Tossing his cigar through the opened
deadlight, Denman arose and unlocked his door, passing
into the small and empty wardroom. First, he
tried the forward door leading into the petty officers’
quarters and to the armroom, and, finding it locked,
sought for the key which opened it, and passed through,
closing the door softly behind him.
Farther forward he could hear the
voice of Billings, singing cheerfully to himself in
the galley; and, filtering through the galley hatch
and open deadlights, the voice of Forsythe, uttering
angry commands to some one on deck.
He had no personal design upon Billings,
nor at present upon Forsythe, so he searched the armroom.
As Forsythe and Daniels had found, there was nothing
there more formidable than cutlasses, rifles, and torpedo
heads; the pistols had been removed to some other
place. So Denman went back and searched the wardroom,
delving into closets and receptacles looking for arms;
but he found none, and sat down on a chair to think.
Presently he arose and tapped on the glazed glass
door of the captain’s apartment.
“Florrie,” he said, in
a half whisper. “Florrie, are you awake?”
There was no answer for a moment;
then he saw a shadow move across the door.
“Florrie,” he repeated, “are you
awake?”
“Who is this?” came an answering whisper
through the door.
“Denman-Billie Denman,”
he answered. “If you are awake and clothed,
let me in. I have a key, and I want to talk with
you.”
“All right-yes. Come in.
But-I have no key, and the door is locked.”
Denman quickly found the key and opened
the door. She stood there, with her face still
tied up in cloths, and only her gray eyes showing in
the light from the electric bulbs of the room.
“Florrie,” he said, “will
you do your part toward helping us out of our present
trouble?”
“I’ll do what I can, Billie; but I cannot
do much.”
“You can do a lot,” he
responded. “Just get up on deck, with your
face tied up, and walk around. Speak to any man
you meet, and go forward to the bridge. Ask any
one you see, any question you like, as to where we
are going, or what is to be done with us-anything
at all which will justify your presence on deck.
Just let them see that you are on deck, and will be
on deck again. Will you, Florrie?”
“My face is still very bad,
Billie; and the wind cuts like a knife. Why must
I go up among those men?”
“I’ll tell you afterward.
Go along, Florrie. Just show yourself, and come
down.”
“I am in the dark. Why
do you not tell me what is ahead? I would rather
stay here and go to bed.”
“You can go to bed in ten minutes,”
said Denman. “But go up first and show
yourself, and come down. I will do the rest.”
“Well, Billie, I will.
I do not like to, but you seem to have some plan which
you do not tell me of, so-well, all right.
I will go up.”
She put on a cloak and ascended the
companion stairs, and Denman sat down to wait.
He heard nothing, not even a voice of congratulation,
and after a few moments Florrie came down.
“I met them all,” she
said, “and they were civil and polite. What
more do you want of me, Billie?”
“Your cloak, your hat, and your
skirt. I will furnish the bandage.”
“What?”
“Exactly. I will go up,
dressed like you, and catch them unawares, one by
one.”
“But, Billie, they will kill
you, or-hurt you. Don’t do it,
Billie.”
“Now, here, Florrie girl,”
he answered firmly. “I’ll go into
the wardroom, and you toss in the materials for my
disguise. Then you go to bed. If I get into
trouble they will return the clothes.”
“But suppose they kill you!
I will be at their mercy. Billie, I am alone
here without you.”
“Florrie, they are sailors;
that means that they are men. If I win, you are
all right, of course. Now let me have the things.
I want to get command of this boat.”
“Take them, Billie; but return
to me and tell me. Don’t leave me in suspense.”
“I won’t. I’ll
report, Florrie. Just wait and be patient.”
He passed into the wardroom, and soon
the skirt, hat, and cloak were thrown to him.
He had some trouble in donning the garments; for, while
the length of the skirt did not matter, the width certainly
did, and he must needs piece out the waistband with
a length of string, ruthlessly punching holes to receive
it. The cloak was a tight squeeze for his broader
shoulders, but he managed it; and, after he had thoroughly
masked his face with bandages, he tried the hat.
There were hatpins sticking to it, which he knew the
utility of; but, as she had furnished him nothing
of her thick crown of hair, he jabbed these through
the bandage, and surveyed himself in the skipper’s
large mirror.
“Most ladylike,” he muttered,
squinting through the bandages. Then he went
on deck.
His plan had progressed no further
than this-to be able to reach the deck
unrecognized, so that he could watch, listen to the
talk, and decide what he might do later on.
Billings still sang cheeringly in
the galley, and the voices forward were more articulate;
chiefly concerned, it seemed, with the replenishing
of the water and food supply, and the necessity of
Forsythe’s pursuing his studies so that they
could know where they were. The talk ended by
their driving their commander below; and, when the
watches were set, Denman himself went down. He
descended as he had come up, by the captain’s
companion, reported his safety to Florrie through
the partly opened stateroom door, and also requested
that, each night as she retired, she should toss the
hat, cloak, and skirt into the wardroom. To this
she agreed, and he discarded the uncomfortable rig
and went to his room, locking the captain’s
door behind him, also his own.
His plan had not progressed.
He had only found a way to see things from the deck
instead of through a deadlight; and he went to sleep
with the troubled thought that, even though he should
master them all, as he had once nearly succeeded in
doing, he would need to release them in order that
they should “work ship.” To put them
on parole was out of the question.
The sudden stopping of the turbines
woke him in the morning, and the sun shining into
his deadlight apprised him that he had slept late.
He looked out and ahead, and saw a large, white steam
yacht resting quietly on the rolling ground swell,
apparently waiting for the destroyer to creep up to
her.
“Another holdup,” he said;
“and for grub and water this time, I suppose.”
Wishing to see this from the deck,
he rushed aft to the captain’s room and tapped
on the door, meanwhile fumbling for his keys.
There was no answer, and, tapping again, he opened
the door and entered.
“Florrie,” he called, in a whisper, “are
you awake?”
She did not reply, but he heard Sampson’s voice
from the deck.
“This is your chance, miss,”
he said. “We’re going to get stores
from that yacht; but no doubt she’ll take you
on board.”
“Is she bound to New York, or
some port where I may reach friends?” asked
the girl.
“No; bound to the Mediterranean.”
“Will you release Mr. Denman as well?”
“No. I’m pretty sure
the boys will not. He knows our plans, and is
a naval officer, you see, with a strong interest in
landing us. Once on shore, he would have every
warship in the world after us.”
“Then I stay here with Mr. Denman. He is
wounded, and is my friend.”
Denman was on the point of calling
up-to insist that she leave the yacht;
but he thought, in time, that it would reveal his position,
and leave him more helpless, while, perhaps, she might
still refuse to go. He heard Sampson’s
footsteps going forward, and called to her softly;
but she, too, had moved forward, and he went back to
his deadlight.
It was a repetition of the scene with
the oil steamer. Forsythe, loudly and profanely
announcing their wants, and calling the yacht’s
attention to two twelve-pounders aimed at her water
line. She was of the standard type, clipper-bowed,
square-sterned, with one funnel and two masts; and
from the trucks of these masts stretched the three-wire
grid of a wireless outfit.
Forward was a crowd of blue-clad sailors,
on the bridge an officer and a helmsman, and aft,
on the fantail, a number of guests; while amidships,
conversing earnestly, were two men, whose dress indicated
that they were the owner and sailing master.
In the door of a small deck house
near them stood another man in uniform, and to this
man the owner turned and spoke a few words. The
man disappeared inside, and Denman, straining his
ears, heard the rasping sound of a wireless “sender,”
and simultaneously Casey’s warning shout to
Forsythe:
“He’s calling for help, Forsythe.
Stop him.”
Then came Forsythe’s vibrant voice.
“Call that man out of the wireless
room,” he yelled, “or we’ll send
a shell into it. Train that gun, Kelly, and stand
by for the word. Call him out,” he continued.
“Stop that message.”
The rasping sound ceased, and the
operator appeared; then, with their eyes distended,
the three ran forward.
“Any one else in that deck house?” called
Forsythe.
“No,” answered the sailing master.
“What are you going to do?”
“Kelly,” said Forsythe,
“aim low, and send a shell into the house.
Aim low, so as to smash the instruments.”
Kelly’s reply was inarticulate,
but in a moment the gun barked, and the deck house
disintegrated into a tangle of kindling from which
oozed a cloud of smoke. Women screamed, and,
forward and aft, the yacht’s people crowded
toward the ends of the craft.
“What in thunder are you trying
to do?” roared the sailing master, shaking his
fist. “Are you going to sink us?”
“Not unless necessary,”
replied Forsythe; “but we want grub-good
grub, too-and water. We want water
through your own hose, because ours is full of oil.
Do you agree?”
There was a short confab between the
owner and the sailing master, ending with the latter’s
calling out: “We’ll give you water
and grub, but don’t shoot any more hardware
at us. Come closer and throw a heaving line,
and send your boat, if you like, for the grub.
Our boats are all lashed down.”
“That’s reasonable,”
answered Forsythe. “Hawkes, Davis, Daniels,
Billings-you fellows clear away that boat
of ours, and stand by to go for the grub.”
The two craft drew together, and for
the rest it was like the other holdup. The hose
was passed, and, while the tanks were filling, the
boat passed back and forth, making three trips, heavily
laden with barrels, packages, and boxes. Then,
when Forsythe gave the word, the hose was drawn back,
the boat hoisted and secured, and the two craft separated
without another word of threat or protest.