsythe, took his disappointment
so keenly that he never amounted to much at home, and
about two years ago enlisted in the navy.
This relieves you, as father tells me, from the
necessity of thrashing him-as you declared
you would. Officers and enlisted men cannot fight,
he said, as the officer has the advantage, and
can always order the man to jail. I thank
you very much for remembering me after all these years-in
fact, I shall never forget your kindness.”
His cheeks and ears had burned all
day, and when his fellow officers had gone, and he
was alone, he reread the letter.
“Sarcasm and contempt between
every line,” he muttered. “She expected
me-the whole town expected me-to
come back and lick that fellow. Well”-his
eyelids became rigidly parallel-“I’ll
do it. When I find him, I’ll get shore
leave for both of us, take him home, and square the
account.”
This resolution did him good; the
heat left his cheek, and the sudden jump of the heart
did not come with the occasional thought of the task.
Gradually the project took form; he would learn what
ship Forsythe was in, get transferred to her, and
when in port arrange the shore leave. He could
not fight him in the navy, but as man to man, in civilian’s
clothing in the town park, he would fight him and thrash
him before the populace.
It was late when he had finished the
planning. He lighted a last cigar, and sauntered
around the deck until the cigar was consumed.
Then he went to his room and turned in, thinking of
the caustic words of Miss Florrie, forgiving her the
while, and wondering how she looked-grown
up.
They were pleasant thoughts to go
to sleep on, but sleep did not come. It was an
intensely hot, muggy night, and the mosquitoes were
thick. He tried another room, then another, and
at last, driven out of the wardroom by the pests,
he took refuge in the steward’s pantry, and
spreading his blanket on the floor, went to sleep on
it.