<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
<p>As we stood there in the hush that followed the
last bars of the song, Tom came towards us.
Dorothy turned to him, starry eyed, and he looked
quickly at me. I nodded. Tom smiled widely, as
he stretched out his hand.</p>
<p>“Nobody else in the world I’d as soon would
have her, old man,” he said, as he nearly wrung
my hand off. Then turning to his sister, “Well,
little girl, so you’ve waked up at last to the real
state of things.” Dorothy clung to his arm.</p>
<p>“Tom, dear, I have, and I am very happy,
but—” her voice broke. “It may only be for to-night.
Jim leaves at once for the fleet. He is going
out to watch the battle, and if the man sends
out his waves to sink those ships, I am afraid he’ll
sink every other boat anywhere near.”</p>
<p>“This, my children,” said Tom, with a flowing
gesture, “is where your old uncle Thomas steps
in as the benevolent fairy who saves the handsome
lover of the beautiful young princess.”</p>
<p>Dorothy looked at him, her whole soul in her
eyes. “Tom, don’t joke. Have you any way by
which Jim can go and be safe? I can’t ask him
to stay behind for me, when he ought to go.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241">[241]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Dorothy,” said Tom seriously, “I think Jim
can go and be perfectly safe. I thought this whole
business out, coming over in the boat. Not being
completely and totally blind, I foresaw the inevitable
occurrence which has inevitably occurred,
and I didn’t want to lose Jim for my own sake, as
well as my sister’s. I’ve had this on my mind ever
since we left Portsmouth. I knew he’d think he
ought to go; so as soon as I reached Folkestone I
had a little yacht built, a sloop with an auxiliary
motor, which hasn’t a nail in her. She’s all wood,
rubber and canvas, except the engine, and if the
engine disappears there’s a set of rubber valves
that instantly closes the shaft hole. ‘The man’
can come right up alongside, stand up and throw
waves at her, and she can’t sink. I had a wire
from there to-night that she was done. They’ve
been working on her twenty-four hours a day since
I started her, and she’s a mighty nice little boat.
The crew is engaged, and all Jim has to do is take
possession.”</p>
<p>“That ought to save the boat,” said Dorothy,
shaking her head sadly, “but how can you save
Jim from the fate of Dr. Heidenmuller, or of the
men on the battleships who died as he did?”</p>
<p>“You never did have much opinion of my
brains, Dorothy,” said Tom. “Don’t you suppose
I thought of the effect those waves would have?
You know none of the other ships in Portsmouth<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242">[242]</SPAN></span>
harbor were injured, when the German ship disappeared.
That proves that the man has some
way of directing his waves. So he may not hurt Jim
at all. But I didn’t take any chances on that. I’ve
had a cage of caema built over the cockpit, and
everything is arranged so that the boat can be run
without going outside that cage.”</p>
<p>Dorothy heaved a sigh of relief. She bent forward
and kissed Tom in the full face of the assembly.</p>
<p>“Tom, you’re the finest, best man in the world,
except one.”</p>
<p>“That’s it,” said Tom with a grin. “Second
place for old uncle Thomas now.”</p>
<p>“But Tom,” I said, “I follow the boat construction
all right, but for Heaven’s sake what is
this caema that I’ve heard so much about, and
what’s the use of the cage?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I forgot you might not understand that,”
said Tom. “You know, or you ought to know,
it’s in every school physics, that if you put a cage
of a conductor like copper around any instrument
which is easily affected by any electrical discharge,
the electrical waves spread out, follow the surface
of the cage, and don’t penetrate the interior. The
instrument is wholly unaffected. Well, caema is
the newest organic conductor. It acts the same
way with any radio-active waves. They spread
out all over it, and can’t get through. I’ve had a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243">[243]</SPAN></span>
cage built of it to insulate you and everything else
that’s inside.”</p>
<p>“Why wouldn’t it work around the battleships
then?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Because the battleships are made of steel; and
if you put a cage like that around them, they could
hardly move. It only worked on your boat because
it’s wood outside.”</p>
<p>“Tom,” I said gravely, “I imagine your forethought
and knowledge will save my life.”</p>
<p>“I know it will,” said Tom cheerfully. “Now,
what time do you leave?”</p>
<p>“In fifty-five minutes, from Charing Cross, on
the Channel Express,” I said.</p>
<p>“We’ll go with you to Folkestone,” said Tom.</p>
<p>“Of course,” said Dorothy.</p>
<p>A few minutes at the Savoy, a brief ride down
the lighted Strand in the midst of the noisy crowds,
a moment in the rush of the station, and a long ride
in the darkness, in a full compartment, brought us
back to Folkestone.</p>
<p>All the way down I held Dorothy’s hand in my
own. All the way down her warm body was close
to mine. Despite all Tom’s precautions, something
might go wrong, but, if it ended to-night, we
had this, and hope persisted that it would not end
to-night, that, on the other hand, this was the
beginning of many happy years.</p>
<p>The crew of three was on board the little yacht,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244">[244]</SPAN></span>
which looked no different in the dark from any
other boat, though, as we came alongside in the
skiff, I could just see a cage of some dark substance
above the cockpit. We entered through a latticed
door toward the bow, and Tom for half an hour
examined every part of the boat with a lantern, the
caema screen most vigilantly of all. Dorothy and
I sat close together, watching the lights and their
reflection in the water. All about the pier was
hurry and movement. Three tugs, bearing correspondents,
passed us as we lay at anchor, and half
a dozen despatch boats and cutters. Tom came
up to us at last.</p>
<p>“Jim, if you keep the door of the cage fastened,
nothing can happen to you.”</p>
<p>“Don’t be foolhardy, though, for my sake,”
said Dorothy.</p>
<p>“Come, Dorothy, we must go. It’s time for
Jim to start,” said Tom gently, and I strained
Dorothy to my heart and felt her wet cheek against
mine.</p>
<p>“I’ll be back safely, dear love,” I whispered, as
I helped her into the waiting boat.</p>
<p>Tom wrung my hand as he left. “Jim, I’d go
with you, but I think I ought to stay with Dorothy.”</p>
<p>“I know you ought,” I replied, and they cast off.</p>
<p>As we started off into the blackness, Dorothy’s
clear “Till we meet again, dear,” were the last
words that reached me.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245">[245]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Our London office had been able to obtain
pretty definite information as regards the whereabouts
of the fleet, and our little boat was a marvel
of swiftness. So it was with no great surprise that,
as the morning dawned, I saw far ahead of me,
off the port bow, the rear ships of the squadron
going slowly ahead, and shortly after came in sight
of the whole fleet. My binoculars showed the
greatest spectacle I had ever beheld. From East and
West, from North and South had come the hurrying
ships to guard the coasts of the great island
empire from attack. I counted forty mighty ships
as I gazed. In regular formation they went onward,
slowly, disdainfully, proudly. Somewhere
to the north, beyond that gray line which bordered
my view on every side, another fleet was coming.
At best, it was to be the greatest trial of naval
strength the world had ever seen. All other naval
battles would sink into obscurity before this, in
which were met the utmost resources of Germany
and England. At worst, it would be a series of
dumb, helpless disasters, as the fleet, stricken by
an unseen, unknown foe, would perish. Near
me were two of the boats bearing men from the
papers. The men on them jeered as they saw our
dark cage, and passed uncomplimentary remarks
on the appearance of my boat. I kept silence,
watching the line of sky and sea. Out on the
farthest point, at last I saw a dot, then half a dozen<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246">[246]</SPAN></span>
more, then more, and I counted up to thirty. Over
on my right a great splash of water rose, and a dull
reverberation sounded. Germany had fired the
first shot. The flagship of the English admiral was
nearest me, on the extreme left of the line. As I
watched, I saw the great ship turn slightly, and I
knew by the sound that they had fired in return.
Sight availed nothing in telling whence came the
shot, for the newest smokeless powder left no trace.
The ship swung back on her course, the great flag
of the Empire hanging at her stern, scarce lifted by
the breeze. I could see figures, through my
powerful glasses, hurrying about the decks, and
three or four officers on the bridge peering through
their glasses at the enemy. I had focussed wholly
on the British flagship, and watched intently for
her next move. Suddenly my lenses grew blank,
and I was staring at sea and sky. The gray waves,
rising and falling, filled the field. The battleship
had disappeared. I dropped my glasses in utter
amaze. I found myself once more repeating the
words of Joslinn concerning the Alaska. “Vanished
like a bursting soap-bubble.” I looked to
right and left. I raised my glasses. Of all that
company of men, of all those implements of war
and of destruction, not one thing remained. Yes,
there was a dark spot on a lifting wave. Eagerly I
trained my lenses on it. Now it came up on a
higher wave. A gleam of color. It was like cloth.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247">[247]</SPAN></span>
Again it rose. It was the flag of England. Alone
it had survived.</p>
<p>“The man” was at work. Where would he strike
next? The rest of the fleet went on, as if no blow
had come. Not by a sign did they show what had
come upon them. I glanced at my wire screen, and
at my crew who stood in a huddled group. The
correspondents, in the boats nearby, were standing
with white faces, peering ahead. I turned my
glasses on the German fleet. The leading ship was
coming forward, under full steam. A shot struck
just to my right, and I realized that peril might
come from other sources than from the man who
was trying, no, who <em>was</em> stopping all war. But it
was all in the game of life. My part in the game
just then was to be at that very place, and I thrust
back the thought of parting with Dorothy that,
despite myself, arose.</p>
<div id="Fig_247" class="figcenter" style="width: 424px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_261.jpg" width-obs="424" height-obs="650" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="center">I FOUND MYSELF COUNTING ALOUD. [<em><SPAN href="#Ref_247">Page 247</SPAN>.</em></p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Through my glasses, I gazed fixedly at the German
ship as she came on. Then, as before, came
the utter blankness, the gray sky and the waves
rising and falling. One English ship and one German.
Where would he strike next? As I asked
the question, another English ship disappeared
more swiftly than a cloud of light smoke scattered
by the wind. <span id="Ref_247">I found myself counting aloud</span>. In a
state of utter unconsciousness as to anything else,
I gazed fixedly to see which would go next.
“Four,” I counted, as a German cruiser off on the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248">[248]</SPAN></span>
right went down. “Five! six!” They were
going at the rate of one every two or three minutes
now. “‘The man’ must be in one spot, and he
has the range now,” I said to myself, as two more
ships disappeared. Those ships that remained
were firing rapidly. Now and again a shot would
hit, and a cloud of steel fly out from a turret, or a
big hole appear in a side. Their brothers were
dying an awful death, the sister ships of the fleet
were disappearing before their eyes, but the men
who directed those gray bull dogs of war kept on.
In a perfect frenzy of excitement, I cheered aloud.
“Oh plucky, plucky!” I cried, as the squadrons,
closing their thinned ranks, bore down on each
other. Twenty had gone from eighty-two, destroyed
by this wonder-worker. Ten of the rest
were in sore straits. Shots were falling on every
side of me, but, in the mad excitement of the
moment, I heeded them no more than if they had
been paper pellets. Then the death-dealing machine
seemed suddenly to accelerate its action.
“Twenty-five, twenty-six, twenty-seven, twenty-eight,”
I counted slowly. The fleets never changed
a point of their course. Not by a gun was the fire
slackened, save in the few ships disabled by the
enemy. The fortieth ship had disappeared for ten
minutes. Then, as by a common understanding, the
fire of each side slackened for a moment as the
ships, closing up their ranks, maneuvered for new<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249">[249]</SPAN></span>
positions. In the lessening din, I could hear the
chug-chug of the little motor of our boat. That
sound always carried me back to the night when
Dorothy and I sought the man who saw the Alaska
go down. The dark Jersey shore, the little launch,
and Dorothy beside me suddenly rose before my
eyes, and I was there, and not in the midst of this
awful carnage. But it was only for a moment.
The pause in the work of destruction ended almost
as it began. One after another, twenty-two ships
more went down, and the antagonists, who had
started with eighty-two of the proudest ships that
any empire ever sent forth, were reduced to a
shattered remnant of twenty. Then suddenly they
gave way. Flesh and blood could stand no more.
Slowly, but proudly as ever, and with no haste of
flight, the Germans drew off to the north, the English
to the south. As they parted, another ship and
yet another disappeared. I groaned in impotent
agony. “Spare them, spare the rest?” I cried
wildly. “Can’t you see they have given up the
fight.”</p>
<p>Remorseless in his purpose, the man went on.
Again and again, with measured blows, he struck
the retreating fleet. One by one, their existence
ended, and the now sunlit ripples of the Channel
rose and fell, where a moment before had sailed
these massive hulks.</p>
<p>I veiled my eyes at the close, but opened them<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250">[250]</SPAN></span>
as I felt a touch on my shoulder. “Are we to be
killed too, sir?” said my skipper, with twitching
lips and corded brow, where the cold sweat stood
in great drops. “Can we go now, sir?”</p>
<p>I nodded numbly, and we started. The only
boats in sight were two boats of the newspapers,
that had lain in apathy near us. As they saw us
start, their skippers started, too. The correspondents
on their decks sat in stricken attitudes. Not
one was writing. They crouched, huddled together,
like men dying from cold. The three
boats ran towards shore, side by side. With fixed
gaze I followed the one on the right. Suddenly,
she also disappeared, and I fell into a wild rage.
“You fool, you fool,” I cried, shaking my fists.
“Don’t you know a non-combatant?”</p>
<p>The men on the boat to the left rose in an agony
of alarm, shouted incoherently, waved handkerchiefs.
My fury suddenly became extinct, and I
watched them apathetically. It would be their
turn next, or ours. I had lost all faith in Tom’s protective
schemes. One thing ran back and forth in
my brain. “If I had only married Dorothy before I
came, she could have worn black. Now, as it was,
would she or wouldn’t she?” That was the only
thing which distressed me. They say a man awaiting
instant death thinks over all his past life. I
didn’t, I only worried as to whether Dorothy would
or would not wear black.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251">[251]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I looked up wearily. The sea was blank. The
other boat had gone. “So you went first,” I said,
calmly enough now. “I’ve always wondered
what the next world was like. Now, I’m going to
know.”</p>
<p>Ceaselessly went the chug, chug of the engine.
Back and forth into the shuttle of my thought went
the Jersey coast, and the problem of whether or not
Dorothy would wear black.</p>
<p>The noise ceased in an instant, and I wondered
at it dully. The crew sat heavily in the stern, the
skipper holding the wheel. I could see his brown,
knotted hands white with the anguished grip with
which he clasped its rim. We lay in the long swell
of the Channel in utter silence. Of all those
thousands, we were left alone, rising and falling on
the billows, absolutely without energy and without
the slightest desire to act. The motor stopped,
we could hoist the main sail from the cage, but
we thought of no such thing. For minutes, which
seemed like hours, we lay there while I gazed indifferently
at the water. A hoarse cry from the
skipper aroused me.</p>
<p>“Lookee there!” he shouted. I turned at the
command and started. Scarce a hundred yards
away was the conning tower of a submarine above
the waves. Its top was open and a man’s head,
the face masked with huge goggles, faced us. As
I gazed with open mouth, the head disappeared,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252">[252]</SPAN></span>
the top closed, and the conning tower sunk beneath
the waves. I had seen “the man.”</p>
<p>The sight somehow galvanized me into energy.
Now I had seen that the antagonist was a human
being, and not a superhuman power, I would fight
for my life. I ordered the sail raised through the
cage, taking great care not to disturb it, and we
started slowly back to Folkestone. Hours later, as
we came up towards the harbor, I saw a yacht
approaching. On the bridge were three figures.
There was the flutter of a white dress beside the
man at the wheel. As they came nearer, I saw it
was the yacht I had chartered for our hunt in the
Channel. The man and the girl on the bridge
were Tom and Dorothy. As they came alongside,
Tom called.</p>
<p>“What happened?”</p>
<p>I raised my head. “We four are all that are
left,” I said sadly.</p>
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