Those were anxious days, during which
I had but little opportunity to associate with Lys.
I had given her the commander’s room, Bradley
and I taking that of the deck-officer, while Olson
and two of our best men occupied the room ordinarily
allotted to petty officers. I made Nobs’
bed down in Lys’ room, for I knew she would
feel less alone.
Nothing of much moment occurred for
a while after we left British waters behind us.
We ran steadily along upon the surface, making good
time. The first two boats we sighted made off
as fast as they could go; and the third, a huge freighter,
fired on us, forcing us to submerge. It was
after this that our troubles commenced. One of
the Diesel engines broke down in the morning, and while
we were working on it, the forward port diving-tank
commenced to fill. I was on deck at the time
and noted the gradual list. Guessing at once
what was happening, I leaped for the hatch and slamming
it closed above my head, dropped to the centrale.
By this time the craft was going down by the head
with a most unpleasant list to port, and I didn’t
wait to transmit orders to some one else but ran as
fast as I could for the valve that let the sea into
the forward port diving-tank. It was wide open.
To close it and to have the pump started that would
empty it were the work of but a minute; but we had
had a close call.
I knew that the valve had never opened
itself. Some one had opened it—some
one who was willing to die himself if he might at
the same time encompass the death of all of us.
After that I kept a guard pacing the
length of the narrow craft. We worked upon the
engine all that day and night and half the following
day. Most of the time we drifted idly upon the
surface, but toward noon we sighted smoke due west,
and having found that only enemies inhabited the world
for us, I ordered that the other engine be started
so that we could move out of the path of the oncoming
steamer. The moment the engine started to turn,
however, there was a grinding sound of tortured steel,
and when it had been stopped, we found that some one
had placed a cold-chisel in one of the gears.
It was another two days before we
were ready to limp along, half repaired. The
night before the repairs were completed, the sentry
came to my room and awoke me. He was rather an
intelligent fellow of the English middle class, in
whom I had much confidence.
“Well, Wilson,” I asked. “What’s
the matter now?”
He raised his finger to his lips and
came closer to me. “I think I’ve
found out who’s doin’ the mischief,”
he whispered, and nodded his head toward the girl’s
room. “I seen her sneakin’ from
the crew’s room just now,” he went on.
“She’d been in gassin’ wit’
the boche commander. Benson seen her in there
las’ night, too, but he never said nothin’
till I goes on watch tonight. Benson’s
sorter slow in the head, an’ he never puts two
an’ two together till some one else has made
four out of it.”
If the man had come in and struck
me suddenly in the face, I could have been no more
surprised.
“Say nothing of this to anyone,”
I ordered. “Keep your eyes and ears open
and report every suspicious thing you see or hear.”
The man saluted and left me; but for
an hour or more I tossed, restless, upon my hard bunk
in an agony of jealousy and fear. Finally I fell
into a troubled sleep. It was daylight when I
awoke. We were steaming along slowly upon the
surface, my orders having been to proceed at half
speed until we could take an observation and determine
our position. The sky had been overcast all the
previous day and all night; but as I stepped into the
centrale that morning I was delighted to see that
the sun was again shining. The spirits of the
men seemed improved; everything seemed propitious.
I forgot at once the cruel misgivings of the past night
as I set to work to take my observations.
What a blow awaited me! The
sextant and chronometer had both been broken beyond
repair, and they had been broken just this very night.
They had been broken upon the night that Lys had been
seen talking with von Schoenvorts. I think that
it was this last thought which hurt me the worst.
I could look the other disaster in the face with
equanimity; but the bald fact that Lys might be a
traitor appalled me.
I called Bradley and Olson on deck
and told them what had happened, but for the life
of me I couldn’t bring myself to repeat what
Wilson had reported to me the previous night.
In fact, as I had given the matter thought, it seemed
incredible that the girl could have passed through
my room, in which Bradley and I slept, and then carried
on a conversation in the crew’s room, in which
Von Schoenvorts was kept, without having been seen
by more than a single man.
Bradley shook his head. “I
can’t make it out,” he said. “One
of those boches must be pretty clever to come it over
us all like this; but they haven’t harmed us
as much as they think; there are still the extra instruments.”
It was my turn now to shake a doleful
head. “There are no extra instruments,”
I told them. “They too have disappeared
as did the wireless apparatus.”
Both men looked at me in amazement.
“We still have the compass and the sun,”
said Olson. “They may be after getting
the compass some night; but they’s too many
of us around in the daytime fer ’em to get the
sun.”
It was then that one of the men stuck
his head up through the hatchway and seeing me, asked
permission to come on deck and get a breath of fresh
air. I recognized him as Benson, the man who,
Wilson had said, reported having seen Lys with von
Schoenvorts two nights before. I motioned him
on deck and then called him to one side, asking if
he had seen anything out of the way or unusual during
his trick on watch the night before. The fellow
scratched his head a moment and said, “No,”
and then as though it was an afterthought, he told
me that he had seen the girl in the crew’s room
about midnight talking with the German commander, but
as there hadn’t seemed to him to be any harm
in that, he hadn’t said anything about it.
Telling him never to fail to report to me anything
in the slightest out of the ordinary routine of the
ship, I dismissed him.
Several of the other men now asked
permission to come on deck, and soon all but those
actually engaged in some necessary duty were standing
around smoking and talking, all in the best of spirits.
I took advantage of the absence of the men upon the
deck to go below for my breakfast, which the cook
was already preparing upon the electric stove.
Lys, followed by Nobs, appeared as I entered the
centrale. She met me with a pleasant “Good
morning!” which I am afraid I replied to in
a tone that was rather constrained and surly.
“Will you breakfast with me?”
I suddenly asked the girl, determined to commence
a probe of my own along the lines which duty demanded.
She nodded a sweet acceptance of my
invitation, and together we sat down at the little
table of the officers’ mess. “You
slept well last night?” I asked.
“All night,” she replied. “I
am a splendid sleeper.”
Her manner was so straightforward
and honest that I could not bring myself to believe
in her duplicity; yet—Thinking to surprise
her into a betrayal of her guilt, I blurted out:
“The chronometer and sextant were both destroyed
last night; there is a traitor among us.”
But she never turned a hair by way of evidencing
guilty knowledge of the catastrophe.
“Who could it have been?”
she cried. “The Germans would be crazy
to do it, for their lives are as much at stake as ours.”
“Men are often glad to die for
an ideal—an ideal of patriotism, perhaps,”
I replied; “and a willingness to martyr themselves
includes a willingness to sacrifice others, even those
who love them. Women are much the same, except
that they will go even further than most men—they
will sacrifice everything, even honor, for love.”
I watched her face carefully as I
spoke, and I thought that I detected a very faint
flush mounting her cheek. Seeing an opening
and an advantage, I sought to follow it up.
“Take von Schoenvorts, for instance,”
I continued: “he would doubtless be glad
to die and take us all with him, could he prevent
in no other way the falling of his vessel into enemy
hands. He would sacrifice anyone, even you; and
if you still love him, you might be his ready tool.
Do you understand me?”
She looked at me in wide-eyed consternation
for a moment, and then she went very white and rose
from her seat. “I do,” she replied,
and turning her back upon me, she walked quickly toward
her room. I started to follow, for even believing
what I did, I was sorry that I had hurt her.
I reached the door to the crew’s room just
behind her and in time to see von Schoenvorts lean
forward and whisper something to her as she passed;
but she must have guessed that she might be watched,
for she passed on.
That afternoon it clouded over; the
wind mounted to a gale, and the sea rose until the
craft was wallowing and rolling frightfully.
Nearly everyone aboard was sick; the air became foul
and oppressive. For twenty-four hours I did not
leave my post in the conning tower, as both Olson
and Bradley were sick. Finally I found that I
must get a little rest, and so I looked about for
some one to relieve me. Benson volunteered.
He had not been sick, and assured me that he was
a former R.N. man and had been detailed for submarine
duty for over two years. I was glad that it
was he, for I had considerable confidence in his loyalty,
and so it was with a feeling of security that I went
below and lay down.
I slept twelve hours straight, and
when I awoke and discovered what I had done, I lost
no time in getting to the conning tower. There
sat Benson as wide awake as could be, and the compass
showed that we were heading straight into the west.
The storm was still raging; nor did it abate its
fury until the fourth day. We were all pretty
well done up and looked forward to the time when we
could go on deck and fill our lungs with fresh air.
During the whole four days I had not seen the girl,
as she evidently kept closely to her room; and during
this time no untoward incident had occurred aboard
the boat—a fact which seemed to strengthen
the web of circumstantial evidence about her.
For six more days after the storm
lessened we still had fairly rough weather; nor did
the sun once show himself during all that time.
For the season—it was now the middle of
June—the storm was unusual; but being from
southern California, I was accustomed to unusual weather.
In fact, I have discovered that the world over, unusual
weather prevails at all times of the year.
We kept steadily to our westward course,
and as the U-33 was one of the fastest submersibles
we had ever turned out, I knew that we must be pretty
close to the North American coast. What puzzled
me most was the fact that for six days we had not sighted
a single ship. It seemed remarkable that we
could cross the Atlantic almost to the coast of the
American continent without glimpsing smoke or sail,
and at last I came to the conclusion that we were
way off our course, but whether to the north or to
the south of it I could not determine.
On the seventh day the sea lay comparatively
calm at early dawn. There was a slight haze upon
the ocean which had cut off our view of the stars;
but conditions all pointed toward a clear morrow, and
I was on deck anxiously awaiting the rising of the
sun. My eyes were glued upon the impenetrable
mist astern, for there in the east I should see the
first glow of the rising sun that would assure me
we were still upon the right course. Gradually
the heavens lightened; but astern I could see no intenser
glow that would indicate the rising sun behind the
mist. Bradley was standing at my side.
Presently he touched my arm.
“Look, captain,” he said, and pointed
south.
I looked and gasped, for there directly
to port I saw outlined through the haze the red top
of the rising sun. Hurrying to the tower, I
looked at the compass. It showed that we were
holding steadily upon our westward course. Either
the sun was rising in the south, or the compass had
been tampered with. The conclusion was obvious.
I went back to Bradley and told him
what I had discovered. “And,” I concluded,
“we can’t make another five hundred knots
without oil; our provisions are running low and so
is our water. God only knows how far south we
have run.”
“There is nothing to do,”
he replied, “other than to alter our course
once more toward the west; we must raise land soon
or we shall all be lost.”
I told him to do so; and then I set
to work improvising a crude sextant with which we
finally took our bearings in a rough and most unsatisfactory
manner; for when the work was done, we did not know
how far from the truth the result might be. It
showed us to be about 20’ north and 30’
west—nearly twenty-five hundred miles off
our course. In short, if our reading was anywhere
near correct, we must have been traveling due south
for six days. Bradley now relieved Benson, for
we had arranged our shifts so that the latter and
Olson now divided the nights, while Bradley and I
alternated with one another during the days.
I questioned both Olson and Benson
closely in the matter of the compass; but each stoutly
maintained that no one had tampered with it during
his tour of duty. Benson gave me a knowing smile,
as much as to say: “Well, you and I know
who did this.” Yet I could not believe
that it was the girl.
We kept to our westerly course for
several hours when the lookout’s cry announced
a sail. I ordered the U-33’s course altered,
and we bore down upon the stranger, for I had come
to a decision which was the result of necessity.
We could not lie there in the middle of the Atlantic
and starve to death if there was any way out of it.
The sailing ship saw us while we were still a long
way off, as was evidenced by her efforts to escape.
There was scarcely any wind, however, and her case
was hopeless; so when we drew near and signaled her
to stop, she came into the wind and lay there with
her sails flapping idly. We moved in quite close
to her. She was the Balmen of Halmstad, Sweden,
with a general cargo from Brazil for Spain.
I explained our circumstances to her
skipper and asked for food, water and oil; but when
he found that we were not German, he became very angry
and abusive and started to draw away from us; but
I was in no mood for any such business. Turning
toward Bradley, who was in the conning-tower, I snapped
out: “Gun-service on deck! To the
diving stations!” We had no opportunity for
drill; but every man had been posted as to his duties,
and the German members of the crew understood that
it was obedience or death for them, as each was accompanied
by a man with a pistol. Most of them, though,
were only too glad to obey me.
Bradley passed the order down into
the ship and a moment later the gun-crew clambered
up the narrow ladder and at my direction trained their
piece upon the slow-moving Swede. “Fire
a shot across her bow,” I instructed the gun-captain.
Accept it from me, it didn’t
take that Swede long to see the error of his way and
get the red and white pennant signifying “I
understand” to the masthead. Once again
the sails flapped idly, and then I ordered him to
lower a boat and come after me. With Olson and
a couple of the Englishmen I boarded the ship, and
from her cargo selected what we needed—oil,
provisions and water. I gave the master of the
Balmen a receipt for what we took, together with an
affidavit signed by Bradley, Olson, and myself, stating
briefly how we had come into possession of the U-33
and the urgency of our need for what we took.
We addressed both to any British agent with the request
that the owners of the Balmen be reimbursed; but whether
or not they were, I do not know. [1]
[1] Late in July, 1916, an item in
the shipping news mentioned a Swedish sailing vessel,
Balmen, Rio de Janiero to Barcelona, sunk by a German
raider sometime in June. A single survivor in
an open boat was picked up off the Cape Verde Islands,
in a dying condition. He expired without giving
any details.
With water, food, and oil aboard,
we felt that we had obtained a new lease of life.
Now, too, we knew definitely where we were, and I
determined to make for Georgetown, British Guiana—but
I was destined to again suffer bitter disappointment.
Six of us of the loyal crew had come
on deck either to serve the gun or board the Swede
during our set-to with her; and now, one by one, we
descended the ladder into the centrale. I was
the last to come, and when I reached the bottom, I
found myself looking into the muzzle of a pistol in
the hands of Baron Friedrich von Schoenvorts—I
saw all my men lined up at one side with the remaining
eight Germans standing guard over them.
I couldn’t imagine how it had
happened; but it had. Later I learned that they
had first overpowered Benson, who was asleep in his
bunk, and taken his pistol from him, and then had found
it an easy matter to disarm the cook and the remaining
two Englishmen below. After that it had been
comparatively simple to stand at the foot of the ladder
and arrest each individual as he descended.
The first thing von Schoenvorts did
was to send for me and announce that as a pirate I
was to be shot early the next morning. Then he
explained that the U-33 would cruise in these waters
for a time, sinking neutral and enemy shipping indiscriminately,
and looking for one of the German raiders that was
supposed to be in these parts.
He didn’t shoot me the next
morning as he had promised, and it has never been
clear to me why he postponed the execution of my sentence.
Instead he kept me ironed just as he had been; then
he kicked Bradley out of my room and took it all to
himself.
We cruised for a long time, sinking
many vessels, all but one by gunfire, but we did not
come across a German raider. I was surprised
to note that von Schoenvorts often permitted Benson
to take command; but I reconciled this by the fact
that Benson appeared to know more of the duties of
a submarine commander than did any of the Stupid Germans.
Once or twice Lys passed me; but for
the most part she kept to her room. The first
time she hesitated as though she wished to speak to
me; but I did not raise my head, and finally she passed
on. Then one day came the word that we were about
to round the Horn and that von Schoenvorts had taken
it into his fool head to cruise up along the Pacific
coast of North America and prey upon all sorts and
conditions of merchantmen.
“I’ll put the fear of
God and the Kaiser into them,” he said.
The very first day we entered the
South Pacific we had an adventure. It turned
out to be quite the most exciting adventure I had
ever encountered. It fell about this way.
About eight bells of the forenoon watch I heard a
hail from the deck, and presently the footsteps of
the entire ship’s company, from the amount of
noise I heard at the ladder. Some one yelled
back to those who had not yet reached the level of
the deck: “It’s the raider, the
German raider Geier!”
I saw that we had reached the end
of our rope. Below all was quiet—not
a man remained. A door opened at the end of the
narrow hull, and presently Nobs came trotting up to
me. He licked my face and rolled over on his
back, reaching for me with his big, awkward paws.
Then other footsteps sounded, approaching me.
I knew whose they were, and I looked straight down
at the flooring. The girl was coming almost at
a run—she was at my side immediately.
“Here!” she cried. “Quick!”
And she slipped something into my hand. It was
a key—the key to my irons. At my side
she also laid a pistol, and then she went on into
the centrale. As she passed me, I saw that she
carried another pistol for herself. It did not
take me long to liberate myself, and then I was at
her side. “How can I thank you?”
I started; but she shut me up with a word.
“Do not thank me,” she
said coldly. “I do not care to hear your
thanks or any other expression from you. Do not
stand there looking at me. I have given you
a chance to do something—now do it!”
The last was a peremptory command that made me jump.
Glancing up, I saw that the tower
was empty, and I lost no time in clambering up, looking
about me. About a hundred yards off lay a small,
swift cruiser-raider, and above her floated the German
man-of-war’s flag. A boat had just been
lowered, and I could see it moving toward us filled
with officers and men. The cruiser lay dead ahead.
“My,” I thought, “what a wonderful
targ—” I stopped even thinking, so
surprised and shocked was I by the boldness of my
imagery. The girl was just below me. I
looked down on her wistfully. Could I trust
her? Why had she released me at this moment?
I must! I must! There was no other way.
I dropped back below. “Ask Olson to step
down here, please,” I requested; “and
don’t let anyone see you ask him.”
She looked at me with a puzzled expression
on her face for the barest fraction of a second, and
then she turned and went up the ladder. A moment
later Olson returned, and the girl followed him.
“Quick!” I whispered to the big Irishman,
and made for the bow compartment where the torpedo-tubes
are built into the boat; here, too, were the torpedoes.
The girl accompanied us, and when she saw the thing
I had in mind, she stepped forward and lent a hand
to the swinging of the great cylinder of death and
destruction into the mouth of its tube. With
oil and main strength we shoved the torpedo home and
shut the tube; then I ran back to the conning-tower,
praying in my heart of hearts that the U-33 had not
swung her bow away from the prey. No, thank
God!
Never could aim have been truer.
I signaled back to Olson: “Let ’er
go!” The U-33 trembled from stem to stern as
the torpedo shot from its tube. I saw the white
wake leap from her bow straight toward the enemy cruiser.
A chorus of hoarse yells arose from the deck of our
own craft: I saw the officers stand suddenly
erect in the boat that was approaching us, and I heard
loud cries and curses from the raider. Then
I turned my attention to my own business. Most
of the men on the submarine’s deck were standing
in paralyzed fascination, staring at the torpedo.
Bradley happened to be looking toward the conning-tower
and saw me. I sprang on deck and ran toward
him. “Quick!” I whispered.
“While they are stunned, we must overcome them.”
A German was standing near Bradley—just
in front of him. The Englishman struck the fellow
a frantic blow upon the neck and at the same time
snatched his pistol from its holster. Von Schoenvorts
had recovered from his first surprise quickly and
had turned toward the main hatch to investigate.
I covered him with my revolver, and at the same instant
the torpedo struck the raider, the terrific explosion
drowning the German’s command to his men.
Bradley was now running from one to
another of our men, and though some of the Germans
saw and heard him, they seemed too stunned for action.
Olson was below, so that there were
only nine of us against eight Germans, for the man
Bradley had struck still lay upon the deck. Only
two of us were armed; but the heart seemed to have
gone out of the boches, and they put up but half-hearted
resistance. Von Schoenvorts was the worst—he
was fairly frenzied with rage and chagrin, and he
came charging for me like a mad bull, and as he came
he discharged his pistol. If he’d stopped
long enough to take aim, he might have gotten me;
but his pace made him wild, so that not a shot touched
me, and then we clinched and went to the deck.
This left two pistols, which two of my own men were
quick to appropriate. The Baron was no match
for me in a hand-to-hand encounter, and I soon had
him pinned to the deck and the life almost choked
out of him.
A half-hour later things had quieted
down, and all was much the same as before the prisoners
had revolted—only we kept a much closer
watch on von Schoenvorts. The Geier had sunk
while we were still battling upon our deck, and afterward
we had drawn away toward the north, leaving the survivors
to the attention of the single boat which had been
making its way toward us when Olson launched the torpedo.
I suppose the poor devils never reached land, and
if they did, they most probably perished on that cold
and unhospitable shore; but I couldn’t permit
them aboard the U-33. We had all the Germans
we could take care of.
That evening the girl asked permission
to go on deck. She said that she felt the effects
of long confinement below, and I readily granted her
request. I could not understand her, and I craved
an opportunity to talk with her again in an effort
to fathom her and her intentions, and so I made it
a point to follow her up the ladder. It was
a clear, cold, beautiful night. The sea was calm
except for the white water at our bows and the two
long radiating swells running far off into the distance
upon either hand astern, forming a great V which our
propellers filled with choppy waves. Benson
was in the tower, we were bound for San Diego and
all looked well.
Lys stood with a heavy blanket wrapped
around her slender figure, and as I approached her,
she half turned toward me to see who it was.
When she recognized me, she immediately turned away.
“I want to thank you,”
I said, “for your bravery and loyalty—you
were magnificent. I am sorry that you had reason
before to think that I doubted you.”
“You did doubt me,” she
replied in a level voice. “You practically
accused me of aiding Baron von Schoenvorts. I
can never forgive you.”
There was a great deal of finality
in both her words and tone.
“I could not believe it,”
I said; “and yet two of my men reported having
seen you in conversation with von Schoenvorts late
at night upon two separate occasions—after
each of which some great damage was found done us
in the morning. I didn’t want to doubt
you; but I carried all the responsibility of the lives
of these men, of the safety of the ship, of your life
and mine. I had to watch you, and I had to put
you on your guard against a repetition of your madness.”
She was looking at me now with those
great eyes of hers, very wide and round.
“Who told you that I spoke with
Baron von Schoenvorts at night, or any other time?”
she asked.
“I cannot tell you, Lys,”
I replied, “but it came to me from two different
sources.”
“Then two men have lied,”
she asserted without heat. “I have not
spoken to Baron von Schoenvorts other than in your
presence when first we came aboard the U-33.
And please, when you address me, remember that to
others than my intimates I am Miss La Rue.”
Did you ever get slapped in the face
when you least expected it? No? Well, then
you do not know how I felt at that moment. I
could feel the hot, red flush surging up my neck, across
my cheeks, over my ears, clear to my scalp.
And it made me love her all the more; it made me swear
inwardly a thousand solemn oaths that I would win
her.