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iceberg.txt
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THE OCEAN WIRELESS BOYS OF THE ICEBERG PATROL
-------------------------------------------------------------------
[Illustration: Amidst a glare of red flame and lurid smoke, the young
operator staggered backward.]
-------------------------------------------------------------------
THE OCEAN WIRELESS BOYS OF THE ICEBERG PATROL
BY
CAPTAIN WILBUR LAWTON
AUTHOR OF
“THE BOY AVIATORS’ SERIES,”
“THE DREADNOUGHT BOYS’ SERIES,”
“THE OCEAN WIRELESS BOYS ON THE ATLANTIC,”
“THE OCEAN WIRELESS BOYS AND THE LOST LINER”
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY CHARLES L. WRENN
NEW YORK
HURST & COMPANY
PUBLISHERS
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright, 1915,
BY
HURST & COMPANY
-------------------------------------------------------------------
CONTENTS
I. ON THE OCEAN TRAIL
II. ON THE LOOKOUT FOR ICE
III. A NARROW ESCAPE
IV. MAN OVERBOARD!
V. IMPRISONED
VI. MAROONED ON AN ICEBERG
VII. JACK SAVES THE CAPTAIN
VIII. ON BOARD THE “_POLLY ANN_”
IX. A JOKE ON POMPEY
X. PLANS TO ESCAPE
XI. A FIENDISH PLOT
XII. UNCLE TOBY IS OFF FOR TREASURE
XIII. POMPEY MYSTIFIED
XIV. TERROR CARSON’S NERVE
XV. A WHALE IS ANNOYED
XVI. LOCKED IN THE CABIN
XVII. IN THE EYES OF THE SHIP
XVIII. RAYNOR TO THE RESCUE
XIX. SKULL ISLAND
XX. JACK TRIES OUT HIS INVENTION
XXI. THE WRECK OF THE “_POLLY ANN_”
XXII. FOOTPRINTS ON THE SAND
XXIII. AN UNEXPECTED MEETING
XXIV. A FRIGHT IN THE NIGHT
XXV. POMPEY LEARNS ABOUT WIRELESS
XXVI. A JOYOUS MESSAGE
XXVII. A CRASH IN THE FOG
XXVIII. UNCLE TOBY IS SURPRISED
XXIX. OFF FOR SKULL ISLAND
XXX. JACK AND BILL MEET ONCE MORE
XXXI. IN A BOILING SEA
XXXII. CEDAR ISLAND AT LAST
XXXIII. TERROR CARSON AGAIN
XXXIV. A PERILOUS ADVENTURE
XXXV. THE TREASURE
-------------------------------------------------------------------
The Ocean Wireless Boys of the Iceberg Patrol
CHAPTER I: ON THE OCEAN TRAIL.
The big, high-sided _Cambodian_, in ballast, that is, carrying no
cargo, and outward bound from New York for Rotterdam, was
shouldering through the green seas that came racing to meet her. The
_Cambodian_ was a brand new freighter of the big shipping combine
controlled by Jacob Jukes, and as just then no better berth had been
offered, Jack Ready found himself occupying her wireless room
getting the newly installed radio apparatus in shape and tuned up
for effective service.
As he worked over a refractory detector Jack, although normally of a
cheerful disposition, felt a strong inclination to grumble at his
present berth. He had been hoping for a chance at the wireless
operator job on board the _Empire State_, the newest and greatest of
the Jukes trans-Atlantic liners. But at the last moment he had been
passed over and another operator appointed on the ground of
seniority.
But Jack’s gloomy mood did not last long. As usual, the stimulus of
work soon caused the clouds to dissolve, and by the time he had the
detector adjusted, he was humming cheerfully. As he looked up from
his completed job, a ruddy-faced, cheery-looking lad about two years
older than Jack, who was eighteen, stuck his head in at the door of
the wireless-room which, besides the apparatus, contained Jack’s
bunk, a picture of the boy’s dead mother hanging at its head, and
the desk at which he made out his reports.
“Hello there,” hailed Jack, as Billy Raynor appeared, “going off
watch?”
“Well, don’t I look it, with this fine old coat of grime on my
hide?” laughed Jack’s chum, now promoted to the post of second
engineer on the new freighter.
“Thought when you got to be second you were just going to loll
around with your hands in your pockets and give orders,” commented
Jack.
“Um, so did I,” rejoined Raynor with a rather wry grin, “but, as you
see, it didn’t just work out that way. By-the-way, I thought you
were going to be the dandy, brass-buttoned wireless hero on a
passenger packet this trip.”
It was Jack’s turn to give a rueful smile and he rejoined, “so did
I.”
“Old Jukes was mighty nice about it though,” he explained. “I’m
getting the same pay as I would on a liner and then, too, that check
for that South American business came in mighty handy, so that,
financially, I’m not kicking. But I do want to get ahead in my
work.”
“Well, old Jukes ought to shove you right along,” declared Raynor,
coming in and planting his overalled form in a chair by the desk.
“You’ve sure done a lot for him, starting in by saving his daughter,
and----”
“Say, shut up, will you!” sputtered Jack, turning red. “I don’t want
any favoritism for anything I may or may not have done. That isn’t
it. I just want to get right ahead in the wireless game.”
“And so you are, so far as I can see,” replied Raynor.
“Incidentally, how’s the portable set coming along?”
He referred to Jack’s pet hobby, an invention over which he had
worked during all his spare time, afloat and ashore, for months. It
was a portable wireless set in which weight and complexity had been
cut to the bone. Jack had managed to reduce the weight by degrees
till at last he had produced what he believed would prove a
practicable device for use in the field, which weighed a trifle
under fifty pounds, and could be carried over the operator’s
shoulder in a satchel.
In reply to young Raynor’s question, Jack opened a closet and
produced a set of instruments of exquisite finish. Attached to them
was a neat coil of copper wire and, strapped to the base that
supported the whole, was a flat package of cloth and bamboo sticks.
“What’s that jigger underneath?” asked Raynor, referring to the
latter bit of apparatus.
“That’s a box kite,” explained Jack.
“A box kite? What in the world do you want with that?”
“Well, you can’t send out or receive messages without aërials, can
you?” parried Jack.
“No, but you could hitch your aërial wires to a tree or----”
“All right, Mr. Smarty, but just suppose that you are in a country
where there are no trees.”
“Oh, I see,” exclaimed Raynor, “in that case you’d do a little kite
flying.”
“That’s the idea exactly,” responded Jack.
“Have you tested it yet?” inquired Raynor.
“Up to 150 miles. It works splendidly. I’m going to gear up my
hand-generator higher so as to produce a stronger alternating
current, however. Then I think I’ll get better results.”
Clang-g-g-g-g-g-g-g!
A gong above Jack’s head sounded clamorously. This gong was another
of the boy’s inventions. By means of a silicon detector ingeniously
connected, a wireless wave striking the antenna of the _Cambodian’s_
apparatus instantly sounded the gong. In this way Jack had done with
a lot of tiresome waiting for calls with his receivers clamped to
his head.
“Something doing?” asked Raynor, as Jack sprang from the chair he
had been sitting on and seated himself in front of the wireless key.
“I guess it’s nothing much,” was the reply, “_Siasconset_ maybe, or
_Race_.”
But a moment later the expression of the young operator’s face grew
concentrated. His hand reached out for a pencil and he began to
scribble on his transcription pad the words that came pulsing
against his ears like waves out of a vast sea of space.
“Steamer _Athenia_ (Br.) reports,”--thus Jack wrote--“Along
parallel of 45.06 saw ice as follows:--Grindstone, one mile
of ice inshore. Scatari, close-packed ice inshore. Cape Ray,
loose strings distant. Money Point, heavy close-packed ice
inshore. Cape Race, several small strings loose ice drifting
S. W.”
Raynor had been peering oyer Jack’s shoulder as the boy wrote. When
he ceased, the young engineer was full of eager questions. Jack
flashed out an answer to the _Athenia_ and then “grounded” his
instrument.
“Well, that’s to be expected in April,” was his comment. “I guess
we’ll get a lot more of such reports before long.”
“Think we’ll run into any bergs?” asked Raynor rather anxiously.
“Don’t get nervous,” laughed Jack, “the iceberg patrol is on the
lookout for those. I’m surprised they haven’t ‘tapped-in’ yet with
some information. That’s the service for you, old man, the iceberg
patrol. Think of the lives you have a chance to save and--and--but
I’ve got to be off with this message to the old man.”
Jack hurried from the cabin, and forwarded his message to Captain
Briggs on the bridge. Raynor followed with more deliberation and
made for his own cabin and soap and water. As he removed the grime
of the engine-room, he mused on the subject of icebergs. Not many
weeks before a big liner had blundered at night into a huge floating
continent of ice and had sunk, with a terrible toll of lives and
suffering.
“If a big old liner like that couldn’t stand one wallop from an
iceberg what chance would the _Cambodian_ stand?” he wondered.
“Still, as Jack said, since the accident they’ve had a regular
iceberg patrol to send out warnings by wireless of any bergs that
happen to be in the vicinity. I wouldn’t mind seeing a berg though,
if it wasn’t at too close range. Wonder if I ever will?”
Had the young engineer possessed the gift of second sight, he would
have been able to foresee that in the immediate future he was
destined to come into closer contact with icebergs than he would
have dreamed possible, and also that the entire current of his life
was to be changed by a series of unlooked for and astonishing
happenings.
CHAPTER II: ON THE LOOKOUT FOR ICE.
With the dropping of the sun it fell bitter cold. The sea heaved in
a leaden, lightless swell which the forefoot of the _Cambodian_, as
she drove along, broke into spuming spray. The officers donned their
heavy bridge coats. The crew, or that portion of it which had the
watch on deck, wrapped up as warmly as they could in the scanty
garments they possessed.
When Jack opened his cabin to go below to his evening meal, a slight
flurry of snow struck him in the face.
“Goodness!” thought the boy, “here’s a change, and when we left New
York folks were thinking about Coney Island and putting their winter
coats in moth-balls.”
The captain was the only other occupant of the dining-room, from
which opened the officers cabins, when Jack went below. The boy
noticed that Captain Briggs’ face was rather flushed, and his eyes
were very bright as he took his seat. The captain had finished
eating but before he left the room he came to Jack’s side and,
leaning over him, asked in a rather thick voice, if there had been
any more reports on icebergs. Jack replied in the negative.
“Tha’s aw’ ri’ then,” said the captain in a loud, boastful voice,
whose tones were thick. “Donner be ’fraid icebergs with Cap’n Briggs
on board. I’m an old sea-going walrus, I am. I jes go ri’ through
’em, yes, sir, jes like knife goin’ thro’ cheese. Thas me.”
He swaggered out of the cabin with his scarlet face grinning. Jack’s
eyes followed him as the captain rather staggeringly ascended the
companionway.
“I don’t know much about such things,” thought the boy, while a
serious look came over his face, “but it seems to me that Captain
Briggs is under the influence of liquor. That’s a bad thing. Liquor
is bad at all times but it’s more dangerous at sea than anywhere
else.”
He finished his meal hastily and returned to his cabin to find his
“wireless bell” ringing furiously. Jack lost no time in getting to
work. He found that the U. S. revenue cutter _Seneca_, one of the
craft detailed by Uncle Sam to the iceberg patrol, was flashing out
signals of warning. Jack got the operator to repeat them when half a
dozen or more other steamers had picked them up.
The _Seneca’s_ operator was in a bad mood at this.
“Confound you fellows,” he flashed through space, “why don’t you pay
attention and get the message from the jump?”
“I was eating supper,” Jack replied contritely.
“I haven’t had a chance to eat yet, and I’m so hungry I could gobble
a boiler-plate pie,” growled the government man. “This is a dog’s
life.”
“I’d trade you jobs,” flashed Jack, but the other ignored this and
began thundering out his message concerning the white terrors of the
north.
“Ready?” he flashed.
“Fire away!” sparked crackingly from Jack’s key. Far above him, in
the night, the aërials flashed and snapped.
“_Seneca_, U.S. Iceberg Patrol. Str. Montrose reports from 50:47 on
parallel 42, sighted three bergs, two growlers, April 6th, moving
S.W. Barometer 30. Temperature 36. Overcast. Wind N.W. About 18
miles per hour.
“April 7th, 2:00 a. m., big berg, lat. 42.34, long. 48.15. Growler
four miles north-west. Both moving south.”
“That’s all. Now I’ll get a chance to stow some grub--maybe,”
grumpily concluded the report. Jack did not jot down these latter
words.
As he made his way forward with his report, the young wireless man
noticed that the fog was beginning to rise from the sea in long,
wavering wreaths. They looked ghostlike under the stars. In the
light breeze they danced a sort of witches’ dance. It looked as if
the sea was a boiling expanse with whirling banners of steam rising
from it. Even as Jack hurried forward he saw that the banners were
closing in to form a solid web of mist.
The _Cambodian_ was ploughing steadily forward. From her single big
funnel, black with a broad white band, inky smoke was pouring out a
volume that showed there was to be no niggardly saving of coal on
the present voyage. In fact, before sailing, Jack had heard that she
represented a new type of fast freighter, and that her maiden voyage
would be utilized as an opportunity of trying her out thoroughly.
Above the young operator hung the spiderweb strands of the antenne.
Practiced operator as he was, Jack had never quite lost his wonder
at the often recurring thought that from those slender copper
cables, seemingly inert, he could, by the pressure and release of a
key, send out a message, in time of danger, that would bring a score
of ships hastening to the stricken one. It was characteristic of the
boy that close acquaintance with the wireless had not in the least
dimmed his enthusiasm and reverence for its marvels.
On the bridge were three figures, shrouded in heavy coats. They were
the captain, chief officer, and second officer. From one end of the
bridge a seaman was constantly casting overboard a canvas bucket
attached to a rope and hauling it in board again. Each time he
brought the bucket to the group of officers, one of whom thrust a
thermometer into it and then read off the temperature of the water.
“Dropped ten degrees, by Neptune!” Captain Briggs exclaimed thickly
as Jack came up. He had just finished scrutinizing the thermometer
under the light of a hooded lantern.
“Ten degrees, sir!” cried Mr. Mulliner, the first officer.
“That’s what. We ought to smell ice before long,” was the reply,
with a loud, hilarious laugh.
CHAPTER III: A NARROW ESCAPE.
“It’s too bad. The captain has certainly been drinking,” mused Jack
to himself as he stood at attention and presented the dispatch he
had just copied.
“What’s this?” demanded the captain, regarding him with bloodshot
eyes that blinked suspiciously.
“Report from the _Seneca_, sir. Bergs in the vicinity,” spoke up
Jack.
“Report from the _Seneca_, eh?” muttered Captain Briggs muzzily.
“Well I know as well as they do there are bergs ahead. Let’s see
what it’s all about.”
He took the message and scanned it under the light of the lantern by
which he had been taking thermometer readings. His hand shook and he
called first officer Mulliner to read the message to him. Mulliner
repeated it in a grave voice.
“Hadn’t we better slow down, sir?” he asked.
“Slow down? What for?” blustered the flushed captain.
“Why, sir, the temperature of the water and then this dispatch all
go to show that we are nearing ice-fields, maybe growlers and bergs.
We are making fully eighteen knots now and----”
“We’ll continue to do so,” exclaimed the captain. “I’ve sailed these
seas for a good many more years than you’ve been on earth, Mr.
Mulliner.”
“That may all be, sir,” rejoined the young officer anxiously, “but
at this speed----”
“At this speed we’ll head ’em off according to my calculations,”
declared the captain. “If we slowed down we’d land in the middle of
’em. If we keep full speed ahead, we’ll pass to the south of ’em.”
“Then you mean to race them, sir?”
“That’s what. If that’s what you want to call it. Now get to your
duty, Mr. Mulliner,” added the captain in sharp tones, as if he felt
he had been too lenient even to argue with his subordinate. Mr.
Mulliner, muttering something about “suicidal,” turned away.
“Any orders, sir?” asked Jack, when he was alone with the captain.
Captain Briggs shook his head. He was a seaman of the old school and
did not place much faith in wireless.
“Just stick at your instruments,” he said, “but if there’s bergs
about the look-out, bet my nose ull pick ’em up ahead of any fool
wireless contraption.”
Jack made his way aft, burning with indignation. Here was a fine,
new ship, being driven at top speed toward the greatest peril a
seaman can encounter, at the whim of a man who had been drinking.
But there was nothing to be done, as Jack reflected with a sense of
speechless anger. Aboard ship the captain, no matter how insane his
orders may appear, is absolute czar of the situation. His word is
law. He can hang or imprison, for mutiny, anyone who dares to
question his orders.
The young wireless operator paused, before he reentered his snug
cabin with its shining instruments, to lean over the rail and gaze
out into the night. The mist had thickened now. It struck at his
face like clammy fingers. The night was quite silent but for the
vague hum of the engines far below him, and the hiss and roar of the
sea as the hulk of the _Cambodian_ was driven through it.
Ahead it was almost impossible to see anything but a dense, black
pall that might hide anything. Dimly through the mist curtains, Jack
could make out the figure of the look-out in the crow’s nest.
Occasionally he could catch his hoarse shout of “All’s well” and an
answer, booming through the smother, from the bridge.
Suddenly the whistle began sounding. At regular half minute
intervals it shrieked hoarsely.
Jack knew what they were doing. If bergs were in the vicinity, in
the intervals of silence between blasts, an echo would be flung
back.
“Pshaw, that’s a haphazard way of detecting bergs at best,” muttered
Jack to himself.
But he found himself listening with strained ears to catch the
slightest sound of an echo after each clamorous yammer of the big
siren. He fell to musing of the night on the _Ajax_ when the big
berg had loomed up before them.
Details of that night were told in the first volume of the Ocean
Wireless Series, which was called “The Ocean Wireless Boys on the
Atlantic.” This volume introduced Jack, his strange dwelling place,
and his odd relative, Cap’n Toby Ready, to our readers. We found
Jack, pretty well disheartened in his ambition to become a wireless
operator, on his way home among the shipping to the queer old
derelict craft where he lived with his uncle Toby, the latter a
purveyor of vegetable drugs and medicine, to old and superannuated
skippers.
Seeing a crowd on a dock, Jack went to find out what was the matter.
He soon discovered that the young daughter of Jacob Jukes, the
millionaire head of the great shipping combine, had strayed from her
father, who was visiting a great “oil-tanker” moored there, and had
tumbled overboard.
Jack leaped from the dock, while the others stood paralyzed with
helplessness, and saved the child in the nick of time. This won him
Mr. Jukes’ extravagant gratitude. He wanted to give Jack money. But
all Jack wanted was a job as wireless operator on the big
“oil-tanker,” the _Ajax_. He got it. Mr. Jukes would have given him
the ship had he asked for it. But the millionaire was autocratic.
After Jack’s first voyage he wanted the lad to give up the sea and,
at a big salary, become the friend and companion of the
millionaire’s son, Tom, a sickly lad. This by no means suited Jack
and he and the millionaire quarreled.
But Jack forged steadily ahead in his chosen profession. On his
first voyage, by a clever wireless trick, he brought confusion on a
gang of tobacco smugglers and set all their plans at naught. For
this brave act he almost paid with his life. But all came out well,
and on a homeward voyage from Antwerp he was able, once more with
the aid of the wireless, to unite Mr. Jukes and his son, Tom, who
had become separated when the millionaire’s yacht caught fire and
burned to the water-line at sea.
In the next volume, which was called “The Ocean Wireless Boys and
the Lost Liner,” Jack found himself the natty chief wireless man of
the crack West Indian liner, _Tropic Queen_, one of the finest
passenger craft plying those waters.
Jack and his assistant, a youth named Sam Smalley, // 015.txt found
themselves involved in an intrigue almost at once. A mysterious
wireless code and a plot to steal papers involving the Panama Canal
formed its chief features.
In trying to fight the ring of rascals, against whom he found
himself pitted, Jack was drugged in the Island of Jamaica and cast
into an inaccessible dungeon--part of an old Spanish castle called
The Lion’s Mouth. By wonderful ingenuity and pluck he escaped from
the fate planned for him.
Later a safe was blown open on the _Tropic Queen_ and the Panama
Papers were stolen.
But Jack’s quick work at the wireless key soon summoned Uncle Sam’s
speediest battleships and cruisers to an ocean wide search for the
yacht, on board which was the gang that had stolen the papers. They
were recovered eventually by Jack and handed over to the rightful
owner. But not long after the Tropic Queen was caught in a hurricane
and cast on an island.
All seemed lost, for a huge tidal wave overwhelmed the wreck to
which Jack and Sam had swum out, leaving the others ashore. But
eventually the two boys reached land and rejoined the other
Castaways. The message that Jack had sent out before the convulsion
of nature ended, the lost liner had reached other crafts, however,
and all were rescued safely. Jack and Sam each received substantial
rewards for their services.
Jack was turning out of the night to reënter his cabin when Raynor
came along. He was going on watch again.
“What news?” he asked, as he paused near Jack.
“Nothing much, except that there is ice ahead.”
“Bergs?”
“Yes, and growlers too, and field ice maybe. The _Seneca_ reports
it.”
Raynor looked about him in a puzzled way.
“But we haven’t slowed down,” he said at length.
“That’s just it. Captain Briggs is a drinking man. He is drinking
to-night and reckless. He means to keep right on this way.”
“Why, that’s madness. At any minute----”
“That’s just what Mr. Mulliner says--. But what are we going to do?
You know as well as I do that the skipper’s word is law at sea.”
Raynor perched himself on the rail, balancing there high above the
water, a favorite position with him.
“I wish you’d brace your legs when you do that,” remarked Jack. “If
there was a sudden lurch or anything you’d go right overboard, and
nothing could save you. I’ve spoken to you a dozen times about it
and----”
“I know you have, you croaking old land-lubber,” laughed Raynor,
“it’s alright. As for danger, if you could see me lying in the
crank-pit, with the big steel throws smashing round within half an
inch of my nose I guess you’d be worried then.”
“No, I wouldn’t, because that’s your business and you know what
you’re doing,” responded Jack, “but balancing like that’s just pure
foolhardiness.”
“So there’s ice ahead?” said Raynor, ignoring Jack’s protest.
“That’s the report. They’re testing the temperature of the water on
the bridge. It’s falling all the time.”
“Well, what does that amiable maniac Briggs think he’s going to do,
knock a berg out of his way if he hits it?”
“No; he figures in his muddled brain that by keeping up full speed
he can pass to the south of the path of the bergs. In other words,
he’s racing them.”
“And if he loses the race there’ll be a most almighty smash-up.”
“That’s it. I---- What in the name of time is that?”
Jack broke off in an alarmed voice. Hoarsely, through the night, had
come the frightened cry of the man in the crow’s nest.
“For the Lord’s sake back her!”
“What’s up?” was shouted from the bridge.
“It’s ice. Ice dead ahead! To the port to starboard!”
With startled eyes and drumming pulses Jack stared forward.
Ghostlike, gigantic and looming white in the darkness a monolithic
tower overhung, as it seemed, the _Cambodian’s_ bow.
“Full speed astern!” came the voice of Mulliner, shrill with alarm,
and then the hoarse shout of Captain Briggs.
“No, confound you. Ahead! D’ye hear me--ahead!”
And then came a shout to the wheelman.
“Hard over! Hard over for your life!”
The _Cambodian_, at unreduced speed, swung off her course. A
shivering shock ran through her steel frame as she grazed the giant
berg and then--swung off, hardly scratched. Jack felt a quick bound
of his heart. In spite of his dissipation, Captain Briggs had shown
he knew how to handle the emergency. That quick order of full speed
ahead, and the swift shifting of the wheel had enabled the
_Cambodian_ to save her life.
“Say, Raynor, old man!” cried the boy enthusiastically, while the
shouldering form of the berg grew dim, a passed menace, and the
raucous shouts of the crew rose up to him, “say Raynor, I’ll take
back what I said about Captain Briggs. I----why don’t you answer?”
Jack turned swiftly. Then he stiffened with alarm. The place where
his chum had been perched upon the rail was vacant. Raynor was gone.
For a brief instant Jack was silent from the shock. Then his voice
rang out in tones of vibrant fear.
“Man overboard!” he cried, running forward stumblingly, “man
overboard!”
CHAPTER IV: MAN OVERBOARD!
Simultaneously with the shivering shock of the impact with the
iceberg, Billy Raynor felt himself lose his balance.
He grasped frantically at the air as he fell backward. But the next
moment, too alarmed to cry out, he was himself tumbling through
space. Then came the sharp shock and the icy sensation of his
immersion as he struck the water.
He came to the surface, his lungs full of brine and his ears roaring
as if an express train had been rushing past them. He gasped for
breath and spat the salt water out. Far above him he saw for a flash
the black, high hull of the _Cambodian_. He saw her lights. For a
brief instant he could hear shouts.
And then the ship had passed by. An instant later she had vanished
from the castaway lad’s sight.
“Help!” yelled Raynor, finding his voice at last. He sent the cry
echoing and volleying across the dark water again and again. But
there was no response.
A chill of deadly fear, not altogether born of the icy water, struck
in at his heart. He was alone on the Atlantic. Nothing but his own
efforts would keep him above the water very long. And weighted as he
was by his water-soaked clothes, he felt his strength ebbing every
moment.
“Great heavens,” he moaned to himself, “is this to be the end? Am I
doomed to end my life here in the ocean with nobody to know of my
fate?”
He cast his eyes upward. Then he almost gave a shout of relief.
Towering above him was a mighty white wall.
It was the iceberg to which he owed his predicament.
It has been said that drowning men will clutch at straws. This may,
or may not, be true, but certain it is that to Billy Raynor, almost
exhausted by his long fight in the chilly water, the iceberg
appeared a haven of refuge. Like most of such huge ice structures it
was very irregular in shape.
Near him was a spot at which a narrow shelf stretched out close to
the water’s edge. Raynor struck out for it and drew himself upon the
ledge of ice. Then, for a time, he lay there supine, too weak to
even move.
He was fearfully cold. His teeth chattered and he felt as if his
flesh must be blue. But at least he had saved his life for the time
being. He knew that ten minutes more in the water would have
finished him. Raynor sat up and took stock of the situation.
He was afloat on an iceberg, a precarious enough situation surely.
His momentary feeling of exultation at having found a safe refuge
began to fade. He felt a wave of fear pass over him. He shouted with
all his might, cupping his hands and casting his voice in the
direction he thought the _Cambodian_ had vanished. But had he known
it he was sending his appeals in altogether the wrong quarter, for
the iceberg was slowly revolving as it lumbered its way south.
“This won’t do. I mustn’t give way,” thought the lad, pluckily
striving to overcome his depressing fears.
He felt in his pockets. The tin box in which he was carrying down
his midnight lunch for consumption in the _Cambodian’s_ engine room
was still there.
“That’s lucky,” thought Raynor, and was still more pleased when he
found that its contents, sandwiches and a piece of pie, were not
much damaged by water. He began to eat ravenously, in the meantime
turning his dilemma over and over in his mind.
“I’m in the steamer track anyhow,” he thought. “I’m bound to be
sighted and picked up before long, even if the _Cambodian_ isn’t
standing by and waiting for morning.”
But then came the disquieting thought that the iceberg was drifting.
He had no means of knowing how fast. But by daylight it might be far
south of the steamer track, which is as well marked as any land
road, and rarely deviated from by any vessels except sailing craft.
“And just think how little things can grow into big ones,” mused the
lad, as he munched his scanty store. “Jack told me not to balance on
the rail. If I’d taken his advice instead of laughing at it I
wouldn’t be here. I’d be on board the _Cambodian_. Jove though--” he
broke off suddenly, as a new thought struck him,--“maybe the
_Cambodian_ was badly ripped by the collision. She may have
sunk--and Jack----”
He buried his face in his hands, too much unnerved by all that he
had gone through to think any longer. By degrees he regained
possession of his faculties, however. He fell once more to revolving
his plight. He need not fear death from thirst for he had his knife
and could chip off fragments of ice and let them melt in his mouth
when he felt so inclined. Food, though, was another consideration.
He resolutely set aside two sandwiches and half his wedge of pie for
emergencies.
It was still dark and misty and he could see little but the blackly
heaving water at his feet and the towering white walls of the berg
above him. Suddenly, however, he became aware of a sound, a strange
sound to hear in his present position.
It was the sound of a footfall, furtive and cautious!
The blood flew poundingly to the boy’s pulses. He sprang erect,
knife in hand. What he might be called upon to face he did not know.
But he knew he was not alone on the iceberg.
His heart beat thick and hot and then seemed to stop. Advancing
onward, from round a shoulder of ice which reached down to the shelf
on which he had found refuge, was a tall white form.
It resembled nothing that the boy had ever seen. As if in a
nightmare he stood there fixed as a graven image, staring at it with
starting eyes as it slowly approached him.
CHAPTER V: IMPRISONED.
Captain Briggs looked blankly at Jack as the frightened boy came
forward by leaps and bounds to the bridge, shouting “Man overboard,”
a cry which was speedily taken up and echoed from end to end of the
ship.
“Whasser marrer?” demanded the captain, seizing the excited boy’s
shoulder.
Jack pointed back into the obscurity. His voice was choked with
emotion.
“It’s Raynor,--Billy Raynor, second assistant engineer, sir. He fell
overboard when we bumped that berg.”
“He did, eh?” repeated the captain thickly, staring stupidly at
Jack. “Well, he’s in Davy Jones locker by this time you may depend
upon that.”
For a moment Jack stood stupefied. Then he broke out angrily,
utterly forgetting all discipline.
“Aren’t you lowering a boat? Why don’t you order one away? Raynor’s
drowning back there.”
“Look here, my lad, you’re excited,” said the captain in more
collected, sober tones, “I’m not going to lay my ship to among these
icebergs on the chance,--it’s one in ten thousand,--of saving him. A
boat couldn’t live among that field ice. It would be crushed in a
jiffy.”
“Then you’re going to hold on your course without an effort to save
him--? You’re going to abandon him like a coward?” shouted Jack,
beside himself.
“Nuzzing to be done,” mumbled the captain, relapsing again, “on your
course, Mr. Mulliner.”
But Jack was too far enraged to stand this. He sprang forward and
grasped the first officer’s sleeve.
“Mr. Mulliner, sir, you won’t see this cowardly thing done? You
won’t leave that poor lad back there without a chance for his life?”
“I can’t help it, my boy, captain’s orders, sorry,” and the officer
stepped into the wheelhouse to give the steersman his orders.
“It’s murder,” shouted Jack, “I’ll see that you suffer for it,
Captain Briggs. It’s a black crime, it’s the work of a coward,
it’s----”
A heavy hand fell on his shoulder. It was Captain Briggs. His face
was aflame with indignation.
“Wadderyer mean, you young jackanapes,” he roared, beside himself
with anger and the potations he had drunk, “Jenks, Andrews!”
The seamen who had been heaving the bucket stepped up. They stood
waiting.
“Bind this young turkey cock hand and foot and lock him in his
cabin,” thundered Captain Briggs, “he’s guilty of mutiny on the high
seas, by Neptune. To-morrow I’ll see if there’s not a pair of irons
on board that will fit him.”
“Do you mean that I am under arrest, captain?” stammered Jack,
completely taken aback.
“I do, yes, sir, and it may go hard with you if I don’t change my
mind,” yelled the captain furiously. “Take him away, you men, and
I’ll hold you responsible for him.”
Jack saw red for a minute. He made a leap for the captain but the
two sailors caught him.
“Easy there, young feller, easy,” one of them whispered, “we’ve no
more use for him than you have, but going on this way ain’t goin’
ter get yer anything. Better come quietly.”
With a sigh that was half a sob Jack submitted to be bound and then
half carried, half dragged, to his cabin. He heard the key turned in
the lock. He was a prisoner. A wild idea crossed his mind of
flashing out by wireless an account of his plight and the captain’s
drunkenness.
The next instant it dawned upon him that he was powerless. He was a
prisoner, bound hand and foot like a criminal. And where was Raynor?
Dead, beyond the possibility of a doubt. He could not have lived
more than a few moments in that icy sea. Jack groaned aloud in
anguish as he strained and writhed at his bonds. His plight was
quite forgotten in his anxiety over Raynor’s fate.
“Hist!”
The sibilant sound of a man’s voice demanding attention broke in on
Jack’s sad reverie at this juncture. It came from a circular
grating, made for ventilation in the door of the cabin. Jack looked
up and saw the face of one of the seamen looking in at him. The hard
lines of the mariner’s countenance were illumined by the electric
light within the cabin.
“Well, what’s the matter?” demanded Jack, rather petulantly.
The man, it was the one who had been addressed as Andrews by Captain
Briggs, began speaking rapidly and cautiously.
“This here Captain Briggs,” he began, “we don’t like him no more
than you do. I’ve sailed with him before. There’s a plot on foot
to----”
The heavy footsteps of an officer approaching caused the face to
vanish and the voice to cease. Outside, Jack recognized Mr.
Mulliner’s voice giving an order.
“Andrews, you can get forward, you too Jenks. There’s no need to
stand on guard here. Give me the key.”
Jack listened and heard the men clump off in one direction. Then he
heard the sound of Mr. Mulliner’s footsteps die out. He was left to
his own reflections once more. His mind dwelt on the mysterious hint
dropped by Andrews.
“There’s a plot on foot----” the man had said.
Jack wondered to himself if there was a mutiny brooding on board the
_Cambodian_. There had been a seaman’s strike in New York when she
sailed, and the crew was made up of all sorts of water-front
riff-raff. Some of them were desperate-looking characters.
The young captive struggled with his ropes as these thoughts ran
through his mind, But the knots had been tied by seamen, and try as
he would he could not loosen them. The bonds began to impede his
circulation and grow painful in the extreme.
“Well, I suppose I’ll have to reconcile myself to my fate till
morning,” said Jack to himself resignedly. “Something tells me that
this voyage is going to turn out to be not quite so tame as I
thought. From what that fellow Andrews said, mutiny is afoot among
the crew, and we are not yet forty-eight hours out of port.”
His reflections were startlingly interrupted.
The sharp crack of a revolver split the night from somewhere
forward. Then came hoarse shouts and the sound of trampling feet.
“The trouble has started already!” exclaimed Jack, rising in his
bunk despite the cruel pain the sudden movement gave his bound
limbs.
CHAPTER VI: MAROONED ON AN ICEBERG.
“Am I going crazy?”
Raynor, marooned on the drifting berg, passed a hand across his
eyes. The white form that had menaced him with he knew not what
peril a minute before had vanished as suddenly as it had appeared.
Badly overwrought, the lad stood staring at the place where he had
seen it.
“This won’t do,” he said to himself, “I mustn’t lose my nerve and
get to seeing things.”
With an effort he braced up his faculties. With infinite patience he
waited for daylight. At last, after what seemed years, the east
began to flush with the dawn. Soon a gray light was diffused over
the sea, the fog had lifted and the horizon could be seen in every
quarter.
Raynor gave a groan, despite his determination not to give way, as
he gazed about him. The sea was empty. The berg, surrounded by a
small belt of floating ice, was the only object on the surface of
the waters. Not even a streak of smoke on the sky showed the
vicinity of steamers.
“I must have drifted right off the ocean track in the night,”
muttered Raynor. “It’s a million chances to one now if I ever get
picked up.”
The thought overwhelmed even his sturdy determination to bear up. He
sank down on the berg utterly unnerved. How long he sat there with
his head between his hands in an attitude of abject despair he did
not know.
But he was aroused by a sound of snuffling not far from him. He
looked up and gave a shout of terror as he did so.
Eyeing him from a slight acclivity of the berg not a hundred feet
away, was an immense polar bear!
Like a flash he realized that this was the mysterious visitant of
the night, the other occupant of the drifting berg. The creature, as
is not uncommonly the case, must have been trapped on the berg when
it broke loose from the ice fields of the north.
The bear stood perfectly still except for a wagging motion of its
long, narrow, almost snake-like, head. Had the circumstances been
different Raynor could have found it in his mind to admire the snow
white king of the polar regions. But now his emotions were very
different. The bear was no doubt famished, and he was unarmed,
except for his knife, which would not be much more use than a
darning needle against such an antagonist.
Cold as it was the sweat broke out on the lad’s brow as he realized
his position. He stood immovable, staring at the white bear. The
great creature, too, appeared to be pondering its next move. Behind
Raynor the berg rose to its summit in a series of ledges. Anxious to
place as great a distance as possible between himself and the wild
beast, the young engineer began to climb upward.
The bear did not follow till he had clambered some distance up the
icy walls.
Then it extended its long neck, and opening its mouth emitted an
appalling roar. Raynor’s blood ran cold as he saw it shuffle
deliberately from the ledge where it had been eyeing him and begin
to climb up after him.
“I’ve not a chance on earth,” he groaned.