2
What could it mean? I had left
Alvarez in command. He was my most loyal subordinate.
It was absolutely beyond the pale of possibility
that Alvarez should desert me. No, there was
some other explanation. Something occurred to
place my second officer, Porfirio Johnson, in command.
I was sure of it but why speculate? The futility
of conjecture was only too palpable. The Coldwater
had abandoned us in midocean. Doubtless none
of us would survive to know why.
The young man at the wheel of the
power boat had turned her nose about as it became
evident that the ship intended passing over us, and
now he still held her in futile pursuit of the Coldwater.
“Bring her about, Snider,”
I directed, “and hold her due east. We
can’t catch the Coldwater, and we can’t
cross the Atlantic in this. Our only hope lies
in making the nearest land, which, unless I am mistaken,
is the Scilly Islands, off the southwest coast of
England. Ever heard of England, Snider?”
“There’s a part of the
United States of North America that used to be known
to the ancients as New England,” he replied.
“Is that where you mean, sir?”
“No, Snider,” I replied.
“The England I refer to was an island off the
continent of Europe. It was the seat of a very
powerful kingdom that flourished over two hundred years
ago. A part of the United States of North America
and all of the Federated States of Canada once belonged
to this ancient England.”
“Europe,” breathed one
of the men, his voice tense with excitement.
“My grandfather used to tell me stories of the
world beyond thirty. He had been a great student,
and he had read much from forbidden books.”
“In which I resemble your grandfather,”
I said, “for I, too, have read more even than
naval officers are supposed to read, and, as you men
know, we are permitted a greater latitude in the study
of geography and history than men of other professions.
“Among the books and papers
of Admiral Porter Turck, who lived two hundred years
ago, and from whom I am descended, many volumes still
exist, and are in my possession, which deal with the
history and geography of ancient Europe. Usually
I bring several of these books with me upon a cruise,
and this time, among others, I have maps of Europe
and her surrounding waters. I was studying them
as we came away from the Coldwater this morning, and
luckily I have them with me.”
“You are going to try to make
Europe, sir?” asked Taylor, the young man who
had last spoken.
“It is the nearest land,”
I replied. “I have always wanted to explore
the forgotten lands of the Eastern Hemisphere.
Here’s our chance. To remain at sea is
to perish. None of us ever will see home again.
Let us make the best of it, and enjoy while we do
live that which is forbidden the balance of our race—the
adventure and the mystery which lie beyond thirty.”
Taylor and Delcarte seized the spirit
of my mood but Snider, I think, was a trifle sceptical.
“It is treason, sir,”
I replied, “but there is no law which compels
us to visit punishment upon ourselves. Could
we return to Pan-America, I should be the first to
insist that we face it. But we know that’s
not possible. Even if this craft would carry
us so far, we haven’t enough water or food for
more than three days.
“We are doomed, Snider, to die
far from home and without ever again looking upon
the face of another fellow countryman than those who
sit here now in this boat. Isn’t that
punishment sufficient for even the most exacting judge?”
Even Snider had to admit that it was.
“Very well, then, let us live
while we live, and enjoy to the fullest whatever of
adventure or pleasure each new day brings, since any
day may be our last, and we shall be dead for a considerable
while.”
I could see that Snider was still
fearful, but Taylor and Delcarte responded with a
hearty, “Aye, aye, sir!”
They were of different mold.
Both were sons of naval officers. They represented
the aristocracy of birth, and they dared to think
for themselves.
Snider was in the minority, and so
we continued toward the east. Beyond thirty,
and separated from my ship, my authority ceased.
I held leadership, if I was to hold it at all, by
virtue of personal qualifications only, but I did
not doubt my ability to remain the director of our
destinies in so far as they were amenable to human
agencies. I have always led. While my
brain and brawn remain unimpaired I shall continue
always to lead. Following is an art which Turcks
do not easily learn.
It was not until the third day that
we raised land, dead ahead, which I took, from my
map, to be the isles of Scilly. But such a gale
was blowing that I did not dare attempt to land, and
so we passed to the north of them, skirted Land’s
End, and entered the English Channel.
I think that up to that moment I had
never experienced such a thrill as passed through
me when I realized that I was navigating these historic
waters. The lifelong dreams that I never had
dared hope to see fulfilled were at last a reality—but
under what forlorn circumstances!
Never could I return to my native
land. To the end of my days I must remain in
exile. Yet even these thoughts failed to dampen
my ardor.
My eyes scanned the waters.
To the north I could see the rockbound coast of Cornwall.
Mine were the first American eyes to rest upon it
for more than two hundred years. In vain, I
searched for some sign of ancient commerce that, if
history is to be believed, must have dotted the bosom
of the Channel with white sails and blackened the
heavens with the smoke of countless funnels, but as
far as eye could reach the tossing waters of the Channel
were empty and deserted.
Toward midnight the wind and sea abated,
so that shortly after dawn I determined to make inshore
in an attempt to effect a landing, for we were sadly
in need of fresh water and food.
According to my observations, we were
just off Ram Head, and it was my intention to enter
Plymouth Bay and visit Plymouth. From my map
it appeared that this city lay back from the coast
a short distance, and there was another city given
as Devonport, which appeared to lie at the mouth of
the river Tamar.
However, I knew that it would make
little difference which city we entered, as the English
people were famed of old for their hospitality toward
visiting mariners. As we approached the mouth
of the bay I looked for the fishing craft which I
expected to see emerging thus early in the day for
their labors. But even after we rounded Ram Head
and were well within the waters of the bay I saw no
vessel. Neither was there buoy nor light nor
any other mark to show larger ships the channel, and
I wondered much at this.
The coast was densely overgrown, nor
was any building or sign of man apparent from the
water. Up the bay and into the River Tamar we
motored through a solitude as unbroken as that which
rested upon the waters of the Channel. For all
we could see, there was no indication that man had
ever set his foot upon this silent coast.
I was nonplused, and then, for the
first time, there crept over me an intuition of the
truth.
Here was no sign of war. As
far as this portion of the Devon coast was concerned,
that seemed to have been over for many years, but
neither were there any people. Yet I could not
find it within myself to believe that I should find
no inhabitants in England. Reasoning thus, I
discovered that it was improbable that a state of
war still existed, and that the people all had been
drawn from this portion of England to some other,
where they might better defend themselves against
an invader.
But what of their ancient coast defenses?
What was there here in Plymouth Bay to prevent an
enemy landing in force and marching where they wished?
Nothing. I could not believe that any enlightened
military nation, such as the ancient English are reputed
to have been, would have voluntarily so deserted an
exposed coast and an excellent harbor to the mercies
of an enemy.
I found myself becoming more and more
deeply involved in quandary. The puzzle which
confronted me I could not unravel. We had landed,
and I now stood upon the spot where, according to
my map, a large city should rear its spires and chimneys.
There was nothing but rough, broken ground covered
densely with weeds and brambles, and tall, rank, grass.
Had a city ever stood there, no sign
of it remained. The roughness and unevenness
of the ground suggested something of a great mass
of debris hidden by the accumulation of centuries
of undergrowth.
I drew the short cutlass with which
both officers and men of the navy are, as you know,
armed out of courtesy to the traditions and memories
of the past, and with its point dug into the loam
about the roots of the vegetation growing at my feet.
The blade entered the soil for a matter
of seven inches, when it struck upon something stonelike.
Digging about the obstacle, I presently loosened
it, and when I had withdrawn it from its sepulcher
I found the thing to be an ancient brick of clay,
baked in an oven.
Delcarte we had left in charge of
the boat; but Snider and Taylor were with me, and
following my example, each engaged in the fascinating
sport of prospecting for antiques. Each of us
uncovered a great number of these bricks, until we
commenced to weary of the monotony of it, when Snider
suddenly gave an exclamation of excitement, and, as
I turned to look, he held up a human skull for my
inspection.
I took it from him and examined it.
Directly in the center of the forehead was a small
round hole. The gentleman had evidently come
to his end defending his country from an invader.
Snider again held aloft another trophy
of the search—a metal spike and some tarnished
and corroded metal ornaments. They had lain close
beside the skull.
With the point of his cutlass Snider
scraped the dirt and verdigris from the face of the
larger ornament.
“An inscription,” he said,
and handed the thing to me.
They were the spike and ornaments
of an ancient German helmet. Before long we
had uncovered many other indications that a great
battle had been fought upon the ground where we stood.
But I was then, and still am, at loss to account for
the presence of German soldiers upon the English coast
so far from London, which history suggests would have
been the natural goal of an invader.
I can only account for it by assuming
that either England was temporarily conquered by the
Teutons, or that an invasion of so vast proportions
was undertaken that German troops were hurled upon
the England coast in huge numbers and that landings
were necessarily effected at many places simultaneously.
Subsequent discoveries tend to strengthen this view.
We dug about for a short time with
our cutlasses until I became convinced that a city
had stood upon the spot at some time in the past,
and that beneath our feet, crumbled and dead, lay
ancient Devonport.
I could not repress a sigh at the
thought of the havoc war had wrought in this part
of England, at least. Farther east, nearer London,
we should find things very different. There would
be the civilization that two centuries must have wrought
upon our English cousins as they had upon us.
There would be mighty cities, cultivated fields,
happy people. There we would be welcomed as long-lost
brothers. There would we find a great nation
anxious to learn of the world beyond their side of
thirty, as I had been anxious to learn of that which
lay beyond our side of the dead line.
I turned back toward the boat.
“Come, men!” I said.
“We will go up the river and fill our casks
with fresh water, search for food and fuel, and then
tomorrow be in readiness to push on toward the east.
I am going to London.”