QUELLING THE MUTINY. “So you will have it, eh?” The leader of the Black Squad, a huge hulk of a fellow, stripped to the waist and smeared hideously with coal-dust, sprang forward. Above his head he brandished a heavy slice-bar. He came straight for Jack and was raising his formidable weapon to strike the boy down when something happened. Crack! There was the report of a pistol and the fellow fell headlong. But it was not Jack’s pistol that had exploded. The boy could not have brought himself even in that moment to fire on a fellow being. It was Mr. Brown’s weapon that had spoken. He came straight for Jack ... when something happened.—Page 258 The men murmured sullenly. Their leader was gone, and without him they wavered and hesitated. The captain came running aft. “What in the mischief is going on here?” he shouted. “Fire-room crew. Mutiny, sir!” said Raynor. “We held ’em as long as we could, but the scoundrels overpowered us. The first is lying below wounded, sir. That fellow Mr. Brown shot felled him with a slice-bar.” The captain’s brow grew black as night. “Back to your posts, you mutinous dogs!” he roared. “Back, I tell you, or some of you will feel cold lead!” He advanced toward them, driving them before him by sheer force of character as if they had been a flock of sheep. Completely demoralized, the men shuffled below again. Certain men were told off to attend to the wounded chief engineer, whose injuries were found to be slight. As for the man Mr. Brown had shot, he turned out not to have been injured at all. The chicken-hearted giant of a fellow had simply dropped at the report of the pistol and lain there till the trouble blew over. He was placed in irons and confined in the forecastle to await trial in port on charges of mutiny. And thus, by prompt action, the mutiny was quelled almost in its inception. The thoroughly cowed firemen took up their work and nothing more was heard of refusal to do duty. It had been a good object lesson to Jack who, in ranging himself by the side of Mr. Brown and the young engineer, had acted more on instinct than anything else. “Well, we are all right for the time being,” said the captain to Mr. Brown. “No need to keep these men by the boats.” “Then we are not hurt as badly as you thought, sir?” “No, the report is that the bow bulkhead is holding, although our forward plates are stove in. Thank goodness, we didn’t hit harder!” “Yes, indeed, sir.” “When daylight comes we’ll start to patch up. I hope this witches’ broth of a fog will have held up by then.” “I’m glad that it was no worse, sir.” The captain and the officer went forward, and Jack was left alone. He took the opportunity to snatch a nap, adjusting the “wireless alarm” so that any ship that came within the zone would awaken him instantly. Twice during the long night he tried to raise some other craft, but each time failed. “I guess they’ve called in all the ships on the ocean,” said the boy to himself as, after the second attempt, he desisted from his efforts for the time being. When daylight came, the big tanker presented a forlorn picture. Of the berg that had almost sent her to the bottom, there was no sign, although the fog had lifted quite a little. The stout steel bow was twisted and crumpled like a bit of tin-foil. There was a yawning cavity in it, too, through which the water washed and Besides the protection of the crumpled bow by the canvas screens, another portion of the crew was sent below to strengthen the bulkhead from within by heavy timbers. There was a space between the front end of the tanks and the bulkhead, and in this they labored, bracing the steel partition as firmly as possible. But Jack, when he made his report, heard Mr. Brown, who had the watch, remarking cheerfully to the second officer that the barometer had risen and that the prospects were for good weather. “Well, we deserve a little luck,” was the response. He had not been there ten minutes, when Jack, his face full of excitement, came hurrying up with a message. “Important, sir!” he said. The captain glanced the message over and then burst into an angry exclamation. “They are asking for assistance, you say?” “Yes, sir. But all I could catch is on that message there.” “Great guns! Mr. Brown, sir, disasters always appear to come in bunches.” “What’s the matter, sir?” asked the sympathetic officer. “Why, young Ready, here, has just caught a message from the air. A ship is in distress somewhere.” “Any details, sir?” “None. This is all the wireless caught. ‘S.O.E.,’ and then a few seconds later, ‘No hope of controlling it.’” “Sounds like fire to me, sir,” said Mr. Brown. “So it does to me. Hustle to your key, Ready, and get what more you can. If we can help them, we will, though Lord knows we’re in bad enough shape ourselves!” |