For several days things went along
in about the same course. I took our position
every morning with my crude sextant; but the results
were always most unsatisfactory. They always
showed a considerable westing when I knew that we
had been sailing due north. I blamed my crude
instrument, and kept on. Then one afternoon the
girl came to me.
“Pardon me,” she said,
“but were I you, I should watch this man Benson—especially
when he is in charge.” I asked her what
she meant, thinking I could see the influence of von
Schoenvorts raising a suspicion against one of my
most trusted men.
“If you will note the boat’s
course a half-hour after Benson goes on duty,”
she said, “you will know what I mean, and you
will understand why he prefers a night watch.
Possibly, too, you will understand some other things
that have taken place aboard.”
Then she went back to her room, thus
ending the conversation. I waited until half
an hour after Benson had gone on duty, and then I
went on deck, passing through the conning-tower where
Benson sat, and looking at the compass. It showed
that our course was north by west—that
is, one point west of north, which was, for our assumed
position, about right. I was greatly relieved
to find that nothing was wrong, for the girl’s
words had caused me considerable apprehension.
I was about to return to my room when a thought occurred
to me that again caused me to change my mind—and,
incidentally, came near proving my death-warrant.
When I had left the conning-tower
little more than a half-hour since, the sea had been
breaking over the port bow, and it seemed to me quite
improbable that in so short a time an equally heavy
sea could be deluging us from the opposite side of
the ship—winds may change quickly, but
not a long, heavy sea. There was only one other
solution—since I left the tower, our course
had been altered some eight points. Turning
quickly, I climbed out upon the conning-tower.
A single glance at the heavens confirmed my suspicions;
the constellations which should have been dead ahead
were directly starboard. We were sailing due
west.
Just for an instant longer I stood
there to check up my calculations—I wanted
to be quite sure before I accused Benson of perfidy,
and about the only thing I came near making quite
sure of was death. I cannot see even now how
I escaped it. I was standing on the edge of the
conning-tower, when a heavy palm suddenly struck me
between the shoulders and hurled me forward into space.
The drop to the triangular deck forward of the conning-tower
might easily have broken a leg for me, or I might
have slipped off onto the deck and rolled overboard;
but fate was upon my side, as I was only slightly
bruised. As I came to my feet, I heard the conning-tower
cover slam. There is a ladder which leads from
the deck to the top of the tower. Up this I scrambled,
as fast as I could go; but Benson had the cover tight
before I reached it.
I stood there a moment in dumb consternation.
What did the fellow intend? What was going
on below? If Benson was a traitor, how could
I know that there were not other traitors among us?
I cursed myself for my folly in going out upon the
deck, and then this thought suggested another—a
hideous one: who was it that had really been
responsible for my being here?
Thinking to attract attention from
inside the craft, I again ran down the ladder and
onto the small deck only to find that the steel covers
of the conning-tower windows were shut, and then I
leaned with my back against the tower and cursed myself
for a gullible idiot.
I glanced at the bow. The sea
seemed to be getting heavier, for every wave now washed
completely over the lower deck. I watched them
for a moment, and then a sudden chill pervaded my entire
being. It was not the chill of wet clothing,
or the dashing spray which drenched my face; no, it
was the chill of the hand of death upon my heart.
In an instant I had turned the last corner of life’s
highway and was looking God Almighty in the face—the
U-33 was being slowly submerged!
It would be difficult, even impossible,
to set down in writing my sensations at that moment.
All I can particularly recall is that I laughed,
though neither from a spirit of bravado nor from hysteria.
And I wanted to smoke. Lord! how I did want
to smoke; but that was out of the question.
I watched the water rise until the
little deck I stood on was awash, and then I clambered
once more to the top of the conning-tower. From
the very slow submergence of the boat I knew that Benson
was doing the entire trick alone—that he
was merely permitting the diving-tanks to fill and
that the diving-rudders were not in use. The
throbbing of the engines ceased, and in its stead came
the steady vibration of the electric motors.
The water was halfway up the conning-tower!
I had perhaps five minutes longer on the deck.
I tried to decide what I should do after I was washed
away. Should I swim until exhaustion claimed
me, or should I give up and end the agony at the first
plunge?
From below came two muffled reports.
They sounded not unlike shots. Was Benson meeting
with resistance? Personally it could mean little
to me, for even though my men might overcome the enemy,
none would know of my predicament until long after
it was too late to succor me. The top of the
conning-tower was now awash. I clung to the wireless
mast, while the great waves surged sometimes completely
over me.
I knew the end was near and, almost
involuntarily, I did that which I had not done since
childhood—I prayed. After that I
felt better.
I clung and waited, but the water rose no higher.
Instead it receded. Now the
top of the conning-tower received only the crests
of the higher waves; now the little triangular deck
below became visible! What had occurred within?
Did Benson believe me already gone, and was he emerging
because of that belief, or had he and his forces been
vanquished? The suspense was more wearing than
that which I had endured while waiting for dissolution.
Presently the main deck came into view, and then
the conning-tower opened behind me, and I turned to
look into the anxious face of Bradley. An expression
of relief overspread his features.
“Thank God, man!” was
all he said as he reached forth and dragged me into
the tower. I was cold and numb and rather all
in. Another few minutes would have done for me,
I am sure, but the warmth of the interior helped to
revive me, aided and abetted by some brandy which
Bradley poured down my throat, from which it nearly
removed the membrane. That brandy would have
revived a corpse.
When I got down into the centrale,
I saw the Germans lined up on one side with a couple
of my men with pistols standing over them. Von
Schoenvorts was among them. On the floor lay
Benson, moaning, and beyond him stood the girl, a
revolver in one hand. I looked about, bewildered.
“What has happened down here?” I asked.
“Tell me!”
Bradley replied. “You
see the result, sir,” he said. “It
might have been a very different result but for Miss
La Rue. We were all asleep. Benson had
relieved the guard early in the evening; there was
no one to watch him—no one but Miss La Rue.
She felt the submergence of the boat and came out
of her room to investigate. She was just in time
to see Benson at the diving rudders. When he
saw her, he raised his pistol and fired point-blank
at her, but he missed and she fired—and
didn’t miss. The two shots awakened everyone,
and as our men were armed, the result was inevitable
as you see it; but it would have been very different
had it not been for Miss La Rue. It was she
who closed the diving-tank sea-cocks and roused Olson
and me, and had the pumps started to empty them.”
And there I had been thinking that
through her machinations I had been lured to the deck
and to my death! I could have gone on my knees
to her and begged her forgiveness—or at
least I could have, had I not been Anglo-Saxon.
As it was, I could only remove my soggy cap and bow
and mumble my appreciation. She made no reply—only
turned and walked very rapidly toward her room.
Could I have heard aright? Was it really a sob
that came floating back to me through the narrow aisle
of the U-33?
Benson died that night. He remained
defiant almost to the last; but just before he went
out, he motioned to me, and I leaned over to catch
the faintly whispered words.
“I did it alone,” he said.
“I did it because I hate you—I hate
all your kind. I was kicked out of your shipyard
at Santa Monica. I was locked out of California.
I am an I. W. W. I became a German agent—not
because I love them, for I hate them too—but
because I wanted to injure Americans, whom I hated
more. I threw the wireless apparatus overboard.
I destroyed the chronometer and the sextant.
I devised a scheme for varying the compass to suit
my wishes. I told Wilson that I had seen the
girl talking with von Schoenvorts, and I made the
poor egg think he had seen her doing the same thing.
I am sorry—sorry that my plans failed.
I hate you.”
He didn’t die for a half-hour
after that; nor did he speak again—aloud;
but just a few seconds before he went to meet his
Maker, his lips moved in a faint whisper; and as I
leaned closer to catch his words, what do you suppose
I heard? “Now—I—lay
me—down—to—sleep”
That was all; Benson was dead. We threw his
body overboard.
The wind of that night brought on
some pretty rough weather with a lot of black clouds
which persisted for several days. We didn’t
know what course we had been holding, and there was
no way of finding out, as we could no longer trust
the compass, not knowing what Benson had done to it.
The long and the short of it was that we cruised
about aimlessly until the sun came out again.
I’ll never forget that day or its surprises.
We reckoned, or rather guessed, that we were somewhere
off the coast of Peru. The wind, which had been
blowing fitfully from the east, suddenly veered around
into the south, and presently we felt a sudden chill.
“Peru!” snorted Olson.
“When were yez after smellin’ iceber-rgs
off Peru?”
Icebergs! “Icebergs, nothin’!”
exclaimed one of the Englishmen. “Why,
man, they don’t come north of fourteen here in
these waters.”
“Then,” replied Olson,
“ye’re sout’ of fourteen, me b’y.”
We thought he was crazy; but he wasn’t,
for that afternoon we sighted a great berg south of
us, and we’d been running north, we thought,
for days. I can tell you we were a discouraged
lot; but we got a faint thrill of hope early the next
morning when the lookout bawled down the open hatch:
“Land! Land northwest by west!”
I think we were all sick for the sight
of land. I know that I was; but my interest
was quickly dissipated by the sudden illness of three
of the Germans. Almost simultaneously they commenced
vomiting. They couldn’t suggest any explanation
for it. I asked them what they had eaten, and
found they had eaten nothing other than the food cooked
for all of us. “Have you drunk anything?”
I asked, for I knew that there was liquor aboard,
and medicines in the same locker.
“Only water,” moaned one
of them. “We all drank water together
this morning. We opened a new tank. Maybe
it was the water.”
I started an investigation which revealed
a terrifying condition— some one, probably
Benson, had poisoned all the running water on the
ship. It would have been worse, though, had land
not been in sight. The sight of land filled
us with renewed hope.
Our course had been altered, and we
were rapidly approaching what appeared to be a precipitous
headland. Cliffs, seemingly rising perpendicularly
out of the sea, faded away into the mist upon either
hand as we approached. The land before us might
have been a continent, so mighty appeared the shoreline;
yet we knew that we must be thousands of miles from
the nearest western land-mass—New Zealand
or Australia.
We took our bearings with our crude
and inaccurate instruments; we searched the chart;
we cudgeled our brains; and at last it was Bradley
who suggested a solution. He was in the tower
and watching the compass, to which he called my attention.
The needle was pointing straight toward the land.
Bradley swung the helm hard to starboard. I
could feel the U-33 respond, and yet the arrow still
clung straight and sure toward the distant cliffs.
“What do you make of it?” I asked him.
“Did you ever hear of Caproni?” he asked.
“An early Italian navigator?” I returned.
“Yes; he followed Cook about
1721. He is scarcely mentioned even by contemporaneous
historians—probably because he got into
political difficulties on his return to Italy.
It was the fashion to scoff at his claims, but I
recall reading one of his works—his only
one, I believe—in which he described a new
continent in the south seas, a continent made up of
`some strange metal’ which attracted the compass;
a rockbound, inhospitable coast, without beach or
harbor, which extended for hundreds of miles.
He could make no landing; nor in the several days he
cruised about it did he see sign of life. He
called it Caprona and sailed away. I believe,
sir, that we are looking upon the coast of Caprona,
uncharted and forgotten for two hundred years.”
“If you are right, it might
account for much of the deviation of the compass during
the past two days,” I suggested. “Caprona
has been luring us upon her deadly rocks. Well,
we’ll accept her challenge. We’ll
land upon Caprona. Along that long front there
must be a vulnerable spot. We will find it, Bradley,
for we must find it. We must find water on Caprona,
or we must die.”
And so we approached the coast upon
which no living eyes had ever rested. Straight
from the ocean’s depths rose towering cliffs,
shot with brown and blues and greens—withered
moss and lichen and the verdigris of copper, and everywhere
the rusty ocher of iron pyrites. The cliff-tops,
though ragged, were of such uniform height as to suggest
the boundaries of a great plateau, and now and again
we caught glimpses of verdure topping the rocky escarpment,
as though bush or jungle-land had pushed outward from
a lush vegetation farther inland to signal to an unseeing
world that Caprona lived and joyed in life beyond
her austere and repellent coast.
But metaphor, however poetic, never
slaked a dry throat. To enjoy Caprona’s
romantic suggestions we must have water, and so we
came in close, always sounding, and skirted the shore.
As close in as we dared cruise, we found fathomless
depths, and always the same undented coastline of
bald cliffs. As darkness threatened, we drew
away and lay well off the coast all night. We
had not as yet really commenced to suffer for lack
of water; but I knew that it would not be long before
we did, and so at the first streak of dawn I moved
in again and once more took up the hopeless survey
of the forbidding coast.
Toward noon we discovered a beach,
the first we had seen. It was a narrow strip
of sand at the base of a part of the cliff that seemed
lower than any we had before scanned. At its
foot, half buried in the sand, lay great boulders,
mute evidence that in a bygone age some mighty natural
force had crumpled Caprona’s barrier at this
point. It was Bradley who first called our attention
to a strange object lying among the boulders above
the surf.
“Looks like a man,” he
said, and passed his glasses to me.
I looked long and carefully and could
have sworn that the thing I saw was the sprawled figure
of a human being. Miss La Rue was on deck with
us. I turned and asked her to go below.
Without a word she did as I bade. Then I stripped,
and as I did so, Nobs looked questioningly at me.
He had been wont at home to enter the surf with me,
and evidently he had not forgotten it.
“What are you going to do, sir?” asked
Olson.
“I’m going to see what
that thing is on shore,” I replied. “If
it’s a man, it may mean that Caprona is inhabited,
or it may merely mean that some poor devils were shipwrecked
here. I ought to be able to tell from the clothing
which is more near the truth.
“How about sharks?” queried
Olson. “Sure, you ought to carry a knoife.”
“Here you are, sir,” cried one of the
men.
It was a long slim blade he offered—one
that I could carry between my teeth—and
so I accepted it gladly.
“Keep close in,” I directed
Bradley, and then I dived over the side and struck
out for the narrow beach. There was another
splash directly behind me, and turning my head, I saw
faithful old Nobs swimming valiantly in my wake.
The surf was not heavy, and there
was no undertow, so we made shore easily, effecting
an equally easy landing. The beach was composed
largely of small stones worn smooth by the action
of water. There was little sand, though from
the deck of the U-33 the beach had appeared to be
all sand, and I saw no evidences of mollusca or crustacea
such as are common to all beaches I have previously
seen. I attribute this to the fact of the smallness
of the beach, the enormous depth of surrounding water
and the great distance at which Caprona lies from
her nearest neighbor.
As Nobs and I approached the recumbent
figure farther up the beach, I was appraised by my
nose that whether or not, the thing had once been
organic and alive, but that for some time it had been
dead. Nobs halted, sniffed and growled.
A little later he sat down upon his haunches, raised
his muzzle to the heavens and bayed forth a most dismal
howl. I shied a small stone at him and bade
him shut up—his uncanny noise made me nervous.
When I had come quite close to the thing, I still
could not say whether it had been man or beast.
The carcass was badly swollen and partly decomposed.
There was no sign of clothing upon or about it.
A fine, brownish hair covered the chest and abdomen,
and the face, the palms of the hands, the feet, the
shoulders and back were practically hairless.
The creature must have been about the height of a
fair sized man; its features were similar to those
of a man; yet had it been a man?
I could not say, for it resembled
an ape no more than it did a man. Its large
toes protruded laterally as do those of the semiarboreal
peoples of Borneo, the Philippines and other remote
regions where low types still persist. The countenance
might have been that of a cross between Pithecanthropus,
the Java ape-man, and a daughter of the Piltdown race
of prehistoric Sussex. A wooden cudgel lay beside
the corpse.
Now this fact set me thinking.
There was no wood of any description in sight.
There was nothing about the beach to suggest a wrecked
mariner. There was absolutely nothing about
the body to suggest that it might possibly in life
have known a maritime experience. It was the
body of a low type of man or a high type of beast.
In neither instance would it have been of a seafaring
race. Therefore I deduced that it was native
to Caprona—that it lived inland, and that
it had fallen or been hurled from the cliffs above.
Such being the case, Caprona was inhabitable, if
not inhabited, by man; but how to reach the inhabitable
interior! That was the question. A closer
view of the cliffs than had been afforded me from
the deck of the U-33 only confirmed my conviction
that no mortal man could scale those perpendicular
heights; there was not a finger-hold, not a toe-hold,
upon them. I turned away baffled.
Nobs and I met with no sharks upon
our return journey to the submarine. My report
filled everyone with theories and speculations, and
with renewed hope and determination. They all
reasoned along the same lines that I had reasoned—the
conclusions were obvious, but not the water.
We were now thirstier than ever.
The balance of that day we spent in
continuing a minute and fruitless exploration of the
monotonous coast. There was not another break
in the frowning cliffs—not even another
minute patch of pebbly beach. As the sun fell,
so did our spirits. I had tried to make advances
to the girl again; but she would have none of me,
and so I was not only thirsty but otherwise sad and
downhearted. I was glad when the new day broke
the hideous spell of a sleepless night.
The morning’s search brought
us no shred of hope. Caprona was impregnable—that
was the decision of all; yet we kept on. It must
have been about two bells of the afternoon watch that
Bradley called my attention to the branch of a tree,
with leaves upon it, floating on the sea. “It
may have been carried down to the ocean by a river,”
he suggested. “Yes, ” I replied, “it
may have; it may have tumbled or been thrown off the
top of one of these cliffs.”
Bradley’s face fell. “I
thought of that, too,” he replied, “but
I wanted to believe the other.”
“Right you are!” I cried.
“We must believe the other until we prove it
false. We can’t afford to give up heart
now, when we need heart most. The branch was
carried down by a river, and we are going to find
that river.” I smote my open palm with a
clenched fist, to emphasize a determination unsupported
by hope. “There!” I cried suddenly.
“See that, Bradley?” And I pointed at
a spot closer to shore. “See that, man!”
Some flowers and grasses and another leafy branch
floated toward us. We both scanned the water
and the coastline. Bradley evidently discovered
something, or at least thought that he had. He
called down for a bucket and a rope, and when they
were passed up to him, he lowered the former into
the sea and drew it in filled with water. Of
this he took a taste, and straightening up, looked
into my eyes with an expression of elation—as
much as to say “I told you so!”
“This water is warm,” he announced, “and
fresh!”
I grabbed the bucket and tasted its
contents. The water was very warm, and it was
fresh, but there was a most unpleasant taste to it.
“Did you ever taste water from
a stagnant pool full of tadpoles?” Bradley asked.
“That’s it,” I exclaimed,
“—that’s just the taste exactly,
though I haven’t experienced it since boyhood;
but how can water from a flowing stream, taste thus,
and what the dickens makes it so warm? It must
be at least 70 or 80 Fahrenheit, possibly higher.”
“Yes,” agreed Bradley,
“I should say higher; but where does it come
from?”
“That is easily discovered now
that we have found it,” I answered. “It
can’t come from the ocean; so it must come from
the land. All that we have to do is follow it,
and sooner or later we shall come upon its source.”
We were already rather close in; but
I ordered the U-33’s prow turned inshore and
we crept slowly along, constantly dipping up the water
and tasting it to assure ourselves that we didn’t
get outside the fresh-water current. There was
a very light off-shore wind and scarcely any breakers,
so that the approach to the shore was continued without
finding bottom; yet though we were already quite close,
we saw no indication of any indention in the coast
from which even a tiny brooklet might issue, and certainly
no mouth of a large river such as this must necessarily
be to freshen the ocean even two hundred yards from
shore. The tide was running out, and this, together
with the strong flow of the freshwater current, would
have prevented our going against the cliffs even had
we not been under power; as it was we had to buck the
combined forces in order to hold our position at all.
We came up to within twenty-five feet of the sheer
wall, which loomed high above us. There was no
break in its forbidding face. As we watched the
face of the waters and searched the cliff’s
high face, Olson suggested that the fresh water might
come from a submarine geyser. This, he said,
would account for its heat; but even as he spoke a
bush, covered thickly with leaves and flowers, bubbled
to the surface and floated off astern.
“Flowering shrubs don’t
thrive in the subterranean caverns from which geysers
spring,” suggested Bradley.
Olson shook his head. “It beats me,”
he said.
“I’ve got it!” I
exclaimed suddenly. “Look there!”
And I pointed at the base of the cliff ahead of us,
which the receding tide was gradually exposing to
our view. They all looked, and all saw what
I had seen—the top of a dark opening in
the rock, through which water was pouring out into
the sea. “It’s the subterranean
channel of an inland river,” I cried. “It
flows through a land covered with vegetation—and
therefore a land upon which the sun shines.
No subterranean caverns produce any order of plant
life even remotely resembling what we have seen disgorged
by this river. Beyond those cliffs lie fertile
lands and fresh water—perhaps, game!”
“Yis, sir,” said Olson,
“behoind the cliffs! Ye spoke a true word,
sir—behoind!”
Bradley laughed—a rather
sorry laugh, though. “You might as well
call our attention to the fact, sir,” he said,
“that science has indicated that there is fresh
water and vegetation on Mars.”
“Not at all,” I rejoined.
“A U-boat isn’t constructed to navigate
space, but it is designed to travel below the surface
of the water.”
“You’d be after sailin’
into that blank pocket?” asked Olson.
“I would, Olson,” I replied.
“We haven’t one chance for life in a
hundred thousand if we don’t find food and water
upon Caprona. This water coming out of the cliff
is not salt; but neither is it fit to drink, though
each of us has drunk. It is fair to assume that
inland the river is fed by pure streams, that there
are fruits and herbs and game. Shall we lie
out here and die of thirst and starvation with a land
of plenty possibly only a few hundred yards away?
We have the means for navigating a subterranean river.
Are we too cowardly to utilize this means?”
“Be afther goin’ to it,” said Olson.
“I’m willing to see it through,”
agreed Bradley.
“Then under the bottom, wi’
the best o’ luck an’ give ’em hell!”
cried a young fellow who had been in the trenches.
“To the diving-stations!”
I commanded, and in less than a minute the deck was
deserted, the conning-tower covers had slammed to
and the U-33 was submerging—possibly for
the last time. I know that I had this feeling,
and I think that most of the others did.
As we went down, I sat in the tower
with the searchlight projecting its seemingly feeble
rays ahead. We submerged very slowly and without
headway more than sufficient to keep her nose in the
right direction, and as we went down, I saw outlined
ahead of us the black opening in the great cliff.
It was an opening that would have admitted a half-dozen
U-boats at one and the same time, roughly cylindrical
in contour—and dark as the pit of perdition.
As I gave the command which sent the
U-33 slowly ahead, I could not but feel a certain
uncanny presentiment of evil. Where were we
going? What lay at the end of this great sewer?
Had we bidden farewell forever to the sunlight and
life, or were there before us dangers even greater
than those which we now faced? I tried to keep
my mind from vain imagining by calling everything which
I observed to the eager ears below. I was the
eyes of the whole company, and I did my best not to
fail them. We had advanced a hundred yards,
perhaps, when our first danger confronted us.
Just ahead was a sharp right-angle turn in the tunnel.
I could see the river’s flotsam hurtling against
the rocky wall upon the left as it was driven on by
the mighty current, and I feared for the safety of
the U-33 in making so sharp a turn under such adverse
conditions; but there was nothing for it but to try.
I didn’t warn my fellows of the danger—it
could have but caused them useless apprehension, for
if we were to be smashed against the rocky wall, no
power on earth could avert the quick end that would
come to us. I gave the command full speed ahead
and went charging toward the menace. I was forced
to approach the dangerous left-hand wall in order
to make the turn, and I depended upon the power of
the motors to carry us through the surging waters
in safety. Well, we made it; but it was a narrow
squeak. As we swung around, the full force of
the current caught us and drove the stern against
the rocks; there was a thud which sent a tremor through
the whole craft, and then a moment of nasty grinding
as the steel hull scraped the rock wall. I expected
momentarily the inrush of waters that would seal our
doom; but presently from below came the welcome word
that all was well.
In another fifty yards there was a
second turn, this time toward the left! but it was
more of a gentle curve, and we took it without trouble.
After that it was plain sailing, though as far as
I could know, there might be most anything ahead of
us, and my nerves strained to the snapping-point every
instant. After the second turn the channel ran
comparatively straight for between one hundred and
fifty and two hundred yards. The waters grew
suddenly lighter, and my spirits rose accordingly.
I shouted down to those below that I saw daylight
ahead, and a great shout of thanksgiving reverberated
through the ship. A moment later we emerged
into sunlit water, and immediately I raised the periscope
and looked about me upon the strangest landscape I
had ever seen.
We were in the middle of a broad and
now sluggish river the banks of which were lined by
giant, arboraceous ferns, raising their mighty fronds
fifty, one hundred, two hundred feet into the quiet
air. Close by us something rose to the surface
of the river and dashed at the periscope. I
had a vision of wide, distended jaws, and then all
was blotted out. A shiver ran down into the tower
as the thing closed upon the periscope. A moment
later it was gone, and I could see again. Above
the trees there soared into my vision a huge thing
on batlike wings—a creature large as a large
whale, but fashioned more after the order of a lizard.
Then again something charged the periscope and blotted
out the mirror. I will confess that I was almost
gasping for breath as I gave the commands to emerge.
Into what sort of strange land had fate guided us?
The instant the deck was awash, I
opened the conning-tower hatch and stepped out.
In another minute the deck-hatch lifted, and those
who were not on duty below streamed up the ladder,
Olson bringing Nobs under one arm. For several
minutes no one spoke; I think they must each have
been as overcome by awe as was I. All about us was
a flora and fauna as strange and wonderful to us as
might have been those upon a distant planet had we
suddenly been miraculously transported through ether
to an unknown world. Even the grass upon the
nearer bank was unearthly—lush and high
it grew, and each blade bore upon its tip a brilliant
flower— violet or yellow or carmine or
blue—making as gorgeous a sward as human
imagination might conceive. But the life!
It teemed. The tall, fernlike trees were alive
with monkeys, snakes, and lizards. Huge insects
hummed and buzzed hither and thither. Mighty
forms could be seen moving upon the ground in the
thick forest, while the bosom of the river wriggled
with living things, and above flapped the wings of
gigantic creatures such as we are taught have been
extinct throughout countless ages.
“Look!” cried Olson.
“Would you look at the giraffe comin’
up out o’ the bottom of the say?” We
looked in the direction he pointed and saw a long,
glossy neck surmounted by a small head rising above
the surface of the river. Presently the back
of the creature was exposed, brown and glossy as the
water dripped from it. It turned its eyes upon
us, opened its lizard-like mouth, emitted a shrill
hiss and came for us. The thing must have been
sixteen or eighteen feet in length and closely resembled
pictures I had seen of restored plesiosaurs of the
lower Jurassic. It charged us as savagely as
a mad bull, and one would have thought it intended
to destroy and devour the mighty U-boat, as I verily
believe it did intend.
We were moving slowly up the river
as the creature bore down upon us with distended jaws.
The long neck was far outstretched, and the four
flippers with which it swam were working with powerful
strokes, carrying it forward at a rapid pace.
When it reached the craft’s side, the jaws
closed upon one of the stanchions of the deck rail
and tore it from its socket as though it had been
a toothpick stuck in putty. At this exhibition
of titanic strength I think we all simultaneously
stepped backward, and Bradley drew his revolver and
fired. The bullet struck the thing in the neck,
just above its body; but instead of disabling it,
merely increased its rage. Its hissing rose to
a shrill scream as it raised half its body out of
water onto the sloping sides of the hull of the U-33
and endeavored to scramble upon the deck to devour
us. A dozen shots rang out as we who were armed
drew our pistols and fired at the thing; but though
struck several times, it showed no signs of succumbing
and only floundered farther aboard the submarine.
I had noticed that the girl had come
on deck and was standing not far behind me, and when
I saw the danger to which we were all exposed, I turned
and forced her toward the hatch. We had not
spoken for some days, and we did not speak now; but
she gave me a disdainful look, which was quite as
eloquent as words, and broke loose from my grasp.
I saw I could do nothing with her unless I exerted
force, and so I turned with my back toward her that
I might be in a position to shield her from the strange
reptile should it really succeed in reaching the deck;
and as I did so I saw the thing raise one flipper
over the rail, dart its head forward and with the
quickness of lightning seize upon one of the boches.
I ran forward, discharging my pistol into the creature’s
body in an effort to force it to relinquish its prey;
but I might as profitably have shot at the sun.
Shrieking and screaming, the German
was dragged from the deck, and the moment the reptile
was clear of the boat, it dived beneath the surface
of the water with its terrified prey. I think
we were all more or less shaken by the frightfulness
of the tragedy—until Olson remarked that
the balance of power now rested where it belonged.
Following the death of Benson we had been nine and
nine—nine Germans and nine “Allies,”
as we called ourselves, now there were but eight Germans.
We never counted the girl on either side, I suppose
because she was a girl, though we knew well enough
now that she was ours.
And so Olson’s remark helped
to clear the atmosphere for the Allies at least, and
then our attention was once more directed toward the
river, for around us there had sprung up a perfect
bedlam of screams and hisses and a seething caldron
of hideous reptiles, devoid of fear and filled only
with hunger and with rage. They clambered, squirmed
and wriggled to the deck, forcing us steadily backward,
though we emptied our pistols into them. There
were all sorts and conditions of horrible things—huge,
hideous, grotesque, monstrous—a veritable
Mesozoic nightmare. I saw that the girl was gotten
below as quickly as possible, and she took Nobs with
her—poor Nobs had nearly barked his head
off; and I think, too, that for the first time since
his littlest puppyhood he had known fear; nor can
I blame him. After the girl I sent Bradley and
most of the Allies and then the Germans who were on
deck—von Schoenvorts being still in irons
below.
The creatures were approaching perilously
close before I dropped through the hatchway and slammed
down the cover. Then I went into the tower and
ordered full speed ahead, hoping to distance the fearsome
things; but it was useless. Not only could any
of them easily outdistance the U-33, but the further
upstream we progressed the greater the number of our
besiegers, until fearful of navigating a strange river
at high speed, I gave orders to reduce and moved slowly
and majestically through the plunging, hissing mass.
I was mighty glad that our entrance into the interior
of Caprona had been inside a submarine rather than
in any other form of vessel. I could readily
understand how it might have been that Caprona had
been invaded in the past by venturesome navigators
without word of it ever reaching the outside world,
for I can assure you that only by submarine could
man pass up that great sluggish river, alive.
We proceeded up the river for some
forty miles before darkness overtook us. I was
afraid to submerge and lie on the bottom overnight
for fear that the mud might be deep enough to hold
us, and as we could not hold with the anchor, I ran
in close to shore, and in a brief interim of attack
from the reptiles we made fast to a large tree.
We also dipped up some of the river water and found
it, though quite warm, a little sweeter than before.
We had food enough, and with the water we were all
quite refreshed; but we missed fresh meat. It
had been weeks, now, since we had tasted it, and the
sight of the reptiles gave me an idea—that
a steak or two from one of them might not be bad eating.
So I went on deck with a rifle, twenty of which were
aboard the U-33. At sight of me a huge thing
charged and climbed to the deck. I retreated
to the top of the conning-tower, and when it had raised
its mighty bulk to the level of the little deck on
which I stood, I let it have a bullet right between
the eyes.
The thing stopped then and looked
at me a moment as much as to say: “Why
this thing has a stinger! I must be careful.”
And then it reached out its long neck and opened its
mighty jaws and grabbed for me; but I wasn’t
there. I had tumbled backward into the tower,
and I mighty near killed myself doing it. When
I glanced up, that little head on the end of its long
neck was coming straight down on top of me, and once
more I tumbled into greater safety, sprawling upon
the floor of the centrale.
Olson was looking up, and seeing what
was poking about in the tower, ran for an ax; nor
did he hesitate a moment when he returned with one,
but sprang up the ladder and commenced chopping away
at that hideous face. The thing didn’t
have sufficient brainpan to entertain more than a
single idea at once. Though chopped and hacked,
and with a bullethole between its eyes, it still persisted
madly in its attempt to get inside the tower and devour
Olson, though its body was many times the diameter
of the hatch; nor did it cease its efforts until after
Olson had succeeded in decapitating it. Then
the two men went on deck through the main hatch, and
while one kept watch, the other cut a hind quarter
off Plesiosaurus Olsoni, as Bradley dubbed the thing.
Meantime Olson cut off the long neck, saying that
it would make fine soup. By the time we had
cleared away the blood and refuse in the tower, the
cook had juicy steaks and a steaming broth upon the
electric stove, and the aroma arising from P. Olsoni
filled us an with a hitherto unfelt admiration for
him and all his kind.