<h2><SPAN name="chap43"></SPAN>CHAPTER XLIII.</h2>
<p>We who are aft, besieged in the high place, are stronger in numbers than I
dreamed until now, when I have just finished taking the ship’s census. Of
course Margaret, Mr. Pike, and myself are apart. We alone represent the ruling
class. With us are servants and serfs, faithful to their salt, who look to us
for guidance and life.</p>
<p>I use my words advisedly. Tom Spink and Buckwheat are serfs and nothing else.
Henry, the training-ship boy, occupies an anomalous classification. He is of
our kind, but he can scarcely be called even a cadet of our kind. He will some
day win to us and become a mate or a captain, but in the meantime, of course,
his past is against him. He is a candidate, rising from the serf class to our
class. Also, he is only a youth, the iron of his heredity not yet tested and
proven.</p>
<p>Wada, Louis, and the steward are servants of Asiatic breed. So are the two
Japanese sail-makers—scarcely servants, not to be called slaves, but
something in between.</p>
<p>So, all told, there are eleven of us aft in the citadel. But our followers are
too servant-like and serf-like to be offensive fighters. They will help us
defend the high place against all attack; but they are incapable of joining
with us in an attack on the other end of the ship. They will fight like
cornered rats to preserve their lives; but they will not advance like tigers
upon the enemy. Tom Spink is faithful but spirit-broken. Buckwheat is
hopelessly of the stupid lowly. Henry has not yet won his spurs. On our side
remain Margaret, Mr. Pike, and myself. The rest will hold the wall of the poop
and fight thereon to the death, but they are not to be depended upon in a
sortie.</p>
<p>At the other end of the ship—and I may as well give the roster, are: the
second mate, either to be called Mellaire or Waltham, a strong man of our own
breed but a renegade; the three gangsters, killers and jackals, Bert Rhine,
Nosey Murphy, and Kid Twist; the Maltese Cockney and Tony the crazy Greek;
Frank Fitzgibbon and Richard Giller, the survivors of the trio of
“bricklayers”; Anton Sorensen and Lars Jacobsen, stupid
Scandinavian sailor-men; Ditman Olansen, the crank-eyed Berserk; John Hackey
and Arthur Deacon, respectively hoodlum and white slaver; Shorty, the
mixed-breed clown; Guido Bombini, the Italian hound; Andy Fay and Mulligan
Jacobs, the bitter ones; the three topaz-eyed dreamers, who are unclassifiable;
Isaac Chantz, the wounded Jew; Bob, the overgrown dolt; the feeble-minded Faun,
lung-wounded; Nancy and Sundry Buyers, the two hopeless, helpless bosuns; and,
finally, the sea-lawyer, Charles Davis.</p>
<p>This makes twenty-seven of them against the eleven of us. But there are men,
strong in viciousness, among them. They, too, have their serfs and bravos.
Guido Bombini and Isaac Chantz are certainly bravos. And weaklings like
Sorensen, and Jacobsen, and Bob, cannot be anything else than slaves to the men
who compose the gangster clique.</p>
<p>I failed to tell what happened yesterday, after Mr. Pike emptied his automatic
and cleared the deck. The poop was indubitably ours, and there was no
possibility of the mutineers making a charge on us in broad daylight. Margaret
had gone below, accompanied by Wada, to see to the security of the port and
starboard doors that open from the cabin directly on the main deck. These are
still caulked and tight and fastened on the inside, as they have been since the
passage of Cape Horn began.</p>
<p>Mr. Pike put one of the sail-makers at the wheel, and the steward, relieved and
starting below, was attracted to the port quarter, where the patent log that
towed astern was made fast. Margaret had returned his knife to him, and he was
carrying it in his hand when his attention was attracted astern to our wake.
Mike Cipriani and Bill Quigley had managed to catch the lazily moving log-line
and were clinging to it. The <i>Elsinore</i> was moving just fast enough to
keep them on the surface instead of dragging them under. Above them and about
them circled curious and hungry albatrosses, Cape hens, and mollyhawks. Even as
I glimpsed the situation one of the big birds, a ten-footer at least, with a
ten-inch beak to the fore, dropped down on the Italian. Releasing his hold with
one hand, he struck with his knife at the bird. Feathers flew, and the
albatross, deflected by the blow, fell clumsily into the water.</p>
<p>Quite methodically, just as part of the day’s work, the steward chopped
down with his knife, catching the log-line between the steel edge and the rail.
At once, no longer buoyed up by the <i>Elsinore’s</i> two-knot drag
ahead, the wounded men began to swim and flounder. The circling hosts of huge
sea-birds descended upon them, with carnivorous beaks striking at their heads
and shoulders and arms. A great screeching and squawking arose from the winged
things of prey as they strove for the living meat. And yet, somehow, I was not
very profoundly shocked. These were the men whom I had seen eviscerate the
shark and toss it overboard, and shout with joy as they watched it devoured
alive by its brethren. They had played a violent, cruel game with the things of
life, and the things of life now played upon them the same violent, cruel game.
As they that rise by the sword perish by the sword, just so did these two men
who had lived cruelly die cruelly.</p>
<p>“Oh, well,” was Mr. Pike’s comment, “we’ve saved
two sacks of mighty good coal.”</p>
<p class="center">
* * * * *</p>
<p>Certainly our situation might be worse. We are cooking on the coal-stove and on
the oil-burners. We have servants to cook and serve for us. And, most important
of all, we are in possession of all the food on the <i>Elsinore</i>.</p>
<p>Mr. Pike makes no mistake. Realizing that with our crowd we cannot rush the
crowd at the other end of the ship, he accepts the siege, which, as he says,
consists of the besieged holding all food supplies while the besiegers are on
the imminent edge of famine.</p>
<p>“Starve the dogs,” he growls. “Starve ’m until they
crawl aft and lick our shoes. Maybe you think the custom of carrying the stores
aft just happened. Only it didn’t. Before you and I were born it was
long-established and it was established on brass tacks. They knew what they
were about, the old cusses, when they put the grub in the lazarette.”</p>
<p>Louis says there is not more than three days’ regular whack in the
galley; that the barrel of hard-tack in the forecastle will quickly go; and
that our chickens, which they stole last night from the top of the
’midship-house, are equivalent to no more than an additional day’s
supply. In short, at the outside limit, we are convinced the men will be keen
to talk surrender within the week.</p>
<p>We are no longer sailing. In last night’s darkness we helplessly listened
to the men loosing headsail-halyards and letting yards go down on the run.
Under orders of Mr. Pike I shot blindly and many times into the dark, but
without result, save that we heard the bullets of answering shots strike
against the chart-house. So to-day we have not even a man at the wheel. The
<i>Elsinore</i> drifts idly on an idle sea, and we stand regular watches in the
shelter of chart-house and jiggermast. Mr. Pike says it is the laziest time he
has had on the whole voyage.</p>
<p>I alternate watches with him, although when on duty there is little to be done,
save, in the daytime, to stand rifle in hand behind the jiggermast, and, in the
night, to lurk along the break of the poop. Behind the chart-house, ready to
repel assault, are my watch of four men: Tom Spink, Wada, Buckwheat, and Louis.
Henry, the two Japanese sail-makers, and the old steward compose Mr.
Pike’s watch.</p>
<p>It is his orders that no one for’ard is to be allowed to show himself,
so, to-day, when the second mate appeared at the corner of the
’midship-house, I made him take a quick leap back with the thud of my
bullet against the iron wall a foot from his head. Charles Davis tried the same
game and was similarly stimulated.</p>
<p>Also, this evening, after dark, Mr. Pike put block-and-tackle on the first
section of the bridge, heaved it out of place, and lowered it upon the poop.
Likewise he hoisted in the ladder at the break of the poop that leads down to
the main deck. The men will have to do some climbing if they ever elect to rush
us.</p>
<p>I am writing this in my watch below. I came off duty at eight o’clock,
and at midnight I go on deck to stay till four to-morrow morning. Wada shakes
his head and says that the Blackwood Company should rebate us on the
first-class passage paid in advance. We are working our passage, he contends.</p>
<p>Margaret takes the adventure joyously. It is the first time she has experienced
mutiny, but she is such a thorough sea-woman that she appears like an old hand
at the game. She leaves the deck to the mate and me; but, still acknowledging
his leadership, she has taken charge below and entirely manages the commissary,
the cooking, and the sleeping arrangements. We still keep our old quarters, and
she has bedded the new-comers in the big after-room with blankets issued from
the slop-chest.</p>
<p>In a way, from the standpoint of her personal welfare, the mutiny is the best
thing that could have happened to her. It has taken her mind off her father and
filled her waking hours with work to do. This afternoon, standing above the
open booby-hatch, I heard her laugh ring out as in the old days coming down the
Atlantic. Yes, and she hums snatches of songs under her breath as she works. In
the second dog-watch this evening, after Mr. Pike had finished dinner and
joined us on the poop, she told him that if he did not soon re-rig his
phonograph she was going to start in on the piano. The reason she advanced was
the psychological effect such sounds of revelry would have on the starving
mutineers.</p>
<p class="center">
* * * * *</p>
<p>The days pass, and nothing of moment happens. We get nowhere. The
<i>Elsinore</i>, without the steadying of her canvas, rolls emptily and drifts
a lunatic course. Sometimes she is bow on to the wind, and at other times she
is directly before it; but at all times she is circling vaguely and hesitantly
to get somewhere else than where she is. As an illustration, at daylight this
morning she came up into the wind as if endeavouring to go about. In the course
of half an hour she worked off till the wind was directly abeam. In another
half hour she was back into the wind. Not until evening did she manage to get
the wind on her port bow; but when she did, she immediately paid off,
accomplished the complete circle in an hour, and recommenced her morning
tactics of trying to get into the wind.</p>
<p>And there is nothing for us to do save hold the poop against the attack that is
never made. Mr. Pike, more from force of habit than anything else, takes his
regular observations and works up the <i>Elsinore’s</i> position. This
noon she was eight miles east of yesterday’s position, yet to-day’s
position, in longitude, was within a mile of where she was four days ago. On
the other hand she invariably makes northing at the rate of seven or eight
miles a day.</p>
<p>Aloft, the <i>Elsinore</i> is a sad spectacle. All is confusion and disorder.
The sails, unfurled, are a slovenly mess along the yards, and many loose ends
sway dismally to every roll. The only yard that is loose is the main-yard. It
is fortunate that wind and wave are mild, else would the iron-work carry away
and the mutineers find the huge thing of steel about their ears.</p>
<p>There is one thing we cannot understand. A week has passed, and the men show no
signs of being starved into submission. Repeatedly and in vain has Mr. Pike
interrogated the hands aft with us. One and all, from the cook to Buckwheat,
they swear they have no knowledge of any food for’ard, save the small
supply in the galley and the barrel of hardtack in the forecastle. Yet it is
very evident that those for’ard are not starving. We see the smoke from
the galley-stove and can only conclude that they have food to cook.</p>
<p>Twice has Bert Rhine attempted a truce, but both times his white flag, as soon
as it showed above the edge of the ’midship-house, was fired upon by Mr.
Pike. The last occurrence was two days ago. It is Mr. Pike’s intention
thoroughly to starve them into submission, but now he is beginning to worry
about their mysterious food supply.</p>
<p>Mr. Pike is not quite himself. He is obsessed, I know beyond any doubt, with
the idea of vengeance on the second mate. On divers occasions, now, I have come
unexpectedly upon him and found him muttering to himself with grim set face, or
clenching and unclenching his big square fists and grinding his teeth. His
conversation continually runs upon the feasibility of our making a night attack
for’ard, and he is perpetually questioning Tom Spink and Louis on their
ideas of where the various men may be sleeping—the point of which always
is: <i>Where is the second mate likely to be sleeping</i>?</p>
<p>No later than yesterday afternoon did he give me most positive proof of his
obsession. It was four o’clock, the beginning of the first dog-watch, and
he had just relieved me. So careless have we grown, that we now stand in broad
daylight at the exposed break of the poop. Nobody shoots at us, and,
occasionally, over the top of the for’ard-house, Shorty sticks up his
head and grins or makes clownish faces at us. At such times Mr. Pike studies
Shorty’s features through the telescope in an effort to find signs of
starvation. Yet he admits dolefully that Shorty is looking fleshed-up.</p>
<p>But to return. Mr. Pike had just relieved me yesterday afternoon, when the
second mate climbed the forecastle-head and sauntered to the very eyes of the
<i>Elsinore</i>, where he stood gazing overside.</p>
<p>“Take a crack at ’m,” Mr. Pike said.</p>
<p>It was a long shot, and I was taking slow and careful aim, when he touched my
arm.</p>
<p>“No; don’t,” he said.</p>
<p>I lowered the little rifle and looked at him inquiringly.</p>
<p>“You might hit him,” he explained. “And I want him for
myself.”</p>
<p class="center">
* * * * *</p>
<p>Life is never what we expect it to be. All our voyage from Baltimore south to
the Horn and around the Horn has been marked by violence and death. And now
that it has culminated in open mutiny there is no more violence, much less
death. We keep to ourselves aft, and the mutineers keep to themselves
for’ard. There is no more harshness, no more snarling and bellowing of
commands; and in this fine weather a general festival obtains.</p>
<p>Aft, Mr. Pike and Margaret alternate with phonograph and piano; and
for’ard, although we cannot see them, a full-fledged
“foo-foo” band makes most of the day and night hideous. A squealing
accordion that Tom Spink says was the property of Mike Cipriani is played by
Guido Bombini, who sets the pace and seems the leader of the foo-foo. There are
two broken-reeded harmonicas. Someone plays a jew’s-harp. Then there are
home-made fifes and whistles and drums, combs covered with paper, extemporized
triangles, and bones made from ribs of salt horse such as negro minstrels use.</p>
<p>The whole crew seems to compose the band, and, like a lot of monkey-folk
rejoicing in rude rhythm, emphasizes the beat by hammering kerosene cans,
frying-pans, and all sorts of things metallic or reverberant. Some genius has
rigged a line to the clapper of the ship’s bell on the forecastle-head
and clangs it horribly in the big foo-foo crises, though Bombini can be heard
censuring him severely on occasion. And to cap it all, the fog-horn machine
pumps in at the oddest moments in imitation of a big bass viol.</p>
<p>And this is mutiny on the high seas! Almost every hour of my deck-watches I
listen to this infernal din, and am maddened into desire to join with Mr. Pike
in a night attack and put these rebellious and inharmonious slaves to work.</p>
<p>Yet they are not entirely inharmonious. Guido Bombini has a respectable though
untrained tenor voice, and has surprised me by a variety of selections, not
only from Verdi, but from Wagner and Massenet. Bert Rhine and his crowd are
full of rag-time junk, and one phrase that has caught the fancy of all hands,
and which they roar out at all times, is: “<i>It’s a bear</i>!
<i>It’s a bear</i>! <i>It’s a bear</i>!” This morning Nancy,
evidently very strongly urged, gave a doleful rendering of <i>Flying Cloud</i>.
Yes, and in the second dog-watch last evening our three topaz-eyed dreamers
sang some folk-song strangely sweet and sad.</p>
<p>And this is mutiny! As I write I can scarcely believe it. Yet I know Mr. Pike
keeps the watch over my head. I hear the shrill laughter of the steward and
Louis over some ancient Chinese joke. Wada and the sail-makers, in the pantry,
are, I know, talking Japanese politics. And from across the cabin, along the
narrow halls, I can hear Margaret softly humming as she goes to bed.</p>
<p>But all doubts vanish at the stroke of eight bells, when I go on deck to
relieve Mr. Pike, who lingers a moment for a “gam,” as he calls
it.</p>
<p>“Say,” he said confidentially, “you and I can clean out the
whole gang. All we got to do is sneak for’ard and turn loose. As soon as
we begin to shoot up, half of ’em’ll bolt aft—lobsters like
Nancy, an’ Sundry Buyers, an’ Jacobsen, an’ Bob, an’
Shorty, an’ them three castaways, for instance. An’ while
they’re doin’ that, an’ our bunch on the poop is takin’
’em in, you an’ me can make a pretty big hole in them that’s
left. What d’ye say?”</p>
<p>I hesitated, thinking of Margaret.</p>
<p>“Why, say,” he urged, “once I jumped into that
fo’c’s’le, at close range, I’d start right in,
blim-blam-blim, fast as you could wink, nailing them gangsters, an’
Bombini, an’ the Sheeny, an’ Deacon, an’ the Cockney,
an’ Mulligan Jacobs, an’ . . . an’ . . . Waltham.”</p>
<p>“That would be nine,” I smiled. “You’ve only eight
shots in your Colt.”</p>
<p>Mr. Pike considered a moment, and revised his list. “All right,” he
agreed, “I guess I’ll have to let Jacobs go. What d’ye say?
Are you game?”</p>
<p>Still I hesitated, but before I could speak he anticipated me and returned to
his fidelity.</p>
<p>“No, you can’t do it, Mr. Pathurst. If by any luck they got the
both of us . . . No; we’ll just stay aft and sit tight until
they’re starved to it . . . But where they get their tucker gets me.
For’ard she’s as bare as a bone, as any decent ship ought to be,
and yet look at ’em, rolling hog fat. And by rights they ought to a-quit
eatin’ a week ago.”</p>
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