He stood before the recruiting officer,
trembling with nervousness, anxious of face, and clothed
in rags; but he was clean, for, knowing the moral
effect of cleanliness, he had lately sought the beach
and taken a swim.
“Want to enlist?” asked
the officer, taking his measure with trained eye.
“Yes, sir; I read you wanted men in the navy.”
“Want seamen, firemen, and landsmen.
What’s your occupation? You look like a
tramp.”
“Yes,” he answered bitterly,
“I’m a tramp. That’s all they’d
let me be. I used to be a locomotive engineer-before
the big strike. Then they blacklisted me, and
I’ve never had a job above laborin’ work
since. It’s easy to take to the road and
stay at it when you find you can’t make over
a dollar a day at back-breakin’ work after earnin’
three and four at the throttle. An engineer knows
nothin’ but his trade, sir. Take it away,
and he’s a laborin’ man.
“I’d ha’ worked
and learned another, but they jailed me-put
me in choky, ‘cause I had no visible means o’
support. I had no money, and was a criminal under
the law. And they kept at it,-jailed
me again and again as a vagrant,-when all
I wanted was work. After a while I didn’t
care. But now’s my chance, sir, if you’ll
take me on. I don’t know much about boats
and the sea, but I can fire an engine, and know something
about steam.”
“A fireman’s work on board
a war-vessel is very different from that of a locomotive
fireman,” said the officer, leaning back in his
chair.
“I know, sir; that may be,”
the tramp replied eagerly; “but I can shovel
coal, and I can learn, and I can work. I’m
not very strong now, ‘cause I haven’t
had much to eat o’ late years; but I’m
not a drinkin’ man-why, that costs
more than grub. Give me a chance, sir; I’m
an American; I’m sick o’ bein’ hunted
from jail to jail, like a wild animal, just ’cause
I can’t be satisfied with pick-and-shovel work.
I’ve spent half o’ the last five years
in jail as a vagrant. I put in a month at Fernandina,
and then I was chased out o’ town. They
gave me two months at Cedar Keys, and I came here,
only to get a month more in this jail. I got
out this mornin’, and was told by the copper
who pinched me to get out o’ Pensacola or he’d
run me in again. And he’s outside now waitin’
for me. I dodged past ’im to get in.”
“Pass this man in to the surgeon,”
said the officer, with something like a sympathetic
snort in the tone of his voice; for he also was an
American.
An orderly escorted him to the surgeon,
who examined him and passed him. Then the recruit
signed his name to a paper.
“Emaciated,” wrote the
surgeon in his daily report; “body badly nourished,
and susceptible to any infection. Shows slight
febrile symptoms, which should be attended to.
An intelligent man; with good food and care will become
valuable.”
The tramp marched to the receiving-ship
with a squad of other recruits, and on the way smiled
triumphantly into the face of a mulatto policeman,
who glared at him. He had signed his name on a
piece of paper, and the act had changed his status.
From a hunted fugitive and habitual criminal he had
become a defender of his country’s honor-a
potential hero.
On board the receiving-ship he was
given an outfit of clothes and bedding; but before
he had learned more than the correct way to lash his
hammock and tie his silk neckerchief he was detailed
for sea duty, and with a draft of men went to Key
West in a navy-yard tug; for war was on, and the fleet
blockading Havana needed men.
At Key West he was appointed fireman
on a torpedo-boat, where his work-which
he soon learned-was to keep up steam in
a tubular boiler. But he learned nothing of the
rest of the boat, her business, or the reason of her
construction. Seasickness prevented any assertion
of curiosity at first, and later the febrile symptoms
which the examining surgeon had noted developed in
him until he could think of nothing else. There
being no doctor aboard to diagnose his case, he was
jeered by his fellows, and kept at work until he dropped;
then he took to his hammock. Shooting pains darted
through him, centering in his head, while his throat
was dry and his thirst tormenting.
Life on a torpedo-boat engaged in
despatch duty and rushing through a Gulf Stream sea
at thirty knots is torture to a healthy, nervous system.
It sent this sick man into speedy delirium. He
could eat very little, but he drank all the water
that was given him. Moaning and muttering, tossing
about in his hammock, never asleep, but sometimes
unconscious, at other times raving, and occasionally
lucid, he presented a problem which demanded solution.
His emaciated face, flushed at first, had taken on
a peculiar bronzed appearance, and there were some
who declared that it was Yellow Jack. But nothing
could be done until they reached the fleet and could
interview a cruiser with a surgeon.
The sick man solved the problem.
He scrambled out of his hammock at daylight in the
morning and dressed himself in his blue uniform, carefully
tying his black neckerchief in the regulation knot.
Then, muttering the while, he gained the deck.
The boat was charging along at full
speed, throwing aside a bow wave nearly as high as
herself. Three miles astern, just discernible
in the half-light, was a pursuing ram-bowed gunboat,
spitting shot and shell; and forward near the conning-tower
were two blue-coated, brass-buttoned officers, watching
the pursuer through binoculars.
The crazed brain of the sick man took
cognizance of nothing but the blue coats and brass
buttons. He did not look for locust clubs and
silver shields. These were policemen-his
deadliest enemies; but he would escape them this time.
With a yell he went overboard, and,
being no swimmer, would have drowned had not one of
the blue-coated officers flung a lifebuoy. He
came to the surface somewhat saner, and seized the
white ring, which supported him, while the torpedo-boat
rushed on. She could not stop for one man in
time of war, with a heavily armed enemy so near.
A twenty-knot gunboat cannot chase
a thirty-knot torpedo-boat very long without losing
her below the horizon; but this pursuit lasted ten
minutes from the time the sick man went overboard before
the gunboat ceased firing and slackened speed.
The quarry was five miles away, out of Spanish range,
and the floating man directly under her bow. He
was seen and taken on board, with Spanish profanity
sounding in his unregarding ears.
He lay on the deck, a bedraggled heap,
gibbering and shivering, while a surgeon, with cotton
in his nostrils and smelling-salts in his hand, diagnosed
his case. Then the gunboat headed north and dropped
anchor in the bight of a small, crescent-shaped sand-key
of the Florida Reef. For the diagnosis was such
as to suggest prompt action. Two brave men bundled
him into the dinghy, lowered it, pulled ashore, and
laid him on the sand.
Returning, they stripped and threw
away their clothing, sank the boat with a buoy on
the painter, took a swim, and climbed aboard to be
further disinfected. Then the gunboat lifted her
anchor and steamed eastward, her officers watching
through glasses a small, low torpedo-boat, far to
the southeast,-too far to be reached by
gun fire,-which was steering a parallel
course, and presumably watching the gunboat.
An idiot, a lunatic, with bloodshot
eyes glaring from a yellow face, raved, rolled, and
staggered bareheaded under the sun about the sandy
crescent until sundown, then fell prostrate and unconscious
into the water on the beach, luckily turning over
so that his nostrils were not immersed. The tide
went down, leaving him damp and still on the sands.
In about an hour a sigh, followed by a deep, gasping
breath, escaped him; another long inhalation succeeded,
and another; then came steady, healthy breathing and
childlike sleep, with perspiration oozing from every
pore. He had passed a crisis.
About midnight the cloudy sky cleared
and the tropic stars came out, while the tide climbed
the beach again, and lapped at the sleeping man’s
feet; but he did not waken, even when the Spanish gunboat
stole slowly into the bay from the sea and dropped
anchor with a loud rattling of chain in the hawse-pipe.
A boat was lowered, and a single man sculled it ashore;
then lifting out a small cask and bag, he placed them
high on the sands and looked around.
Spying the sleeping man, half immersed
now, he approached and felt of the damp clothing and
equally damp face. Not noticing that he breathed
softly, the man crossed himself, then moved quickly
and nervously toward his boat, muttering, “Muerto,
muerto!” Pushing out, he sculled rapidly toward
the anchored craft, and disposed of the boat and his
clothing as had been done before; then he swam to the
gangway and climbed aboard.
Shortly after, the sleeping man, roused
by the chill of the water, crawled aimlessly up the
sand and slept again-safe beyond the tide-line.
In three hours he sat up and rubbed his eyes, half
awake, but sane.
Strange sights and sounds puzzled
him. He knew nothing of this starlit beach and
stretch of sparkling water-nothing of that
long black craft at anchor, with the longer beam of
white light reaching over the sea from her pilot-house.
He could only surmise that she was a war-vessel from
the ram-bow,-a feature of the government
model which had impressed him at Key West,-and
from the noise she was making. She quivered in
a maze of flickering red flashes, and the rattling
din of her rapid-fire and machine guns transcended
in volume all the roadside blastings he had heard
in his wanderings. Dazed and astonished, he rose
to his feet, but, too weak to stand, sat down again
and looked.
Half a mile seaward, where the beam
of light ended, a small craft, low down between two
crested waves, was speeding toward the gunboat in the
face of her fire. The water about her was lashed
into turmoil by the hail of projectiles; but she kept
on, at locomotive speed, until within a thousand feet
of the gunboat, when she turned sharply to starboard,
doubled on her track, and raced off to sea, still covered
by the search-light and followed by shot and shell
while the gunners could see her.
When the gun fire ceased, a hissing
of steam could be heard in the distance, and a triumphant
Spanish yell answered. The small enemy had been
struck, and the gunboat slipped her cable and followed.
The tired brain could not cope with
the problem, and again the man slept, to awaken at
sunrise with ravenous hunger and thirst, and a memory
of what seemed to be horrible dreams,-vague
recollections of painful experiences,-torturing
labor with aching muscles and blistered hands; harsh
words and ridicule from strong, bearded men; and running
through and between, the shadowy figures of blue-coated,
brass-buttoned men, continually ordering him on, and
threatening arrest. The spectacle of the night
was as dream-like as the rest; for he remembered nothing
of the gunboat which had rescued and marooned him.
His face had lost its yellowish-bronze
color, but was pale and emaciated as ever, while his
sunken eyes held the soft light which always comes
of extreme physical suffering. He was too weak
to remain on his feet, but in the effort to do so
he spied the cask and bag higher up on the beach and
crawled to them. Prying a plug from the bunghole
with his knife, he found water, sweet and delicious,
which he drank by rolling the cask carefully and burying
his lips in the overflow. Evidently some one
in authority on the gunboat had decreed that he should
not die of hunger or thirst, for the bag contained
hard bread.
Stronger after a meal, he climbed
the highest sand-dune and studied the situation.
An outcropping of coral formed the backbone of the
thin crescent which held him, and which was about
half a mile between the points. To the south,
opening out from the bay, was a clear stretch of sea,
green in the sunlight, deep blue in the shadows of
the clouds, and on the horizon were a few sails and
smoke columns. West and east were other sandy
islets and coral reefs, and to the north a continuous
line of larger islands which might be inhabited, but
gave no indication of it.
Out in the bay, bobbing to the heave
of the slight ground-swell, were the three white buoys
left by the Spaniards to mark the sunken boats and
slipped cable; and far away on the beach, just within
the western point, was something long and round, which
rolled in the gentle surf and glistened in the sunlight.
He knew nothing of buoys, but they relieved his loneliness;
they were signs of human beings, who must have placed
him there with the bread and water, and who might come
for him.
“Wonder if I got pinched again,
and this is some new kind of a choky,” he mused.
“Been blamed sick and silly, and must ha’
lost the job and got jailed again. Just my luck!
S’pose the jug was crowded and they run me out
here. Wish they’d left me a hat. Wonder
how long I’m in for this time.”
He descended to the beach and found
that repeated wettings of his hair relieved him from
the headache that the sun’s heat was bringing
on; and satisfied that the strong hand of local law
had again closed over him, he resigned himself to
the situation, resenting only the absence of a shade-tree
or a hat. “Much better ’n the calaboose
in El Paso,” he muttered, “or the brickyard
in Chicago.”
As he lolled on the sand, the glistening
thing over at the western point again caught his eye.
After a moment’s scrutiny he rose and limped
toward it, following the concave of the beach, and
often pausing to rest and bathe his head. It
was a long journey for him, and the tide, at half-ebb
when he started, was rising again when he came abreast
of the object and sat down to look at it. It was
of metal, long and round, rolling nearly submerged,
and held by the alternate surf and undertow parallel
with the beach, about twenty feet out.
He waded in, grasped it by a T-shaped
projection in the middle, and headed it toward the
shore. Then he launched it forward with all his
strength-not much, but enough to lift a
bluntly pointed end out of water as it grounded and
exposed a small, four-bladed steel wheel, shaped something
like a windmill. He examined this, but could not
understand it, as it whirled freely either way and
seemed to have no internal connection. The strange
cylinder was about sixteen feet long and about eighteen
inches in diameter.
“Boat o’ some kind,”
he muttered; “but what kind? That screw’s
too small to make it go. Let’s see the
other end.”
He launched it with difficulty, and
noticed that when floating end on to the surf it ceased
to roll and kept the T-shaped projection uppermost,
proving that it was ballasted. Swinging it, he
grounded the other end, which was radically different
in appearance. It was long and finely pointed,
with four steel blades or vanes, two horizontal and
two vertical,-like the double tails of
an ideal fish,-and in hollowed parts of
these vanes were hung a pair of unmistakable propellers,
one behind the other, and of opposite pitch and motion.
“One works on the shaft, t’
other on a sleeve,” he mused, as he turned them.
“A roundhouse wiper could see that. Bevel-gearin’
inside, I guess. It’s a boat, sure enough,
and this reverse action must be to keep her from rolling.”
On each of the four vanes he found
a small blade, showing by its connection that it possessed
range of action, yet immovable as the vane itself,
as though held firmly by inner leverage. Those
on the horizontal vanes were tilted upward. Just
abaft the T-shaped projection-which, fastened
firmly to the hull, told him nothing of its purpose-were
numerous brass posts buried flush with the surface,
in each of which was a square hole, as though intended
to be turned with a key or crank. Some were marked
with radiating lines and numbers, and they evidently
controlled the inner mechanism, part of which he could
see-little brass cog-wheels, worms, and
levers-through a fore-and-aft slot near
the keyholes.
Rising from the forward end of this
slot, and lying close to the metal hull in front of
it, was a strong lever of brass, L-shaped, connected
internally, and indicating to his trained mechanical
mind that its only sphere of action was to lift up
and sink back into the slot. He fingered it,
but did not yet try to move it. A little to the
left of this lever was a small blade of steel, curved
to fit the convex hull,-which it hugged
closely,-and hinged at its forward edge.
This, too, must have a purpose,-an internal
connection,-and he did not disturb it until
he had learned more.
To the right of the brass lever was
an oblong hatch about eight inches long, flush with
the hull, and held in place by screws. Three seams,
with lines of screws, encircled the round hull, showing
that it was constructed in four sections; and these
screws, with those in the hatch, were strong and numerous-placed
there to stay.
Fatigued from his exertion, he moistened
his hair, sat down, and watched the incoming tide
swing the craft round parallel with the beach.
As the submerged bow raised to a level with the stern,
he noticed that the small blades on the horizontal
vanes dropped from their upward slant to a straight
line with the vanes.
“Rudders,” he said, “horizontal
rudders. Can’t be anything else.”
With his chin in his hand and his wrinkled brow creased
with deeper corrugations, he put his mind through
a process of inductive reasoning.
“Horizontal rudders,”
he mused, “must be to keep her from diving, or
to make her dive. They work automatically, and
I s’pose the vertical rudders are the same.
There’s nothing outside to turn ’em with.
That boat isn’t made to ride in,-no
way to get into her,-and she isn’t
big enough, anyhow. And as you can’t get
into her, that brass lever must be what starts and
stops her. Wonder what the steel blade’s
for. ’T isn’t a handy shape for a
lever,-to be handled with fingers,-too
sharp; but it has work to do, or it wouldn’t
be there. That section o’ railroad iron
on top must be to hang the boat by,-a traveler,-when
she’s out o’ water.
“And the fan-wheel on the nose-what’s
that for? If it’s a speed or distance indicator,
the dial’s inside, out o’ sight. There’s
no exhaust, so the motive power can’t be steam.
Clockwork or electricity, maybe. Mighty fine
workmanship all through! That square door is fitted
in for keeps, and she must ha’ cost a heap.
Now, as she has horizontal rudders, she’s intended
to steer up and down; and as there’s no way to
get into her or to stay on her, and as she can’t
be started from the inside or steered from the outside,
I take it she’s a model o’ one o’
those submarine boats I’ve heard of-some
fellow’s invention that’s got away from
him. Guess I’ll try that lever and see what
happens. I’ll bury the propellers, though;
no engine ought to race.”
He pushed the craft into deeper water,
pointed it shoreward, and cautiously lifted the curved
blade to a perpendicular position, as high as it would
go. Nothing happened. He lowered it, raised
it again,-it worked very easily,-then,
leaving it upright, he threw the long brass lever
back into the slot. A slight humming came from
within, the propellers revolved slowly, and the craft
moved ahead until the bow grounded. Then he followed
and lifted the lever out of the slot to its first
position, shutting off the power.
Delighted with his success, he backed
it out farther than before and again threw back the
brass lever, this time with the curved blade down
flat on the hull. With the sinking of the lever
into the slot the mechanism within gave forth a rushing
sound, the propellers at the stern threw up a mound
of foam, and the craft shot past him, dived until
it glanced on the sandy bottom, then slid a third of
its length out of water on the beach and stopped,
the propellers still churning, and the small wheel
on the nose still spinning with the motion given it
by the water.
“Air-pressure!” he exclaimed,
as he shut it off. He had seen a line of bubbles
rise as the thing dived. “An air-engine,
and the whole thing must be full o’ compressed
air. The brass lever turns it on, and if the
steel blade’s up it gives it the slow motion;
if it’s down, she gets full speed at once.
Now I know why it’s blade-shaped. It’s
so the water itself can push it down-after
she starts.”
He did not try to launch it; he waited
until the tide floated it, then pushed it along the
beach toward his store of food, arriving at high water
too exhausted to do more that day than ground his capture
and break hard bread. And as the afternoon drew
to a close the fatigue in his limbs became racking
pain; either as a result of his exposure, or as a
later symptom of the fever, he was now in the clutch
of a new enemy-rheumatism.
Then, with the coming of night came
a return of his first violent symptoms; he was hot,
shivery, and feverish by turns, with dry tongue and
throat, and a splitting headache; but in this condition
he could still take cognizance of a black, ram-bowed
gunboat, which stole into the bay from the east and
dropped anchor near the buoys.
A half-moon shone in the western sky,
and by its light the steamer presented an unkempt,
broken appearance, even to the untrained eye of this
castaway. Her after-funnel was but half as high
as the other; there were gaps in her iron rail, and
vacancies below the twisted davits where boats should
be; and her pilot-house was wrecked-the
starboard door and nearest window merged in a large,
ragged hole.
Officers on the bridge gave orders
in foreign speech, in tones which came shoreward faintly.
Men sprang overboard with ropes, which they fastened
to the buoys; then they swam back, and for an hour
or two the whole crew was busy getting the boats to
the davits and the end of the cable into the hawse-pipe.
The man on the beach recognized the
craft he had seen when he wakened.
He felt that she must in some way
be connected with his being there, and he waited,
expecting to see a boat put off; but when both boats
were hoisted and he heard the humming of a steam-windlass,
he gave up this expectation and tried to hail.
His voice could not rise above a hoarse
whisper. The anchor was fished, and after an
interval he heard the windlass again, heaving in the
other chain. They were going away-going
to leave him there to die.
He crawled and stumbled down to the
water’s edge. The tide was up again, rippling
around the strange thing he had resolved to navigate.
It was not a boat, but it would go ahead, and it would
float-it would possibly float him.
With strength born of desperation
and fear, he pushed it, inch by inch, into the water
until it was clear of the sand, and tried the engine
on the slow motion. The propellers turned and
satisfied him. He shut off the power, swung the
thing round until it pointed toward the steamer, and
seated himself astride of it, just abaft the T-shaped
projection in the middle. The long cylinder sank
with him, and when it had steadied to a balance between
his weight and its buoyancy he found that it bore
him, shoulders out; and the position he had taken-within
reach of the levers behind him-lifted the
blunt nose higher than the stern, but not out of water.
This was practicable.
He reached behind, raised the blade
lever, threw back the large brass lever, and the craft
went ahead, at about the speed of a healthy man’s
walk. He kept his left hand on the blade lever
to hold it up, and by skilful paddling with his right
maintained his balance and assisted his legs in steering.
He had never learned to swim, but he felt less fear
of drowning than of slow death on the island.
In five minutes he was near enough
to the steamer to read her name. He pulled the
starting-lever forward, stopping his headway; for he
must be sure of his welcome.
“Say, boss,” he called
faintly and hoarsely, “take me along, can’t
you? Or else gi’ me some medicine.
I’m blamed sick-I’ll die if
I stay here.”
The noise of the windlass and chain
prevented this being heard, but at last, after repeated
calls on his part, a Spanish howl went up from amidships,
and a sailor sprang from one of the boats to the deck,
crossed himself, and pointing to the man in the water,
ran forward.
“Madre de Dios!” he yelled.
“El aparecido del muerto.”
Work stopped, and a call down a hatchway
stopped the windlass. In ports and dead-lights
appeared faces; and those on deck, officers and men,
crowded to the rail, some to cross themselves, some
to sink on their knees, others to grip the rail tightly,
while they stared in silence at the torso and livid
face in the moonlight on the sea-the ghastly
face of the man they had marooned to die alone, who
had been seen later dead on the beach.
“Take me with you, boss,”
he pleaded with his weak voice. “I’m
sick; I can’t hold on much longer.”
It was not the dead man’s body
washed out from the beach, for it moved, it spoke.
And it was not a living man; no man may recover from
advanced yellow fever, and this man had been found
afterward, dead-cold and still. And
no living man may swim in this manner-high
out of water, patting and splashing with one hand.
It was a ghost. It had come to punish them.
“Por que nos
atormentan así, hombre, deja?”
cried a white-faced officer.
“Can’t you hear me?”
asked the apparition. “I’ll come closer.”
He threw back the starting-lever,
and the thing began moving. Then a rifle-barrel
protruded from a dead-light. There was a report
and a flash, and a bullet passed through his hair.
The shock startled him, and he lost his balance.
In the effort to recover it his leg knocked down the
blade lever, and the steel cylinder sprang forward,
leaving him floundering in the water. Pointed
upward, it appeared for a moment on the surface, then
dived like a porpoise and disappeared. In five
seconds something happened to the gunboat.
Coincident with a sound like near-by
thunder, the black craft lifted amidships like a bending
jack-knife, and up from the shattered deck, and out
from ports, doors, and dead-lights, came a volcano
of flame and smoke. The sea beneath followed
in a mound, which burst like a great bubble, sending
a cloud of steam and spray and whitish-yellow smoke
aloft to mingle with the first and meet the falling
fragments. These fell for several seconds-hatches,
gratings, buckets, ladders, splinters of wood, parts
of men, and men whole, but limp.
A side-ladder fell near the choking
and half-stunned sick man, and he seized it.
Before he could crawl on top the two halves of the
gunboat had sunk in a swirl of bubbles and whirlpools.
A few broken and bleeding swimmers
approached to share his support, saw his awful face
in the moonlight, and swam away.
A few hours later a gray cruiser loomed
up close by and directed a search-light at him.
Then a gray cutter full of white-clad men approached
and took him off the ladder. He was delirious
again, and bleeding from mouth, nose, and ears.
The surgeon and the torpedo-lieutenant
came up from the sick-bay, the latter with enthusiasm
on his face,-for he was young,-and
joined a group of officers on the quarterdeck.
“He’ll pull through, gentlemen,”
said the surgeon. “He is the man Mosher
lost overboard, though he doesn’t know anything
about it, nor how he got on that sand-key. I
suppose the Destructor picked him up and landed
him. He found bread and water, he says. You
see, the first symptoms are similar in Yellow Jack
and relapsing bilious fever. I don’t wonder
that Mosher was nervous.”
“Then it was the Destructor?”
asked an ensign, pulling out a note-book and a pencil.
“And Lieutenant Mosher was right, after all?”
“Yes; this man read her name
before she blew up; and a Spanish sailor has waked
up and confirmed it. She was the Destructor,
just over, and trying to get into Havana. Instead
of blowing up in Algeciras Bay, as they thought, she
had left with despatches for Havana, only to blow up
on the Florida Reef.”
“The Destructor,”
said the ensign, as he pocketed his note-book and
pencil, “carried fifty-five men. Don’t
we get the bounty as the nearest craft?”
“Not much,” said the young
and enthusiastic torpedo-lieutenant. “We
were not even within signal distance, and came along
by accident. Listen, all of you. When an
American war-craft sinks or destroys a larger enemy,
there is a bounty due her crew of two hundred dollars
for every man on board the enemy. That is law,
isn’t it?” They nodded. “If
a submarine boat can be a war-craft, so may a Whitehead
torpedo, and certainly is one, being built for war.
A war-craft abandoned is a derelict, and the man who
finds her becomes her lawful commander for the time.
If he belongs to the navy his position is strengthened,
and if he is alone he is not only commander, but the
whole crew, and consequently he is entitled to all
the bounty she may earn. That is law.
“Now, listen hard. Lieutenant
Mosher sent one torpedo at the gunboat; it missed
and became derelict, while Mosher escaped under one
boiler. This man found the derelict adrift, puzzled
out the action, waited until the gunboat came back
for her anchor, then straddled his craft, and rode
out with the water-tripper up. They shot at him.
He turned his dog loose and destroyed the enemy.
If the Destructor carried fifty-five men he
is entitled to eleven thousand dollars, and the government
must pay, for that is law.”