But McTee, deep in thought, was walking
from the bridge. He went straight to the hole
of the ship and questioned some of the firemen, and
they told him that Harrigan had done no work passing
coal the day before; Campbell, it appeared, had taken
him for some special job. With this tidings the
Scotchman hastened back to Henshaw.
“The game’s slipping through
our hands, captain,” he said.
“Harrigan?” queried Henshaw.
“Aye. He didn’t pass a shovelful
of coal in the hole yesterday.”
“Tut, tut,” answered the
other with a wave of the hand. “I sent orders
to Campbell, and told him what sort of a man he could
expect to find in Harrigan.”
“I’ve just talked to the
firemen. They say that Harrigan didn’t handle
a single pound of coal. That ought to be final.”
Henshaw went black.
“It may be so. I’ve
given more rope to old Campbell than to any man that
ever sailed the seas with White Henshaw, and it may
be he’s using the rope now to hang himself.
We’ll find out, McTee; we’ll find out!
Where’s Harrigan now?”
“Gone below a while ago after
he finished scrubbing down the bridge.”
“We’ll speak with Douglas.
Come along, McTee. There’s nothing like
discipline on the high seas.”
He went below, murmuring to himself,
with McTee close behind him. Strange sounds were
coming from the room of the chief engineer, sounds
which seemed much like the strumming of a guitar.
“He’s playing his songs,”
grinned Henshaw, and he chuckled noiselessly.
“Listen! We’ll give him something
to sing about—and it’ll be in another
key. Ha-ha!”
He tasted the results of his disciplining
already, but just as he placed his hand on the knob
of the door, another sound checked him and made him
turn with a puzzled frown toward McTee. It was
a ringing baritone voice which rose in an Irish love
song.
“What the devil—” began Henshaw.
“You’re right,”
nodded McTee. “It’s the devil—Harrigan.
Open the door!”
The captain flung it open, and they
discovered the two worthies seated at ease with a
black bottle and two glasses at hand. Campbell,
in the manner of a musical critic of some skill, leaned
back in a chair with his brawny arms folded behind
his head and his eyes half closed. Harrigan,
tilted back hi a chair, rested his feet on the edge
of a small table and swept the guitar which lay on
his lap. In the midst of a high note he saw the
ominous pair standing in the door, and the music died
abruptly on his lips.
He rose to his feet and nudged Campbell
at the same time. The latter opened his eyes
and, glimpsing the unwelcome visitors, sprang up,
gasping, stammering.
“What? Come in! Don’t
be standing there, Cap’n Henshaw. Come in
and sit down!”
In spite of his bluster his red face
was growing blotched with patches of gray. Harrigan,
less moved than any of the others, calmly replaced
the guitar in its green cloth case.
“I sent this fellow down to
be put at hard work,” said Henshaw, and waited.
It was obvious to Harrigan that the
chief engineer was in mortal fear. He himself
felt strangely ill at ease as he looked at White Henshaw
with his skin yellow as Egyptian papyrus from a tomb.
“Just a minute, captain,”
began the engineer. “You sent Harrigan down
to the hole because he’s considered a hard man
to handle, eh?”
Henshaw waited for a fuller explanation;
he seemed to be enjoying the distress of Campbell.
“Just so,” went on the
Scotchman, “but there are two ways of handling
a difficult sailor. One is by using the club
and the other by using kindness. The club has
been tried and hasn’t worked very well with
Harrigan. I decided to take a hand with kindness.
The results have been excellent. I was just about—”
His voice died away, for McTee was
chuckling in a deep bass rumble, and Henshaw was smiling
in a way that boded no good.
The captain broke in coldly:
“I’ve heard enough of your explanation,
Campbell. Send Harrigan down to the hole at once.
We’ll work him a double shift today, for a starter.”
Campbell was trembling like a self-conscious
girl, for he was drawn between shame and dread of
the captain.
“Look!” he cried, and
taking the hand of Harrigan, he turned it palm up.
“This chap has been brutally treated. He’s
been at work that fairly tore the skin from the palms
of his hands. One hour’s work with a shovel,
captain, would make Harrigan useless at any sort of
a job for a month.”
“Which goes to show,”
said McTee, “that you don’t know Harrigan.”
“I’ve heard what you have
to say,” said Henshaw. “I sent him
down to work hi the hole; I come down and find him
singing in your room. I expect you to have him
passing coal inside of fifteen minutes, Campbell.”
Harrigan started for the door, feeling
that the game had been played out, and glad of even
this small respite of a day or more from the labor
of the shovel. Before he left the room, however,
the voice of Campbell halted him.
“Wait! Stay here!
You’ll do what I tell you, Harrigan. I’m
the boss belowdecks.”
It was a declaration of war, and what
it cost Campbell no one could ever tell. He stood
swaying slightly from side to side, while he glared
at Henshaw.
“You’re drunk,”
remarked the captain coldly. “I’ll
give you half an hour, Campbell, to come to your senses—but
after that—”
“Damn you and your time!
I want no tune! I say the lad has been put through
hell and shan’t go back to it, do you hear me?”
Henshaw was controlling himself carefully,
or else he wished to draw out the engineer.
He said: “You know the record of Harrigan?”
“What record? The one McTee
told you? Would you believe what Black McTee
says of a man he tried to break and couldn’t?”
“My friend McTee is out of the
matter. All that you have to do with is my order.
You’ve heard that order, Campbell!”
“I’ll see you in hell before I send him
to the hole.”
Henshaw waited another moment, quietly
enjoying the wild excitement of the engineer like
the Spanish gentleman who sits in safety in the gallery
and watches the baiting of the bull in the arena below.
“I shall send that order to
you in writing. If you refuse to obey then, I
shall act!”
He turned on his heel; McTee stayed
a moment to smile upon Harrigan, and then followed.
As the door closed, Harrigan turned to Campbell and
found him sitting, shuddering, with his face buried
in his hands. He touched the Scotchman on the
shoulder.
“You’ve done your part,
chief. I won’t let you do any more.
I’m starting now for the hole.”
“What?” bellowed Campbell.
“Am I no longer the boss of my engine room?
You’ll sit here till I tell you to move!
Damn Henshaw and his written orders!”
“If you refuse to obey a written
order, he can take your license away from you in any
marine court.”
“Let it go.”
“Ah-h, chief, ye’re afther
bein’ a thrue man an’ a bould one, but
I’d rather stay the rest av me life in the hole
than let ye ruin yourself for me. Whisht, man,
I’m goin’! Think no more av it!”
Campbell’s eyes grew moist with
the temptation, but then the fighting blood of his
clan ran hot through his veins.
“Sit down,” he commanded.
“Sit down and wait till the order comes.
It’s a fine thing to be chief engineer, but
it’s a better thing to be a man. What does
Bobbie say?”
And he quoted in a ringing voice:
“A man’s a man for a’ that!”
Afterward they sat in silence that grew more tense
as the minutes passed, but it seemed that Henshaw,
with demoniac cunning, had decided to prolong the
agony by delaying his written order and the consequent
decision of the engineer. And Harrigan, watching
the suffused face of Campbell, knew that the time
had come when his will would not suffice to make him
follow the dictates of his conscience.
All of which Henshaw knew perfectly
well as he sat in his cabin filling the glass of McTee
with choice Scotch.
They sat for an hour or more, chatting,
and McTee drew a picture of the pair waiting below
in silent dread—a picture so vivid that
Henshaw laughed hi his breathless way. In time,
however, he decided that they had delayed long enough,
and took up pen and paper to write the order which
was to convince the dauntless Campbell that even he
was a slave. As he did so, Sloan, the wireless
operator, appeared at the door, saying: “The
report has come, sir.”