She had a large crew, abnormally large
hawse-pipes, and a bad reputation-the last
attribute born of the first. Registered as the
Rosebud, this innocent name was painted on her
stern and on her sixteen dories; but she was known
among the fishing-fleet as the Ishmaelite,
and the name fitted her. Secretive and unfriendly,
she fished alone, avoided company, answered few hails,
and, seldom filling her hold, disposed of her catch
as her needs required, in out-of-the-way ports, often
as far south as Charleston. And she usually left
behind her such bitter memories of her visit as placed
the last port at the bottom of her list of markets.
No ship-chandler or provision-dealer
ever showed her receipted bills, and not a few of
them openly averred that certain burglaries of their
goods had plausible connection with her presence in
port. Be this as it may, the fact stood that
farmers on the coast who saw her high bow and unmistakable
hawse-pipes when she ran in for bait invariably double-locked
their barns and chicken-coops, and turned loose all
tied dogs when night descended, often to find both
dogs and chickens gone in the morning.
Once, too, three small schooners
had come home with empty holds, and complained of
the appearance, while anchored in the fog, of a flotilla
of dories manned by masked men, who overpowered and
locked all hands in cabin or forecastle, and then
removed the cargoes of fish to their own craft, hidden
in the fog. Shortly after this, the Ishmaelite
disposed of a large catch in Baltimore, and the piracy
was believed of her, but never proved.
Her luck at finding things was remarkable.
Drifting dories, spars, oars, and trawl-tubs sought
her unsavory company, as though impelled by the inanimate
perversity which had sent them drifting. They
were sold in port, or returned to their owners, when
paid for. In the early part of her career she
had towed a whistling buoy into Boston and claimed
salvage of the government, showing her logbook to prove
that she had picked it up far at sea. The salvage
was paid; but, as her reputation spread, there were
those who declared that she herself had sent the buoy
adrift.
As poets and sailors believe that
ships have souls, it may be that she gloried in her
shame, like other fallen creatures; for her large,
slanting oval hawse-pipes and boot-top stripe gave
a fine, Oriental sneer to her face-like bow, and there
was slur and insult to respectable craft in the lazy
dignity with which she would swash through the fleet
on the port tack, compelling vessels on the starboard
tack to give up their right of way or be rammed; for
she was a large craft, and there was menace in her
solid, one-piece jib-boom, thick as an ordinary mainmast.
An outward-bound coasting-schooner, resenting this
lawlessness on one occasion, attempted to assert her
rights, and being on the lawful starboard tack, bore
steadily down on the Ishmaelite,-who
budged not a quarter-point,-and, losing
heart at the last moment, luffed up, all shaking,
in just the position to allow the ring of her port
anchor to catch on the bill of the Ishmaelite’s
starboard anchor. As her own ring-stopper and
shank-painter were weak, the patent windlass unlocked,
and the end of the cable not secured in the chain-locker,
the Ishmaelite walked calmly away with the anchor
and a hundred fathoms of chain, which, at the next
port, she sold as legitimate spoil of the sea.
As her reputation increased, so did
the hatred of men, while the number of ports on the
coast which she could safely enter became painfully
small. To avoid conflict with local authority,
she had hurried to sea without clearing at the custom-house
from Boston, Bangor, Portland, and Gloucester.
She had carried local authority in the persons of
distressed United States marshals to sea with her from
three other ports, and landed it on some outlying
point before the next meal-hour. With her blunt
jib-boom she had prodded a hole in the side of a lighthouse
supply-boat, and sailed away without answering questions.
The government was taking cognizance, and her description
was written on the fly-leaves of several revenue cutters’
log-books, while Sunday newspapers in the large cities
began a series of special articles about the mysterious
schooner-rigged pirate of the fishing-fleet.
The future looked dark for her, and
when the time came that she was chased away from Plymouth
harbor-which she had entered for provisions-by
a police launch, it seemed that the end was at hand;
for she had done no wrong in Plymouth, and the police
boat was evidently acting on general principles and
instructions, which were vital enough to extend the
pursuit to the three-mile limit. Her trips had
become necessarily longer, and there was but two weeks’
supply of food in the lazarette. The New England
coast was an enemy’s country, but in the crowded
harbor of New York was a chance to lie unobserved at
anchor long enough to secure the stores she needed,
which only a large city can supply. So Cape Cod
was doubled on the way to New York; but the brisk
offshore wind, which had helped her in escaping the
police boat, developed to a gale that blew her to
sea, and increased in force as the hours passed by.
Hard-headed, reckless fellows were
these men who owned the Rosebud and ran her
on shares and under laws of their own making.
Had they been of larger, broader minds, with no change
of ethics they would have acquired a larger, faster
craft with guns, hoisted the black flag, and sailed
southward to more fruitful fields. Being what
they were,-fishermen gone wrong,-they
labored within their limitations and gleaned upon known
ground.
They were eighteen in number, and
they typified the maritime nations of the world.
Americans predominated, of course, but English, French,
German, Portuguese, Scandinavian, and Russian were
among them. The cook was a West India negro,
and the captain-or their nearest approach
to a captain-a Portland Yankee. Both
were large men, and held their positions by reason
of special knowledge and a certain magnetic mastery
of soul which dominated the others against their rules;
for in this social democracy captains and bosses were
forbidden. The cook was an expert in the galley
and a thorough seaman; the other as able a seaman,
and a navigator past the criticism of the rest.
His navigation had its limits, however,
and this gale defined them. He could find his
latitude by meridian observation, and his longitude
by morning sights and chronometer time; his dead-reckoning
was trustworthy, and he possessed a fair working conception
of the set and force of the Atlantic currents and
the heave of the sea in a blow. But his studies
had not given him more than a rudimentary knowledge
of meteorology and the laws of storms. A gale
was a gale to him, and he knew that it would usually
change its direction as a clock’s hands will
in moving over the dial; and if, by chance, it should
back around to its former point, he prepared for heavier
trouble, with no reference to the fluctuations of
the barometer, which instrument to him was merely a
weather-glass-about as valuable as a rheumatic
big toe.
So, in the case we are considering,
not knowing that he was caught by the southern fringe
of a St. Lawrence valley storm, with its center of
low barometer to the northwest and coming toward him,
he hove to on the port tack to avoid Cape Cod, and
drifted to sea, shortening sail as the wind increased,
until, with nothing set but a small storm-mainsail,
he found himself in the sudden calm of the storm-center,
which had overtaken him. Here, in a tumultuous
cross-sea, fifty miles off the shore, deceived by
the light, shifty airs and the patches of blue sky
showing between the rushing clouds, he made all sail
and headed west, only to have the masts whipped out
as the whistling fury of wind on the opposite side
of the vortex caught and jibed the canvas.
It was manifestly a judgment of a
displeased Providence; and, glad that the hull was
still tight, they cut away the wreck and rode out the
gale,-now blowing out of the north,-hanging
to the tangle of spar and cordage which had once been
the foremast and its gear. It made a fairly good
sea-anchor, with the forestay-strong as
any chain-for a cable, and she lay snug
under the haphazard breakwater and benefited by the
protection, as the seas must first break their heads
over the wreckage before reaching her. The mainmast
was far away, with all that pertained to it; but the
solid, hard-pine jib-boom was still intact, and not
one of the sixteen dories piled spoon-fashion in the
four nests had been injured when the spars went by
the board. So they were content to smoke, sleep,
and kill time as they could, until the gale and sea
should moderate, and they could rig a jury-foremast
of the wreck.
But before they could begin,-while
there was still wind enough to curl the head of an
occasional sea into foam,-a speck which
had been showing on the shortened horizon to windward,
when the schooner lifted out of the hollows, took
form and identity-a two-masted steamer,
with English colors, union down, at the gaff.
High out of water, her broadside drift was faster
than that of the dismasted craft riding to her wreckage,
and in a few hours she was dangerously near, directly
ahead, rolling heavily in the trough of the sea.
They could see shreds of canvas hanging from masts
and gaffs.
“Wunner what’s wrong wid
her,” said the cook, as he relinquished the
glasses to the next man. “Amos,” he
called to another, “you’ve been in the
ingine-room, you say. Is her ingine bus’
down?”
“Dunno,” answered Amos.
“Steam’s all right; see the jet comin’
out o’ the stack? There! she’s turnin’
over-kickin’ ahead. ’Bout
time if she wants to clear us. She’s signalin’.
What’s that say, Elisha?”
The ensign was fluttering down, and
a string of small flags going aloft on the other part
of the signal-halyards, while the steamer, heading
west, pushed ahead about a length under the impulse
of her propeller. Elisha, the navigator, went
below, and returned with a couple of books, which
he consulted.
“Her number,” he said.
“She’s the Afghan Prince o’
London.” As the schooner carried no signal-flags,
he waved his sou’wester in answer, and the flags
came down, to be replaced by others.
“Rudder carried away,”
he read, and then looked with the glasses. “Rudder
seems all right; must mean his steerin’-gear.
Why don’t they rig up suthin’, or a drag
over the stern?”
“Don’t know enough,”
said an expatriated Englishman of the crew. “She’s
one o’ them bloomin’, undermanned tramps,
run by apprentices an’ Thames watermen.
They’re drivin’ sailors an’ sailin’-ships
off the sea blarst ’em!”
“Martin,” said Elisha
to the cook, “what’s the matter with our
bein’ a drag for her?”
“Dead easy, if we kin git his
line an’ he knows how to rig a bridle.”
“We can show him, if it comes
to it. What ye say, boys? If we steer her
into port we’re entitled to salvage. She’s
helpless; we’re not, for we’ve got a jury-rig
under the bows. Hello! what’s he sayin’
now?” Other flags had gone aloft on the steamer,
which asked for the longitude. Then followed
others which said that the chronometer was broken.
“Better ’n ever!”
exclaimed Elisha, excitedly. “Can’t
navigate. Our chronometer’s all right;
we never needed it, an’ don’t now, but
it’s a big help in a salvage claim. What
ye say? Can’t we get our hemp cable to
him with a dory?”
Why not? They were fishermen,
accustomed to dory work. A short confab settled
this point; a dory was thrown over, and Elisha and
Amos pulled to the steamer, which was now abreast,
near enough for the name which Elisha had read to
be seen plainly on the stern, but not near enough
for the men shouting from her taffrail to make themselves
heard on the schooner. Elisha and Amos, in the
dory, conferred with these men and then returned.
“Badly rattled,” they
reported. “Tiller-ropes parted, an’
not a man aboard can put a long splice in a wire rope,
an’ o’ course we said we couldn’t.
They’ll take our line, an’ we’re
to chalk up the position an’ the course to New
York. Clear case o’ salvage. We furnish
everything, an’ sacrifice our jury-material
to aid ’em.”
“What’ll be our chance
in court, I’m thinkin’,” said one,
doubtfully. “Hadn’t we better keep
out o’ the courts? It’s been takin’
most of our time lately.”
“What’s the matter wi’
ye?” yelled Elisha. “We owe a few
hundreds, an’ mebbe a fine or two; an’
there’s anywhere from one to two hundred thousand-hull
an’ cargo-that we save. We’ll
get no less than a third, mebbe more. Go lay
down, Bill.”
Bill subsided. They knotted four
or five dory rodings together, coiled the long length
of rope in the dory, unbent the end of their water-laid
cable from the anchor, and waited until the wallowing
steamer had drifted far enough to leeward to come
within the steering-arc of a craft with no canvas;
then they cut away the wreck, crowded forward, all
hands spreading coats to the breeze, and when the schooner
had paid off, steered her down with the wind on the
quarter until almost near enough to hail the steamer,
where they rounded to, safe in the knowledge that
she could not drift as fast as the other.
Away went the dory, paying out on
the roding, the end of which was fastened to the disconnected
cable, and when it had reached the steamer, a heaving-line
was thrown, by which the roding was hauled aboard.
Then the dory returned, while the steamer’s men
hauled the cable to their stern. The bridle,
two heavy ropes leading from the after-winch out the
opposite quarter-chocks to the end of the cable, was
quickly rigged by the steamer’s crew.
With a warning toot of the whistle,
she went ahead, and the long tow-line swept the sea-tops,
tautened, strained, and creaked on the windlass-bitts,
and settled down to its work, while the schooner,
dropping into her wake, was dragged westward at a ten-knot
rate.
“This is bully,” said
Elisha, gleefully. “Now I’ll chalk
out the position an’ give her the course-magnetic,
to make sure.”
He did so, and they held up in full
view of the steamer’s bridge a large blackboard
showing in six-inch letters the formula: “La-20. Lo-10. Mag. Co. W.
half S.”
A toot of the whistle thanked them,
and they watched the steamer, which had been heading
a little to the south of this course, painfully swing
her head up to it by hanging the schooner to the starboard
leg of the bridle; but she did not stop at west-half-south,
and when she pointed unmistakably as high as northwest,
still dragging her tow by the starboard bridle, a
light broke on them.
“She’s goin’ on
her way with us,” said Elisha. “No,
no; she can’t. She’s bound for London,”
he added. “Halifax, mebbe.”
They waved their hats to port, and
shouted in chorus at the steamer. They were answered
by caps flourished to starboard from the bridge, and
outstretched arms which pointed across the Atlantic
Ocean, while the course changed slowly to north, then
faster as wind and sea bore on the other bow, until
the steamer steadied and remained at east-by-north.
“The rhumb course to the Channel,”
groaned Elisha, wildly. “The nerve of it!
An’ I’m supposed to give the longitude
every noon. Why, dammit, boys, they’ll
claim they rescued us, an’ like as not the English
courts’ll allow them salvage on our little tub.”
“Let go the tow-line! Let
’em go to h -l!” they
shouted angrily, and some started forward, but were
stopped by the cook. His eyes gleamed in his
black face, and his voice was a little higher pitched
than usual; otherwise he was the steadiest man there.
“We’ll hang right on to
our bran-new cable, men,” he said. “It’s
ours, not theirs. ‘Course we kin turn her
adrif’ ag’in, an’ be wuss off, too;
we can’t find de foremast now. But dat ain’t
de bes’ way. John,” he called to
the Englishman of the crew, “how many men do
you’ country tramp steamers carry?”
John computed mentally, then muttered:
“Two mates, six ash-cats, two flunkies, two
quartermasters, watchman, deck-hands-oh,
’bout sixteen or seventeen, Martin.”
“Boys, lé’ ‘s
man de win’lass. We’ll heave in on
our cable, an’ if we kin git close enough to
climb aboard, we’ll reason it out wid dat English
cappen, who can’t fin’ his way roun’
alone widout stealin’ little fishin’-schooners.”
“Right!” they yelled.
“Man the windlass. We’ll show the
lime-juice thief who’s doin’ this.”
“Amos,” said Martin to
the ex-engineer, “you try an’ ’member
all you forgot ‘bout ingines in case anything
happens to de crew o’ dat steamer; an’,
Elisha, you want to keep good track o’ where
we go, so’s you kin find you’ way back.”
“I’ll get the chronometer
on deck now. I can take sights alone.”
They took the cable to the windlass-barrel
and began to heave. It was hard work,-equal
to heaving an anchor against a strong head wind and
ten-knot tideway,-and only half the crew
could find room on the windlass-brakes; so, while
the first shift labored and swore and encouraged one
another, the rest watched the approach of a small tug
towing a couple of scows, which seemed to have arisen
out of the sea ahead of them. When the steamer
was nearly upon her, she let go her tow-line and ranged
up alongside, while a man leaning out of the pilot-house
gesticulated to the steamer’s bridge and finally
shook his fist. Then the tug dropped back abreast
of the schooner. She was a dingy little boat,
the biggest and brightest of her fittings being the
name-board on her pilot-house, which spelled in large
gilt letters the appellation J. C. Hawks.
“Say,” yelled her captain
from his door, “I’m blown out wi’
my barges, short o’ grub an’ water.
Can you gi’ me some? That lime-juice sucker
ahead won’t.”
“Can you tow us to New York?”
asked Elisha, who had brought up the chronometer and
placed it on the house, ready to take morning sights
for his longitude if the sun should appear.
“No; not unless I sacrifice
the barges an’ lose my contract wi’ the
city. They’re garbage-scows, an’ I
haven’t power enough to hook on to another.
Just got coal enough to get in.”
“An’ what do you call
this-a garbage-scow?” answered Elisha,
ill-naturedly. “We’ve got no grub
or water to spare. We’ve got troubles of
our own.”
“Dammit, man, we’re thirsty
here. Give us a breaker o’ water. Throw
it overboard; I’ll get it.”
“No; told you we have none to
spare; an’ we’re bein’ yanked out
to sea.”
“Well, gi’ me a bottleful; that won’t
hurt you.”
“No; sheer off. Git out o’ this.
We’re not in the Samaritan business.”
A forceful malediction came from the
tug captain, and a whirling monkey-wrench from the
hand of the engineer, who had listened from the engine-room
door. It struck Elisha’s chronometer and
knocked it off the house, box and all, into the sea.
He answered the profanity in kind, and sent an iron
belaying-pin at the engineer; but it only dented the
tug’s rail, and with these compliments the two
craft separated, the tug steaming back to her scows.
“That lessens our chance just
so much,” growled Elisha, as he joined the rest.
“Now we can’t do all we agreed to.”
“Keep dead-reckonin’,
’Lisha,” said Martin; “dat’s
good ’nough for us; an’, say, can’t
you take sights by a watch-jess for a bluff,
to show in de log-book?”
“Might; ’t wouldn’t
be reliable. Good enough, though, for log-book
testimony. That’s what I’ll do.”
Inch by inch they gathered in their
cable and coiled it down, unmoved by the protesting
toots of the steamer’s whistle. When half
of it lay on the deck, the steamer slowed down, while
her crew worked at their end of the rope; then she
went ahead, the schooner dropped back to nearly the
original distance, and they saw a long stretch of new
Manila hawser leading out from the bridle and knotted
to their cable. They cursed and shook their fists,
but pumped manfully on the windlass, and by nightfall
had brought the knot over their bows by means of a
“messenger,” and were heaving on the new
hawser.
“Weakens our case just that
much more,” growled Elisha. “We were
to furnish the tow-line.”
“Heave away, my boys!”
said Martin. “Dey’s only so many ropes
aboard her, an’ when we get ’em all we’ve
got dat boat an’ dem men.”
So they warped their craft across
the Western Ocean. Knot after knot, hawser after
hawser, came over the bows and cumbered the deck.
They would have passed them over the
stern as fast as they came in, were they not salvors
with litigation ahead; for their hands must be clean
when they entered their claim, and to this end Elisha
chalked out the longitude daily at noon and showed
it to the steamer, always receiving a thankful acknowledgment
on the whistle. He secured the figures by his
dead-reckoning; but the carefully kept log-book also
showed longitude by chronometer sights, taken when
the sun shone, with his old quadrant and older watch,
and corrected to bring a result plausibly near to
that of the reckoning by log and compass. But
the log-book contained no reference to the loss of
the chronometer. That was to happen at the last.
On stormy days, when the sea rose,
they dared not shorten their tow-line, and the steamer-folk
made sure that it was long enough to eliminate the
risk of its parting. So these days were passed
in idleness and profanity; and when the sea went down
they would go to work, hoping that the last tow-line
was in their hands. But it was not until the
steamer had given them three Manila and two steel hawsers,
four weak-too weak-mooring-chains,
and a couple of old and frayed warping-lines, that
the coming up to the bow of an anchor-chain of six-inch
link told them that the end was near, that the steamer
had exhausted her supply of tow-lines, and that her
presumably sane skipper would not give them his last
means of anchoring-the other chain.
They were right. Either for this
reason or because of the proximity to English bottom,
the steamer ceased her coyness, and her crew watched
from the taffrail, while those implacable, purposeful
men behind crept up to them. It was slow, laborious
work; for the small windlass would not grip the heavy
links of the chain, and they must needs climb out a
few fathoms, making fast messengers to heave on, while
the idle half of them gathered in the slackened links
by hand.
On a calm, still night they finally
unshipped the windlass-brakes and looked up at the
round, black stern of the steamer not fifty feet ahead.
They were surrounded by lights of outgoing and incoming
craft, and they knew by soundings taken that day,
when the steamer had slowed down for the same purpose,
that they were within the hundred-fathom curve, close
to the mouth of the Channel, but not within the three-mile
limit. Rejoicing at the latter fact, they armed
themselves to a man with belaying-pins from their
still intact pin-rails, and climbed out on the cable,
the whole eighteen of them, man following man, in close
climbing order.
“Now, look here,” said
a portly man with a gilt-bound cap to the leader of
the line, as he threw a leg over the taffrail, “what’s
the meaning, may I ask, of this unreasonable conduct?”
“You may ask, of course,”
said the man,-it was Elisha,-“but
we’d like to ask something, too” (he was
sparring for time until more should arrive); “we’d
like to ask why you drag us across the Atlantic Ocean
against our will?”
Another man climbed aboard, and said:
“Yes; we ‘gree to steer
you into New York. You’s adrif’ in
de trough of de sea, an’ you got no chronometer,
an’ you can’t navigate, an’ we come
‘long-under command, mind you-an’
give you our tow-line, an’ tell you de road
to port. Wha’ you mean by dis?”
“Tut, tut, my colored friend!”
answered the man of gilt. “You were dismasted
and helpless, and I gave you a tow. It was on
the high seas, and I chose the port, as I had the
right.”
Another climbed on board.
“We were not helpless,”
rejoined Elisha. “We had a good jury-rig
under the bows, and we let it go to assist you.
Are you the skipper here?”
“I am.”
Martin’s big fist smote him
heavily in the face, and the blow was followed by
the crash of Elisha’s belaying-pin on his head.
The captain fell, and for a while lay quiet.
There were four big, strong men over the rail now,
and others coming. Opposing them were a second
mate, an engineer, a fireman, coal-passer, watchman,
steward, and cook-easy victims to these
big-limbed fishermen. The rest of the crew were
on duty below decks or at the steering-winch.
It was a short, sharp battle; a few pistols exploded,
but no one was hurt, and the firearms were captured
and their owners well hammered with belaying-pins;
then, binding all victims as they overcame them, the
whole party raided the steering-winch and engine-room,
and the piracy was complete.
But from their standpoint it was not
piracy-it was resistance to piracy; and
when Amos, the ex-engineer, had stopped the engines
and banked the fires, they announced to the captives
bound to the rail that, with all due respect for the
law, national and international, they would take that
distressed steamboat into New York and deliver her
to the authorities, with a claim for salvage.
The bargain had been made on the American coast, and
their log-book not only attested this, but the well-doing
of their part of the contract.
When the infuriated English captain,
now recovered, had exhausted his stock of adjectives
and epithets, he informed them (and he was backed
by his steward and engineer) that there was neither
food nor coal for the run to New York; to which Elisha
replied that, if so, the foolish and destructive waste
would be properly entered in the log-book, and might
form the basis of a charge of barratry by the underwriters,
if it turned out that any underwriters had taken a
risk on a craft with such an “all-fired lunatic”
for a skipper as this. But they would go back;
they might be forced to burn some of the woodwork fittings
(her decks were of iron) for fuel, and as for food,
though their own supply of groceries was about exhausted,
there were several cubic yards of salt codfish in
the schooner’s hold, and this they would eat:
they were used to it themselves, and science had declared
that it was good brain-food-good for feeble-minded
Englishmen who couldn’t splice wire nor take
care of a chronometer.
Before starting back they made some
preliminary and precautionary preparations. While
Martin inventoried the stores and Amos the coal-supply,
the others towed the schooner alongside and moored
her. Then they shackled the schooner’s
end of the chain cable around the inner barrel of
the windlass and riveted the key of the shackle.
They transhipped their clothing and what was left
of the provisions. They also took the log-book
and charts, compass, empty outer chronometer-case,-which
Elisha handled tenderly and officiously by its strap
in full view of the captives,-windlass-brakes,
tool-chest, deck-tools, axes, handspikes, heavers,
boat-hooks, belaying-pins, and everything in the shape
of weapon or missile by which disgruntled Englishmen
could do harm to the schooner or their rescuers.
Then they passed the rescued ones
down to the schooner, and Martin told them where they
would find the iron kettle for boiling codfish, with
the additional information that with skill and ingenuity
they could make fish-balls in the same kettle.
Martin had reported a plenitude of
provisions, and anathematized the lying captain and
steward; and Amos had declared his belief that with
careful economy in the use of coal they could steam
to the American coast with the supply in the bunkers:
so they did not take any of the codfish, and the hawsers,
valuable as fuel in case of a shortage, were left
where they would be more valuable as evidence against
the lawless, incompetent Englishmen. And they
also left the dories, all but one, for reasons in
Elisha’s mind which he did not state at the time.
They removed the bonds of one man-who
could release the others-and cast off the
fastenings; then, with Amos and a picked crew of pupils
in the boat’s vitals, they went ahead and dropped
the prison-hulk back to the full length of the chain,
while the furious curses of the prisoners troubled
the air. They found a little difficulty in steering
by the winch and deck-compass (they would have mended
the tiller-ropes with a section of backstay had they
not bargained otherwise), but finally mastered the
knack, and headed westerly.
You cannot take an Englishman’s
ship from under him-homeward bound and
close to port-and drag him to sea again
on a diet of salt codfish without impinging on his
sanity. When day broke they looked and saw the
hawsers slipping over the schooner’s rail, and
afterward a fountain of fish arising from her hatches
to follow the hawsers overboard.
“What’s de game, I wunner?”
asked Martin. “Tryin’ to starve deyselves?”
“Dunno,” answered Elisha,
with a serious expression. “They’re
not doin’ it for nothin’. They’re
wavin’ their hats at us. Somethin’
on their minds.”
“We’ll jes let ’em
wave. We’ll go ’long ’bout our
business.”
So they went at eight knots an hour;
for, try as he might, Amos could get no more out of
the engine. “She’s a divil to chew
up coal,” he explained; “we may have to
burn the boat yet.”
“Hope not,” said Elisha.
“‘Tween you an’ me, Amos, this is
a desperate bluff we’re makin’, an’
if we go to destroyin’ property we may get no
credit for savin’ it. We’d have no
chance in the English courts at all, but it’s
likely an American judge ’ud recognize our original
position-our bargain to steer her in.”
“Too bad ‘bout that tarred
cable of ours,” rejoined Amos; “three days’
good fuel in that, I calculate.”
“Well, it’s gone with
the codfish, and the fact is properly entered in the
log as barratrous conduct on the part of the skipper.
Enough to prove him insane.”
And further to strengthen this possible
aspect of the case, Elisha found a blank space on
the leaf of the log-book which recorded the first
meeting and bargain to tow, and filled it with the
potential sentence, “Steamer’s commander
acts strangely.” For a well-kept logbook
is excellent testimony in court.
Elisha’s knowledge of navigation
did not enable him to project a course on the great
circle-the shortest track between two points
on the earth’s surface, and the route taken
by steamers. But he possessed a fairly practical
and ingenious mind, and with a flexible steel straight-edge
rule, and a class-room globe in the skipper’s
room, laid out his course between the lane-routes
of the liners,-which he would need to vary
daily,-as it was not wise to court investigation.
But he signaled to two passing steamships for Greenwich
time, and set his watch, obtaining its rate of correction
by the second favor; and with this, and his surely
correct latitude by meridian observation, he hoped
to make an accurate landfall in home waters.
And so the hours went by, with their
captives waving caps ceaselessly, until the third
day’s sun arose to show them an empty deck on
the schooner, over a dozen specks far astern and to
the southward, and an east-bound steamship on their
port bow. The specks could be nothing but the
dories, and they were evidently trying to intercept
the steamship. Elisha yelled in delight.
“They’ve abandoned ship-just
what I hoped for-in the dories. They’ve
no case at all now.”
“But what for, Elisha?”
asked Martin. “Mus’ be hungry,
I t’ink.”
“Mebbe, or else they think that
liner, who can stop only to save life,-carries
the mails, you see,-will turn round and
put ’em in charge here. Why, nothin’
but an English man-o’-war could do that now.”
They saw the steamship slow down,
while the black specks flocked up to her, and then
go on her way. And they went on theirs; but three
days later they had reasoned out a better explanation
of the Englishmen’s conduct. Martin came
on deck with a worried face, and announced that, running
short of salt meat in the harness-cask, he had broken
out the barrels of beef, pork, and hard bread that
he had counted upon, and found their contents absolutely
uneatable, far gone in putrescence, alive with crawling
things.
“Must ha’ thought he was
fitting out a Yankee hell-ship when he bought this,”
said Elisha, in disgust, as he looked into the ill-smelling
barrels. “Overboard with it, boys!”
Overboard went the provisions, for
starving animals could not eat of them, and the odor
permeated the ship. They resigned themselves to
a gloomy outlook-gloomier when Amos reported
that the coal in the bunkers would last but two days
longer. He had been mistaken, he said; he had
calculated to run compound engines with Scotch boilers,
not a full-powered blast-furnace with six inches of
scale on the crown-sheets.
“And they knew this,”
groaned Elisha. “That’s why they chucked
the stuff overboard-to bring us to terms,
and never thinkin’ they’d starve first.
They were dead luny, but we’re lunier.”
They stopped the engines and visited
the schooner in the dory. Not a scrap of food
was there, and the fish-kettle was scraped bright.
They returned and went on. With plenty of coal
there was still six days’ run ahead to New York.
How many with wood fuel, chopped on empty stomachs
and burned in coal-furnaces, they could not guess.
But they went to work. There were three axes,
two top-mauls, and several handspikes and pinch-bars
aboard, and with these they attacked bulkheads and
spare woodwork, and fed the fires with the fragments;
for a glance down the hatches had shown them nothing
more combustible and detachable in the cargo than
a few layers of railroad iron, which covered and blocked
the openings to the lower hold.
With the tools at hand they could
not supply the rapacious fires fast enough to keep
up steam, and the engines slowed to a five-knot rate.
As this would not maintain a sufficient tension on
the dragging schooner to steer by, they were forced
to sacrifice the best item in their claim for salvage:
they spliced the tiller-ropes and steered from the
pilot-house. They would have sacrificed the schooner,
too, for Amos complained bitterly of the load on the
engines; but Elisha would not hear of it. She
was the last evidence in their favor now, their last
connection with respectability.
“She and the pavement o’
h -l,” he growled fiercely,
“are all we’ve got to back us up.
Without proof we’re pirates under the law.”
However, he made no entry in the log
of the splicing, trusting that a chance would come
in port to remove the section of wire rope with which
they had joined the broken ends.
And, indeed, it seemed that their
claim was dwindling. The chronometer which they
were to use for the steamer’s benefit was lost;
the tow-line which they were to furnish had been given
back to them; the course to New York which they chalked
out had not been accepted; the abandoning of their
ship by the Englishmen was clearly enforced by the
pressure of their own presence; and now they themselves
had been forced to cancel from the claim the schooner’s
value as a necessary drag behind the steamer, by substituting
a three hours’ splicing-job, worth five dollars
in a rigging-loft, and possibly fifty if bargained
for at sea. Nothing was left them now but their
good intentions, duly entered in the log-book.
But fate, and the stupid understanding
of some one or two of them, decreed that their good
intentions also should be taken from them. The
log-book disappeared, and the strictest search failing
to bring it to light, the conclusion was reached that
it had been fed to the fires among the wreckage of
the skipper’s room and furniture. They blasphemed
to the extent that the occasion required, and there
was civil war for a time, while the suspected ones
were being punished; then they drew what remaining
comfort they could from burning the steamer’s
log-book and track-chart, which contained data conflicting
with their position in the case, and resumed their
labors.
Martin had raked and scraped together
enough of food to give them two scant meals; but these
eaten, starvation began. The details of their
suffering need not be given. They chopped, hammered,
and pried in hunger and anxiety, and with lessening
strength, while the days passed by-fortunately
spared the torture of thirst, for there was plenty
of water in the tanks. Upheld by the dominating
influence of Elisha, Martin, and Amos, they stripped
the upper works and fed to the fires every door and
sash, every bulkhead and wooden partition, all chairs,
stools, and tables, cabin berths and forecastle bunks.
Then they attempted sending down the topmasts, but
gave it up for lack of strength to get mast-ropes
aloft, and attacked instead the boats on the chocks,
of which there were four.
It was no part of the plan to ask
help of passing craft and have their distressed condition
taken advantage of; but when the hopelessness of the
fight at last appealed to the master spirits, they
consented to the signaling of an east-bound steamer,
far to the northward, in the hope of getting food.
So the English ensign, union down, was again flown
from the gaff. It was at a time when Elisha could
not stand up at the wheel, when Amos at the engines
could not have reversed them, when Martin-man
of iron-staggered weakly around among the
rest and struck them with a pump-brake, keeping them
at work. (They would strive under the blows, and sit
down when he had passed.) But the flag was not seen;
a haze arose between the two craft and thickened to
fog.
By Elisha’s reckoning they were
on the Banks now, about a hundred miles due south
from Cape Sable, and nearer to Boston than to Halifax;
otherwise he might have made for the latter port and
defied alien prejudice. But the fog continued,
and it was not port they were looking for now; it
was help, food: they were working for life, not
salvage; and, wasting no steam, they listened for
whistles or fog-horns, but heard none near enough
to be answered by their weak voices.
And so the boat, dragging the dismal
mockery behind her, plodded and groped her way on
the course which Elisha had shaped for Boston, while
man after man dropped in his tracks, refusing to rise;
and those that were left nourished the fires as they
could, until the afternoon of the third day of fog,
when the thumping, struggling engines halted, started,
made a half-revolution, and came to a dead stop.
Amos crawled on deck and forward to the bridge, where,
with Elisha’s help, he dragged on the whistle-rope
and dissipated the remaining steam in a wheezy, gasping
howl, which lasted about a half-minute. It was
answered by a furious siren-blast from directly astern;
and out of the fog, at twenty knots an hour, came
a mammoth black steamer. Seeming to heave the
small tramp out of the way with her bow wave, she roared
by at six feet distance, and in ten seconds they were
looking at her vanishing stern. But ten minutes
later the stern appeared in view, as the liner backed
toward them. The reversed English ensign still
hung at the gaff; and the starving men, some prostrate
on the deck, some clinging to the rails, unable to
shout, had painted to the flag of distress and beckoned
as the big ship rushed by.
“There’s a chance,”
said the captain of this liner to the pilot, as he
rejoined him on the bridge an hour later, “of
international complications over this case, and I
may have to lose a trip to testify. That’s
the Afghan Prince and consort that I was telling
you about. Strange, isn’t it, that I should
pick up these fellows after picking up the legitimate
crew going east? I don’t know which crew
was the hungriest. The real crew charge this
crowd with piracy. By George, it’s rather
funny!”
“And these men,” said
the pilot, with a laugh, “would have claimed
salvage?”
“Yes, and had a good claim,
too, for effort expended; but they’ve offset
it by their violence. Their chance was good in
the English courts, if they’d only allowed the
steamer to go on; and then, too, they abandoned her
in a more dangerous position than where they found
her. You see, they met her off Nantucket with
sea-room, and nothing wrong with her but broken tiller-ropes;
and they quit her here close to Sandy Hook, in a fog,
more than likely to hit the beach before morning.
Then, in that case, she belongs to the owners or underwriters.”
“Why didn’t they make Boston?” asked
the pilot.
“Tried to, but overran their
distance. Chronometer must have been ’way
out. I talked to the one who navigated, and found
that he’d never thought of allowing for local
attraction,-didn’t happen to run against
the boat’s deviation table,-and so,
with all that railway iron below hatches, he fetched
clear o’ Nantucket, and ’way in here.”
“That’s tough. The
salvage of that steamer would make them rich, wouldn’t
it? And I think they might have got it if they
could have held out.”
“Yes; think they might.
But here’s another funny thing about it.
They needn’t have starved. They needn’t
have chopped her to pieces for fuel. I just remember,
now. Her skipper told me there was good anthracite
coal in her hold, and Chicago canned meats, Minnesota
flour, beef, pork, and all sorts of good grub.
He carried some of the rails in the ’tween-deck
for steadying ballast, and I suppose it prevented them
looking farther. And now they’ll lose their
salvage, and perhaps have to pay it on their own schooner
if anything comes along and picks them up. That’s
the craft that’ll get the salvage.”
“Not likely,” said the
pilot; “not in this fog, and the wind and sea
rising. I’ll give ’em six hours to
fetch up on the Jersey coast. A mail contract
with the government is sometimes a nuisance, isn’t
it, captain? How many years would it take you
to save money to equal your share of the salvage if
you had yanked that tramp and the schooner into New
York?”
“It would take more than one
lifetime,” answered the captain, a little sadly.
“A skipper on a mail-boat is the biggest fool
that goes to sea.”
The liner did not reach quarantine
until after sundown, hence remained there through
the night. As she was lifting her anchor in the
morning, preparatory to steaming up to her dock, the
crew of the Rosebud, refreshed by food and
sleep, but still weak and nerveless, came on deck
to witness a harrowing sight. The Afghan Prince
was coming toward the anchorage before a brisk southeast
wind. Astern of her, held by the heavy iron chain,
was their schooner. Moored to her, one on each
side, were two garbage-scows; and at the head of the
parade, pretending to tow them all,-puffing,
rolling, and smoking in the effort to keep a strain
on the tow-line,-and tooting joyously with
her whistle, was a little, dingy tugboat, with a large
gilt name on her pilot-house-J.
C. Hawks.