<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
<p>The engines of the motor boat slowed, gave
a final chug, and stopped. “Brading Harbor,”
remarked our boy guide laconically, as he threw
the anchor, and stepped to the stern to pull in
the skiff that trailed after us. Before us lay the
estuary of the Yar, its black water scarcely
differentiated in color from the dark shores that
rose above it. A huddle of buildings lifting on our
left changed from blots of blackness into shadowy
outlines, sprinkled here and there with light,
as we rowed in. The lad pulled steadily, with but
an occasional glance at the shore. The steady
strokes of the oar slowed down, the blackness
ahead seemed to rush towards us more swiftly,
and the boat ran silently up on to the sand. I
jumped out, the little anchor in my hand. We
were at Brading Harbor.</p>
<p>Without a word, the boy pulled up the boat,
dug the flukes of the anchor deep into the sand,
and started off into the darkness.</p>
<p>“Come on, Tom,” I said laughing. “This
is an Arabian Night Expedition headed by one of
the mutes of Haroun Al Raschid. Hustle up, or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114">[114]</SPAN></span>
we’ll be left behind.” About three hundred yards
from our landing-place our guide suddenly disappeared;
we came abruptly on the corner of a
small brick building, and rounded it to find him
working on the padlock of a broad, low door.</p>
<p>“Bee’s here,” remarked the boy, flinging the
door open as we came up.</p>
<p>We stepped just inside and paused. The
scratch of a fusee, the clatter of a lifted lantern,
and the low room sprung into light.</p>
<p>A weird sight met our eyes. On a shelf three
great diving helmets, with shining cyclopean eyes
of heavy glass, reflected back the lantern’s flame,
and showed barred side windows looking like
caged ear-muffs. On the shelf below three pair
of huge shoes, with leaden soles, seemed ready
for some giant’s foot, rather than for the use of
man. As the light shifted, the armor on the wall
came into view; copper breastplate and twilled
overalls, hosepipe and coils of safety line; a
veritable museum of diving paraphernalia.</p>
<p>Tom turned to the boy. “You’ll have to show
us very carefully how to run the safety line and
the air pump, while you’re down.”</p>
<p>“I don’t go down,” said the boy. “Heart’s
wike loike. Niver go down.”</p>
<p>Tom and I stared at each other in consternation.
With one accord we turned to the boy again.</p>
<p>“Who is going down?” I cried.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115">[115]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Ayther of you thot loikes,” responded the
boy calmly.</p>
<p>“I’ll be the one to go, Tom,” I cried, “I’ve
got to see it with my own eyes to write it up
properly.”</p>
<p>“Why can’t we both go?” exclaimed Tom
eagerly. “I don’t want to be out of this.”</p>
<p>The boy broke in. “Needs two men oop on
rope and poomp.”</p>
<p>“Oh pshaw!” said Tom disgustedly, “I don’t
see why I shouldn’t be in this. I tell you what
we’ll do,” he went on, his face brightening, “you
go down first, and then come up, and I’ll go down
after you.”</p>
<p>“All right,” I said. “It’s a go.”</p>
<p>The boy had stood motionless while our discussion
had gone on.</p>
<p>“How’ll you get the stuff down?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Tike it on a barrow,” he replied briefly,
turning to bring a big wheelbarrow forward.</p>
<p>“Tike they two,” he said, pointing to the two
helmets on the right and the shoes below them.
Tom and the lad took a helmet, and placed it on
the barrow. I took a pair of shoes, and nearly
dropped them. “Great Scott,” I ejaculated,
“they weigh a ton.”</p>
<p>“Twinty pund,” corrected the lad, without a
smile. “You’ll need it on bottom.”</p>
<p>We loaded till the boy said “stop,” then took<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116">[116]</SPAN></span>
our burden to the skiff, carried it out to the boat,
returned for a second load, shipped that, locked
the door, and came down to the shore through the
still night. We had neither seen nor heard any one
during our visit.</p>
<p>As we started out of Brading Harbor, Tom
remarked, “I’ll take the wheel, boy, I’ve got the
course. Get the armor on Mr. Orrington.”</p>
<p>Never did I experience such a strange toilet.
The dress of tan twill, interlined with sheet rubber,
and the copper breastplate were clumsy and awkward
enough. The shoes, twenty pounds to each
foot, were no winged sandals of Mercury, but the
huge helmet was worst of all. I seemed to be prisoned
in a narrow cell and, despite myself, I could
not wholly keep from wondering what would happen,
if the air pipe should break, or the rope snap.
The big lens, the bull’s-eye that was the window
of the front of the helmet, was left open till I went
down, and I took in the salt air in huge breaths
through the orifice, expanding my chest to its full
capacity, while the lad silently plied his wrench
on the nuts that clamped the helmet water-tight.
At length the suit was adjusted, and the safety
line tied securely round my waist. Then the boy
spoke.</p>
<p>“Up one, down two. That’s all ye need.”
He jerked the rope in my hand once, twice, and
then started forward to take the wheel. We had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span>
been racing swiftly across, towards the lights of
Portsmouth, as I made my diving toilet, but my
thoughts, far swifter, had gone thousands of miles
more. Suppose I never came up? If I did not,
would Dorothy ever know? Had I made a
mistake in not speaking before? Unavailing
regret tore at me. Yet stronger than any regret
or any weakness was my determination to fulfil
my mission. Here was the next step. I must
see what lay below the waves. As I sat there, in
my cumbrous raiment, I tried to analyze my sensations.
No danger I had heretofore encountered
had ever caused me anything but a pleasing excitement.
Why should this have a disquieting
effect upon me, when Tom was so eager to go.
The answer came like a flash, in Lord Bacon’s
words, “He that hath wife and children, hath given
hostages to fortune.” I had neither as yet, but
my whole heart was set on having them. My
feeling was not cowardly fear. Rather, it was
instinctive regret at taking the chance of going
and leaving Dorothy behind. I breathed easier
when I had worked that out, and gradually, as
my mind quieted, the uneasiness gave away to a
sense of eager expectation. The shore lights were
growing brighter, and Tom, leaving his place at
the bow, came down the boat towards my seat
in the stern.</p>
<p>“We’re almost there, old man,” he remarked<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118">[118]</SPAN></span>
jubilantly. “The lad has the bearings. He’ll
put us over the exact spot, and then you can go
overboard. It’s a chance of a lifetime.”</p>
<p>Just as he spoke, the lad turned. “Bee’s there,”
he said, as he stopped the motor and threw out
an anchor. The great coil of rope ran swiftly
down for a considerable distance, and brought
the boat up with a jerk. The boy came back
towards us.</p>
<p>“Screw up t’ bull’s-eye now an’ start t’ poomp,”
he directed.</p>
<p>“Good luck, old man,” said Tom, wringing
my hand, as he started up the air pump.</p>
<p>“Same to you. I go with leaden steps,” I remarked,
waving my lead-soled shoe as I spoke.</p>
<p>Tom’s hearty laugh was the last thing I heard.
The bull’s-eye shut, and I found myself breathing
fast. To my surprise the air supply was ample,
no trace of taint,—good, wholesome air. “Come,”
I said to myself. “This is not half bad.” Aided
by the boy, I clambered clumsily over the bow and
went down the little ladder. As I entered the water,
the weight of my suit went from me, I was borne
up as if I were in swimming, but, as I sank slowly,
I began to feel a strange earache, increasing in
intensity till I thought I should cry out with the
agony. My forehead above my eyes seemed
clamped in a circlet of red hot iron, and the bells
of a thousand church spires seemed ringing and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span>
reverberating through my head. I could see
dimly the black water about me, and I gripped the
metal case of the electric lamp that I held in my
hand, till I feared it would crush into fragments.
All of a sudden I touched bottom, and the pain
ceased. The relief was so great that for a moment
or two I stood motionless, luxuriating in the
respite and, as I started to go on, I realized that
a slight depression was the only unusual bodily
feeling left. I turned the switch of my lamp and
looked about me. Nothing but clean, white
sand, nothing to show which way I should turn.
“Straight ahead is the best course,” I decided,
and I started forward, my boots and dress, heavy
and dragging on the surface as they were, of but
the slightest inconvenience here. Fortunately
for me, the tide was no serious hindrance, and I
was to windward of the boat. Before moving
I turned my lantern in every direction. One thing
was sure. There was no huge hulking shadow,
such as a warship lying on the bottom would make.
My lamp but dimly outlined the lane of light on
the sand along which I started forward. Now that
I was about my work, and had safely reached the
bottom, the strangeness of the situation began to
wear off. I went ahead twenty measured steps,
casting my light in every direction. No result.
I paced back the same number to keep my position
even. Turned to the right, and repeated the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span>
maneuver. Turned to the left, and did the same.
No sign. Apparently the depths had remained
untouched since the Royal George had been
cleared from the harbor, back about 1840. Returned
from my last trip, I turned off my lantern,
to save its current, and stood in the darkness
pondering. I did not want to go backward from
the place where I was. Such a step would put
me to leeward of the boat, and the lad had warned
me against such a move, saying that it might be
hard for me to make progress against the tide.
There was nothing to be done save to try a further
cast of fortune, so I pushed on twenty paces forward
and started to count twenty more. Just as
I was reaching the limit, the lantern gleam showed
a shadow ahead of me. I hurried on till the object
came into the full light. There, peacefully as if
sleeping in his quiet bed at home, lay a midshipman
in his blue uniform. He could not have been
fifteen years of age. His golden hair, that a mother
might often have kissed and caressed, swayed with
the slight movement of the waters. His arm lay
naturally beneath his head. As I knelt beside this
childish victim of a dread mission, a wave of
bitter rebellion passed over me. I cried out in
very intensity of feeling. The sound reverberating
through the helmet to my ears seemed a mighty
roar, and, surprised into realization, I braced
myself to my work and looked more closely. There<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121">[121]</SPAN></span>
was something strange about the uniform, something
different from that on the youngsters I had
seen about German harbors. I studied the form
before me for a minute before I saw what it was.
At last I placed it. The buttons, the brass buttons
were gone. I looked more narrowly. Not a glint
of metal showed. Rising, I passed on, and
entered on a city of the dead beneath the waves.
Officer and sailor, steward and electrician lay
in quiet rest. They lay all around me, as if sleeping
on a battlefield, ready for the struggle of the
morning. I had paced many steps before I reached
the end. A thousand men lay there. Not one
had even a shadow of surprise, of premonition of
death, upon his brow. All lay as if ready for the
reveille, the reveille which would not sound for
them. It seemed no thing of earth. Rather a
scene from some unearthly vision where I, a disembodied
spirit, walked among the forgotten shells
of other souls. I wakened with a start, as I came
sharp up against a mass which gave way at my
approach. I flashed my lamp upon it. A heap of
crockery, broken and shattered, met my eye.
One plate in ornate gold showed the double eagle
and below “Kaiserin Luisa.” That heap of
broken crockery and this city of the dead were all
that remained of as fine a battleship, of as magnificent
a result of human ingenuity and skill, as
ever sailed the seas. I must not linger, though,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122">[122]</SPAN></span>
I had work enough to do, to find all I could of the
reasons for the catastrophe, and give place to
Tom before the dawn could come. Just beside
me lay an officer. I could not tell his rank, for
all insignia had disappeared. I stooped to look for
metal, when suddenly I felt myself rising steadily.
I was being drawn to the surface, though I had
given no signal. Indignantly I jerked the rope
twice again and again. The men above paid no
heed to my commands, and I mounted steadily
upwards.</p>
<p>As I rose the same pains attacked me as when
I descended, but the space through which they
endured seemed far shorter. In reality but a
brief interval elapsed before I was clambering up
the little ladder, to find myself in the full glare of a
powerful search-light, while the boat started off at
full speed. I had no time to look around till the
boy helped me to loosen the bull’s-eye in the front
of my helmet. Then I surveyed the scene.</p>
<p>The boat was going at her top speed, while
Tom ran her straight out towards the Isle of Wight.
<span id="Ref_122">The search-light of a warship</span> a mile or more away
was playing constantly on us as we sped along, and
I could see a spot of darkness, probably a launch,
leaving her side and starting in our direction. As
I gazed, I breathed in long breaths of fresh air.
I felt as if I had never known how good air, just
plain air, was, before.</p>
<div id="Fig_122" class="figcenter" style="width: 428px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_135.jpg" width-obs="428" height-obs="650" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="center">THE SEARCH-LIGHT OF A WARSHIP WAS PLAYING CONSTANTLY
ON US. [<em><SPAN href="#Ref_122">Page 122</SPAN>.</em></p>
</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123">[123]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Take off Mr. Orrington’s armor, boy,”
ordered Tom sharply. “You all right, Jim?”</p>
<p>“Sure,” I answered. “What are we in for?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know yet,” replied Tom, “but we’ll
know pretty soon. We can’t get away in this old
boat. We’ll run as long as we can, though.
Luckily they sent a launch, not a torpedo boat
or a destroyer. The battleship landed us with
their searchlight just a few minutes ago, and once
they fixed it on us, I pulled you up. Get anything?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” I replied, and fell back into silence,
while the lad valeted me out of my diving suit. The
launch was coming swiftly. It seemed to be
moving two feet to our one.</p>
<p>“It’s going to be a pretty close shave,” I remarked,
as I stood beside Tom, who had given
the wheel to the boy.</p>
<p>“Yes, but I’m going to head straight for Ryder,
and trust to luck,” he said. We were well towards
the shores of the Isle as the launch came near
enough to hail.</p>
<p>“Stop or we shoot,” came hurtling at us.</p>
<p>“No go,” said Tom resignedly, as he stopped the
engine, “and there’s the shore not five hundred
yards away.”</p>
<p>Just as he spoke, the light vanished. The
searchlight had gone out; something must have
happened to the current. We could hear the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124">[124]</SPAN></span>
officer swear vigorously, as the launch came up.</p>
<p>Tom seized my arm. “To the dingy,” he
whispered. “Lad, if you keep your mouth shut,
I’ll straighten everything out,” he murmured to
the boy, as we scrambled to the stern.</p>
<p>“Roight, sor,” said the boy briefly, as he sat
phlegmatically beside the engine.</p>
<p>Tumbling into the dingy, I seized the oars and
pulled swiftly towards the shore, as the launch
came up on the opposite side. We could hear
the hail as the officer came aboard, and his angry
raging “Where are the other men?”</p>
<p>“Don’t know,” answered the boy.</p>
<p>The officer ran to the stern.</p>
<p>“They have the boat, follow them,” he cried,
but just as the launch turned, we struck the shore,
and before the panting sailors could reach us, were
off the beach and sheltered in a deep doorway.
We heard their steps running by, as we stood
crouched against the wall, but we dared not venture
out till we had heard them returning after a
futile chase. Once they were by, we started off
into the country at a brisk pace.</p>
<p>The morning was well on as we came into
Seaview, whence we had planned to come back
to Portsmouth. I had finished my story, and Tom
had meditated on it for an hour, while we strode
sturdily on. As we stopped by a wayside brook
to freshen our toilet, he spoke. “No metal?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125">[125]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Not a bit,” I answered.</p>
<p>“Dorothy was right,” said Tom. “The man
who is trying to stop all war must have some
terrific power which utterly destroys metal, causing
it to change completely into some other form,
and instantly disappear. How horrible to have
that man at large. Jim, we’ve got to find him.
That little middy you told me of would fire my
purpose ten times over, if it were not ablaze already.
There’s one thing though,—do you
suppose the British government knows what we
know?”</p>
<p>“I have very little doubt they do,” I answered,
“I fully believe that somebody had been there
before us. Everything points that way; the closing
of all diving operations by the authorities, the
chase of our boat and their persistent effort to
capture us.”</p>
<p>“You must be right, Jim,” said Tom soberly.
“They wouldn’t want any one to know any more
about conditions than they could help. You can’t
tell what little thing will start the fire of war just
now. I guess we’d better keep this to ourselves
for the present.”</p>
<p>“Right you are,” I answered, as we walked
into Seaview.</p>
<p>We reached our rooms without the slightest
difficulty, and went to bed after a hearty breakfast.
We were awakened about twelve by a knock<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126">[126]</SPAN></span>
at the door, and the call of a familiar voice. It
was our friend Thompson, the manager. He
closed the door carefully, as I admitted him.
Then he turned and shook hands with me.</p>
<p>“Mr. Orrington,” he said, “you’re a great man,
and a lucky one. J. Miggs and his boy came to
see me this morning.”</p>
<p>“Then they didn’t keep them?” I cried.</p>
<p>“No,” said Thompson laughing. “J. Miggs
got out of prison, and his boy never got there.
The lad waked up for once. The launch with all
its crew went chasing you and, by the time they
got back, the youngster was safe at the dock at
Portsmouth, and the suits were stored. You’d
better not see either of them though. They may
be watched. If you’ll give me the money, I’ll pay
him and it will be all right.”</p>
<p>I paid the money, and we parted.</p>
<p>The moment Thompson closed the door, I
rushed into Tom’s room.</p>
<p>“Get up,” I said energetically. “J. Miggs
and his boy are both free; I’ve left the money for
them, and it’s time now for us to get out immediately.
This town is none too healthy a location for
us, now that business is out of the way.”</p>
<p>Tom’s loquaciousness had a habit of utterly
disappearing, when a new scientific conception
entered his head. As we drove to the station,
he stopped the cab at a bookseller’s, dashed in,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127">[127]</SPAN></span>
and returned with a package of books and papers.
Once settled in the train, “Don’t speak to me
till I get through, if you don’t mind,” he said,
“I’ve got something here I want to work out.”
He opened his new package, spread the books
on the seat, and took up a block and his fountain
pen. I scanned the titles of his books casually.
“New Insulators for High Currents,” “Control
and Insulation of Radio-active Apparatus,”
“Yacht Construction,” “Theory of Wood Working,”
“Caema, What It Has Done for Electricity,”
“Types of Sailing Vessels for the Past Twenty
Years.” “Queer mixture,” I said to myself idly,
and then I turned my attention to the scenery.</p>
<p>Tom was busy with his pocket rule, measuring
and laying off diagrams, for three hours, until the
outer edges of London began to appear. Looking
up suddenly, he spoke, “Almost in, aren’t we?
Well, I’ll put my work away, and we’ll discuss
our future plans for a few minutes.”</p>
<p>As we rolled into Waterloo station, our discussion
ended. “We’ll go down somewhere on
the Channel,” said Tom, “set up the wave-measuring
machine, and see what we can do with
that. It’s our best card, and we’ll work there till
Dorothy comes. We’ve got to hang round here till
she arrives, anyway.”</p>
<p>“We certainly have,” said I, and my heart
leaped exultantly at the thought of her coming.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></span></p>
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