If there was anxiety on board of the
Gehenna as to the condition and whereabouts of the
House-boat, there was by no means less uneasiness
upon that vessel itself. Cleopatra’s scheme
for ridding herself and her abducted sisters of the
pirates had worked to a charm, but, having worked
thus, a new and hitherto undreamed-of problem, full
of perplexities bearing upon their immediate safety,
now confronted them. The sole representative
of a seafaring family on board was Mrs. Noah, and
it did not require much time to see that her knowledge
as to navigation was of an extremely primitive order,
limited indeed to the science of floating.
When the last pirate had disappeared
behind the rocks of Holmes Island, and all was in
readiness for action, the good old lady, who had hitherto
been as calm and unruffled as a child, began to get
red in the face and to bustle about in a manner which
betrayed considerable perturbation of spirit.
“Now, Mrs. Noah,” said
Cleopatra, as, peeping out from the billiard-room
window, she saw Morgan disappearing in the distance,
“the coast is clear, and I resign my position
of chairman to you. We place the vessel in your
hands, and ourselves subject to your orders.
You are in command. What do you wish us to do?”
“Very well,” replied Mrs.
Noah, putting down her knitting and starting for the
deck. “I’m not certain, but I think
the first thing to do is to get her moving.
Do you know, I’ve never discovered whether this
boat was a steamboat or a sailing-vessel? Does
anybody know?”
“I think it has a naphtha tank
and a propeller,” said Elizabeth, “although
I don’t know. It seems to me my brother
Raleigh told me they’d had a naphtha engine
put in last winter after the freshet, when the House-boat
was carried ten miles down the river, and had to be
towed back at enormous expense. They put it in
so that if she were carried away again she could get
back of her own power.”
“That’s unfortunate,”
said Mrs. Noah, “because I don’t know anything
about these new fangled notions. If there’s
any one here who knows anything about naphtha engines,
I wish they’d speak.”
“I’m of the opinion,”
said Portia, “that I can study out the theory
of it in a short while.”
“Very well, then,” said
Mrs. Noah, “you can do it. I’ll appoint
you engineer, and give you all your orders now, right
away, in advance. Set her going and keep her
going, and don’t stop without a written order
signed by me. We might as well be very careful,
and have everything done properly, and it might happen
that in the excitement of our trip you would misunderstand
my spoken orders and make a fatal error. Therefore,
pay no attention to unwritten orders. That will
do for you for the present. Xanthippe, you may
take Ophelia and Madame Recamier, and ten other ladies,
and, every morning before breakfast, swab the larboard
deck. Cassandra, Tuesdays you will devote to
polishing the brasses in the dining-room, and the balance
of your time I wish you to expend in dusting the bric-a-brac.
Dido, you always were strong at building fires.
I’ll make you chief stoker. You will
also assist Lucretia Borgia in the kitchen. Inasmuch
as the latter’s maid has neglected to supply
her with the usual line of poisons, I think we can
safely entrust to Lucretia’s hands the responsibilities
of the culinary department.”
“I’m perfectly willing
to do anything I can,” said Lucretia, “but
I must confess that I don’t approve of your
methods of commanding a ship. A ship’s
captain isn’t a domestic martinet, as you are
setting out to be. We didn’t appoint you
housekeeper.”
“Now, my child,” said
Mrs. Noah, firmly, “I do not wish any words.
If I hear any more impudence from you, I’ll put
you ashore without a reference; and the rest of you
I would warn in all kindness that I will not tolerate
insubordination. You may, all of you, have one
night of the week and alternate Sundays off, but your
work must be done. The regimen I am adopting
is precisely that in vogue on the Ark, only I didn’t
have the help I have now, and things got into very
bad shape. We were out forty days, and, while
the food was poor and the service execrable, we never
lost a life.”
The boat gave a slight tremor.
“Hurrah!” cried Elizabeth,
clapping her hands with glee, “we are off!”
“I will repair to the deck and
get our bearings,” said Mrs. Noah, putting her
shawl over her shoulders. “Meantime, Cleopatra,
I appoint you first mate. See that things are
tidied up a bit here before I return. Have the
windows washed, and to-morrow I want all the rugs
and carpets taken up and shaken.”
Portia meanwhile had discovered the
naphtha engine, and, after experimenting several times
with the various levers and stop-cocks, had finally
managed to move one of them in such a way as to set
the engine going, and the wheel began to revolve.
“Are we going all right?” she cried, from
below.
“I am afraid not,” said
the gallant commander. “The wheel is roiling
up the water at a great rate, but we don’t seem
to be going ahead very fast—in fact, we’re
simply moving round and round as though we were on
a pivot.”
“I’m afraid we’re
aground amidships,” said Xanthippe, gazing over
the side of the House-boat anxiously. “She
certainly acts that way—like a merry-go-round.”
“Well, there’s something
wrong,” said Mrs. Noah; “and we’ve
got to hurry and find out what it is, or those men
will be back and we shall be as badly off as ever.”
“Maybe this has something to
do with it,” observed Mrs. Lot, pointing to
the anchor rope. “It looks to me as if
those horrid men had tied us fast.”
“That’s just what it is,”
snapped Mrs. Noah. “They guessed our plan,
and have fastened us to a pole or something, but I
imagine we can untie it.”
Portia, who had come on deck, gave
a short little laugh.
“Why, of course we don’t
move,” she said—“we are anchored!”
“What’s that?” queried
Mrs. Noah. “We never had an experience
like that on the Ark.”
Portia explained the science of the anchor.
“What nonsense!” ejaculated
Mrs. Noah. “How can we get away from it?”
“We’ve got to pull it
up,” said Portia. “Order all hands
on deck and have it pulled up.”
“It can’t be done, and,
if it could, I wouldn’t have it!” said
Mrs. Noah, indignantly. “The idea!
Lifting heavy pieces of iron, my dear Portia, is
not a woman’s work. Send for Delilah, and
let her cut the rope with her scissors.”
“It would take her a week to
cut a hawser like that,” said Elizabeth, who
had been investigating. “It would be more
to the purpose, I think, to chop it in two with an
axe.”
“Very well,” replied Mrs.
Noah, satisfied. “I don’t care how
it is done as long as it is done quickly. It
would never do for us to be recaptured now.”
The suggestion of Elizabeth was carried
out, and the queen herself cut the hawser with six
well-directed strokes of the axe.
“You are an expert with
it, aren’t you?” smiled Cleopatra.
“I am, indeed,” replied
Elizabeth, grimly. “I had it suspended
over my head for so long a time before I got to the
throne that I couldn’t help familiarizing myself
with some of its possibilities.”
“Ah!” cried Mrs. Noah,
as the vessel began to move. “I begin to
feel easier. It looks now as if we were really
off.”
“It seems to me, though,”
said Cleopatra, gazing forward, “that we are
going backward.”
“Oh, well, what if we are!”
said Mrs. Noah. “We did that on the Ark
half the time. It doesn’t make any difference
which way we are going as long as we go, does it?”
“Why, of course it does!”
cried Elizabeth. “What can you be thinking
of? People who walk backward are in great danger
of running into other people. Why not the same
with ships? It seems to me, it’s a very
dangerous piece of business, sailing backward.”
“Oh, nonsense,” snapped
Mrs. Noah. “You are as timid as a zebra.
During the Flood, we sailed days and days and days,
going backward. It didn’t make a particle
of difference how we went—it was as safe
one way as another, and we got just as far away in
the end. Our main object now is to get away
from the pirates, and that’s what we are doing.
Don’t get emotional, Lizzie, and remember, too,
that I am in charge. If I think the boat ought
to go sideways, sideways she shall go. If you
don’t like it, it is still not too late to put
you ashore.”
The threat calmed Elizabeth somewhat,
and she was satisfied, and all went well with them,
even if Portia had started the propeller revolving
reverse fashion; so that the House-boat was, as Elizabeth
had said, backing her way through the ocean.
The day passed, and by slow degrees
the island and the marooned pirates faded from view,
and the night came on, and with it a dense fog.
“We’re going to have a
nasty night, I am afraid,” said Xanthippe, looking
anxiously out of the port.
“No doubt,” said Mrs.
Noah, pleasantly. “I’m sorry for
those who have to be out in it.”
“That’s what I was thinking
about,” observed Xanthippe. “It’s
going to be very hard on us keeping watch.”
“Watch for what?” demanded
Mrs. Noah, looking over the tops of her glasses at
Xanthippe.
“Why, surely you are going to
have lookouts stationed on deck?” said Elizabeth.
“Not at all,” said Mrs.
Noah. “Perfectly absurd. We never
did it on the Ark, and it isn’t necessary now.
I want you all to go to bed at ten o’clock.
I don’t think the night air is good for you.
Besides, it isn’t proper for a woman to be
out after dark, whether she’s new or not.”
“But, my dear Mrs. Noah,”
expostulated Cleopatra, “what will become of
the ship?”
“I guess she’ll float
through the night whether we are on deck or not,”
said the commander. “The Ark did, why not
this? Now, girls, these new-fangled yachting
notions are all nonsense. It’s night, and
there’s a fog as thick as a stone-wall all about
us. If there were a hundred of you upon deck
with ten eyes apiece, you couldn’t see anything.
You might much better be in bed. As your captain,
chaperon, and grandmother, I command you to stay below.”
“But—who is to steer?” queried
Xanthippe.
“What’s the use of steering
until we can see where to steer to?” demanded
Mrs. Noah. “I certainly don’t intend
to bother with that tiller until some reason for doing
it arises. We haven’t any place to steer
to yet; we don’t know where we are going.
Now, my dear children, be reasonable, and don’t
worry me. I’ve had a very hard day of
it, and I feel my responsibilities keenly. Just
let me manage, and we’ll come out all right.
I’ve had more experience than any of you, and
if—”
A terrible crash interrupted the old
lady’s remarks. The House-boat shivered
and shook, careened way to one side, and as quickly
righted and stood still. A mad rush up the gangway
followed, and in a moment a hundred and eighty-three
pale-faced, trembling women stood upon the deck, gazing
with horror at a great helpless hulk ten feet to the
rear, fastened by broken ropes and odd pieces of rigging
to the stern-posts of the House-boat, sinking slowly
but surely into the sea.
It was the Gehenna!
The House-boat had run her down and
her last hour had come, but, thanks to the stanchness
of her build and wonderful beam, the floating club-house
had withstood the shock of the impact and now rode
the waters as gracefully as ever.
Portia was the first to realize the
extent of the catastrophe, and in a short while chairs
and life-preservers and tables—everything
that could float—had been tossed into the
sea to the struggling immortals therein. On
board the Gehenna, those who had not cast themselves
into the waters, under the cool direction of Holmes
and Bonaparte, calmly lowered the boats, and in a
short while were not only able to felicitate themselves
upon their safety, but had likewise the good fortune
to rescue their more impetuous brethren who had preferred
to swim for it. Ultimately, all were brought
aboard the House-boat in safety, and the men in Hades
were once more reunited to their wives, daughters,
sisters, and fiancees, and Elizabeth had the satisfaction
of once more saving the life of Raleigh by throwing
him her ruff as she had done a year or so previously,
when she and her brother had been upset in the swift
current of the river Styx.
Order and happiness being restored, Holmes took command of the House-
boat and soon navigated her safely back into her old-time berth. The
Gehenna went to the bottom and was never seen again, and when the
roll was called it was found that all who had set out upon her had
returned in safety save Shylock, Kidd, Sir Henry Morgan, and
Abeuchapeta; but even they were not lost, for, five weeks later,
these four worthies were found early one morning drifting slowly up
the river Styx, gazing anxiously out from the top of a water-cask and
yelling lustily for help.
And here endeth the chronicle of the pursuit of the good old House-
boat. Back to her moorings, the even tenor of her ways was once more
resumed, but with one slight difference.
The ladies became eligible for membership, and, availing themselves
of the privilege, began to think less and less of the advantages of
being men and to rejoice that, after all, they were women; and even
Xanthippe and Socrates, after that night of peril, reconciled their
differences, and no longer quarrel as to which is the more entitled
to wear the toga of authority. It has become for them a divided
skirt.
As for Kidd and his fellows, they have never recovered from the
effects of their fearful, though short, exile upon Holmes Island, and
are but shadows of their former shades; whereas Mr. Sherlock Holmes
has so endeared himself to his new-found friends that he is quite as
popular with them as he is with us, who have yet to cross the dark
river and be subjected to the scrutiny of the Committee on Membership
at the House-boat on the Styx.
Even Hawkshaw has been able to detect his genius.