<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
<p>As I came over the side of the yacht, Dorothy
was at the rail and in a moment was in my arms.
“Thank God! Thank God! you are back,” she
murmured. “You are back and the awful waiting
is over, but how many wives and sweethearts will
wait all the rest of their lives!”</p>
<p>Tom was but a moment behind his sister. “Do
you mean to say that every boat, without exception,
has gone?” he questioned.</p>
<p>“Every one within my range of vision. Between
eighty and ninety in all,” I answered.</p>
<p>“Good God! What a catastrophe,” said Tom
dazedly. “I can’t realize it.”</p>
<p>My little yacht was still alongside, and the
skipper now hailed us. “Mr. Orrington, sir, could
somebody else take our boat in, and could we go
with you? I think, sir, we’d feel easier, if we could
go with you.”</p>
<p>There was something to do. In a few minutes
an exchange had been made, and my crew was on
the larger yacht. As they came over the rail, Tom
met them with a low request to keep their mouths
shut.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_254">[254]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Don’t fear us,” said my skipper. “We’re
alive, that’s all we ask for. We don’t have any
call or wish to talk about it. Do we, mates?”
The other men shook their heads dumbly, and
went slowly to their places.</p>
<p>“What became of your propeller?” asked Tom,
coming back towards us.</p>
<p>“Disappeared. Your rubber valves closed the
hole.”</p>
<p>“Then he tried to sink you.”</p>
<p>“Undoubtedly,” I answered. “It was your
wooden boat and cage of caema which saved me.”</p>
<p>As we made for Folkestone, we met other boats
hurrying out on the Channel. Tom had ventured
out farther than any one else. One by one, they
hailed us, but our captain gave them no news and
made on.</p>
<p>“I wish I knew what to do,” I said wearily. “I
can’t write this thing. I feel stunned and broken.
I’m not sure what I ought to do, anyway. Any
ordinary or even extraordinary thing is proper
journalistic stuff, but this is too big, somehow, for
individual use. Yet the one thing that ought to be
done is to get the news to the world as soon as
possible.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know what to tell you,” said Dorothy
hesitatingly. “Isn’t your London correspondent
to be in Folkestone waiting for you?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” I said.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_255">[255]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Well, ask him. You and I will go ashore, and
Tom can put out with the yacht. Then there
will be no chance of the sailors’ telling anything.”</p>
<p>“All right,” I answered. “I don’t seem to care
what happens.”</p>
<p>Folkestone Pier was a black mass of people
looking out to sea as we came in, and a surging
crowd came towards us, as Dorothy and I landed,
while our boat, with Tom in the stern, shot back
towards the yacht. Had it not been for three or
four policemen, we could not have forced our way
through the jam, but by their aid we managed to
struggle through, shaking our heads in response to
the thousand questions. As the human tide ebbed
back towards the end of the pier, I heard my name
and turned. It was Maxwell, our London correspondent.</p>
<p>“What news?” he asked eagerly, when he
reached me.</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you, if you’ll get us out of this crowd,”
I answered.</p>
<p>“I’ve got a motor here. Come on,” he said, and
we made our way out, boarded the motor and
started slowly off. I looked at the chauffeur.</p>
<p>“Run out to a quiet place where we can be
alone, will you?” I said to Maxwell.</p>
<p>In a few moments we had cleared the town, and
were on the bluff above the sea. There was no
one around. “This will do,” I said.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_256">[256]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>As we descended, Maxwell looked questioningly
at Dorothy.</p>
<p>“This is my fiancée, Miss Haldane,” I explained.
“I forgot to introduce you. She knows the whole
story.”</p>
<p>Just where we paused, an iron seat faced the
wide expanse of blue and shining water, and for a
moment I gazed out over the Channel and breathed
a silent prayer of thanksgiving for my escape, of
remembrance for the men who lay beneath that
flood. Then I turned, and began my story. Ere
I had spoken a dozen words, Maxwell had his
note book out, writing rapidly. Throughout, he
wrote without a question, without a word. As I
ended, he closed his note book slowly.</p>
<p>“What we want to know, Mr. Maxwell,” said
Dorothy anxiously, “is the right thing to do.
Should this go straight to the paper, or ought it to
go first to the English government? You see there’s
probably no living man who saw this except Jim
and his sailors, and we want to do right. We want
to do right by the men that died, and the people
that remain.”</p>
<p>Wise, able, thoughtful, a scholar and a gentleman,
a great journalist, a man who counted among
his friends the greatest men of two countries,—no
man could be found who could decide such a question
better than Maxwell. He looked at Dorothy.</p>
<p>“That was the very question in my mind, Miss<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257">[257]</SPAN></span>
Haldane,” he answered. “But I think there’s
only one answer. I believe we should take this
straight to the King. He is at Buckingham Palace,
and I believe we should go directly to him with the
story. I have met him a number of times, and I
know we can get an audience immediately.”</p>
<p>“I’m very glad you think so,” I said. “How
about the trains?”</p>
<p>“We can do it better in my car,” he replied.</p>
<p>Ten minutes for gasolene, and we started off.
Through quiet villages where red farmhouses
stood framed in vivid green, by tower and manor
house embowered in ancient oaks, through hedge-rowed
land and city street we sped, till the rows of
villas, each modelled from a single type, showed
the outskirts of London. Then, at a slower pace,
we passed through a smoky fog, across the river,
by the Abbey, to the long front of Buckingham
Palace. All the way we sat silent under the heavy
burden of the news that brought the end of those
long centuries of unconquerable British power.
No enemy who could be conquered had they met.
The day had come for peace, and Britain and
Germany had been the greatest sufferers in the
change of epochs.</p>
<p>Past the red-coated sentry, to the door of the
palace we drove. A few words on a card brought a
secretary with a startled face, and scarce five
minutes had elapsed before Maxwell was ushered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258">[258]</SPAN></span>
in. Dorothy and I remained in the car. As Maxwell
left, he remarked, “Orrington, under any
ordinary circumstances, I’d ask for an audience for
you, but now there’s no time to be lost. I can get
an immediate interview alone, where I could not
get one with you.”</p>
<p>“That’s all right,” I said apathetically, “I’m
glad not to be obliged to move.”</p>
<p>We waited before the palace the better part of
an hour before the door opened and Maxwell
emerged. As he came towards us, I could see that
he was blowing his nose vigorously, and that his
eyes were moist. He got into the car without a
word, but as we swung over the bridge into the
Park, Maxwell made his first remark, staring off
into vacancy, “I always thought the King was
about the finest man that England held. Now I
know it.”</p>
<p>That was all I ever learned of the interview, but,
as we came by the Abbey, I heard a newsboy
crying, “Destruction of the fleets,” and I looked
inquiringly at Maxwell. He nodded in reply, “We
published it first. I telephoned the news from the
palace.”</p>
<p>Weary and sad as I was, broken with the horror
of the day, my purpose had become stronger than
ever before. As we ran slowly through Whitehall
and around to the Savoy, the thoughts of the past
were disappearing in cogitations as to the effect<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259">[259]</SPAN></span>
this would have upon our search for “the man.”
Though every battleship in the world was sunk,
my purpose held good. I would find the destroyer.</p>
<p>The next morning came a startling announcement.
The King of England, the President of the
United States, the President of the French Republic,
the Mikado of Japan, and the Czar of Russia
issued an immediate call for representatives of all
nations to assemble at The Hague to consider the
question of disarmament. That, in itself, differed
but little from the other summonses which had
resulted in academic discussions, but the paragraph
which succeeded the call was one of the most
extraordinary the world had ever seen. The five
rulers who issued this invitation each pledged himself
to do everything in his power to bring about
complete disarmament, and to end war in the
whole world. In view of the urgency of the situation,
the meeting was to be held in a month at The
Hague.</p>
<p>It was soon learned that the initiative in this
step had come from the King of England, that the
four other rulers had gladly joined with him in the
action, when asked concerning it by wireless, and
that the Emperor of Germany had been invited to
make one of the number, but had refused. That
seemed to leave Germany as the stumbling-block
in the way. Complete disarmament was wholly
possible if every nation were to agree. If a single<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260">[260]</SPAN></span>
powerful nation refused to disarm, it became
practically an impossibility,—for no nation would
give up her defenses, with a powerful armored foe
at her gates.</p>
<p>I had scarcely finished reading the account in the
morning paper, as a waiter approached with a
wireless message from the office. “Take three
weeks’ vacation, and then go to Hague as special
correspondent for peace conference.”</p>
<p>“Confound it!” I ejaculated, as I read the
missive. “Look at this,” and I passed the paper
over to Tom and Dorothy. Tom’s face fell.</p>
<p>“Of course it’s a good thing in a way,” said
Tom, “but it takes you right off the track of ‘the
man.’”</p>
<p>“I refuse to go off the track,” I said warmly.
“I’m going to wire them back refusing this.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I wouldn’t do that,” interrupted Dorothy
eagerly. “You stand almost, or quite as much of
a chance to get news of ‘the man’ at the peace
conference, as elsewhere. We can take the wave-measuring
machine right over to The Hague, and
work from there. Besides, I want the three weeks’
vacation.”</p>
<p>“Better take the vacation, and put it in with me
down at Cambridge,” remarked Tom. “They’re
doing some work in one of the colleges that might
help me with the Denckel machine. I’d like to
watch it awhile, and see its bearing on the case.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261">[261]</SPAN></span>
Dorothy would have enjoyed it once, but now she’s
hopeless. You two can come down, though, and
roam round for three weeks there, as well as anywhere
else. It’s a jolly country, and we’ll have a
good time.”</p>
<p>“Well, if you feel convinced it’s the thing to do,
I’ll do it,” I said resignedly. “But I want to put
in three weeks here in London, getting things together.
We’ve never run down that Cragent clue
yet.”</p>
<p>“You are neither of you going to do any such
thing,” remarked Dorothy firmly. “I’ll tell you
what you are going to do for the next three weeks.
You’re going to Paris with me.”</p>
<p>“Oh, pshaw!” said Tom disgustedly. “Paris
is a hole. I want to go to Cambridge. Do you
like Paris, Jim?”</p>
<p>“Not particularly,” I said, with some hesitation,
“but then—”</p>
<p>“We’re going,” said Dorothy.</p>
<p>“What for?” said Tom argumentatively.</p>
<p>“Well, if you must know,” said Dorothy blushing,
“I want to shop.”</p>
<p>Tom burst into a roar of laughter, and I looked
at him in bewilderment. He leaned over towards
me.</p>
<p>“Got the cards engraved yet, Jim?”</p>
<p>Dorothy blushed still more. I saw a sudden
light.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262">[262]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Of course we go to Paris,” I said enthusiastically.
“It’s the place of places.”</p>
<p>“And you’ll sit round for hours, waiting in a
dinky little cab or in a motor car on the Boulevard
Haussmann, while Dorothy spends her patrimony
inside. Is there a special duty on trousseaux,
Dorothy?” he asked, with an affectation of seriousness.</p>
<p>“I wish you’d stop,” said Dorothy emphatically.</p>
<p>“All right,” said Tom. “Only I thought I’d
better wire my banker to see if my balance would
leave us anything to go home on.”</p>
<p>Three weeks in Paris, hours when I sat and
smoked outside big shops and little shops, afternoons
in the Bois, little “diners à trois” at great
restaurants, life, and light, and joy. Three weeks
with Dorothy, then the day express to The Hague,
and a week of watching the arrival of the envoys,
while Tom, who had run across an old assistant of
Carl Denckel’s, set up the wave-measuring machine,
and spent his days working over it, in an
attempt to widen its scope and bring it nearer to
its ever present mission. It still remained our chief
reliance for our search.</p>
<p>Anxious as I was to return to the quest of “the
man,” the work at The Hague proved fascinating
in the extreme. My daily report told of the coming
of representatives from almost every nation, and,
best of all, told of the free and full powers given<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263">[263]</SPAN></span>
them to agree to complete disarmament, provided
it could be universal. Day after day, in the month
which intervened between the calling of the convention
and the opening of the meeting, had come
reports of parliaments and congresses hastily
gathered together to consider the question, and of
their eager passing of favorable votes. One by
one they came, till every nation had joined in consent,
save one. Germany still held aloof. Since
the disappearance of the fleets, the German emperor
had made no movement to advance the war,
but kept his armies gathered, his transports riding
at anchor in the ports. The Reichstag met, and
discussed most favorably the call to The Hague,
waiting anxiously for some sign from its imperial
master, but none came. In absolute seclusion, in
a lone castle in the depths of the Black Forest, he
sulked like Achilles in his tent.</p>
<p>The first day of meeting came with every power
represented save Germany. The second and
third passed with no sign from Berlin. On the
fourth, I began to see signs of difficulty. It was
evident that the consent of the German empire
was a <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">sine qua non</i>. Delegate after delegate arose
and expressed the eager desire of his country to
disarm and bring about universal peace, provided
(and the provided was emphatic) all other nations
did the same. On the evening of the fourth day,
an American delegate rose, and by a powerful<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264">[264]</SPAN></span>
speech so roused the assembly that a delegation
was appointed to meet the German Emperor and
ask him, in the name of the conference, to join with
the other nations. After the delegation was named,
the meeting adjourned for three days, until they
could return.</p>
<p>On the night when the delegates were to return,
I was in my place in the correspondents’ section of
the hall of the conference. The meeting came to
order, the preliminary business was finished, and
the presiding officer arose to say that the delegates
had been delayed in returning, but had telegraphed
that they would be there within an hour. He had
scarcely finished speaking, when a door opened,
and a marshal announced “The delegation sent to
His Majesty the Emperor of Germany.”</p>
<p>Travel-worn and weary, the five men walked up
the aisle to the space at the front. “Gentlemen,
are you ready to report?” said the presiding
officer.</p>
<p>“We are,” said the head of the delegation.
“The Emperor of Germany refused absolutely to
see us, pleading an indisposition. We were unable
to obtain any satisfaction.”</p>
<p>The grave assembly rose like the sea. Shouts,
cries, requests for recognition, came in one clamorous
volume, and the president sounded his gavel
fiercely. The excitable Latins were shouting recriminations.
It looked as if the seething mass<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265">[265]</SPAN></span>
would break up in utter disorder, and the great conference
would end without result. Far off by the
door, I could see a marshal forcing his way
through the crowded aisles, imploring, struggling,
fighting. He reached the rostrum, mounted it, and
spoke in the president’s ear. With a tremendous
effort, he shouted, “Silence for important news.”
Little by little, the crowd stilled. In a resonant
voice came the words, “An envoy from the Emperor
of Germany desires to address the conference
in person.”</p>
<p>A hush came over the assembly, a hush so sudden,
so profound, that I could hear the scratching
of the fountain pen with which the secretary before
the president wrote the words. The aisles cleared,
and the ordered assembly sat silently in their seats.
The great door opened and, preceded by a corps
of marshals, the envoy from the great Hohenzollern
entered. The stiff, unbending figure, the haughty
head, the piercing eyes and high, upturned moustache
of the field marshal envoy showed his imitation
of his master, the war lord. Proudly, as on
parade, he paced to the space where the president,
who had descended to the floor to greet him,
stood. He bowed coldly and turned.</p>
<p>“My master has sent me here,” he said abruptly,
“to address your conference. These are his words,
‘I have believed that war, that armies made for
the best good of my state; I believe it still. I do<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266">[266]</SPAN></span>
not believe in peace. But I cannot expose my navy
to destruction, my sailors and my soldiers to death.
I therefore agree to peace. My armies shall disband,
my fortifications be torn down, my battleships
sunk or turned to peaceful ends. My
Reichstag will have confirmed my words ere now.’”</p>
<p>As one man, the assembly arose and cheered.
Never, in his own city or from his own troops,
came heartier greetings than that which rung out
for the last ruler to take up the cause of peace.
The field marshal stood there, while the tumult
raged, his hands resting on the hilt of his sword,
erect as ever, impassive as ever. As the cheering
ended, he bowed to the assembly. Turning, he
bowed to the president, and then, with martial
step, he slowly withdrew. The delegates from
Germany arrived the next day with power to disarm,
and the business of signing the agreements
and plans of disarmament went on so rapidly that
the conference was able to adjourn in but a few
days’ time.</p>
<p>The day the conference closed, I rushed back
from the telegraph office the moment I had sent
off the last word of my final despatch. I found
Tom and Dorothy in the laboratory. “There,
thank goodness,” I cried exultantly, “that’s over.
Now I can go back to the hunt for ‘the man’ with
an easy conscience. What do you think that next
move ought to be?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267">[267]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Hold on, till we finish this,” said Tom. “We’ll
talk things over as soon as I get this screw set.”</p>
<p>I watched him idly as he worked. “What is he
trying to do now?” I asked Dorothy.</p>
<p>Just as I spoke, Tom moved his hand, the low
buzz of a Ruhmkoff coil broke in on the silence of
the room, and the glorious beauty of the tube of
unknown gas that we had found in Heidenmuller’s
laboratory illumined the place.</p>
<p>“Why, there’s the gas tube,” I cried in amazement.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Dorothy. “From that tube has
come a marvellous development of the Denckel
apparatus. Tom has been able to receive with it
right along, but never send. One day he thought
of placing that tube of gas in the circuit, and now
he can send, as well as receive. Tom has done a big
thing. He can reverse the action of the machine,
not only receive a message from any place, but
shoot a wireless back across space, and have it
strike exactly where he wishes. It’s really a wonderful
development, but I don’t see how it’s going
to help us find ‘the man,’ and I don’t want to give
up. There, Tom is finishing. We’ll talk things
over now.”</p>
<p>“If ‘the man’s’ crusade were not over, it might
be even more effective,” I remarked reflectively.
“It would have been strange enough if we had
found him by means of the gas released from
metal destroyed by his terrific power.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268">[268]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“It would have been,” answered Dorothy.</p>
<p>I stood watching Tom, as, pipe in mouth, he
set the revolving belt in motion and watched the
moving cylinders.</p>
<p>“To what strength of wave is it adjusted?” I
asked.</p>
<p>“I’ve put it on the high,” said Tom. “It’s
fixed for ‘the man’s’ waves. I’ve got one new
dodge, though, among others. I have it arranged
so I could have told at any time whether ‘the man’
was sinking a ship or just experimenting. It’s so
delicate that when his waves strike a ship, the
machine can tell it by the slight loss in power.
See here,” he turned on the switch in its revolution,
“it’s this.” Flash went the beam.</p>
<p>A groan burst from Dorothy’s lips. “He’s at it
again. There’s a ship gone down.”</p>
<p>Tom’s face was ghastly. “That’s right,” he
said. “Where is he?”</p>
<p>Five minute’s calculation brought it.</p>
<p>“He’s in Tokio,” said Dorothy.</p>
<p>Tom nodded. “What a fiend to have loose in
the world. Here his mission is accomplished and
war is over, and he keeps on.”</p>
<p>Dorothy sprang from her chair. “No, it isn’t
that. I’m sure of it. He doesn’t know that war
is over. It must be that. We must tell him of it.”</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269">[269]</SPAN></span></p>
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