1
Since earliest childhood I have been
strangely fascinated by the mystery surrounding the
history of the last days of twentieth century Europe.
My interest is keenest, perhaps, not so much in relation
to known facts as to speculation upon the unknowable
of the two centuries that have rolled by since human
intercourse between the Western and Eastern Hemispheres
ceased—the mystery of Europe’s state
following the termination of the Great War—provided,
of course, that the war had been terminated.
From out of the meagerness of our
censored histories we learned that for fifteen years
after the cessation of diplomatic relations between
the United States of North America and the belligerent
nations of the Old World, news of more or less doubtful
authenticity filtered, from time to time, into the
Western Hemisphere from the Eastern.
Then came the fruition of that historic
propaganda which is best described by its own slogan:
“The East for the East— the West
for the West,” and all further intercourse was
stopped by statute.
Even prior to this, transoceanic commerce
had practically ceased, owing to the perils and hazards
of the mine-strewn waters of both the Atlantic and
Pacific Oceans. Just when submarine activities
ended we do not know but the last vessel of this type
sighted by a Pan-American merchantman was the huge
Q 138, which discharged twenty-nine torpedoes at a
Brazilian tank steamer off the Bermudas in the fall
of 1972. A heavy sea and the excellent seamanship
of the master of the Brazilian permitted the Pan-American
to escape and report this last of a long series of
outrages upon our commerce. God alone knows
how many hundreds of our ancient ships fell prey to
the roving steel sharks of blood-frenzied Europe.
Countless were the vessels and men that passed over
our eastern and western horizons never to return; but
whether they met their fates before the belching tubes
of submarines or among the aimlessly drifting mine
fields, no man lived to tell.
And then came the great Pan-American
Federation which linked the Western Hemisphere from
pole to pole under a single flag, which joined the
navies of the New World into the mightiest fighting
force that ever sailed the seven seas—
the greatest argument for peace the world had ever
known.
Since that day peace had reigned from
the western shores of the Azores to the western shores
of the Hawaiian Islands, nor has any man of either
hemisphere dared cross 30dW. or 175dW. From
30d to 175d is ours—from 30d to 175d is
peace, prosperity and happiness.
Beyond was the great unknown.
Even the geographies of my boyhood showed nothing
beyond. We were taught of nothing beyond.
Speculation was discouraged. For two hundred
years the Eastern Hemisphere had been wiped from the
maps and histories of Pan-America. Its mention
in fiction, even, was forbidden.
Our ships of peace patrol thirty and
one hundred seventy-five. What ships from beyond
they have warned only the secret archives of government
show; but, a naval officer myself, I have gathered
from the traditions of the service that it has been
fully two hundred years since smoke or sail has been
sighted east of 30d or west of 175d. The fate
of the relinquished provinces which lay beyond the
dead lines we could only speculate upon. That
they were taken by the military power, which rose
so suddenly in China after the fall of the republic,
and which wrested Manchuria and Korea from Russia
and Japan, and also absorbed the Philippines, is quite
within the range of possibility.
It was the commander of a Chinese
man-of-war who received a copy of the edict of 1972
from the hand of my illustrious ancestor, Admiral
Turck, on one hundred seventy-five, two hundred and
six years ago, and from the yellowed pages of the
admiral’s diary I learned that the fate of the
Philippines was even then presaged by these Chinese
naval officers.
Yes, for over two hundred years no
man crossed 30d to 175d and lived to tell his story—not
until chance drew me across and back again, and public
opinion, revolting at last against the drastic regulations
of our long-dead forbears, demanded that my story
be given to the world, and that the narrow interdict
which commanded peace, prosperity, and happiness to
halt at 30d and 175d be removed forever.
I am glad that it was given to me
to be an instrument in the hands of Providence for
the uplifting of benighted Europe, and the amelioration
of the suffering, degradation, and abysmal ignorance
in which I found her.
I shall not live to see the complete
regeneration of the savage hordes of the Eastern Hemisphere—that
is a work which will require many generations, perhaps
ages, so complete has been their reversion to savagery;
but I know that the work has been started, and I am
proud of the share in it which my generous countrymen
have placed in my hands.
The government already possesses a
complete official report of my adventures beyond thirty.
In the narrative I purpose telling my story in a
less formal, and I hope, a more entertaining, style;
though, being only a naval officer and without claim
to the slightest literary ability, I shall most certainly
fall far short of the possibilities which are inherent
in my subject. That I have passed through the
most wondrous adventures that have befallen a civilized
man during the past two centuries encourages me in
the belief that, however ill the telling, the facts
themselves will command your interest to the final
page.
Beyond thirty! Romance, adventure,
strange peoples, fearsome beasts—all the
excitement and scurry of the lives of the twentieth
century ancients that have been denied us in these
dull days of peace and prosaic prosperity—all,
all lay beyond thirty, the invisible barrier between
the stupid, commercial present and the carefree, barbarous
past.
What boy has not sighed for the good
old days of wars, revolutions, and riots; how I used
to pore over the chronicles of those old days, those
dear old days, when workmen went armed to their labors;
when they fell upon one another with gun and bomb
and dagger, and the streets ran red with blood!
Ah, but those were the times when life was worth
the living; when a man who went out by night knew not
at which dark corner a “footpad” might
leap upon and slay him; when wild beasts roamed the
forest and the jungles, and there were savage men,
and countries yet unexplored.
Now, in all the Western Hemisphere
dwells no man who may not find a school house within
walking distance of his home, or at least within flying
distance.
The wildest beast that roams our waste
places lairs in the frozen north or the frozen south
within a government reserve, where the curious may
view him and feed him bread crusts from the hand with
perfect impunity.
But beyond thirty! And I have
gone there, and come back; and now you may go there,
for no longer is it high treason, punishable by disgrace
or death, to cross 30d or 175d.
My name is Jefferson Turck.
I am a lieutenant in the navy— in the great
Pan-American navy, the only navy which now exists
in all the world.
I was born in Arizona, in the United
States of North America, in the year of our Lord 2116.
Therefore, I am twenty-one years old.
In early boyhood I tired of the teeming
cities and overcrowded rural districts of Arizona.
Every generation of Turcks for over two centuries
has been represented in the navy. The navy called
to me, as did the free, wide, unpeopled spaces of
the mighty oceans. And so I joined the navy,
coming up from the ranks, as we all must, learning
our craft as we advance. My promotion was rapid,
for my family seems to inherit naval lore. We
are born officers, and I reserve to myself no special
credit for an early advancement in the service.
At twenty I found myself a lieutenant
in command of the aero-submarine Coldwater, of the
SS-96 class. The Coldwater was one of the first
of the air and underwater craft which have been so
greatly improved since its launching, and was possessed
of innumerable weaknesses which, fortunately, have
been eliminated in more recent vessels of similar type.
Even when I took command, she was
fit only for the junk pile; but the world-old parsimony
of government retained her in active service, and
sent two hundred men to sea in her, with myself, a
mere boy, in command of her, to patrol thirty from
Iceland to the Azores.
Much of my service had been spent
aboard the great merchantmen-of-war. These are
the utility naval vessels that have transformed the
navies of old, which burdened the peoples with taxes
for their support, into the present day fleets of
self-supporting ships that find ample time for target
practice and gun drill while they bear freight and
the mails from the continents to the far-scattered
island of Pan-America.
This change in service was most welcome
to me, especially as it brought with it coveted responsibilities
of sole command, and I was prone to overlook the deficiencies
of the Coldwater in the natural pride I felt in my
first ship.
The Coldwater was fully equipped for
two months’ patrolling— the ordinary
length of assignment to this service—and
a month had already passed, its monotony entirely
unrelieved by sight of another craft, when the first
of our misfortunes befell.
We had been riding out a storm at
an altitude of about three thousand feet. All
night we had hovered above the tossing billows of
the moonlight clouds. The detonation of the
thunder and the glare of lightning through an occasional
rift in the vaporous wall proclaimed the continued
fury of the tempest upon the surface of the sea; but
we, far above it all, rode in comparative ease upon
the upper gale. With the coming of dawn the
clouds beneath us became a glorious sea of gold and
silver, soft and beautiful; but they could not deceive
us as to the blackness and the terrors of the storm-lashed
ocean which they hid.
I was at breakfast when my chief engineer
entered and saluted. His face was grave, and
I thought he was even a trifle paler than usual.
“Well?” I asked.
He drew the back of his forefinger
nervously across his brow in a gesture that was habitual
with him in moments of mental stress.
“The gravitation-screen generators,
sir,” he said. “Number one went
to the bad about an hour and a half ago. We have
been working upon it steadily since; but I have to
report, sir, that it is beyond repair.”
“Number two will keep us supplied,”
I answered. “In the meantime we will send
a wireless for relief.”
“But that is the trouble, sir,”
he went on. “Number two has stopped.
I knew it would come, sir. I made a report on
these generators three years ago. I advised then
that they both be scrapped. Their principle
is entirely wrong. They’re done for.”
And, with a grim smile, “I shall at least have
the satisfaction of knowing my report was accurate.”
“Have we sufficient reserve
screen to permit us to make land, or, at least, meet
our relief halfway?” I asked.
“No, sir,” he replied
gravely; “we are sinking now.”
“Have you anything further to report?”
I asked.
“No, sir,” he said.
“Very good,” I replied;
and, as I dismissed him, I rang for my wireless operator.
When he appeared, I gave him a message to the secretary
of the navy, to whom all vessels in service on thirty
and one hundred seventy-five report direct.
I explained our predicament, and stated that with
what screening force remained I should continue in
the air, making as rapid headway toward St. Johns
as possible, and that when we were forced to take
to the water I should continue in the same direction.
The accident occurred directly over
30d and about 52d N. The surface wind was blowing
a tempest from the west. To attempt to ride
out such a storm upon the surface seemed suicidal,
for the Coldwater was not designed for surface navigation
except under fair weather conditions. Submerged,
or in the air, she was tractable enough in any sort
of weather when under control; but without her screen
generators she was almost helpless, since she could
not fly, and, if submerged, could not rise to the
surface.
All these defects have been remedied
in later models; but the knowledge did not help us
any that day aboard the slowly settling Coldwater,
with an angry sea roaring beneath, a tempest raging
out of the west, and 30d only a few knots astern.
To cross thirty or one hundred seventy-five
has been, as you know, the direst calamity that could
befall a naval commander. Court-martial and
degradation follow swiftly, unless as is often the
case, the unfortunate man takes his own life before
this unjust and heartless regulation can hold him
up to public scorn.
There has been in the past no excuse,
no circumstance, that could palliate the offense.
“He was in command, and he took
his ship across thirty!” That was sufficient.
It might not have been in any way his fault, as,
in the case of the Coldwater, it could not possibly
have been justly charged to my account that the gravitation-screen
generators were worthless; but well I knew that should
chance have it that we were blown across thirty today—as
we might easily be before the terrific west wind that
we could hear howling below us, the responsibility
would fall upon my shoulders.
In a way, the regulation was a good
one, for it certainly accomplished that for which
it was intended. We all fought shy of 30d on
the east and 175d on the west, and, though we had
to skirt them pretty close, nothing but an act of God
ever drew one of us across. You all are familiar
with the naval tradition that a good officer could
sense proximity to either line, and for my part, I
am firmly convinced of the truth of this as I am that
the compass finds the north without recourse to tedious
processes of reasoning.
Old Admiral Sanchez was wont to maintain
that he could smell thirty, and the men of the first
ship in which I sailed claimed that Coburn, the navigating
officer, knew by name every wave along thirty from
60dN. to 60dS. However, I’d hate to vouch
for this.
Well, to get back to my narrative;
we kept on dropping slowly toward the surface the
while we bucked the west wind, clawing away from thirty
as fast as we could. I was on the bridge, and
as we dropped from the brilliant sunlight into the
dense vapor of clouds and on down through them to the
wild, dark storm strata beneath, it seemed that my
spirits dropped with the falling ship, and the buoyancy
of hope ran low in sympathy.
The waves were running to tremendous
heights, and the Coldwater was not designed to meet
such waves head on. Her elements were the blue
ether, far above the raging storm, or the greater
depths of ocean, which no storm could ruffle.
As I stood speculating upon our chances
once we settled into the frightful Maelstrom beneath
us and at the same time mentally computing the hours
which must elapse before aid could reach us, the wireless
operator clambered up the ladder to the bridge, and,
disheveled and breathless, stood before me at salute.
It needed but a glance at him to assure me that something
was amiss.
“What now?” I asked.
“The wireless, sir!” he
cried. “My God, sir, I cannot send.”
“But the emergency outfit?” I asked.
“I have tried everything, sir.
I have exhausted every resource. We cannot
send,” and he drew himself up and saluted again.
I dismissed him with a few kind words,
for I knew that it was through no fault of his that
the mechanism was antiquated and worthless, in common
with the balance of the Coldwater’s equipment.
There was no finer operator in Pan-America than
he.
The failure of the wireless did not
appear as momentous to me as to him, which is not
unnatural, since it is but human to feel that when
our own little cog slips, the entire universe must
necessarily be put out of gear. I knew that
if this storm were destined to blow us across thirty,
or send us to the bottom of the ocean, no help could
reach us in time to prevent it. I had ordered
the message sent solely because regulations required
it, and not with any particular hope that we could
benefit by it in our present extremity.
I had little time to dwell upon the
coincidence of the simultaneous failure of the wireless
and the buoyancy generators, since very shortly after
the Coldwater had dropped so low over the waters that
all my attention was necessarily centered upon the
delicate business of settling upon the waves without
breaking my ship’s back. With our buoyancy
generators in commission it would have been a simple
thing to enter the water, since then it would have
been but a trifling matter of a forty-five degree dive
into the base of a huge wave. We should have
cut into the water like a hot knife through butter,
and have been totally submerged with scarce a jar—I
have done it a thousand times—but I did
not dare submerge the Coldwater for fear that it would
remain submerged to the end of time—a condition
far from conducive to the longevity of commander or
crew.
Most of my officers were older men
than I. John Alvarez, my first officer, is twenty
years my senior. He stood at my side on the
bridge as the ship glided closer and closer to those
stupendous waves. He watched my every move, but
he was by far too fine an officer and gentleman to
embarrass me by either comment or suggestion.
When I saw that we soon would touch,
I ordered the ship brought around broadside to the
wind, and there we hovered a moment until a huge wave
reached up and seized us upon its crest, and then
I gave the order that suddenly reversed the screening
force, and let us into the ocean. Down into the
trough we went, wallowing like the carcass of a dead
whale, and then began the fight, with rudder and propellers,
to force the Coldwater back into the teeth of the
gale and drive her on and on, farther and farther
from relentless thirty.
I think that we should have succeeded,
even though the ship was wracked from stem to stern
by the terrific buffetings she received, and though
she were half submerged the greater part of the time,
had no further accident befallen us.
We were making headway, though slowly,
and it began to look as though we were going to pull
through. Alvarez never left my side, though
I all but ordered him below for much-needed rest.
My second officer, Porfirio Johnson, was also often
on the bridge. He was a good officer, but a man
for whom I had conceived a rather unreasoning aversion
almost at the first moment of meeting him, an aversion
which was not lessened by the knowledge which I subsequently
gained that he looked upon my rapid promotion with
jealousy. He was ten years my senior both in
years and service, and I rather think he could never
forget the fact that he had been an officer when I
was a green apprentice.
As it became more and more apparent
that the Coldwater, under my seamanship, was weathering
the tempest and giving promise of pulling through
safely, I could have sworn that I perceived a shade
of annoyance and disappointment growing upon his dark
countenance. He left the bridge finally and
went below. I do not know that he is directly
responsible for what followed so shortly after; but
I have always had my suspicions, and Alvarez is even
more prone to place the blame upon him than I.
It was about six bells of the forenoon
watch that Johnson returned to the bridge after an
absence of some thirty minutes. He seemed nervous
and ill at ease—a fact which made little
impression on me at the time, but which both Alvarez
and I recalled subsequently.
Not three minutes after his reappearance
at my side the Coldwater suddenly commenced to lose
headway. I seized the telephone at my elbow,
pressing upon the button which would call the chief
engineer to the instrument in the bowels of the ship,
only to find him already at the receiver attempting
to reach me.
“Numbers one, two, and five
engines have broken down, sir,” he called.
“Shall we force the remaining three?”
“We can do nothing else,”
I bellowed into the transmitter.
“They won’t stand the gaff, sir,”
he returned.
“Can you suggest a better plan?” I asked.
“No, sir,” he replied.
“Then give them the gaff, lieutenant,”
I shouted back, and hung up the receiver.
For twenty minutes the Coldwater bucked
the great seas with her three engines. I doubt
if she advanced a foot; but it was enough to keep
her nose in the wind, and, at least, we were not drifting
toward thirty.
Johnson and Alvarez were at my side
when, without warning, the bow swung swiftly around
and the ship fell into the trough of the sea.
“The other three have gone,”
I said, and I happened to be looking at Johnson as
I spoke. Was it the shadow of a satisfied smile
that crossed his thin lips? I do not know; but
at least he did not weep.
“You always have been curious,
sir, about the great unknown beyond thirty,”
he said. “You are in a good way to have
your curiosity satisfied.” And then I could
not mistake the slight sneer that curved his upper
lip. There must have been a trace of disrespect
in his tone or manner which escaped me, for Alvarez
turned upon him like a flash.
“When Lieutenant Turck crosses
thirty,” he said, “we shall all cross
with him, and God help the officer or the man who
reproaches him!”
“I shall not be a party to high
treason,” snapped Johnson. “The regulations
are explicit, and if the Coldwater crosses thirty
it devolves upon you to place Lieutenant Turck under
arrest and immediately exert every endeavor to bring
the ship back into Pan-American waters.”
“I shall not know,” replied
Alvarez, “that the Coldwater passes thirty;
nor shall any other man aboard know it,” and,
with his words, he drew a revolver from his pocket,
and before either I or Johnson could prevent it had
put a bullet into every instrument upon the bridge,
ruining them beyond repair.
And then he saluted me, and strode
from the bridge, a martyr to loyalty and friendship,
for, though no man might know that Lieutenant Jefferson
Turck had taken his ship across thirty, every man
aboard would know that the first officer had committed
a crime that was punishable by both degradation and
death. Johnson turned and eyed me narrowly.
“Shall I place him under arrest?” he asked.
“You shall not,” I replied. “Nor
shall anyone else.”
“You become a party to his crime!” he
cried angrily.
“You may go below, Mr. Johnson,”
I said, “and attend to the work of unpacking
the extra instruments and having them properly set
upon the bridge.”
He saluted, and left me, and for some
time I stood, gazing out upon the angry waters, my
mind filled with unhappy reflections upon the unjust
fate that had overtaken me, and the sorrow and disgrace
that I had unwittingly brought down upon my house.
I rejoiced that I should leave neither
wife nor child to bear the burden of my shame throughout
their lives.
As I thought upon my misfortune, I
considered more clearly than ever before the unrighteousness
of the regulation which was to prove my doom, and
in the natural revolt against its injustice my anger
rose, and there mounted within me a feeling which
I imagine must have paralleled that spirit that once
was prevalent among the ancients called anarchy.
For the first time in my life I found
my sentiments arraying themselves against custom,
tradition, and even government. The wave of rebellion
swept over me in an instant, beginning with an heretical
doubt as to the sanctity of the established order
of things—that fetish which has ruled Pan-Americans
for two centuries, and which is based upon a blind
faith in the infallibility of the prescience of the
long-dead framers of the articles of Pan-American
federation—and ending in an adamantine determination
to defend my honor and my life to the last ditch against
the blind and senseless regulation which assumed the
synonymity of misfortune and treason.
I would replace the destroyed instruments
upon the bridge; every officer and man should know
when we crossed thirty. But then I should assert
the spirit which dominated me, I should resist arrest,
and insist upon bringing my ship back across the dead
line, remaining at my post until we had reached New
York. Then I should make a full report, and
with it a demand upon public opinion that the dead
lines be wiped forever from the seas.
I knew that I was right. I knew
that no more loyal officer wore the uniform of the
navy. I knew that I was a good officer and sailor,
and I didn’t propose submitting to degradation
and discharge because a lot of old, preglacial fossils
had declared over two hundred years before that no
man should cross thirty.
Even while these thoughts were passing
through my mind I was busy with the details of my
duties. I had seen to it that a sea anchor was
rigged, and even now the men had completed their task,
and the Coldwater was swinging around rapidly, her
nose pointing once more into the wind, and the frightful
rolling consequent upon her wallowing in the trough
was happily diminishing.
It was then that Johnson came hurrying
to the bridge. One of his eyes was swollen and
already darkening, and his lip was cut and bleeding.
Without even the formality of a salute, he burst
upon me, white with fury.
“Lieutenant Alvarez attacked
me!” he cried. “I demand that he
be placed under arrest. I found him in the act
of destroying the reserve instruments, and when I
would have interfered to protect them he fell upon
me and beat me. I demand that you arrest him!”
“You forget yourself, Mr. Johnson,”
I said. “You are not in command of the
ship. I deplore the action of Lieutenant Alvarez,
but I cannot expunge from my mind the loyalty and
self-sacrificing friendship which has prompted him
to his acts. Were I you, sir, I should profit
by the example he has set. Further, Mr. Johnson,
I intend retaining command of the ship, even though
she crosses thirty, and I shall demand implicit obedience
from every officer and man aboard until I am properly
relieved from duty by a superior officer in the port
of New York.”
“You mean to say that you will
cross thirty without submitting to arrest?”
he almost shouted.
“I do, sir,” I replied.
“And now you may go below, and, when again
you find it necessary to address me, you will please
be so good as to bear in mind the fact that I am your
commanding officer, and as such entitled to a salute.”
He flushed, hesitated a moment, and
then, saluting, turned upon his heel and left the
bridge. Shortly after, Alvarez appeared.
He was pale, and seemed to have aged ten years in
the few brief minutes since I last had seen him.
Saluting, he told me very simply what he had done,
and asked that I place him under arrest.
I put my hand on his shoulder, and
I guess that my voice trembled a trifle as, while
reproving him for his act, I made it plain to him
that my gratitude was no less potent a force than
his loyalty to me. Then it was that I outlined
to him my purpose to defy the regulation that had raised
the dead lines, and to take my ship back to New York
myself.
I did not ask him to share the responsibility
with me. I merely stated that I should refuse
to submit to arrest, and that I should demand of him
and every other officer and man implicit obedience
to my every command until we docked at home.
His face brightened at my words, and
he assured me that I would find him as ready to acknowledge
my command upon the wrong side of thirty as upon the
right, an assurance which I hastened to tell him I
did not need.
The storm continued to rage for three
days, and as far as the wind scarce varied a point
during all that time, I knew that we must be far beyond
thirty, drifting rapidly east by south. All
this time it had been impossible to work upon the
damaged engines or the gravity-screen generators; but
we had a full set of instruments upon the bridge,
for Alvarez, after discovering my intentions, had
fetched the reserve instruments from his own cabin,
where he had hidden them. Those which Johnson
had seen him destroy had been a third set which only
Alvarez had known was aboard the Coldwater.
We waited impatiently for the sun,
that we might determine our exact location, and upon
the fourth day our vigil was rewarded a few minutes
before noon.
Every officer and man aboard was tense
with nervous excitement as we awaited the result of
the reading. The crew had known almost as soon
as I that we were doomed to cross thirty, and I am
inclined to believe that every man jack of them was
tickled to death, for the spirits of adventure and
romance still live in the hearts of men of the twenty-second
century, even though there be little for them to feed
upon between thirty and one hundred seventy-five.
The men carried none of the burdens
of responsibility. They might cross thirty with
impunity, and doubtless they would return to be heroes
at home; but how different the home-coming of their
commanding officer!
The wind had dropped to a steady blow,
still from west by north, and the sea had gone down
correspondingly. The crew, with the exception
of those whose duties kept them below, were ranged
on deck below the bridge. When our position was
definitely fixed I personally announced it to the eager,
waiting men.
“Men,” I said, stepping
forward to the handrail and looking down into their
upturned, bronzed faces, “you are anxiously
awaiting information as to the ship’s position.
It has been determined at latitude fifty degrees
seven minutes north, longitude twenty degrees sixteen
minutes west.”
I paused and a buzz of animated comment
ran through the massed men beneath me. “Beyond
thirty. But there will be no change in commanding
officers, in routine or in discipline, until after
we have docked again in New York.”
As I ceased speaking and stepped back
from the rail there was a roar of applause from the
deck such as I never before had heard aboard a ship
of peace. It recalled to my mind tales that
I had read of the good old days when naval vessels
were built to fight, when ships of peace had been
man-of-war, and guns had flashed in other than futile
target practice, and decks had run red with blood.
With the subsistence of the sea, we
were able to go to work upon the damaged engines to
some effect, and I also set men to examining the gravitation-screen
generators with a view to putting them in working
order should it prove not beyond our resources.
For two weeks we labored at the engines,
which indisputably showed evidence of having been
tampered with. I appointed a board to investigate
and report upon the disaster. But it accomplished
nothing other than to convince me that there were
several officers upon it who were in full sympathy
with Johnson, for, though no charges had been preferred
against him, the board went out of its way specifically
to exonerate him in its findings.
All this time we were drifting almost
due east. The work upon the engines had progressed
to such an extent that within a few hours we might
expect to be able to proceed under our own power westward
in the direction of Pan-American waters.
To relieve the monotony I had taken
to fishing, and early that morning I had departed
from the Coldwater in one of the boats on such an
excursion. A gentle west wind was blowing.
The sea shimmered in the sunlight. A cloudless
sky canopied the west for our sport, as I had made
it a point never voluntarily to make an inch toward
the east that I could avoid. At least, they
should not be able to charge me with a willful violation
of the dead lines regulation.
I had with me only the boat’s
ordinary complement of men— three in all,
and more than enough to handle any small power boat.
I had not asked any of my officers to accompany me,
as I wished to be alone, and very glad am I now that
I had not. My only regret is that, in view of
what befell us, it had been necessary to bring the
three brave fellows who manned the boat.
Our fishing, which proved excellent,
carried us so far to the west that we no longer could
see the Coldwater. The day wore on, until at
last, about mid-afternoon, I gave the order to return
to the ship.
We had proceeded but a short distance
toward the east when one of the men gave an exclamation
of excitement, at the same time pointing eastward.
We all looked on in the direction he had indicated,
and there, a short distance above the horizon, we
saw the outlines of the Coldwater silhouetted against
the sky.
“They’ve repaired the
engines and the generators both,” exclaimed
one of the men.
It seemed impossible, but yet it had
evidently been done. Only that morning, Lieutenant
Johnson had told me that he feared that it would be
impossible to repair the generators. I had put
him in charge of this work, since he always had been
accounted one of the best gravitation-screen men in
the navy. He had invented several of the improvements
that are incorporated in the later models of these
generators, and I am convinced that he knows more
concerning both the theory and the practice of screening
gravitation than any living Pan-American.
At the sight of the Coldwater once
more under control, the three men burst into a glad
cheer. But, for some reason which I could not
then account, I was strangely overcome by a premonition
of personal misfortune. It was not that I now
anticipated an early return to Pan-America and a board
of inquiry, for I had rather looked forward to the
fight that must follow my return. No, there
was something else, something indefinable and vague
that cast a strange gloom upon me as I saw my ship
rising farther above the water and making straight
in our direction.
I was not long in ascertaining a possible
explanation of my depression, for, though we were
plainly visible from the bridge of the aero-submarine
and to the hundreds of men who swarmed her deck, the
ship passed directly above us, not five hundred feet
from the water, and sped directly westward.
We all shouted, and I fired my pistol
to attract their attention, though I knew full well
that all who cared to had observed us, but the ship
moved steadily away, growing smaller and smaller to
our view until at last she passed completely out of
sight.