the
Ocean to the South Pole
by
Roy Rockwood
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Title: Under the Ocean to the South Pole The Strange
Cruise of the Submarine Wonder
Author: Roy Rockwood
Release Date: November 7, 2006 [EBook #19731]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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OCEAN TO THE SOUTH POLE ***
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UNDER THE OCEAN TO THE SOUTH POLE
Or
The Strange Cruise of the Submarine Wonder
BY ROY ROCKWOOD
AUTHOR OF "THROUGH THE AIR TO THE NORTH
POLE," "THE RIVAL OCEAN DIVERS," "A SCHOOLBOY'S
PLUCK," ETC.
ILLUSTRATED
NEW YORK CUPPLES & LEON CO.
GOOD BOOKS FOR BOYS
BY ROY ROCKWOOD
* * * * *
=THE GREAT MARVEL SERIES=
THROUGH THE AIR TO THE NORTH POLE Or The Wonderful
Cruise of the Electric Monarch
UNDER THE OCEAN TO THE SOUTH POLE Or The Strange
Cruise of the Submarine Wonder
Cloth. Illustrated
Copyright, 1907, by CUPPLES & LEON CO.
* * * * *
UNDER THE OCEAN TO THE SOUTH POLE
CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE
I. WILL THE SHIP WORK? 1
II. A LAND OF ICE 10
III. RUNNING DOWN A WAR SHIP 19
IV. IN THE MIDST OF FIRE 27
V. A GRAVE ACCUSATION 35
VI. ON A RUNAWAY TROLLEY 43
VII. OFF FOR THE SOUTH POLE 52
VIII. ASHORE IN THE DARK 60
IX. A PRICE ON THEIR HEADS 68
X. ATTACKED BY A MONSTER 75
XI. CAUGHT IN A SEA OF GRASS 84
XII. FIRE ON BOARD 92
XIII. THE GHOST OF THE SUBMARINE 100
XIV. DIGGING OUT THE SHIP 108
XV. THE STRANGE SHIPWRECK 117
XVI. THE GHOST AGAIN 126
XVII. ATTACKED BY SAVAGES 134
XVIII. ON LAND 143
XIX. REGAINING THE SHIP 152
XX. ON A VOLCANIC ISLAND 160
XXI. CAUGHT IN A WHIRLPOOL 169
XXII. UNDER FIRE 177
XXIII. CAUGHT IN AN ICE FLOE 185
XXIV. THE SHIP GRAVEYARD 193
XXV. CAUGHT BY SEA SUCKERS 201
XXVI. LAND UNDER ICE 211
XXVII. ATTACKED BY AN OCTUPUS 220
XXVIII. OUT OF THE ICE 228
XXIX. THE BOILING WATER 235
XXX. THE SOUTH POLE--CONCLUSION 240
UNDER THE OCEAN TO THE SOUTH POLE
CHAPTER I
WILL THE SHIP WORK?
"Hand me that wrench, Mark," called Professor
Amos Henderson to a boy who stood near some complicated machinery over which
the old man was working. The lad passed the tool over.
"Do you think the ship will work,
Professor?" he asked.
"I hope so, Mark, I hope so," muttered the
scientist as he tightened some bolts on what was perhaps the strangest
combination of apparatus that had ever been put together. "There is no
reason why she should not, and yet--"
The old man paused. Perhaps he feared that, after all,
the submarine boat on which he had labored continuously for more than a year
would be a failure.
"Is there anything more I can do now?" asked
Mark.
"Not right away," replied the professor,
without looking up from the work he was doing. "But I wish you and Jack
would be around in about an hour. I am going to start the engine then, and I'll
need you. If you see Washington outside send him to me."
Mark left the big room where the submarine boat had
been in process of construction so long. Outside he met a boy about his own
age, who was cleaning a rifle.
"How's it going, Mark?" asked this second
youth, who was rather fat, and, if one could judge by his face, of a jolly
disposition.
"The professor is going to try the engine in
about an hour," replied Mark. "We must be on hand."
"I'll be there all right. But if there isn't
anything else to do, let's shoot at a target. I'll bet I can beat you."
"Bet you can't. Wait 'till I get my gun."
"Now don't yo' boys go to disportin' yo'seves in
any disproportionable anticipation ob transposin' dem molecules of lead in a
contigious direction to yo' humble servant!" exclaimed a colored man,
coming from behind the big shed at that moment, and seeing Mark and Jack with
their rifles.
"I s'pose you mean to say, Washington,"
remarked Jack, "that you don't care to be shot at. Is that it?"
"Neber said nuffin truer in all yo' born
days!" exclaimed Washington earnestly. "De infliction ob distress to
de exterior portion ob--"
"The professor wants you," interrupted Mark,
cutting off the colored man's flow of language.
"Yo' mind what I tole yo'," Washington
muttered as he hurried into the work room.
Soon the reports of rifles indicated that the boys
were trying to discover who was the best shot, a contest that waged with
friendly interest for some time.
The big shed, where the submarine ship was being
built, was located at a lonely spot on the coast of Maine. The nearest town was
Easton, about ten miles away, and Professor Henderson had fixed on this
location as one best suited to give him a chance to work secretly and unobserved
on his wonderful invention.
The professor was a man about sixty-five years old,
and, while of simple and kindly nature in many ways, yet, on the subjects of
airships and submarines, he possessed a fund of knowledge. He was somewhat
queer, as many persons may be who devote all their thoughts to one object, yet
he was a man of fine character.
Some time before this story opens he had invented an
electric airship in which he, with Mark Sampson, Jack Darrow and the colored
man, Washington White, had made a trip to the frozen north.
Their adventures on that journey are told of in the
first volume of this series, entitled, "Through the Air to the North Pole,
or, The Wonderful Cruise of the Electric Monarch."
The two boys, Mark then being fifteen and Jack a year older,
had met the professor under peculiar circumstances. They were orphans, and,
after knocking about the world a bit, had chanced to meet each other. They
agreed to seek together such fortune as might chance to come to them.
While in the town of Freeport, N. Y., they were driven
away by a constable, who said tramps were not allowed in the village. The boys
jumped on a freight train, which broke in two and ran away down the mountain,
and the lads were knocked senseless in the wreck that followed.
As it chanced Professor Henderson had erected nearby a
big shop, where he was building his airship. He and Washington were on hand
when the wreck occurred and they took the senseless boys to the airship shed.
The boys, after their recovery, accepted the
invitation of the professor to go on a search for the north pole. As the
airship was about to start Andy Sudds, an old hunter, and two men, Tom Smith
and Bill Jones, who had been called in to assist at the flight, held on too
long and were carried aloft.
Somewhat against their will the three latter made the
trip, for the professor did not want to return to earth with them.
The party had many adventures on the voyage, having to
fight savage animals and more savage Esquimaux. They reached the north pole,
but in the midst of such a violent storm that the ship was overturned, and the
discovery of the long-sought goal availed little. After many hardships, and a
fierce fight to recover the possession of the ship, which had been seized by
natives, the adventurers reached home.
Since then a little over a year had passed. The
professor, having found he could successfully navigate the air, turned his
attention to the water, and began to plan a craft that would sail beneath the
ocean.
To this end he had moved his machine shop to this
lonely spot on the Maine coast. The two boys, who had grown no less fond of the
old man than he of them, went with him, as did Washington White, the negro, who
was a genius in his way, though somewhat inclined to use big words, of the
meaning of which he knew little and cared less.
Andy Sudds, the old hunter, had also been induced to
accompany the professor.
"I hunted game up north and in the air,"
said Andy, "and if there's a chance to shoot something under the water I'm
the one to do it."
Needing more assistance than either the boys, Andy or
Washington could give, the professor had engaged two young machinists, who,
under a strict promise never to divulge any of the secrets of the submarine,
had labored in its building.
Now the queer craft was almost finished. As it rested
on the ways in the shed, it looked exactly like a big cigar, excepting that the
top part was level, forming a platform.
The ship, which had been named the Porpoise,
was eighty feet long, and twenty feet in diameter at the largest part. From
that it tapered gradually, until the ends were reached. These consisted of
flattened plates about three feet in diameter, with a hole in the center one
foot in size.
Weary months of labor had been spent on the Porpoise,
until now it was almost ready for a trial. The professor had discovered a new
method of propulsion. Instead of propellers or paddle-wheels, he intended to
send his craft ahead or to the rear, by means of a water cable.
Through the entire length of the ship ran a round hole
or shaft, one foot in diameter. Within this was an endless screw worked by
powerful engines. With a working model the professor had demonstrated that when
the endless screw was revolved it acted on the water just as another sort of
screw does in wood. The water coming in through the shaft served as a rope, so
to speak, and the screw, acting on it, pulled the craft ahead or to the rear,
according to the direction in which the screw was revolved.
The submarine was a wonderful craft. It contained a
powerful engine, electric motors and dynamos, and machinery of all kinds. The
engine was a turbine, and steam was generated from heat furnished by the
burning of a powerful gas, manufactured from sea water and chemicals. So there
was no need to carry a supply of coal on the ship.
The interior of the vessel was divided into an
engine-room, a kitchen, combination dining-room and parlor, bunk rooms, and a
conning tower, or place for the steersman.
While the boys had been shooting at the target the
professor and Washington had been putting the finishing touches to the engine,
tightening nuts here and screwed up bolts there.
"I guess that will do," remarked the old
inventor. "Call the boys, Washington."
The colored man went to the door and gave three blasts
on a battered horn that hung from a string.
"Coming!" called Mark, as he and Jack ceased
their marksmanship contest and approached the shed.
"Now boys, we'll see if she works so far,"
said the professor. "If she does, we'll give her a trial under
water."
At the inventor's directions the boys started the gas
to generating from the chemicals. Soon the hissing of steam told them that
there was power in the boiler.
The professor entered the engine-room of the
submarine. He looked over the various wheels, levers, handles, gages and
attachments, satisfying himself that all were in proper shape and position.
"Three hundred pounds pressure," he
muttered, glancing at the steam indicator. "That ought to be enough. Are
you all ready, boys?"
"All ready!" cried Jack.
Of course the test was only one to see if the engine
worked, for the boat could not move until in the water.
The professor opened a valve. The steam filled the
turbine with a hiss and throb. The Porpoise trembled. Then, with a cough
and splutter of the exhaust pipes, the engine started. Slowly it went at first,
but, as the professor admitted more steam, it revolved the long screw until it
fairly hummed in the shaft.
"Hurrah! It works!" cried Mark.
"It does!" chimed in Jack.
"Gollyation! She suttinly am goin'!" yelled
Washington.
"I think we may say it is a success," said
the professor calmly, yet there was a note of exultation in his voice.
"Now that you've got her started, when are you
goin' to put her in the water an' scoot along under the waves?" asked Andy
Sudds.
"In about a week," replied the professor.
"And where are you goin' to head for?" went
on the hunter.
"We're going under the ocean to the south
pole!" exclaimed the inventor, as he shut off the engine.
CHAPTER II
A LAND OF ICE
"The south pole?" exclaimed Mark.
"Way down dat way!" cried Washington.
"Can you do it?" asked Jack.
"That remains to be seen," replied the
professor, answering them all at once. "I'm going to try, at any
rate."
"Hurrah!" yelled Mark. "It will be
better than going to the north pole, for we will be in no danger of freezing to
death."
"Don't be so sure of that," interrupted the
professor. "There is more ice at the south pole than at the north,
according to all accounts. It is a place of great icebergs, immense floes and
cold fogs. But there is land beyond the ice, I believe, and I am going to try
to find it."
"It will be a longer voyage than to the north
pole," said Jack.
"Jest de same," argued Washington, "de
poles am at each end ob de world."
"Yes, but we're quite a way north of the equator
now, and we'll have to cross that before we will be half way to the south
pole," explained Jack. "But I guess the Porpoise can make good
time."
"If the engine behaves under water as well as it
did just now, we'll skim along," said the professor.
"And so you figure there's land down there to the
south, do you?" asked old Andy.
"I do," replied the inventor. "I can't
prove it, but I'm sure there is. I have read all the accounts of other
explorers and from the signs they mention I am positive we shall find land if
we ever get there. Land and an open sea."
"And other things as well," muttered Andy,
yet neither he nor any of them dreamed of the terrible and strange adventures
they were to have.
The next few days were busy ones. Many little details
remained to perfect in connection with the ship, and a lot of supplies and
provisions had to be purchased, for the professor was determined to get all in
readiness for the trip under the water. He believed firmly that his ship would
work, though some of the others were not so positive.
"We'll put her into the water to-morrow,"
announced the inventor after supper one night. "Everything is complete as
far as I can make it, and the only thing remaining is to see if she will float,
sink when I want her to, and, what is most important, rise to the surface
again. For," he added with a twinkle in his eye, "anybody can make a
ship that will sink, but it isn't every one who can make one that will come to
the surface again."
"Golly! I hope dis chile ain't goin' to git in no
subicecream ship what'll stay down under de water so de fishes gits him!"
exclaimed Washington, opening his eyes wide. "Dat's worser dan freezin!"
"Can't you swim?" asked Mark with a wink at
Jack.
"Co'se I can swim, boy. I can swim like a
starfish, but I can't wif ten thousand tons of a subicecream ship on my
back."
"A sub-ice-cream ship is a new one,"
commented the professor with a smile. "It's a submarine, Washington."
"I can't see no difference," persisted the
colored man. "Subicecream am good enough for me."
That night Mark and Jack were thinking so much of the
proposed test of the ship the next day that they each dreamed they were sailing
beneath the waves, and Jack woke Mark up by grabbing him about the neck during
a particularly vivid part of the vision.
"What's the matter?" inquired Mark,
sleepily.
"I thought the ship turned over and spilled me
out and I was drowning," explained Jack. "I grabbed the first thing I
got hold of and it happened to be you."
"Well, as long as you're safe you can go to sleep
again," said Mark. "I dreamed I was chasing a whale with the Porpoise."
The boys were up early the next morning, and found the
professor and Washington before them. The inventor was inspecting the track
which had been built from the shed down to the water's edge to enable the Porpoise
to slide into the ocean.
With him were the two machinists, Henry Watson and
James Penson. They had been busy since daylight making the ways secure.
"She goes in after breakfast," announced the
professor, "and I'm going to let you christen her, Washington."
"Me? I neber christened a ship," objected
the colored man.
"Nothing like learning," remarked Mr.
Henderson.
"Has you got the bottle ob wine?" asked
Washington.
"I guess soda water will do," said the
inventor. "Now look sharp, boys. Get your breakfasts and we'll see if the
ship will come up to our expectations."
No one lingered over the meal. When it was finished the
professor gave Washington a few instructions about breaking the bottle over the
nose of the Porpoise as she slid down to the water, for there was no bow
to such a queerly shaped vessel as the submarine.
At last all was in readiness. The two machinists knocked
away the last of the retaining blocks and eased the ship slightly down the
well-greased timbers of the ways.
"There she goes!" cried the professor.
"Break the bottle, Washington!"
"In de name ob de Stars an' Stripes, in de name
of liberty, de home of the free an' de land ob de brave, I names yo' Mrs.
Porpoise!" cried the colored man, but he was so long getting the words
out, and so slow in swinging the bottle of soda, that the ship was quite beyond
his reach when he had finished his oration. He was not to be outdone, however,
and, with a quick movement he hurled the bottle at the moving ship. It struck
the blunt nose squarely, and shivered to pieces.
"Three cheers for de south pole!" yelled
Washington, and the others joined in.
The next instant the Porpoise was riding the
waves of the little bay, dancing about as lightly as a cork, though, from the
nature of her construction, she was quite low in the water, only about three
feet of freeboard showing where the platform was located.
"Well, she floats, anyhow," remarked the
professor. "Row out and fasten cables fore and aft," he went on,
turning to the two machinists. In a few minutes the Porpoise was
fastened to a small dock with strong ropes the two young men had carried out to
her in rowboats.
"We will go aboard in a little while," the
professor said. "I am anxious to see if she rides on an even keel and how
the sinking tanks work."
Aided by the boys, he and Washington carried on board
a number of tools and appliances. Then, with the two machinists, they all
descended into the interior of the craft through the small manhole in the
middle of the deck or platform.
Inside the Porpoise, the greater part of which
was below the surface of the waves and consequently in darkness, the professor
switched on the electric lights and then he proceeded to get up steam.
The propelling power of the craft has already been
described. In order to make the ship sink beneath the water all that was
necessary was to incline the rudder and open certain valves in the four tanks,
when the water, rushing in, would sink her. There was a tank on either side,
and one each fore and aft. If it was desired to sink straight down all four
tanks were filled at once. If the professor wanted to descend slanting either
to the front or back, only one of the end tanks was filled, according to the
direction desired. The deflecting rudder also aided greatly in this movement.
To cause the ship to rise the tanks were emptied of
the water by means of powerful pumps. The filling of the tanks, as well as the
emptying of them, the starting or stopping of the engine that moved the boat,
as well as the control of most of the important machinery on the craft could be
accomplished from the conning or steering tower, as well as from the
engine-room.
There were numerous gages to tell the depth to which
the ship had sunk, the steam pressure, density of the water, and other
necessary details.
There were dynamos to make light, motors to run the
pumps, and a great storage battery, so that in case of a breakdown to the
turbine engine the craft could be run entirely by electricity for a time.
The cooking was all done by this useful current, and
all that was necessary to make a cup of coffee or fry a beefsteak was to turn a
small switch of the electric stove.
The professor was busy over the machine for generating
gas, that furnished the heat to create steam. Soon a hissing told that it was
working. In a few minutes the hum and throb of the engine told that it was
ready to start.
"We are only going down a little way," the
professor said, "and only going to travel a short distance under water for
the first time. I think there is no danger, but if any of you want to back out,
now is your chance."
No one seemed inclined to withdraw, though Mark said
afterward he thought Washington got as pale as it is possible for a colored man
to get.
"We will all put on life preservers," the
inventor went on, "and one of you will be stationed near the emergency
exit. In case anything goes wrong, and I cannot make the ship rise, by pulling
the lever the top of the craft will be forced off, and, we can at least save
our lives. I think we are all ready now. Mark, you clamp down the manhole
cover, and Jack, after you close the conning tower station yourself at the
emergency lever after we have donned the life preservers."
The cork jackets were adjusted and Mark clamped the
manhole cover on. The professor took one last look at the various levers and
handles, and then turned the wheel that admitted water to all four tanks. There
was a hissing sound as the sea water rushed in, and the Porpoise gave a
sudden lurch.
Then they could all feel the submarine sinking. Down
and down she went. Would she ever stop? Would the professor be able to raise
her again? There were questions that troubled everyone.
Down and down the craft sunk, until by the gage it was
indicated that she was twenty feet below the surface. Then the professor shut
off the inrush of water and the Porpoise floated away below the surface
of the waves.
There was a clicking sound and all the lights went
out. The boys and Washington gave a gasp of terror. What did the sudden
blackness mean.
"Open the side windows," called the
professor's voice, and the two machinists obeyed. Heavy steel doors that
covered plate glass windows in either side of the craft were pulled back, and a
cry of astonishment broke from the boys.
They looked out and saw staring in at them, so close
it seemed that they could touch them, scores of fishes that looked in through
the glass bull's-eyes.
For the first time they realized that they were in the
depths of the ocean.
CHAPTER III
RUNNING DOWN A WARSHIP
"How do you like it?" asked the professor.
"Great!" exclaimed Jack.
"Fine!" cried Mark.
"It am simply coslostrousness!" exploded
Washington. "'Nebber in all my born days did I eber expansionate on such a
sight!"
"Wish I had a fishing pole and line,"
remarked Andy Sudds. "There's some pretty nice specimens out there."
"You'll see better ones than those before we
finish our trip to the pole," remarked the professor. "Now we will
try moving forward. I am going into the conning tower."
He turned on the lights once more, but the boys begged
him to shut them off, as they could see out into the ocean when the interior of
the ship was in darkness. So the professor obliged them.
In the tower he switched on the powerful searchlight
that illuminated the path in front of him. Then he started the engine, slowly
at first, and gradually increasing the speed. The Porpoise forged ahead,
riding as evenly as an ordinary ship does on the surface.
The professor steered her about in a large circle,
bringing her back to the starting point. She worked as smoothly as if she had
been used to under-water service for years.
"Now," said the inventor, "we will see
if we can go up to the surface again," and there came a little note of
anxiety into his voice. He slowed down the engine and started the powerful
pumps that were to empty the tanks. For a moment there was a feeling of terror
in the hearts of all. Would the pumps work?
Then, slowly but surely, those aboard the Porpoise
felt her beginning to rise. Up and up she went as the tanks were emptied and
the ship lightened.
Then, with a bounce like a rubber ball, the submarine shot
upward to the surface and lay undulating on the waves caused by her emergence
from the depths.
"Hurrah!" shouted Jack. "We're all
right!"
"We shore am!" exclaimed Washington.
"It's a success!" Professor Henderson almost
whispered. "The pumps worked. The Porpoise has fulfilled my
greatest expectations!"
Then he steered the ship back to the dock, where she
was moored, and the adventurers disembarked.
"One or two little details to attend to, and
we'll be ready for the great trip," remarked the professor. "I want
to give her a little harder trial before I trust her, though she seems to be
first-rate."
They all went back to the combined machine shop and
cabin, where they had lived during the building of the submarine. Dinner was
prepared and, after the meal the two machinists approached the professor.
"I don't suppose you need us any more,"
remarked Henry Watson. "The ship is finished as far as we can do anything,
and we may as well leave now. We have an offer to go to work in an electrical
shop."
"I haven't said much to you about my plans,"
the professor replied, "but if you would like to remain in my employ, I
can promise you an interesting trip."
"Thank you, but I prefer to work above
ground," said James Pensen. "You have been very kind to us, and we
would do anything we could for, but we don't want to take any long under-ocean
trips if we can help it."
"Very well," answered the professor, though
he seemed disappointed. "I will pay you what I owe you and you can
go."
For some time after the departure of the two young
machinists the inventor seemed worried.
"Did you count on them staying with you?"
asked Mark.
"I rather hoped they would," replied Mr.
Henderson. "We need two more hands if we are to make the trip. They need
not be machinists, but we will have to have someone, and I don't like to get
strangers. They might talk too much about the ship."
At that instant there came a rap on the door.
Washington answered it.
"Yas sir, Perfesser Henderson done lib
here," he replied, in answer to a question from some one. "But he am
bery busy jest at de present occasioness an' he'll be most extremely
discommodated if yo' obtrude yo' presence on him at de conglomeration ob de
statutory limitations, which am to say right now. Come again!"
"It's the same old Washington!" said someone
outside, laughing heartily. "Just you tell the professor we want to see
him most particular."
At the sound of the voice the professor started and
Mark and Jack wondered where they had heard it before.
"Show the gentlemen in, Washington," called the
inventor.
"Dere's two ob 'em," objected the colored
man.
"Show them both in, then."
Washington opened the door of the cabin, and in came
two men, who seemed much amused over something.
"What can I do for you?" asked the
professor, in rather a sharp voice.
"He don't know us either, Tom," remarked the
taller of the two.
"If it ain't Bill Jones and Tom Smith!"
exclaimed Andy Sudds. "Wa'al I'll be horn swoggled. Where'd ye come
from?"
"Right from the farm," replied Bill.
"And we've had a hard job locating you. I guess Washington didn't know us
since we raised beards," and Bill stroked his wealth of brown whiskers.
"And I guess we sort of fooled the
professor," went on Bill, "eh, Tom?"
"Right!" said Tom. "You see," he
went on, "the farming business is almost over, as its coming on fall now,
so Bill and I thought it would be a good time to hunt up the professor. We
heard he was down in this neighborhood so we come by easy stages. We didn't
have any time to stop and make our toilets, hence our beards."
"You've come at the right time," remarked
the inventor, as he came forward to welcome the two young men. "Do you
remember the trip you made with me to the north pole?"
"I guess we'll not forget it in a hurry,"
replied Bill.
"That's what made us hunt you up," put in
Tom. "We hoped you might have something similar on foot."
"I have," answered the inventor.
"What is it?"
"A trip under the ocean!"
For an instant the two young men hesitated. It was a
new proposition to them. Yet they recalled that they had come safely back from
the journey through the air.
"Do you want to go along as part of the
crew?" asked the inventor, after some further conversation.
"You can count on me!" cried Bill.
"And if Bill goes I'll go too!" exclaimed
Tom.
"Under the seas or over the seas, it'll be all
one to us if Professor Henderson sails the ship!" went on Bill.
"We'll go!"
"Good!" ejaculated the professor. "You
certainly came at just the right time."
As Tom Smith and Bill Jones were hungry a hasty meal
was prepared for them, during the eating of which they told of their
experiences since landing from the airship. They had been on a farm until fired
with a desire to go roving once more.
For the next few days the professor, the boys, and the
other four were busy making some improvements to the Porpoise. Tom and
Bill were much astonished at their first sight of the queer craft, but they
soon became accustomed to her, and said they preferred her to the airship.
"To-morrow we are going on a little longer trip
than our first trial," announced the inventor one evening. "We will
be gone all day if nothing happens to make the stay more lengthy," he
added grimly. "So, Washington, put plenty to eat aboard."
A little later, when supplies had been put on the Porpoise,
and the machinery well overhauled, the professor explained that he intended
making a trip, entirely under water, from the dock in the cove to a point off
the Massachusetts coast and return.
Early the next morning all were aboard. To each one
was assigned a particular station. Washington, with Mark as an assistant, was
in the engine-room. Jack was to watch the various gages and registers to give
warning of any danger. The professor, of course, would be in the conning tower
and operate the craft. Andy was to be with him, to watch out, with his sharp
eyes, for any danger that might loom up in the path of the searchlight. Tom and
Bill were to be ready to help where needed.
With a hissing sound the water filled the tanks and
the Porpoise sunk beneath the waves. The engine that worked the endless
screw was started, and the threads, working on the water cable, shot the boat
ahead.
"We're off!" yelled Washington.
About sixty feet below the surface the craft was sent
along. Mile after mile was covered as shown by the patent log. The lights were
turned off, and through the thick plate glass windows the strange inhabitants
of the sea were observed.
"I think I'll go a little nearer the
surface," said the professor to Andy. The inventor started the pumps that
emptied the tanks. The craft rose slightly.
"Quick! Stop her!" shouted the old hunter,
grasping the captain's arm.
Something black, like a grim shadow, loomed up in the
dull glare of the searchlight.
"What is it?" cried the professor.
"We're goin' to hit somethin' hard!" yelled
Andy.
"It's the hull of a ship!" exclaimed the
inventor as he jammed the reversing lever hard over.
It was too late. The next instant the Porpoise,
with a shock that made her shiver from stem to stern, collided with the steel
side of a small warship.
CHAPTER IV
IN THE MIDST OF FIRE
"Pull the secondary emergency lever!" cried
the professor through the speaking tube to Washington. "We must reach the
surface at once!"
"Are we damaged?" asked Andy, scrambling to
his feet, for the shock had knocked him down. The professor had not fallen
because he clung to the steering wheel.
The ship gave a sudden lurch.
"We're sinking!" cried Bill, rushing to the
conning tower from the engine-room.
"That's only the action of one of the emergency
levers," said the professor calmly. "It forces compressed air into
the tanks the more quickly to empty them of water. I think we are safe."
"What is it?" asked Mark, as, followed by
Jack, he came forward.
"We tried to do the torpedo act to one of Uncle
Sam's ships," explained Andy.
The electric lights had been switched on, and, with
the Porpoise flooded with the bright beams, those on board waited
anxiously for what was to happen next.
Suddenly an upward motion was experienced. The next
instant the craft bounced out of the water and fell back in a smother of foam,
shaking and shivering, alongside a small armored warship that was anchored
about two miles and a half from shore.
"Open the manhole," commanded Mr. Henderson.
Mark sprang up the iron ladder that led to the opening
in the deck of the Porpoise and threw back the cams that held the heavy
iron in place. Then he swung the cover back and stepped out on the small
platform, followed by the professor, Andy and Jack. They looked up to find
themselves observed by a curious throng that crowded to the rail of the
warship.
[Illustration: A CURIOUS THRONG CROWDED TO THE RAIL OF
THE WARSHIP.--Page 28.]
"What are you trying to do? Ram me with a
new-fangled torpedo?" asked an angry voice, and a man in a gold laced
uniform, who, from his importance plainly showed himself to be the captain of
the ship, shook his fist at Mr. Henderson.
"I might ask what right your ship has to get in
my path," replied the inventor. "It was all an accident."
"Mighty queer," muttered the naval
commander. "Looks very suspicious. How do I know but what you're a torpedo
from some foreign nation?"
"Because this is not a torpedo," replied Mr.
Henderson. "It is a new submarine boat of my invention, and I was giving
it a trial spin."
"I guess you'd better come aboard and do your
explaining," went on the captain. "I don't like the looks of things.
Lower a boat!" he shouted, "and bring those chaps to my cabin. I want
to question them."
It did not suit Professor Henderson to have his plans
upset in this fashion. Nor did he care to give a detailed description of his
ship to officers of the war department. He had many valuable inventions that
were not patented. So he determined to outwit the pompous commander of the
cruiser.
The noise made in preparing the small boat for
lowering over the side of the big ship could be plainly heard.
"Go below, all of you, and as quietly as you
can," whispered Mr. Henderson.
Andy, Mark and Jack obeyed. At that instant the side
of the warship was almost deserted, for the sailors who had gathered to observe
the Porpoise had gone to lower the small boat.
No sooner had Jack, who was in the rear, disappeared
through the manhole than the professor, with a quick jump, followed him.
"Here! Come back!" shouted the warship's
captain as he saw Mr. Henderson's head disappearing from view. "Come back
I say!"
But with a quick movement the inventor pulled down the
manhole cover and clamped it. Then he sprang to the conning tower, and, with a
jerk, opened the levers that admitted water to the tanks. The Porpoise
began to sink slowly, and then more suddenly, so that, in less than a minute,
she was out of sight beneath the waves, and the angry, gold-laced captain was
staring in wonderment at the place where the submarine had been. The spot was
marked only by a few bubbles and some foam.
"I guess he'll wait some time for an
explanation," spoke Mr. Henderson, as he started the big screw and sent the
Porpoise ahead at a swift pace.
"That was rather a narrow escape," observed
Jack, standing at the foot of the conning tower stairs and talking to Andy and
Mr. Henderson, who was steering.
"It certainly was," agreed the professor.
"I have not yet become used to seeing things very far ahead in the dimness
caused by being under water. But we'll soon get used to it. Luckily, the Porpoise
was not damaged by the shock."
For several hours the Porpoise was kept on her
course. She behaved handsomely, and nothing excepting slight and easily
remedied defects were found. The professor steered well out to sea, increasing
both the forward speed and the depth to which the vessel sank. Presently the
craft came to a stop with a little jolt.
"What's the trouble?" asked Mark, somewhat
alarmed.
"Nothing at all," replied the professor with
a smile, as he stepped out of the conning tower and entered the engine-room.
"I thought it was time for dinner so I stopped the ship. We are now
resting on the ocean bed, about half a mile below the surface. Look!"
As he spoke he slid back the slides covering the plate
glass windows. The boys saw that the ship rested in the midst of an immense
forest of sea weed. Some of the stalks were as large around as trees. In and
out among the snake-like, waving branches swam big fishes. It was a weird, but
beautiful sight.
"Come, Washington, serve dinner," ordered
Mr. Henderson, and the colored man soon had a good meal prepared. Few repasts
have been eaten under such strange circumstances.
Desiring to be back at his secluded dock by nightfall,
Captain Henderson soon started the Porpoise up again. Without any
accidents the return trip was made and by nine o'clock the Porpoise rode
safely at the dock where she had been launched.
The night was spent in the cabin on shore. Early the
next morning Mr. Henderson paid a visit to the ship, to make a thorough
examination by daylight, and see if the craft had suffered any damage.
"I think you and Mark will have to make a trip to
town," he said to Jack at the breakfast table. "I need a new monkey
wrench and some other tools and some small pieces of machinery. I'll give you a
list of them, and you can bring them back in a valise, for they will be quite
numerous."
After the meal the inventor made a record of what he
needed and the boys started off.
"In case the machine shop does not have
everything and you have to wait for something, you had better stay in the town
all night," the captain of the Porpoise said. "It is quite a
long trip and I don't want you traveling after dark. Put up at the hotel if you
are delayed."
Provided with money for their purchase, and a large
valise in which to carry them, the boys started off. They had to walk two miles
to where a trolley line was built that ran to the town of Easton, where they
were to get the tools and parts of machinery.
They made the trip safely and without incident. When
they gave the machinist, to whom they had been directed by Mr. Henderson, the
list of the things needed, the man looked puzzled.
"I'll have to make one piece," he said.
"You'll have to wait for it. Can't promise it before to-morrow morning
about eight o'clock."
"That will be all right," remarked Mark.
"We'll call for it then."
So, bearing in mind Mr. Henderson's instructions, the
boys engaged a room at the hotel, which was quite a large one, for Easton was a
favorite summer resort and the town was filled with visitors. The lads strolled
about the town, had their dinner, and then went for a bath in the surf. They
retired early, for they were tired.
In the middle of the night Mark began to dream that he
was on board the Porpoise and that the submarine blew up. There was a
loud noise, he saw a bright flash of flame, and saw rolling clouds of smoke. So
vivid was the vision that he thought he tried to leap out of the boat, and
awoke with a jump, to find Jack shaking him.
"What's the matter?" inquired Mark.
"The hotel's on fire!" shouted Jack.
Mark sprang out of bed and with Jack rushed to the
window, for their room was filled with thick smoke. They could see the dull
glare of flames, which every moment were becoming brighter.
The next instant a loud explosion shook the building. It
swayed and seemed likely to topple over. Outside the boys could hear excited
shouts and the puffing and whistling of fire engines.
"Quick! Run!" yelled Mark. He opened the
door leading into the corridor, but was driven back by a rush of flames and
smoke that almost stifled him.
"We must try the fire escape!" shouted Mark.
"Don't forget the valise with the tools;"
exclaimed Jack, and Mark hastened to where he had placed it under the bed.
Then the two boys rushed to the balcony on which their
front windows opened, and whence the fire escapes led down to the streets. The
lads had only time to slip on their coats, trousers, shoes and caps.
As they were preparing to clamber down the iron
ladders they heard someone on the balcony next to them shout:
"Here, you boys! Stop! I want you!"
CHAPTER V
A GRAVE ACCUSATION
"We haven't time now!" yelled back Mark,
looking in the direction of the voice, and seeing a short, stout man, who
appeared greatly excited.
"Stop or I'll shoot!" the man exclaimed.
"The fire must have made him crazy," said
Jack. "Go on, Mark, it's getting hot up above!"
Mark did not linger on the ladder and soon the two
boys were in the street, surrounded by an excited crowd.
"Are you hurt?" asked several.
"I guess not," replied Mark. "What
caused the fire?"
"Some sort of an explosion," answered a
policeman. "Part of the hotel was blown up. If you boys wish you can go to
a station house where you'll be comfortable until morning."
"I guess we will," said Mark.
They started to work their way through the crowd but
did not notice that the strange man followed them. The fire was now burning
fiercely, and once they had gotten clear of the press the lads halted to look
at the spectacle.
The hotel was now a mass of flames and the firemen
were kept busy. What with the puffing of engines, the whistling of the
steamers, the roar of the flames, and the shouts of the crowd, pandemonium
reigned.
The boys watched the fire for some time. Gradually the
flames came under the control of the men and the leaping tongues died out.
"I guess we'd better go to the police
station," suggested Jack.
Mark agreed this would be a good thing to do, as both
of them felt rather chilly in the night air with only half of their clothes on.
They inquired their way of the first policeman they saw, and he volunteered to
escort them.
"Sure an' you'll have plenty of company," he
said. "The hotel was full an' the people have no place to go except to the
lock-up. Some swells will be glad to take a place behind the bars to-night I'm
thinkin'. I wonder how some of those English aristocrats will like it?"
"English aristocrats?" repeated Jack.
"Are any here?"
"Sure. There's a lot of them burned out. Lord
Peckham was stoppin' at the hotel with a big crowd of people, an' their
apartments was all destroyed. Some of 'em went to the police station."
The boys followed their uniformed guide through the
streets of Easton, and were soon at the station house. There they were received
by the sergeant in charge, while the matron gave them each a cup of hot coffee,
a large pot of the beverage having been brewed.
"I'll have to give you boys one bed between
you," said the sergeant. "We're rather crowded for room
to-night."
"Anything will do us," said Jack with a
laugh.
Just then there was some excitement at the entrance of
the police station.
"I tell you they're in here! I will see
them!" a voice exclaimed. "I want them arrested at once!"
"Go easy now," counseled the doorman as he
tried to hold back a short, stout, excited man who was pushing his way into the
station.
"There they are!" exclaimed the man,
pointing to Jack and Mark.
"Why those boys are from the burned hotel,"
said the doorman.
"I know it! They are the very ones I want!"
"What do you of us?" spoke up Mark. He
recognized the man as the one who had called to him as he and Jack were
escaping.
"I charge you with being sons of James Darrow,
the notorious English anarchist!" cried the little man, pointing his
finger at the boys, "and I accuse you of trying to kill Lord Peckham with
a bomb, the explosion of which set fire to the hotel!"
For a moment the surprising charge so astonished every
one that not a word was said. Then the little man, advancing toward the boys
went on:
"I arrest you in the name of His Royal Highness,
Edward VII, King of England, Scotland and Wales."
He threw back the lapel of his coat and showed a
badge.
"King of England, Scotland and Wales, is
it!" exclaimed the doorman with a twinkle in his eye. "An' why didn't
ye say Ireland into the bargain."
"Ireland, of course," went on the little
man. "I'm an officer of His Most Gracious Majesty," he added,
"and I demand the assistance of the United States authorities in general
and the police of Easton in particular in taking these desperate criminals into
custody!"
"Hold your horses," advised the
desk-sergeant. "Those boys are not liable to run away. They're to stay
here over night, and if you have any charge to make against them why you'll
have to come and see the judge in the morning."
"But they are sons of an anarchist! They are
anarchists themselves!" exclaimed the man, "I must arrest them!"
"You're not going to arrest anybody," said
the sergeant, "until you get a warrant from the judge. This isn't
England."
"Then I'm going to stay with these boys the rest
of the night," insisted the man. "I can't take any chances on their
giving me the slip."
"This place is going to be crowded with people
from the burned hotel," objected the sergeant. "There will be no room
for you. Besides, how do I know these boys are anarchists?"
"Look in their valise," cried the stranger.
"It is filled with bombs."
"You can't look in this satchel," exclaimed
Jack, for he remembered the valise contained parts of the professor's secret
machines.
"What did I tell you?" cried the Englishman
with triumph in his tones. "They are the guilty ones. They are afraid to
open their valise."
"We are, but not because it has bombs in
it," said Mark. "It has parts of an unpatented machine and the owner
does not want any one to see them," for Mark remembered Mr. Henderson's
strict injunctions to let no one but the mechanist to whom they had gone catch
a glimpse of the parts that were to be duplicated. The machinist was sworn to
secrecy.
"It's none of our affair," said the
sergeant, though he seemed a little impressed by the Englishman's words and the
reluctance Mark and Jack showed to letting the valise be opened. "The boys
will be here until morning, and then you can see the judge. Now you'll have to
get out. You boys get to bed."
Muttering threats, the stranger went from the station
house, and Mark and Jack, in response to a nod from the doorman, followed him
upstairs to a part of the police station used to detain witnesses. They were
shown to a small room with a single bed.
"Are ye really anarchists?" asked the
doorman.
"Not a bit," replied Jack, and he told as
much of their story as he dared.
"I was kind-of hopin' ye was," said the
officer with a twinkle in his eye. "It wouldn't do any harm to scare that
uppish Englishman a bit. Sure he an' his kind have done enough to poor old
Ireland."
"I'm sorry we can't oblige you," said Mark
with a laugh.
"I guess ye're all right," went on the
doorman. "I hope ye sleep good the rest of the night."
Then he left them alone. What with the excitement of
the fire and the startling accusation against them, the boys' brains were too
excited to let them sleep much. They had a few fitful naps throughout the
remainder of the night.
It was just getting daylight when Mark was awakened by
some one shaking him.
"What is it?" he asked. "Another
fire?"
"Not this time," replied a voice, and Mark,
now that his eyes were fully opened, saw the doorman bending over him.
"What's the matter?" asked Jack waking up in
his turn.
"Easy!" exclaimed the doorman in a whisper.
"I happened to think ye might want to be leavin'."
"Leaving?" asked Mark in bewilderment.
"Yes. Ye know that Englishman is liable to be
back any minute, an' he may make trouble for ye. I know ye're innocent lads,
an' I'd hate to see ye mixed up in a mess with that fellow. So I slips up here
early, an' ye can leave by the back door if ye want to, an' the officer of His
Imperial Majesty, King Edward VII, will never know a thing about it."
"It looks like running away," objected Jack.
"Sure there's no charge agin ye," went on
the doorman. "Ye're free to come an' go as far as we're concerned, an'
ye'd better go whilst ye have the chance."
Jack reflected. It was true that the charge of the
Englishman, baseless as it was, might make trouble for them, and cause them
endless delays in getting back to Professor Henderson. Suddenly Jack made up
his mind.
"Come on Mark," he said.
CHAPTER VI
ON A RUNAWAY TROLLEY
"Are you going to leave?" asked Mark.
"Certainly. There is no use staying here and
getting mixed up in something that Englishman thinks we have done. It's easier
to go away quietly and let him find out his mistake."
"All right," agreed Mark. "I wonder who
he is, anyhow?"
"He thinks he owns the earth, whoever he
is," returned Jack.
"He's some sort of a special detective traveling
with Lord Peckham's party," explained the doorman. "He told us a lot
about himself last night after you boys went to bed. He came back to inquire
how early the judge would be here.
"He went on to tell how some English anarchists
have vowed to kill Lord Peckham because he foreclosed a lot of mortgages on
some poor people in Ireland where he owned property," added the doorman.
"There was some sort of explosions in the hotel, near where Lord Peckham
had his rooms. Maybe it was a bomb and, maybe ag'in it was only the boiler.
Anyhow, this detective jumped to the conclusion that anarchists had done it,
and he thinks you are responsible. But you'd better be goin' now. It's gettin'
daylight."
So Mark and Jack, with what scanty clothes they had,
and carrying their valise, went quietly out of the back door of the police
station.
"We'd better go to the machine shop for the rest
of the stuff," suggested Mark, "and then we can take the first
trolley we see and get back to the professor."
Through quiet side streets the boys made their way
toward the machine shop. They were somewhat amused to think how they had fooled
the detective, but they would not have felt so jolly had they seen the roughly
dressed man who had darted after them as soon as they left the police station.
"I'll get you yet," the man muttered.
"You needn't think to escape with the aid of these bloomin' American
police."
The lads found the machinist just opening his shop
though it was quite early. The pieces of apparatus were finished and, after
paying for them Mark put the parts in the valise.
"Quite a fire in town," observed the
machinist.
"Yes," answered Mark, not wishing to get
into a long conversation.
"Heard the hotel was blowed up by anarchists and
that the police are after 'em," proceeded the man.
"I believe I did hear something like that,"
admitted Mark. "I guess we'll be going."
He signalled to Jack, and the two hurried out of the
shop. As they did so, the trampish-looking man glided from behind a tree where
he had been hiding and took after them.
"Say," exclaimed Jack, "I forgot we
haven't had any breakfast yet."
"That's so," said Mark, rubbing his stomach
and making a wry face.
Near by was a bakery, and there the lads got some
coffee and rolls which tasted fine. When they finished their simple meal a
trolley came past and they ran to catch it. So did the man who had been
following them, but this person bore no resemblance to the spruce little detective
who had wanted to arrest the boys.
"A couple of hours now and we'll be back at the
cabin," spoke Mark. "My, but I must say we have had strenuous times
since we started away!"
There were few passengers on the trolley so early in
the morning and not many stops to make, so the motorman turned on the power
full and made the vehicle speed along.
Mile after mile was covered and finally the car
reached the top of a long hill. At the foot of this the line came to an end,
and the boys had a two mile tramp before them to reach the lonely spot where
the Porpoise was docked.
Down the hill the car started. The motorman shut off
the electricity and let the vehicle run by its weight.
Faster and faster it ran, the dust flying in a cloud
about it.
"Better put the brakes on a bit," called the
conductor. "It's gettin' kinder speedy, Hank!"
The motorman twisted the handle. There was a grinding
noise as the shoes took hold on the wheels. Then a chain snapped and the car
seemed to leap ahead.
"The brake's busted! I can't stop the car!"
yelled the motorman.
Vainly he twisted at the handle. Then, seeing he could
not stop the trolley car he made a desperate jump off the vehicle and landed in
a heap on the side of the road, rolling over and over.
"Reverse the current!" cried one of the
passengers, to the conductor. "That ought to stop her!"
The conductor made his way to the front platform and
turned the reversing lever. Then he applied the current. But it was no use.
With a blinding flash and a report like that of a gun a fuse blew out, and that
crippled the car completely so far as the electric current was concerned.
"Everybody jump!" cried the conductor.
"There's a curve at the foot of the hill, and we'll all be killed if we
stay on!"
One by one the passengers leaped from the car. Several
were badly hurt by the falls they got. Meanwhile the trolley was tearing down
the hill at a terrific rate of speed.
"Shall we jump?" asked Mark of Jack.
"We'll be killed if we do," was Jack's
answer.
"And we'll be killed if we stay aboard,"
said Mark.
"Not if I can help it," cried Jack as he
started for the rear platform.
"What are you going to do?" asked Mark.
"Put on the other brake. They never thought to
try this one! Maybe it will work and stop the car!"
Then Mark saw what Jack was up to and went to help
him. The shabbily dressed man seemed undecided what to do. He stood up, holding
to the straps to prevent himself from being tossed from side to side as the
runaway trolley swayed. He watched the boys curiously.
The lads, reaching the rear platform, twisted at the
brake handle with all their strength. They could feel that the chain was still
intact. But would the shoes grip the wheels with force sufficient to stop the
car?
There was a shrill screech as the brakes were applied
by the boys. With all their might they turned the handle, winding the chain up
tighter and tighter. At last they could not budge it another inch. Then they
waited anxiously.
The car never slackened its speed. So great was the
momentum that had both sets of brakes been in working order it is doubtful
whether they would have stopped the vehicle. The speed was so great now that
one of the journals became hot and the oily waste that was packed in it caught
fire, making what railroad men term a "hot box".
"I guess we're done for," groaned Mark.
"We certainly haven't checked the speed
any," Jack admitted. "But wait a minute."
He began stamping on the floor of the platform.
"What you doing?" cried Mark, for he had to
shout to make his voice heard above the roar and rattle of the car.
"Putting on the sand," replied Jack, as he
kicked at the plunger which, being depressed, let a stream of fine gravel out
on the rails. "The wheels are gripped I think, and are slipping on the
rails. This may help some."
"Let me give you a hand," exclaimed a voice,
and the boys turned to see the shabby man standing with them on the platform.
He grasped the brake handle, and gave it an additional turn. His strength
seemed remarkable for so small a man.
The speed of the car was checked a little, but the
vehicle was still speeding along at a rate that would soon bring it to
destruction if not halted before the curve was reached.
"That's a little better," observed Mark.
"It's a good thing you were here."
"Good for me, not so good for you," said the
man with a peculiar smile.
"What do you mean?" asked Mark.
"I mean that I shall have to place you under
arrest for attempting to assassinate Lord Peckham!" exclaimed the man.
"I am Detective Ducket, of Scotland Yard!"
He stripped off a false beard he had donned, and threw
back his coat, displaying his shield. He was the same man who had attempted to
arrest the boys in the police station at Easton.
"I've got you just where I want you now,"
Detective Ducket went on. "There are none of those blooming American
police to interfere."
The next instant the car gave a sudden lurch. Then it
seemed to rise up in the air. Jack felt himself flying through space, and he
observed Mark, who was clinging to the valise, following him.
There was a terrific crash, a ripping, tearing
splintering sound, and the runaway trolley smashed into a big oak tree at the
foot of the hill. The vehicle had completely jumped the track at the sharp
curve.
Jack's eyes grew dim, and he seemed to be sinking down
in some dark pool of water. He heard a splashing beside him and began to strike
out, trying to swim. He seemed to be choking. Then the blessed air and daylight
came to him, and he found he was floating on the surface of a pond.
He dashed the water from his eyes and saw, over on the
bank, the wreck of the trolley. Then he noticed that Mark was swimming beside
him.
"What happened?" asked Jack.
"A little of everything," panted Mark.
"Lucky we weren't killed. We must have been flung off the rear platform
into this duck pond."
The boys soon made their way to shore, unhurt except
for the wetting. The fall into the water had saved their lives.
"Where's the valise of machinery?" asked
Jack.
"There it is," answered Mark pointing to
where it had fallen at the back of the pond.
"And what became of Detective Ducket?"
"He's here, at your service!" exclaimed a
voice. "Consider yourselves under arrest and don't you dare to leave this
place without me."
The boys looked in the direction of the sound and saw
the English officer lying on the grass not far away. He seemed in pain, but had
raised himself on his elbow and was pointing his finger sternly at the boys.
CHAPTER VII
OFF FOR THE SOUTH POLE
"Are you hurt?" asked Jack.
"I think my leg is broken, but otherwise I'm not
damaged," replied the detective. "Even if I am disabled, it makes no
difference, you are my prisoners. I command you to stay here until help
comes."
The boys did not know what to do. They did not like to
see even an enemy suffer, but, at the same time, they knew he had no right to
arrest them.
"Here comes a wagon," said Mark, catching
the sound of wheels.
"Well, fo' de land sakes! Gollyation! What
terrible catafterme hab occurred in dis unapproachable manner?" a voice
demanded.
"It's Washington!" cried Mark, as he saw
Professor Henderson's colored assistant driving along the road.
"Dat's who it am!" exclaimed Washington as
he noticed the boys. "My! My! But am you boff dead?"
"No, only one of us," said Mark with a
laugh, as he and Jack ran toward the wagon.
"Ha! Ha! Dat's one ob yo' jokes," said
Washington. "But hurry up, boys. De perfessor he done sent me to meet you.
He reckoned you'd becomin' ober on an early trolley. He's in a hurry to git
away."
"Don't you boys dare to leave!" exclaimed
Detective Ducket.
"Who's dat?" asked Washington.
"Never mind," said Mark. "He was hurt
in the trolley smash, but not badly. We'll send help, from the first farm house
we come to. Come on, Washington, we'll go with you."
The boys jumped into the wagon, and Washington started
off. He explained that the inventor was anxious to make a start that day, as
there would be an unusually high tide which would be followed a little later by
a low one, and that would make it difficult to cross the harbor bar.
"So I hired dis wagon an' come after you,"
said the colored man.
At the first house they came to the boys stopped and
told about the accident. The farmer agreed to go and get the detective and the
others who were hurt and take them to a hospital.
"I guess we're rid of that detective now,"
observed Jack, as they started off again.
"Yes, but we're getting away under a cloud on our
characters," said Mark. "I'd like to stay and see the thing through,
if we had time."
"But we can't, and there's no use worrying over
it," spoke Jack.
In a short time they were at the inventor's cabin, and
related to Mr. Henderson all that had occurred.
"Well I guess your detective friend will have a
hard time to find you in a few hours," said the old man. "We start on
our trip for the south pole this evening."
There were busy times for the next few hours. Many
supplies had to be placed on board, and, while the boys, with Tom and Bill, saw
to this, the professor and Washington were occupied with putting the last touches
to the submarine boat's machinery.
Most of the supplies from the cabin were placed in the
Porpoise, including food and clothing and a good quantity of minerals
that, with sea water, generated the gas that made steam.
An early supper was made on shore, as the professor
said they might be so busy for the first few hours of the starting trip that
they would get no chance to eat. Then the cabin and buildings where the
submarine had been built, were securely fastened.
"I guess we're all ready," announced the
professor, taking a last look around.
One by one they went aboard the Porpoise
crawling down through the man hole. The inventor was the last one to enter. He
clamped the cover on by means of the cam levers and switched on the electric
lights. Then he took his place in the conning tower with Andy Sudds.
"Forward, to the South Pole!" exclaimed Mr.
Henderson.
With a turn of his wrist the inventor started the
engines. The big screw in the shaft revolved, pulling the water in at one end
of the craft and sending it out in a swirling stream at the other. The trip was
fairly begun.
For several miles the Porpoise glided along on
the surface of the ocean. It was a calm evening, and the boys down in the cabin
of the craft could look into the reflecting mirrors on the wall, which were
connected with observation magnifying glasses in the conning tower, and view
what was going on, though their heads were below the surface of the sea.
As it grew darker the view of shore and water faded
away. The engine kept up its speed with Washington to see to it every now and
then, oiling the bearings, some of which did not run quite smoothly because of
their newness.
"I'll send her down a bit now," observed the
professor. "I don't want to run into any more warships or scare the crews
by making them think we are a foreign torpedo boat."
He opened the sea cocks in the ballast tanks and soon
the Porpoise sunk about two hundred feet beneath the waves. The craft,
which had been pitching and tossing under the influence of a ground swell,
became more steady and quiet once it left the surface.
The searchlight in the conning tower was turned on, and
in the glare of it Andy and the professor were able to steer properly, aided by
the compass which gave them the true southern course.
It was now quite dark. Additional electric lights were
switched on in the cabin, engine and dining room. Andy came out of the conning
tower and announced that Captain Henderson wanted Washington to get supper.
All the cooking was done by electricity, and, in
addition to a supply of the usual and ordinary kinds of food, there was a big
lot of patent condensed victuals to draw on. Soup, broiled steak, potatoes, hot
biscuits, rice pudding and coffee made up the repast which was enjoyed by all.
Toward the close of the meal Professor Henderson began
to sniff the air of the cabin.
"What's the matter? Do you smell a storm
brewing?" asked Andy.
"No, but the air is not as fresh as it should
be," replied the inventor. "Washington, release a little more of the
supply from the compression tanks."
The ship, which had been left to steer itself
automatically while the professor was absent from the conning tower, was moving
along at about half speed. The gage showed they were going at twenty miles an
hour, and were three hundred feet below the surface.
"Washington and I will share the first night's
watch between us," said the inventor, after the supper things had been
cleared away. "There will not be much to do, as the ship will steer
automatically in whatever direction I set her. Still I want to see how she
behaves. The rest of you might as well go to your bunks."
The two boys were especially glad of a chance to go to
bed, as they had had but little sleep the night before on account of the fire.
So they lost no time in undressing and rolling up in the blankets, for it was
quite cool so far down under the water.
"Well, we've slept on the earth, above the earth
and now we're under the waters," observed Jack.
"There's only one place more to spend your time
taking a snooze," said Mark.
"Where's that?"
"Inside the earth."
Then they fell asleep. During the night and the next
day the Porpoise forged on underneath the waves. Washington relieved Mr.
Henderson in the conning tower and reported the machinery to be working well.
"Keep her headed due south," was the order
of the inventor, and the colored man did so.
It was about four o'clock one morning that Washington
felt a slight jar to the submarine.
"Hope we ain't goin' to hit no more
battleships," he said.
He glanced at the speed-indicating gage. To his
surprise it stood at zero. The craft was not moving forward a foot! Yet the
engines were going at half speed!
In great alarm Washington shut off the power and ran
to acquaint Professor Henderson with the news.
"Suffin's ketched us!" cried the colored
man.
"Nonsense!" said the inventor, yet he seemed
alarmed as he slipped on his clothes and hastened to the conning tower.
He peered ahead along the path of water illuminated by
the glare of the searchlight, but nothing was to be seen. Then he started the
engine, increasing the speed gradually until the big screw in the shaft
revolved more than one thousand times a minute. Still the Porpoise never
stirred. She remained in the same position, as if some giant hand grasped her.
"Reverse the engine," said the professor.
Washington did so. To the surprise of both of them the
ship shot backward like a frightened crab.
"Now forward!" exclaimed the old inventor.
But this time the Porpoise did not move. It was
as if she was up against a stone wall.
"What's the matter?" asked Mark, who had
been awakened by the excitement on board.
"I do not know," replied Mr. Henderson gravely.
"Something mysterious has occurred. We can go no further!"
CHAPTER VIII
ASHORE IN THE DARK
"Stop the engine," the captain commanded
after he had peered through the lens in the conning tower for some time.
"We must see what is the matter."
He glanced at the depth gage and noted that they were
now four hundred feet below the surface. Then he consulted some charts.
"There is a depth of one thousand feet about
here," he remarked. "Lower the ship, Washington. Let us see if by
getting on the ocean bed we can get away from this obstruction."
The colored man opened wider the sea cocks by which
the tanks were filled. The increased ballast sunk the Porpoise still
lower, and, in a few minutes a slight jar told the navigators that they were on
the bottom of the ocean.
"Now we will see if we have cleared the
obstruction," said the professor.
He started the big screw to revolving, but the ship
did not move. It shivered and trembled throughout its length but remained
stationary.
"Maybe dar's a debil fish what hab circumulated
dis ship in de exteror portion ob his anatomy," suggested Washington,
rolling his eyes until only the whites were visible.
"I presume you mean that a giant squid or cuttle
fish has attacked us," spoke the professor.
"Yas, sir," replied Washington.
"That's nonsense," went on the inventor.
"However, we must make an investigation."
"How are you going to do it?" asked Mark.
"You can't see the end of the tube from inside the ship, and, even if we
went to the surface it would still be under water."
"We are going to look at it while here, under the
ocean," said the inventor.
"Well, maybe you're a good swimmer," put in
Jack, "but I don't believe you can stay under, in this depth of water,
long enough to see what the trouble is."
"I think I can," answered Mr. Henderson.
"How?"
"I'll show you. Washington, bring out the diving
suits."
The colored man, his eyes growing bigger every minute,
went to a locker and brought out what seemed quite a complicated bit of
apparatus.
"With the aid of these," said the professor,
"I will be able to go out, walk along the ocean bed, and investigate the
mystery. Do you boys want to come along?"
"Is it safe?" asked Mark, who was inclined
to be cautious.
"As safe as any part of this under-sea
voyage," replied the professor. "These diving suits are something I
have not told you about," he went on. "They are my own invention.
Besides the regular rubber suits there is an interlining of steel,--something
like the ancient suits of chain mail--to withstand the great pressure of water.
Then, instead of being dependent on a supply of air, pumped into the helmet
from an apparatus in a boat on the surface, each person carries his own air
supply with him."
"How is that?" asked Jack, and Mark also
asked the question.
"Simply by attaching a little tank of the
compressed gas to the shoulder piece of the suit," said the inventor.
"There is enough air in the tank to last for nearly a day. It is admitted
to the helmet as needed by means of automatic valves. In other respects the
diving suit is the same as the ordinary kind, except that there is a small
searchlight, fed by a storage battery, on top of the helmet."
In spite of their fears at venturing out under the
great ocean, the two boys were anxious to try the suits. So, after some
hesitation, they donned them.
"Here, take these with you," said the
professor, before their helmets were screwed on. He held out what looked like
long sticks.
"What are they?" asked Jack.
"Electric guns," replied the professor.
"But come on now, we have no time to lose."
Further conversation was impossible, for the boys had
their heavy copper helmets on, and they were as tightly enclosed as if inside a
box. They grasped their weapons and waited for the next move.
The professor led the way to the stern of the ship.
The boys found it hard to walk, as they were weighted down by the heavy suits,
and also the boots, the soles of which were of lead.
They followed the inventor into what seemed a small
room. Inside they found themselves in darkness. There was a clanking sound as
Washington fastened and clamped the door shut. Then came a hissing.
The boys felt water rising about them. They could
experience its coldness, even through the diving suits. They were much afraid,
but the professor put a reassuring hand on their shoulders.
They seemed to feel a great weight. It gradually
lessened, however, and, in a few minutes, they saw something move in front of
them. The professor pushed them gently forward.
In another instant they were walking on the bed of the
ocean, having stepped from the Porpoise. They had gone into a locked
compartment, the inner door of which had been tightly closed, after which water
from outside had been gradually admitted until the pressure was equal, and then
the boys and the professor had merely to emerge out into the bottom of the sea
when the outer portal was swung aside by Washington, who worked the lever from
inside.
The boys were in intense darkness, but, suddenly a
light glowed about them, and they saw that the professor had switched on his
miniature search lamp. They remembered how he had told them to work the
apparatus, and soon tiny gleams shot out from their helmets.
The professor pointed ahead, for not a sound could be
heard, and the boys followed him.
It was a new sensation, this walking along the bed of
the ocean. At first the great pressure of water, even though the steel lined
diving suits kept most of it off, was unpleasant. Gradually, however, the boys
became used to it. They had to move slowly, for the water was denser than the
air and impeded their progress.
In a few minutes they reached the forward end of the Porpoise.
Now they were to solve the mystery of what had stopped the submarine. For a few
moments they could distinguish nothing.
Suddenly the boys felt the professor grasping their
arms. They looked in the direction he pointed. There in the diffused glare from
the search light and the illumination of their helmet lamps they saw, wrapped
about the forward shaft opening a gigantic squid or devil fish. Its soft,
jelly-like body completely covered the opening of the shaft preventing any
water from entering, and thus stopping any forward motion to the ship.
This was what had caused all the trouble. The Porpoise
had run into the monster, who feeling what it must have thought an enemy, had
grasped the submarine with its long sinuous arms.
The professor hesitated a moment. Then he slowly
raised his electrical gun, and took aim at the hideous mass. The boys followed
his example. At Mr. Henderson's signal they all fired together.
From the muzzles of the guns darted small barbs that
carried with them a strong shock of electricity, from storage batteries in the
shoulder pieces of the weapons. Three of them were enough to produce death in
an animal as large as a whale.
The devil fish quivered. Then the water about it
suddenly grew black, and the boys and the professor were in dense darkness, for
the squid had dyed the ocean with a dark liquid from the sack it carried for
the purpose.
The explorers groped their way to the left, having
fortunately grasped hands after firing their guns, to prevent being separated
in case the terrible fish began a death struggle.
Luckily Professor Henderson went in the right
direction and managed to locate the Porpoise. Then, feeling along her
steel sides, he led the boys through the inky blackness to the water chamber by
which entrance could be had to the interior.
In a few minutes all three were safely inside and had
removed their diving suits. The others crowded about, anxious to learn what had
happened. The inventor related it briefly.
Once more the engines were started. This time there
was no hanging back on the part of the Porpoise. The big screw revolved,
the water came in the shaft and was thrust out of the rear end, making a
current that sent the craft ahead swiftly. The gigantic fish had been killed,
and its body no longer obstructed progress.
"Now we'll rise to the surface and see how it
feels to sail along that way for a while," said the professor as he
started the pumps that emptied the tanks. In a little while the ship was
floating on the waves.
It was now night, and the clouds overhead made it so
dark that it was hard to see ten feet in advance. The professor did not want to
use the searchlight for he did not care to have his presence discovered by
curious persons. So he ran the ship at half speed.
"Where are we now?" asked Mark, who had
entered the conning tower, where the professor was steering.
"Somewhere's off the coast of South
Carolina," replied the inventor.
The next instant there was a sudden shock and jar. The
ship quivered from stem to stern, and came to an abrupt stop.
"We've hit something!" exclaimed the
professor, shutting down the engines with a jerk of the lever.
CHAPTER IX
A PRICE ON THEIR HEADS
On board the Porpoise there was great
excitement. Washington, with Andy, Tom, Bill and Jack came running from the
engine room.
"What is it?" cried Jack.
"I don't know," answered the professor as
calmly as he could. "We'll soon see, however."
He switched on the searchlight and peered from the
conning tower.
"Can you see anything?" asked Andy,
anxiously.
"I can," announced the inventor.
"What?"
"Land," replied Mr. Henderson. "We've
hit the coast."
"I hope we ain't done no damage," put in
Washington.
"Do you mean to the coast or to us?" asked
the professor, with a smile. "I guess there isn't much danger in ramming
the shore excepting to the Porpoise. However, we do not seem to be in
any immediate trouble."
He tested various wheels and levers, and announced
that, aside from the jar, which might have started some of the machinery, the Porpoise
was unharmed.
The cover of the man-hole was loosened and, one after
another, the adventurers crawled out on the small deck or platform. It took
them a little while to become accustomed to the darkness, but soon they were
able to make out that they had run on the muddy bank of the ocean beach. The
tide was low and the Porpoise had rammed her nose well into the soft
muck, which accounted for the lack of damage.
"Well, I guess there is nothing to do excepting
to wait for morning," said Mr. Henderson. "It doesn't look like a
very lively neighborhood about here. I don't believe we'll be disturbed."
Save for the splash and lapping of the waves and the
sound of the wind, it was as quiet as the proverbial graveyard. Not a light
showed on shore, and the gleam from the search lamp of the Porpoise cut
the darkness like a small moonbeam.
"If there's nothing to do I'm going to turn
in," said Andy. "I'm tired."
The professor said this was a good suggestion, and,
leaving instructions that Washington and Bill were to divide the night's watch
between them, the inventor sought his bunk.
The boys remained on deck a few minutes longer.
"We certainly are getting our share of
adventures," remarked Jack.
"I should say so," answered Mark.
"Gollyation yes!" exclaimed Washington.
"You-uns done most been eat by dat air koslostrous specimen ob a
parralleledon! I'm glad I didn't go. But I'se brave enough!"
"What's that?" asked Mark suddenly, pointing
to an object floating on the water.
Washington turned to behold something white drifting
along.
"Oh my good land ob mercy! It's a ghost!"
the colored man yelled. "It's a ghost! Land a' massy! Hide me some where,
quick!"
Washington fell on his knees and stretched up his
clasped hands in supplication. The boys gazed curiously at the white object
that was slowly floating toward the stranded ship.
It rose and fell on the waves, with an odd motion.
"I wonder what it is," said Mark.
"We'll soon see," spoke Jack. "It's
coming this way."
"Don't go near it! Don't touch it, boys!"
pleaded Washington. "It'll put de evil eye on yo', suah! Turn yo' haids
away!"
But the boys were not so easily frightened. The white
thing did look queer, but Jack reasoned correctly that the darkness of the
night magnified it, and made it appear stranger than it probably was.
"I'm going to try to get it," said Mark.
The white thing was now quite close. It resembled a
bundle of rags, floating on top of the water, and, as it came nearer, it seemed
to take on a curious form.
"It's a baby! It's de ghost ob a little dead
baby!" cried the colored man. "Let it alone, I tell you!"
Indeed, now that Washington had suggested it, the boys
could see a resemblance to a child in the white object. But this did not deter
them. Jack secured a boat hook from where it was fastened to the platform. With
it he gently poked at the white thing. The object seemed to collapse and Jack
was conscious of a strange feeling. Then, with slow motions, he drew it close
to the side of the ship.
Lying on his face he was able to get a good look at
the thing. He muttered an exclamation.
"What is it?" cried Mark.
"Nothing but a newspaper!" announced Jack
with a laugh, as he threw it on the deck. "All our trouble for
nothing."
"I shore thought it were a ghost," cried
Washington as he got up from his knees.
The boys went to their bunks. They were the first ones
awake the next morning, and Jack followed Mark on deck.
"There's the paper you rescued from
drowning," said Mark.
"So it is," came from Jack. "I wonder
if there's any news in it."
The sheet had dried out and Jack spread it open. No
sooner had he scanned the first page than he uttered a whistle.
"Something startling?" asked Mark.
"Startling! I guess yes! Look here!"
Mark looked over Jack's shoulder. Staring at them,
from amid a mass of other news was the announcement in big black type:
REWARD FOR BOY ANARCHISTS!
Then followed an account of the burning of the hotel
at Easton, a vivid description with pictures, of how it had been blown up in an
attempt to assassinate Lord Peckham, and how the two boys, sons of an English
anarchist, had escaped.
The rest of the story was given over to a description
which Jack and Mark could see was meant for them though it was incorrect in
several particulars. How the boys had escaped the detective, through the
trolley car mishap, was related, and then came the startling announcement that
the hotel authorities had offered a reward of $1,000 for the capture of either
or both of the boy anarchists. To this Lord Peckham had added an equal sum.
"Well, it looks as if we were of some importance
in the world," remarked Jack.
"Rather," agreed Mark. "Think of having
a price on our heads! Well, that detective certainly is a hustler. When is that
paper dated?"
Jack looked and saw that the sheet had been issued in
Charleston the day previous. It had probably been thrown overboard from some
steamer, and had drifted toward shore.
While the boys were speculating over the matter
Professor Henderson came on deck. He saw something was up, and soon had the
whole story from the boys.
"I shouldn't worry about it," said the
inventor. "They've got to catch you first, and it isn't like running away
when you know you are guilty. You boys had no more to do with the fire than the
man in the moon. And we'll soon be beyond the reach of rewards and
newspapers."
Nevertheless, the boys brooded over the matter. It
seemed that they were still under a cloud, and they wished very much that it
could be cleared away.
However there were soon busy times. The rising tide
floated the boat, and soon it was riding safely at anchor. The professor needed
some small bits of machinery, and had decided to send the boys to the nearest
town for them. But the news in the paper changed his plans, and he sent Bill
and Washington, who soon returned with the needed articles.
"Now we'll make another start," said Mr.
Henderson, as soon as all were on board once more. "This time I hope we
will keep on until we reach the south pole!"
He started the engine, the Porpoise sank
beneath the waves, and with a hum of the big screw that throbbed and vibrated,
was away again.
CHAPTER X
ATTACKED BY A MONSTER
For several days the Porpoise plowed her way
beneath the surface of the ocean. Obedient to the directing hand of Professor
Henderson she rose or sank as the tanks were emptied or filled. He put the
craft through several rather difficult movements to test her under all
conditions. In each one she was a success.
Dinner was sometimes eaten five hundred feet below the
surface. Then while Washington washed the dishes and cleaned up the galley,
Jack and Mark looked from the side windows at the strange life under water.
They were getting farther south now and the water was
warmer as the equator was approached. This produced a great variety of animal
life, and the ocean fairly swarmed with fishes, big and little, strange and
curious that could be seen from the glass bull's-eyes.
Great sharks swam up alongside of the Porpoise,
keeping pace with her in spite of her speed. Their cruel tigerish eyes and ugly
mouths made the boys shudder as they looked at the creatures. Then came odd
creatures that seemed neither of the land or sea, but which swam along with
their horrible bodies flapping up against the glass. One and all, the inhabitants
of the ocean seemed to resent the intrusion of the submarine.
One day the boys turned the light out in the cabin and
sat in the darkness the better to observe the fishes. The sea, in the vicinity
of the ship, was illuminated with a sort of glow that diffused from the
searchlight.
Suddenly, as the boys were watching, there came a thud
on the glass window at the port side. They glanced in that direction to see
some horrible thing peering in at them through the window.
At first they were greatly frightened. Two big eyes of
green, with rims of what looked like red fire, stared at them, and, there was
an ugly mouth lined with three rows of teeth.
"It's only a fish," said Mark.
"Well, I wouldn't like to meet it outside,"
said Jack. "I'd rather be here. My, but it's a nasty sight!"
"Let's give Washington a little scare,"
suggested Mark.
"How?"
"We'll go out and tell him some one in the cabin
wants to see him. The fish will stay there. See, it is fastened to the glass by
some sort of suction arrangement, like the octupus fish have on their arms.
Then we'll look in and see what Wash does."
Jack agreed to the plan. The boys left the cabin, and
Mark called to the colored man, who was in the engine room.
"I'll go right instanter this minute," said
Washington. "Don't no grass grow under dis chile's feet!"
"Now listen," said Mark as he and Jack
tiptoed after the colored man.
Washington had no sooner entered the darkened cabin,
and caught sight of the horrible staring red and green eyes looking straight at
him, than he let out a yell that could be heard all over the ship. Then the
colored man dropped on his knees and began to implore:
"Good please Mr. Satan fish, doan take Washington
White," he begged. "It's all a mistake. I didn't do nuffin. Good
please Mr. Satan fish, take some one else. It's disproportionate to de
circumulation ob de interiorness ob dis subicecream ship, so kindly pass me by
dis time!"
"What's the matter?" asked Amos Henderson,
as he came hurrying into the cabin, seeking the cause for Washington's loud cry.
Jack and Mark, who came in at that juncture, were a
little bit ashamed of the trick they had played.
"What is the trouble?" repeated Mr.
Henderson.
"We's all goin' to be devoured alibe!" cried
Washington pointing to the fish, that still clung to the glass.
"Ah, a sucker fish!" remarked the inventor.
"A large specimen, too. Don't be afraid Washington, it can't hurt
you."
"He looks like he could," said the colored
man. "Look at dem teef!"
Indeed the creature's mouth was a horrible sight, as
it opened and shut.
"I'll show you how to get rid of him," said
the professor.
He turned on the electric lights in the cabin,
flooding the room with a bright glow. The big fish darted off, and, when the
lights were turned out again, the terrible eyes did not reappear, much to their
satisfaction.
"The lights scared it away," remarked the
inventor. "But you mustn't get frightened so easily, Washington. You'll
see stranger sights than that before you're through with this voyage."
"Oh I wasn't 'fraid," spoke up Washington.
"I were jest 'stonished, dat's all."
"What did you get down on your knees for?"
asked Mark with a grin.
"I might hab been lookin' for my collar button,
for all you knows," replied Washington, with an air of great dignity, and
went back to the engine room.
For several days after this the Porpoise
continued on her way south. Now and then appearing on the surface to renew the
supply of fresh air, and again skimming along under the surface, or deep down,
the strange craft kept on. It grew much warmer, and even when some distance
below the surface the heat could be felt in an uncomfortable manner.
"We're getting near the equator," explained
the professor.
One afternoon, when dinner had just been finished, and
the ship, under the direction of Washington, was gliding along well under the
sea, there came a sudden shock.
"We've hit something!" exclaimed Mr.
Henderson as he jumped for the conning tower. The shock was repeated.
"What was it?" asked someone.
"Shut down the engine!" yelled the inventor
to the colored man. "What do you want to go on ramming an object after
you've once hit it? Slow down the engine!"
"Power's shut off!" cried Washington.
"We didn't hit nothin'! Something hit us!"
"What do you mean?" asked Mr. Henderson.
"Somethin's rammin' us," went on Washington.
"It must be a big monster. I was sterrin' along
an' there was nothin' in de road, when all of a suddint, ker-plunk! We's hit.
Look ahead, an' you can't see nothin'!"
The professor, and the boys, who had followed him,
gazed out of the conning tower window. There was nothing forward but a vast
expanse of water.
The next instant the ship careened as something struck
her a violent blow on the port side. Everyone almost toppled over from the
force of the impact.
"Dar he goes agin!" cried Washington.
"We're attacked by a whale!" said the
professor. "We must rise to the surface or it may damage the ship."
"If it's a whale I'd like to get a shot at
it," put in Andy Sudds, from the foot of the companion ladder leading into
the tower.
"I don't know that it is a whale," went on
the inventor. "But it must be something very big and strong."
"It's a monster of some sort," put in Andy,
"and I want a chance at him."
"It's too risky," murmured the professor.
"We couldn't get down to bottom here, as the water is several miles deep,
and the pressure would crush the Porpoise, strong as she is."
Once more came a terrible blow and the ship rocked in
a swirl of foam beneath the waves. In quick succession two more fierce
onslaughts were made by the unseen monster.
"We'll have to do something," muttered Andy.
"You're right," agreed the professor.
"Our only chance is to rise to the surface, for I do not believe the
creature will follow us there. Empty the tanks, Washington."
The colored man started the pumps, and the professor
watched the gages that told the depth of the craft. The pointer should have
begun to swing around in a few seconds after the tanks began to empty. Instead
it remained stationary.
"Strange," said Mr. Henderson. "I
wonder if anything is wrong with the machinery."
"More like the whale, or whatever it is, is on
top of the boat, holding her down," suggested Andy.
There was no doubt of this a moment later, for there
were several violent blows on the upper part of the Porpoise.
The crew of the submarine were held prisoners below
the surface by the unknown monster!
For a few minutes the thought of the awful fate that
would be theirs if the ship should be wrecked under the water made each one
speechless. As they stood looking at each other, not knowing what to do, the
attack was renewed on the port side.
The big fish, whale or whatever it was, kept pounding
away.
"I have an idea!" cried Andy suddenly.
"What is it?" asked the professor quickly.
"Let me put a diving dress on," began the
old hunter.
"I tell you we can't sink to the bottom in this
depth of water," interrupted the professor.
"We don't need to," put in Andy. "All I
want is a diving suit and a chance to stand out in the diving chamber. I guess
I can fix Mr. Whale, if I have one of those electric guns."
"Quick! Get a diving suit, Washington!"
cried Mr. Henderson. He saw what the old hunter planned to do.
In a few minutes Andy was dressed in the suit. The
attacks of the monster had redoubled in frequency, and the ship rocked as in a
storm.
Andy stepped into the diving chamber, clasping the
electric gun. The inner door was tightly closed and then the sea cocks that
admitted water from the outside were opened. When the pressure inside the
chamber was equal to that of the ocean outside some one pulled the lever that
opened the outer door.
Andy knew better than to step outside. He remained in
the chamber, like a sentinel hid in the embrasure of a wall, for the chamber
was a sort of big dent in the side of the Porpoise.
Once more the ship rocked from a terrific blow, and
the old hunter was nearly thrown out and into the fathomless depths below.
He clung to the door lever and peered out. Through the
big glass eyes of his copper helmet he saw headed straight at him a whale that
seemed larger than the submarine.
CHAPTER XI
CAUGHT IN A SEA OF GRASS
"It's all up with me and the ship, too,"
thought Andy as he stood in the small chamber and watched the oncoming of the
monster.
However, he was not going to die without a fight, so
he raised the electric gun. Yet he knew it was a most forlorn chance.
He aimed straight down the big open mouth and pulled
the trigger. The next instant the water all about him was a mass of foam,
through which he could dimly see that the whale had halted.
And, as the old hunter watched, in awe and fear at
what he saw, he noted that instead of one monster there seemed to be a pair.
Together they were threshing the sea into a bloody foam.
Then, turning on the searchlight in his helmet, Andy
beheld a terrible sight. The whale had been attacked by a gigantic swordfish at
the moment the hunter had fired the shot, and it was that, and not the electric
bullet, that had stopped the infuriated animal's rush at the ship.
Ancient enemies, the whale and swordfish, had met in
mortal combat. The swordfish had engaged the whale just as it was about to
strike what would probably have been a blow that would have disabled the
submarine, for with the door of the diving chamber open, the onslaught might
not have been withstood.
Rushing here and there, the whale seeking to destroy
his enemy with a sweep of the enormous flukes, and the swordfish plunging his
bony weapon again and again into the whale, the two monsters fought until the
water about the ship was a mass of foam and blood.
Much as he wanted to see the end of the fight, Andy
knew it was dangerous to remain longer with the door open.
He closed it, pressed the lever which started the
pumps, forcing the water from the chamber and, in a few minutes, emerged into
the interior of the ship.
Mr. Henderson, realizing that something out of the
ordinary was going on, had opened the slides of the bull's-eye windows, and
those in the submarine saw part of the fight between the whale and swordfish.
As soon as Andy had removed his diving suit he advised
that the ship be sent to the surface, as there might be danger should the
monsters get too close in their struggles.
Accordingly the pumps, which had been stopped when it
was found impossible to raise the ship, because of the weight of the whale,
were started and the Porpoise was soon on the surface.
The manhole cover was opened and Andy, with Jack and
Mark, went out on deck. They had no sooner stepped out on the platform than
there was a commotion in the water.
"They're going to fight up here!" exclaimed
Mark.
A big body shot upward and fell back with a splash,
rocking the submarine.
"There's the whale," observed Andy.
"But I reckon he won't fight any more. He's dead."
It was so. The swordfish had conquered, and the
lifeless body of the whale floated on top of the water, only to sink a little
later.
"It was a great battle," said Jack.
"I'm glad I was inside the ship."
The course was due south, and every minute it seemed
to the boys that it was getting warmer, for they were approaching the equator.
Every hour brought them nearer the south pole, though they were still several
thousand miles from it.
After a while quite a wind sprang up, and as the sea
roughened the professor decided to go down under the surface. The Porpoise
sunk as the tanks filled and, in a little while, the submarine was in calm
water, and was forging ahead at three-quarter speed.
It was three days after the adventure with the whale
when, as the ship was going along at a good rate, that there seemed to be a
gradual slacking in the progress.
"I wonder what Washington is slowing down
for," said the professor rising from the dinner table at which all save
the colored man had been sitting. "I told him to keep right on. He must
have seen something ahead. I'll take a look."
The inventor went to the conning tower, where
Washington was steering.
"What are you stopping for?" he asked.
"I'm not slowin' down," replied the colored
man. "Guess another ob dem debil fishes has grabbed holt ob de ship. Dey
suttinly am de most koslostrous conglomerations ob inconsequence dat I eber
see."
"You must keep your big words for another
time," remarked Mr. Henderson, who seemed worried. "Hurry to the
engine-room and see if the machinery is all right. We certainly are slowing
down, from some cause or other."
The Porpoise was now scarcely moving, though
from the vibration it was evident that the engines were working almost at top
speed. Washington came back and reported that the big screw was revolving
properly and that all the machinery was working well.
"Then we're caught in something," said the
professor. "Shut off the power, Washington, I don't want to strain
things."
The ship was now scarcely making a foot a minute, and,
a little later, when the colored man had turned off the engine, the submarine
became stationary, merely undulating with the roll and heave of the ocean.
Hurrying to the cabin, Captain Henderson opened the
side window shutters, turned off the electric lights and peered out.
"I can't see anything," he said. "Yet I
should be able to, as we are not very deep."
The gage showed that the ship was submerged only
thirty feet, and at that depth there should have been no difficulty in seeing,
at least dimly, objects under water. But the windows showed as black as night.
"Bring me one of the portable searchlights,"
called Mr. Henderson.
Washington brought one, operated by a storage battery.
Holding it so the reflector cast the beams out of the bull's-eye and into the
water on the opposite side, the inventor peered forth.
"I was afraid of this!" he murmured.
"What is it?" asked Jack.
"We are caught in the Sargasso Sea," replied
Mr. Henderson.
"The Sargasso Sea?" repeated Mark, in a
questioning tone. "What is that?"
"It is a great sea of grass," replied the
captain. "An immense ocean of sea weed, that sometimes floats on the
surface and sometimes a little below. The stalks or blades of the grass are
very long and closely matted together."
"Is there any danger?" asked Andy in some
alarm.
"Very much," answered the professor quietly.
"A ship, once fairly entangled in the grass or sea weed, seldom gets out.
If it is a sailing ship the weed clings to the rudder, making steerage
impossible, and even in a strong wind the ship cannot get free of the mass. The
grass winds about the propellers of steamships, and holds them as tight as in a
vise.
"Sometimes a great storm may tear the mass of
weed loose from the bottom of the ocean, and then the ship is free. But the
Sargasso Sea is the graveyard of many a fine vessel."
The pumps were set going. Anxiously everyone watched
the gage. The pointer never moved, but remained at thirty feet. The Porpoise
was caught.
"Well, since we can't go up, let us see if we can
go down," said the inventor. "Perhaps we can dive under the sea
weed."
The cocks of the tanks were opened and the water
rushed in. Under the weight of it the ship should have sunk to the bottom.
Instead it remained just where it was, thirty feet below the surface.
"Try the screw again," suggested Andy,
"Maybe we can back out."
The big propeller in the tube was started going in a
reverse direction, but the Porpoise only moved a few feet and then
stopped. To go forward was equally impossible.
The submarine was held fast in the grip of the long,
sinuous, snake-like fingers of the terrible sea grass. Weak as one strand was,
the thousands combined served to fasten the ship as securely as wire cables
would have done. The weeds had entangled themselves all around the craft and
refused to let go.
"Well," remarked Mr. Henderson when all
efforts had failed. "We must think of a new plan."
He spoke cheerfully, for he did not want the boys and
other members of the crew to know how worried he was. This was a danger he had
never counted on when he planned to go to the south pole.
"There is no great hurry," Mr. Henderson
went on in a few minutes. "We can stay here for several days if need be,
and by that time a storm may tear the grass loose."
"If we had our old hay sythes here," spoke
Bill, "me an' Tom could put on divin' suits an' go out an' cut the sea
weed."
"I'm afraid that wouldn't work," answered Mr.
Henderson. "I'll think up some plan, soon."
He started toward the engine room to look over the
machinery. He was met by Washington, who seemed much alarmed.
"What's the matter?" asked the inventor.
"De air tank hab busted an' all de air is
escapin' out!" cried the colored man. "We'll all smothercate!"
CHAPTER XII
FIRE ON BOARD
The professor jumped past Washington and hurried into
the room where the tanks were kept, carrying the reserve supply of air for
breathing when the ship was under water. A loud hissing told that the leak was
a large one.
"Quick! Bring me some tools and a steel
plug," shouted the captain.
Mark hurried in with the things the professor wanted.
But before the plug could be put in the hole the air stopped hissing.
"The leak is fixed!" cried Jack.
"No," said the professor in a strange voice.
"But the air no longer rushes out."
"For a good reason, there is no longer any air to
rush out. It is all gone!"
"Do you mean to say that all the reserve stock
has been lost?" exclaimed Andy.
"I fear so. The leak must have been a bad one.
The air was stored in tanks under pressure, and, as you know, we released it as
we needed it. Now it is all gone."
"All? Then we shall smother," said Jack, and
his voice trembled.
"Not at once," went on Mr. Henderson in a
calm voice. "There is enough air in the entire ship, including that which
has leaked from the tanks to last us five hours. After that----" he paused
and looked at his watch.
"Well?" asked Andy. "After that?"
"There is enough stored in the small tanks of the
diving suits to last another two hours, perhaps. Seven hours in all."
"Then what?" asked Mark.
"We shall smother to death," said the
professor in a low tone. "That is," he went on, "unless before
that time we can raise the Porpoise to the surface of the sea and get a
fresh supply of air."
"Then we must work to raise the ship," put
in Bill. "Let' get out and see if we can't cut through the sea weed."
"It would be useless," said Mr. Henderson.
"We can only depend on the power of the ship herself. But do not be
discouraged. We may escape. Come, Washington, start the engine again. By
keeping it going constantly we can, perhaps, break loose from the grass. It is
our only hope."
Steadily the machinery worked. It might as well have
remained stationary, however, as far as any noticeable effect was made on the
boat's progress. The grass of the Sargasso Sea held the Porpoise in a
firm grasp.
Four hours passed. There was nothing to do but wait
and see what would happen. It all depended on the engines. Silently the
navigators of the realms under the ocean sat and hoped. Now and then the professor
would go to the engine room to adjust the machines.
The atmosphere in the cabin was growing noticeably
heavier. The boys' heads began to ring with strange noises, and there was a
tightness across their chests. The lack of fresh air was beginning to tell.
"We might as well use that in the diving suit
reservoirs," remarked the professor. "We will feel better, at least
for a little while."
The helmets of the suits were brought in, and the
vapor released from the small tanks. A change was at once noticed. The old
stale air in the cabin was forced out of the exhaust pipes, and the fresh took
its place. Every one felt better.
Faster and faster revolved the big screw. The ship
vibrated more and more. Yet it did not move, nor did it rise. The crew were
still prisoners beneath the water.
For an hour or so conditions were fairly comfortable.
Then the same unpleasantness was experienced as was noticed before.
"If we could only open a window," sighed
Mark, "and let in a lot of fresh air, how nice it would be."
The air rapidly became more foul. Soon Washington was
gasping for breath. Tom and Bill showed signs of uneasiness.
"Lie down on the floor," counseled the
professor. "You will find the air a little fresher down there."
They all did as he advised, the inventor himself
stretching out at full length. A little relief was experienced.
They knew it could not last long. Even the professor
seemed to have given up hope. The engine was not going to free the ship in time
to save the lives of those on board.
Washington crawled to the engine room, as some of the
bearings needed oiling. The professor seemed in despair. He opened one of the
slides that covered the glass bulls eye windows. Then he turned off the
electric lights. The opening was black, showing that the sea of grass still
surrounded them. With a groan Mr. Henderson turned aside. The last hope was
gone. He sank down on the floor of the darkened cabin.
Just then Mark happened to look at the bull's-eye. He
saw a glimmer of light. Then he noticed several fishes swimming about. The
water was clear. The grass had disappeared from the vicinity of the window.
"Look!" cried Mark to the professor.
The inventor peered forth. As he did so he uttered a
cry. Then he staggered rather than ran to the engine room.
"What are you doing?" he called to
Washington.
"I jest let some ob de sulphuric acid out ob de
storage battery tank," replied the colored man.
"That's it! That's it!" exclaimed the
professor. "Quick, let some more out, Washington. Let out all there is in
that tank. It will save our lives."
Wonderingly Washington obeyed. The air in the ship was
growing more foul every second. It was hard to breathe even on the floor, and
all were gasping for breath. A few minutes more and they would all become
unconscious and death would come in a little while if the air was not
freshened.
The professor staggered back to the main cabin. He
looked out of the bull's-eye windows. Then he exclaimed:
"See, it is getting lighter! Thank Heaven we are
saved!"
The next instant the ship began to move backward. Then
with increasing speed it pulled out of the grip of the long grass, and in
another minute was floating on top of the water, at the edge of the Sargasso
Sea.
"Quick! Open the man hole cover!" said Amos
Henderson.
Washington threw back the lever cams, and in rushed
the fresh air. It was a blessed relief from the terrible oppressiveness of the
foul atmosphere of the boat. They all breathed deeply, and, in a few minutes
the effects of their long imprisonment had passed off.
They went out on the small deck. It was getting dusk,
and the reflection of the red sunset shone brightly on the heaving water.
"I 'spected I'd neber see dis again," said
Washington. "Thought suah I was a gone chicken!"
"We had a most fortunate escape," said the
professor. "You did the trick for us when you let the acid run from that
tank into the sea. It mingled with the water and burned or ate through the
stems of the grass so they no longer held the ship. I saw what had happened as
soon as I looked out of the bull's-eye, and that's why I had you turn out all
the acid you could. It was just as if liquid fire had touched the sea weed and
burnt it off."
"Golly!" exclaimed Washington. "Fust I
know I'll be a perfessor myself!"
Supper was eaten with the ship on the surface of the
ocean, for it was impossible to go below until the leak in the air tanks had
been repaired. Work was begun on this the next day, and though it proved a
difficult job it was accomplished by Mr. Henderson and the boys.
There were several minor repairs to be made to the
machinery, and it was a week before all was in readiness for another descent
beneath the waves. In the meanwhile the craft had moved slowly southward on the
surface, where no very great speed was possible.
Toward evening, on the seventh day after their
adventure with the Sargasso Sea, the travelers closed the man hole, and with
air tanks well filled slowly sank beneath the waves. Supper was eaten at a
depth of sixty feet, and after the meal, while Washington was washing the
dishes, the others sat and looked out through the bull's-eyes at the big fishes
which floated past.
"I wouldn't like to catch one of them air things
on my hook an' line," observed Bill, as a particularly large fish went
past. "I reckon I'd have trouble landin' him."
"More likely he'd pull you in," said Mark.
For several minutes they watched the strange
procession of deep-sea life. Presently Jack, who was sitting near the engine
room door, sprang up. At the same instant there was the sound of an explosion.
"What's the matter?" cried the professor.
"Come quick!" yelled Washington.
"It's a fire!" yelled Jack. "One of the
electrical fuses has blown out, and the ship is on fire!"
CHAPTER XIII
THE GHOST OF THE SUBMARINE
They all rushed toward the engine room. It was dark,
because the lights had gone out all over the ship, and they could see only by
the glare of the flames, which were increasing.
"Light one of the oil lanterns!" called the
professor, and Bill did so.
"Unreel the hose," the inventor continued,
and Mark and Jack ran to do this.
In a few minutes the line was stretched into the
engine room, and water was being thrown on the flames, for Washington had
started the pump as soon as he saw the conflagration.
The fire was in one corner, near the electrical switch
board, and had been caused by the blowing out of one of the fuses, which
occasioned the little explosion. The wood work near the switches was blazing
fiercely, and soon the ship was filled with smoke.
"Empty the ballast tanks!" called the
professor. "We must rise to the surface!"
"We'll all be burned up!" cried Tom.
"First we nearly smother and then we get on fire. Neber saw such
luck!"
With a rush the Porpoise began to rise, as her
tanks were lightened. With steady hands, though with fear in their hearts, Jack
and Mark continued to play the water on the flames, while the professor and
Washington got out a second line and aided them.
"The fire is dying out!" exclaimed Mr.
Henderson. "We'll soon get the best of it."
In five minutes the worst was over, though it had been
an anxious time, and one of danger. The ship came to the surface, and the open
man-hole let out the thick smoke that had nearly suffocated the travelers.
As soon as it was cool enough in the engine room an
examination was made of the damage done. It was not as bad as the professor had
feared, and the running part of the ship was not harmed. A new fuse was put in
and the electric lights turned on.
The night was spent with the ship floating on the surface
of the ocean, only enough speed being kept up to give her steerage way. The
professor did not want to go below the waves until he had repaired the switch
board.
Watch was kept, for, though they were out of the
regular line of ocean travel, there was no telling when a vessel might come
along and run them down, for the Porpoise did not show above the waves
more than a few feet, and carried no lights.
Mark had the watch just after midnight, and was
sitting in the conning tower, the door of which opened out on the small deck.
He had swept the surface of the water with powerful glasses and was sure there
were no ships in sight. So, feeling that he would like to stretch his legs, he
walked up and down on the platform.
He had reached the after end, and was about to turn
and go back, when he was startled to see between him and the conning tower a
white object. At first Mark thought it was a cloud of mist, or something the
matter with his eyes. He rubbed them, but the object did not disappear.
Then it moved, and, to his horror Mark saw that it had
the shape of a man, tall and thin. The two arms were outstretched, and to
Mark's imagination seemed to be pointed toward him.
In spite of trying not to be, Mark was frightened.
He did not believe in ghosts, and had always felt that
all stories about them were due to persons' imaginations. Now he saw something
that was hard to explain.
As he watched it, the white object turned and glided
without making the slightest noise, toward the conning tower. It entered and
Mark breathed a sigh of relief.
Perhaps, after all, it was some one from down in the
cabin, maybe the professor himself in his night shirt, who had come up to see
that all was right.
"I'll go and look," said Mark to himself.
He had to nerve himself for the ordeal, as, in spite
of assuring himself that there were no such things as ghosts, he was
frightened.
It was absolutely quiet. The only sound was the gentle
swish of the water against the sides of the ship. The engine was running so
slowly that it caused no noise.
Half way on his journey to the conning tower Mark
paused. There, advancing toward him, was the white object. With outstretched
arms it glided nearer and nearer until Mark's heart was beating as if it would
burst through his ribs. His mouth was dry and he could not have cried out had
he tried.
There was a splash in the water off to the left as
some big fish sprang out and dropped back again. Involuntarily Mark turned in
that direction. Then he thought of the ghost and looked for it again. To his
surprise the white object was nowhere to be seen!
The boy waited a few minutes, and then, screwing up
his courage, he went to the tower. There was no one inside, and, along the
length of deck nothing was to be seen of the ghost.
"I wonder if I have been asleep and
dreaming," the boy asked himself. He gave his leg a pinch, and the
sensation of pain told him he was not slumbering.
"Well, I'll say nothing about it," Mark went
on to himself. "They'll only laugh at me."
Entering the tower Mark looked for the glasses in
order to make another observation. He could not find them, yet he was sure he
had left them on a shelf in the tower.
"I wonder if the ghost took them," he said.
He heard some one coming up the iron stairs of the
small companionway that led down into the interior of the ship through the
man-hole. At first he thought it was his queer midnight visitor returning. Then
the head and shoulders of Jack appeared.
"I've come to relieve you," said Jack.
"Your watch is up; it's two o'clock. Here are the night glasses. I found
them on the cabin table. I thought you had them with you."
"I did," replied Mark.
"Then how did they get below?"
"I--I don't know," said Mark.
The mystery was deepening, yet he did not want to tell
Jack just yet.
"Well, that's queer," remarked Jack.
"Maybe the captain came up and got them while you were asleep."
"I didn't go to sleep," answered Mark rather
crossly.
Jack said nothing more, but took his place in the
conning tower, while Mark went below. Thinking to discover if the ghost might
by any chance have been one of the persons on the Porpoise, Mark looked
into each bunk. From the captain to Washington, all the inmates were peacefully
slumbering.
"Queer," murmured Jack, as he took a look
into the engine room before turning in. The engine needed no attention, as it
worked automatically, and all there was to do was to steer the ship. Even this
needed little care as the course was a straight one, and the wheel could be
locked, leaving the lookout little to do.
"Did you see anything during your watch?"
asked Mark of Jack the next morning.
"See anything? What do you mean?"
"I mean anything unusual."
"Nothing, only a school of porpoises went past
and gave me a little scare. They were like a lot of water kittens at
play."
Mark concluded he would say nothing of the white
visitor until he ascertained whether any one else had seen it.
It was several nights later, when the ship was once
more proceeding slowly along the surface of the water, that the ghost again
appeared. This time Washington had the midnight watch.
But the colored man was not one to remain quiet when
he had such a scary visitor, and his yells aroused the ship.
"It's a ghostess! A big white ghostess!"
yelled Washington. "I don seen it wid my eyes, an' it waved his arms at
me. I's goin' to die suah!"
"What's all this nonsense?" demanded the
professor sternly. Then Washington, more or less excitedly, told of what he had
seen. It was just as it had happened to Mark.
"You were dreaming," said the professor to
Washington. "There are no such things as ghosts."
Every one, from old Andy to Tom and Bill, had been
roused by Washington's cries, and listened to his story. At the close of the
recital of how the white thing had suddenly disappeared, Washington refused to
continue his watch, unless some one stayed with him.
Mark volunteered to do this. He was anxious to see if
the ghost would reappear to him. But nothing happened; and the rest of the
night passed off quietly.
The next day the Porpoise was taken below the
surface, in order to allow of better speed being made. She was running along,
submerged to a depth of two hundred feet, when there came a sudden jar, and the
ship stopped.
"More trouble!" exclaimed the professor.
He opened the slide covering the bull's-eye windows and
looked out. All about was swirling muddy water.
"Can you see anything?" the inventor called
to Jack, who was in the conning tower.
"We've run into a mud-bank, and are stuck
fast," called back the boy.
CHAPTER XIV
DIGGING OUT THE SHIP
"Reverse the engine!" called the professor.
"Maybe we can back the ship out."
Washington set the big screw to revolving in the
opposite direction. The Porpoise shook and shivered but the mud held her
fast.
"We must have gone in pretty deep,"
commented Amos Henderson. "Luckily it was soft mud instead of a rocky reef
or we'd have damaged the ship beyond repair."
For several minutes the engines were kept on the
reverse, but all to no purpose. The sticky mud was like glue in its holding
power and the ship had buried her prow deep into it.
"I guess we'll have to dig our way out,"
said the professor, after taking a careful view of the big mud bank from the
conning tower. "Washington, get out the diving suits and the spades."
"Are we really going out in the water to
dig?" asked Tom.
"Of course," said Mr. Henderson.
"You'll be as safe as in the ship, wearing one of my diving suits. We'll
all have to help, for it will be quite a task."
The queer suits were brought out, and the reservoirs
in the helmets were filled with compressed air. It was decided to have
Washington remain within the Porpoise, to watch the machinery and start
the engine when the digging was partly done, in order to see if the ship would
not pull herself free when some of the mud had been removed from the prow.
"And we may need Washington for another
purpose," said the professor.
"What for?" asked Mark.
"Well, he'll have to stay by the diving tank, to
let us in quickly in case of emergency."
"Do you think there'll be an emergency?"
asked Jack.
"You never can tell," was the answer.
"We are in deep water, and I don't want any accidents to happen."
In a few minutes all save Washington were in their
diving suits and ready to go out and walk on the bottom of the sea. They
entered the tank, the door was closed, and then water was slowly admitted from
the ocean. When the tank was full, led by the professor, they stepped out on
the muddy floor of the ocean.
At first the pressure of the water at so great a depth
bothered them. But, as we know, the diving suits were reinforced with plates of
steel, and so strong that little more than an extra weight of water was
noticed. They soon became used to it. Each one carried a spade, while the
professor, Andy and the boys each had, slung about their necks by straps, one
of the electric guns.
Cautiously they walked toward the big mud bank. They
had to go slowly because of the weight of the water above them, and because
they might at any minute step into some muck hole and sink down. Fortunately,
however, they found there was a firm bottom right up to where the bank of mud
reared upward.
Turning on the electric lights in their helmets, the
voyagers were able to see quite distinctly. The Porpoise had rammed her
nose into the under-water hill for a distance of about ten feet. It was going
to be no easy matter to get her free, but the divers lost no time.
Vigorously they attacked the big hill of mud. They dug
their spades in and tossed the earth to one side. It was a strange place to
work. At first the weight of water hampered every one, but they soon became
used to it and were able to proceed more rapidly.
From the conning tower Washington kept watch of their
progress. When they had gone in about five feet he started the engines, hoping
the Porpoise might now pull herself free. But the mud still held.
By signs, for it was of course impossible for any one
to hear or speak, attired as they were in helmets and suits, the professor
motioned that they must dig deeper.
Once more they attacked the big mud bank with their
shovels. Farther and farther they went into the muck until it seemed that the
nose of the submarine must be free. But when Washington started the engines it
was obvious that the ship was still held.
Again the digging was resumed. All at once, while
every one was wielding his spade to best advantage, a shadow seemed to cover
the water. It loomed up large and black, and the professor stopped and gazed
upward. What he saw made him drop his spade and grab the gun that was about his
neck.
Floating in the water above the diggers, were three
immense sharks. Their cruel mouths were partly open, showing three rows of big
teeth, and they were slowly turning over on their backs to make a sudden rush
and devour the men and boys. Owing to the peculiar shape of its maw a shark can
not bite until it turns over.
The professor motioned for Bill and Tom to move behind
him, and signalled for Jack, Mark and Andy to stand close with their weapons
ready.
The sharks floated lazily downward as if they knew
they had the diggers at their mercy. To run and escape was impossible, for no
one could run hampered by the weight of water and his diving suit.
One of the terrible fish opened its mouth wider and,
with a flirt of its tail aimed straight for the professor. Mr. Henderson raised
his gun, and took careful aim at the middle of the fish, half turned over.
Unerringly the electric bullet sped on its way. It entered the soft under part
of the shark, and immediately the thing struggled in its death agony.
The water was dyed with blood. At the same instant the
other sharks rushed forward in a swirl of foam. The boys and Andy fired as best
they could, and must have hit one of the creatures for there was a greater
commotion.
But the fight was not over. Instantly the ocean seemed
alive with the giant fish. Attracted by the blood of the killed ones, scores of
the tigers of the seas rushed toward the scene of combat making matters
livelier than ever.
The professor, the boys and Andy fired their guns at
random. Redder and more red became the water until their helmet lamps barely
glowed in the crimson sea. It seemed that a whole army of the voracious sharks
had attacked them.
The professor realized that to stay and attempt to
fight all the sharks in that part of the ocean was impossible. He motioned for
the boys and Andy to follow him. Then he slowly led the way back to the ship.
But the sharks were not to be gotten rid of so easily.
Several of the largest followed the diggers, their horrible eyes, and big
mouths with rows of cruel teeth, striking terror to the hearts of all.
One of the creatures made a rush for Bill and Tom who
were close together. Either or both of the men would have been bitten in twain,
in spite of the protection of their diving suits, had not Mark, with a snap
shot, killed the fierce fish.
It was now a running fight, and yet not so much that,
because to run was impossible. However, they hurried all they could, and, by
dint of quick firing kept the ugly creatures at bay until the side of the ship,
where the diving tank was placed, was reached.
The professor stepped to one side, and motioned for
the others to proceed him in entering. Little time was lost. As Bill, the last
one in, stepped past the steel door the inventor attempted to enter. To do so
he had to let go of his gun.
Instantly one of the sharks made a rush for the old
man. But Andy was on the watch. He leaned forward, and, from his weapon sent a
bullet straight down the throat of the monster. The electric missile did its
work well, and the lifeless body of the shark was devoured by the others of its
tribe.
The professor pulled the door shut behind him. Then he
set the pump to work to empty the tank. As he did so there was a tremor to the
ship. What could it mean?
In a few minutes the tank was empty and the divers
stepped out into the ship, freed from the oppressive weight of water. The ship
continued to vibrate and seemed to be in motion.
"What is it?" asked Mark as soon as he had
his helmet off.
"De ship am free! We've got off de mud
bank!" exclaimed Washington, running in from the engine room.
It was true. Enough had been dug so that, with the
power of the screw working backward, there was sufficient force to pull the Porpoise
from her perilous position.
"Empty the tanks and rise to the surface,"
said the professor.
In a few minutes the ship was on top of the waves, the
adventurers freed from the double danger of the mud and sharks. They
congratulated each other on the good outcome of the fight with the monster
fishes.
Wearied with their labors and the battle under the
waves, the travelers sat up on the deck breathing in the fresh breeze. Then,
after a while, supper was made ready and eaten with good appetites.
It was decided hereafter to sail along near the
surface at night, and not to submerge the ship deeply save during daylight,
when it was easier to distinguish objects under the water.
Following this plan the Porpoise steamed along
just awash that night, and the next day was sent down about fifty feet below
the surface.
One afternoon, when the travelers were resting, having
partaken of a fine meal, the professor went on deck to make some observations,
the ship having been raised for that purpose. He came down, somewhat excited.
"Well, we're half way to the pole," he
announced.
"How can you tell?" asked Mark.
"Because we have just crossed the equator. We
went over the imaginary line three minutes ago."
"I was wondering what made it so warm," said
Jack.
"I guess you dreamed it was hotter," spoke
the professor. "It has been just as hot as this for the last few days.
Crossing the line makes no difference."
"Then we are really in the southern hemisphere
now," said Mark.
"That's where we are," replied Mr. Henderson.
He put his instruments away.
"Well, we may as well go below the surface
again," he remarked.
"Come quick! Hurry up!" yelled Washington
from the deck. "Dar's a shipwreck up heah! Somebody's on it!"
CHAPTER XV
THE STRANGE SHIPWRECK
The professor, followed by the boys and Tom, Bill and
Andy hastened on deck. They saw Washington pointing excitedly off to the west.
There, rising and falling on the easy swell, was the wreck of a large vessel.
She had been a three masted schooner, but now only the
stumps of the masts remained and the craft was rolling to and fro. It had
settled low in the water, and was quite deep by the head, so that, at times,
the waves broke over the bow in a shower of spray.
But what attracted the attention of the adventurers
more than anything else was the sight of two figures near what had been the
after cabin of the ship.
There they stood, frantically waving their hands
toward those on the submarine. Across the water that separated the two craft,
there came a faint hail.
"I suppose they are nearly dead," exclaimed
the inventor. "We must save them."
He ordered the Porpoise sent ahead slowly
toward the wreck. The distance was about half a mile, and was soon covered. As
the submarine approached closer those on the schooner could be observed more
plainly.
"One of 'em is a woman!" exclaimed Jack, who
was using the glasses.
"Let me see," spoke the professor.
"You're right," he added. "The other is
a little girl."
A few minutes later the Porpoise was alongside.
The woman and child came to the rail of the schooner, which was barely five
feet above the waves.
"Can you jump down, or shall I come aboard and
get you?" asked Mr. Henderson seeing the woman hesitate.
"I can jump down, if you will catch the
child," said the woman. "Oh I am so glad you came," she added.
"We are almost dead from hunger and thirst, and the wreck is ready to sink
and cannot last many hours longer."
"Pass the little girl down to me," spoke
Andy. "Then you jump. We'll save you all right."
The little girl reached the deck in safety, and the
woman, who proved to be her mother, followed.
"Now take us to your ship," said the woman.
"You must be a long way from her, as she is not
in sight."
"Our ship is right here," spoke Mr.
Henderson with a smile.
"Where, I don't see her," and the woman
looked in all directions.
"Allow me to introduce you to Profess Amos
Henderson's famous submarine, the Porpoise," spoke the inventor
with a bow. "But come, let us go below. You must be suffering, and here I
am making speeches."
"Indeed I am hungry, and thirsty too," said
the woman. "So is Nellie. But I thought this was merely a small boat, sent
from some large ship to get us."
The woman and girl descended to the cabin of the
submarine, where Washington set before them a fine meal. Under the advice of
the professor they partook sparingly of food and drink at first, as, having
eaten nothing in many hours, the inventor said they must begin by taking a
little at a time.
As soon as they had finished and become somewhat rested,
the woman told her story. She was Mrs. Johnson, a widow, her husband having
once owned and been captain of the schooner that was wrecked. After his death
she and her daughter, having become part owners of the craft, disposing of a
third interest to the former mate of the ship, had set out on one of the
voyages to South American ports.
They had had good weather going, and took on a
valuable cargo of lumber and rare woods. But the return trip was more perilous.
Heavy storms had buffeted the craft almost from the time of leaving port, and
in one heavy blow, ten days before, the ship had been wrecked.
"What became of the crew?" asked Mr.
Henderson.
"They took to the boats," replied Mrs.
Johnson. "My little girl and myself were to go with the mate and his men.
The waves were fearfully high, and, as they held the boat close to the schooner
so we could get in, a big roller smashed the little craft. The men must have
all been drowned for I never afterwards caught sight of one of them."
"But the other boats?" asked the inventor.
"They had gotten too far away to hail, supposing
that I would be taken care of by the mate. There was nothing for Nellie and I
to do but stay on board, expecting the ship to sink every minute."
"And you have been there ever since?"
inquired Andy.
"Ever since. That was ten days ago. Every day I
thought it would be our last. The storm passed away and the sea became calm but
the ship kept settling lower and lower. Only the fact that part of the cargo
was wood kept her afloat so long. I managed to get some provisions and water up
on deck, but the sea had spoiled most of the stuff. We had to eat only a little
at a time, as I knew it would be some days before we could be rescued, if we
ever were. Two days ago we ate the last of the food and drank almost the last
of the water."
"Then you had nothing since then," spoke
Jack.
"Only a few drops of rain that I caught on a
piece of sail," answered Mrs. Johnson.
"Never mind, you can have all you want now,
mother," said Nellie, coming over to pat her parent's cheek.
"Oh," the child went on, "I was so thirsty I could just cry when
I thought of such things as ice cream sodas."
"I guess you could," agreed Mark.
"Well, we can't give you any soda water, but we have plenty of the other
kind."
Mrs. Johnson was much interested in the Porpoise
and Professor Henderson showed her all about the craft. Though the quarters
were rather cramped, a small cabin was fitted up for the lady and her daughter.
"We will travel a bit under the water so you can
get used to it," said the captain after a tour of the ship had been made.
The tanks were filled, and the Porpoise sank beneath the waves. At first
Mrs. Johnson was much frightened, and Nellie cried. But when they saw how
skillfully the ship was managed, and how easy it was to rise again, they lost
their fears.
For several days the voyage was continued. Mrs.
Johnson and Nellie remained aboard as there was no place to land them, and they
said they wished to stay until they met some ship sailing north.
One day, just at dusk, when the Porpoise, after
a long run under the water had come to the surface, the professor, came up on
deck to take a look around. Washington and Andy accompanied him.
"Looks like land, off there to the left,"
remarked the old hunter.
"Get the glasses, Washington," said Mr.
Henderson. "It may be a ship."
He took a long and careful look through the
binoculars.
"It's some sort of land," he announced.
"We'll go over in the morning and see what it is. Probably it's an island,
for there's no main land in these parts. We are in the middle of the southern
Atlantic now."
The next morning, after breakfast, the Porpoise
was headed toward the dark spot on the surface of the water that the professor
had gazed at the evening before. As they came nearer it was seen that the place
was a large island.
"But it's a mighty queer one," spoke Mr.
Henderson. "It looks more like a big volcano than anything else."
As the ship came nearer it was seen that this was
true. The island rose abruptly from the surface of the sea in a big ridge, slightly
rounded. There appeared to be no signs of life on the land, but in the air
overhead hovered several big birds. These circled about and then fluttered
down, seemingly about the middle of the island.
"We'll sail around and see if there's a place to
land," spoke the inventor. "There doesn't seem to be a good harbor on
this side."
Slowly the Porpoise made the circuit. The
island appeared to be almost round. When they had gone about half way around
Andy, who was staring ahead, cried out:
"Look out Professor! Don't go any nearer or we'll
be sucked into the whirlpool!"
The inventor looked where the hunter pointed. Then he
beheld the strangest sight he had ever seen. The island was low toward where
Andy pointed and they beheld the waters of the ocean pouring over the edge of
it, and falling down into an immense hole with a roar like that of Niagara
Falls.
"Reverse the ship!" cried Professor
Henderson. "Send her back quickly, Washington, or we'll be sucked
down!"
The colored man lost no time, and the big screw was
sent whirling in the opposite direction. And it was high time, for already the
onward rush of the falling waters was slowly drawing the ship toward the big
cavern.
"That was a lucky escape," commented Amos
Henderson. "Well, as we can't land there we'll try the other way
around."
The ship was headed in the opposite direction, and,
after an hour's sailing, a good harbor was discovered. The Porpoise was
anchored in shallow water close to the shore and in a small boat the professor,
Andy and the two boys went to the strange island.
They found it merely an immense circle of land with
the middle part taken up by the big hole. And such a hole as it was! It was so
wide across that they could not see the farther side, and the depth they could
only guess at. Looking down they could only see great rolling masses of clouds
or vapor.
"Perhaps it's steam," suggested Jack.
"Maybe it is," agreed the professor.
"If this is a volcano, with lava in it, the water of the ocean, pouring in
on the other side, may be changed to steam."
"Do you suppose this hole leads to the centre of
the earth?" asked Mark. "I've read somewhere, that the earth is
hollow."
"Some scientists believe it," commented the
professor. "This looks like a big enough hole to lead clear through to
China. Hark, you can hear the roar of the water now."
They listened, and the wind brought to them the sound
of the sea pouring down into the unfathomable depths.
"Let's throw a big rock down," suggested
Jack. "Maybe we can hear it strike bottom."
With the aid of Mark he cast a big boulder down into
the depths. They listened intently, but not the slightest sound echoed back.
"I guess the bottom is too far away for you to
hear the stone land," said the professor.
CHAPTER XVI
THE GHOST AGAIN
They spent some time looking down into the hole. The
masses of vapor, or clouds, rolled and swirled hundreds of feet below them, but
never broke sufficiently to allow of a clear sight.
"Well, we had better go back to the ship,"
remarked the professor. "We must continue our voyage."
They were soon on the Porpoise and steaming
away from the strange island, the inventor deciding to get far off out of the
influence of the terrible waterfall.
The night was, as usual, spent with the ship slowly
steaming ahead on the surface of the water. It was getting on toward twelve
o'clock and Washington had the watch. He was to be relieved by Jack.
The latter had been awakened by the alarm clock at the
head of his bed, which time-piece he had set to arouse him so that he might
take Washington's place. Jack was just getting the sleep from his eyes by a
vigorous rubbing when he heard a loud yell.
"Land a' Massy!" cried Washington from the
deck above. "I's goin' t' die suah! De ghostess am after me ag'in!"
Without waiting to dress, Jack sprang up the ladder
and was soon out on the deck. He saw Washington kneeling down in front of the
conning tower door while, at the after end of the deck, was a mysterious white
object; the same strange shape that had been observed before.
"I'm going to solve this puzzle!" exclaimed
Jack to himself as he made a dive toward the object in white. "This ghost
business will have to stop!"
But, unfortunately for his plans, his foot slipped on
the smooth steel deck, and he went down in a heap. When he got up the ghost was
nowhere to be seen.
Washington, however, was still kneeling down and
praying to be spared from the attack of the midnight visitor. Jack limped over
to the colored man.
"Keep still," said the boy. "It's gone
now. What was it, anyhow?"
"Some ghost from de grabeyard," replied
Washington.
"When did you see it first?" went on Jack.
"'Bout ten minutes ago," replied Washington.
"Well it's gone now," said Jack, though he
had to admit to himself that the affair was somewhat puzzling. Professor Henderson
had been awakened by the yells of the colored man and came on deck to see what
the trouble was. He appeared somewhat annoyed when Washington told him what had
happened.
"There are no ghosts!" declared the inventor
in positive tones.
"You wouldn't say so, Perfessor, if you'd seen
him," spoke Washington. "He were all in white, tall an' slim, an' big
red eyes, an' a green nose, an' fire comin' from his mouth an'--"
"Nonsense," interrupted Jack. "It was
nothing but a white object, Professor Henderson. I saw it."
"And what do you think it was?" asked the
inventor.
"I--I can hardly say," replied Jack.
"Of course I don't believe in ghosts, but this--"
"It was probably a mist from the ocean,"
interrupted the professor. "Don't let me hear any more of it. Washington,
go below. Your watch is up and Jack will take charge. I don't believe there
will be any more ghosts."
Nor were there that night. The Porpoise glided
along, requiring little attention, and when morning broke was several miles
nearer the southern pole.
The journey was continued beneath the waves and it was
found much cooler under them than upon the surface, for the ship was in the
midst of the equatorial heat.
About four o'clock in the afternoon, when all was
quiet aboard, there came a sudden yell from the engine room. Washington's voice
could be heard calling for help. Then it died away in a groan.
"Something has happened!" called Jack.
"Washington is in trouble."
He hurried toward where the machinery could be heard
buzzing. The professor, with Andy and Mark followed. They expected to see the
colored man caught in some shaft or belt, but he was nowhere in sight.
"Perhaps he has fallen into the ocean,"
suggested Mark.
"The engine room does not open into the
sea," answered the professor.
A deep groan came from some corner of the engine room.
"There he is!" cried Jack.
But a careful search failed to reveal Washington.
Still he could be heard to groan at intervals. Bill and Tom came and aided in
the search, while Mrs. Johnson, who was worried at the unusual activity, asked
what the trouble was.
Captain Henderson did not tell her, for, as he said
afterward, he did not want any women fainting away on his ship. At his request
Mrs. Johnson went back to her cabin, and the hunt for Washington continued.
"Here he is!" cried Jack at last.
The boy had climbed up on a small ladder that led to
the big storage battery tanks. He had looked down, and there, in the large
metal box had spied the colored man on the bottom. Washington was unconscious
and breathing heavily.
"He has been overcome by the fumes of the
sulphuric acid!" exclaimed the professor. "We must get him out
quickly or he will die!"
"I'll get him!" cried Andy.
The old hunter grabbed a small step ladder that stood
against the wall of the engine room. With this on his shoulder he climbed up
the steps which led to the top of the storage battery tank. Then, by means of
his ladder, he descended inside.
He had to work quickly as the fumes were very strong,
but he managed to hoist Washington up so that Bill and Tom, from outside, could
take hold of him. Then the colored man was carried out on the deck, where the
fresh air and some restoratives the professor used soon revived him.
"Is I dead," were Washington's first words,
as he sat up and looked about him.
"Not this time," replied the professor.
"You had a close call, though. How did it happen?"
Washington explained that he started to clean the
battery tank, when he lost his balance and fell in. He cried as he felt himself
falling, but as soon as he struck the bottom of the tank the fumes of the
chemicals made him unconscious. His deep breathing, which had sounded like
groans, alone served to attract attention to his location.
In a little while Washington was all right save for a
slight weakness. Captain Henderson made him go to his bunk, and ordered him to
remain there until morning.
During the excitement over Washington's mishap all
thought of steering the ship had been forgotten, and when Mr. Henderson went to
the conning tower about five o'clock he found that the Porpoise was
several points off her course and was headed to the east instead of to the
south. How many miles out of her way the craft had steamed could only be
guessed, but as she had been going wrong for nearly an hour, it must be quite a
few the inventor calculated.
However, he said, no great harm had been done. Even
this slight accident would not have happened had not Bill, who was in the
conning tower steering, forgotten to put the automatic device in operation when
he left the wheel to join in the search for Washington.
"We'll soon make up the lost ground," said
Mr. Henderson. "Another week or ten days ought to see us at the end of our
journey."
"And what will we do when we get there?"
asked Jack.
"We will make some important geographical and
scientific observations," said the professor. "Not only that, but we
will have done something that no living person has ever accomplished. We
reached the north pole, though we could not land on the exact spot. Let us hope
we will be more successful regarding the south pole."
The professor set the ship on her course again. Bill
and Tom got supper in place of Washington, while Mrs. Johnson helped set the
table.
The meal was eaten, and then the inventor started the
ship toward the surface, following the plan of not sailing beneath the waves
after dark, in order to avoid accidents.
The craft was making good speed ahead, with the big
screw revolving in the tunnel and spurting the water from the rear, when there
came a sudden jar, and everyone nearly toppled over from the quick stopping of
the Porpoise. At the same time the forward end seemed to go up in the
air.
"What has happened? Are we sinking?" cried
Mrs. Johnson.
"I think we are going up," spoke the
professor in cool tones.
"In the air?" asked the lady.
"On the land," answered the inventor.
"I think we have struck shore and slid up on a beach."
He ordered the engine stopped and hurried to the
conning tower to make an observation. He turned on the searchlight and looked
carefully at what the beams showed. Then he came back to the cabin.
"Well, what is it?" asked Mrs. Johnson.
"We have gone ashore, just as I supposed,"
said Mr. Henderson.
"And whereabouts are we?"
"On the coast of South America."
"Near where?"
"Near Terra Del Fuego, the land of fire!"
CHAPTER XVII
ATTACKED BY SAVAGES
"Are we in any danger?" asked Mrs. Johnson.
"I hope not," replied the captain. "If
the ship is not strained the rising tide will probably float her safely, and we
can continue our trip. We will have to wait until morning to see,
however."
"And if the ship is damaged?"
"We will have to do what we can. We will hope for
the best, madam."
The professor went on deck. His first opinion of the
accident was confirmed. The Porpoise, in emerging from the waves, had
slid well up on a sandy shore, where she was held fast because the tide was
rapidly falling. It would be twelve hours before there would be a chance of her
floating again.
The mishap had occurred because the ship had gotten
off her course when Washington's accident occurred, and had not been set right
in time.
However, as Mr. Henderson had said, there was no
particular danger, unless it was found that some of the plates had been
strained, which might cause a leak.
The night was passed with the nose of the Porpoise
well up on shore, and before morning, as the tide continued to fall, more and
more of the craft became exposed until the whole steel body rested on the
sloping beach.
Jack was the first to awaken. He was up with the sun,
and went out on the deck to take a view of the country he had often heard
about. A stretch of wild landscape met his eyes, and to the left and right of
the ship the waves were breaking on jagged rocks.
"It's a good thing we didn't hit the rocks,"
thought the youth.
Mark came up on deck, and the two boys looked over the
scene. It was a strange one. Beyond the beach was a low level country, green in
places, with now and then a patch of what looked like trees.
"And what are those brown spots moving
about?" asked Mark.
"I guess they are herds of cattle," replied
Jack. "You know South America is a great place for them."
For half an hour the two lads gazed about. Except for
the stern of the Porpoise all of the craft was now out of water, and one
could have jumped from the low deck down to a mound of white sand of the beach.
"Let's go ashore and take a run," suggested
Mark. "I've almost forgotten how to walk on dry land."
"Go ahead," answered Jack. "I'm with
you."
"All right."
The boys lost no time in getting down to the beach.
They found it hard and firm, and made their way to the strip of grass-covered
land lying beyond. Up and down they wandered, finding many curious and
beautifully marked shells where the waves had washed them.
Suddenly Jack gave a big jump and let out a yell.
"What's the matter?" asked Mark.
"I thought I saw one of those cocoanuts
move," answered Jack, pointing to where several of the big shaggy fruits
lay under a tree from which they had fallen.
"I guess you're right," spoke Mark. "I
certainly saw one of them take a little side step. I wonder what does it."
As the boys watched they were surprised, to see one of
the cocoanuts come toward them, apparently advancing without any visible means
of locomotion.
"This is a queer country," remarked Jack,
getting ready to run in case the strangely moving cocoanut might be a warning
of danger.
"Look! There's a whole lot of them moving,"
cried Mark.
Sure enough a dozen or more of the nuts began to
advance toward the lads. The boys were not so much afraid as they were
surprised. But a few seconds later the reason for the strange sight was made
plain.
As they looked they saw one of the nuts roll down a
little mound of sand. Then they noticed that a big land crab was on the tiny
hill and it was evident that the nut had fallen from his claws.
"It's the crabs!" exclaimed Mark. "I
remember reading about them now. They come ashore from the water where they
live part of the time and get the cocoanuts. Then they smash the shells by
pounding the nuts on a stone and eat the white meat inside. They are called
cocoanut crabs."
"I was beginning to think we were in some
enchanted land," spoke Jack.
"Well, it certainly looked queer," agreed
Mark.
For some time the boys watched the strange sight. Then
they walked along the beach, seeing several large star fish, and some big
horse-shoe crabs that had been stranded by the tide.
"Look at that immense turtle!" exclaimed
Mark, as one of the creatures scuttled over the sand toward the sea. "I'll
bet she's been laying eggs!"
"Perhaps so."
They made a rush for the tortoise but were not quick
enough, for she slid into the water and made off.
"Here's her nest, anyhow," called Jack, as
he pointed to some eggs, thinly covered with sand. "Let's go back and take
them with us. I've heard they are good eating."
Jack and Mark started to gather up as many of the eggs
as they could in their hats. While they were thus engaged they heard a call
from the ship and looked up to see coming toward them, all of the ship's
company except Washington.
"I wonder if anything could have happened,"
spoke Mark.
He and Jack dropped the eggs and started on a run
toward the stranded ship. They were reassured, however, when they saw the professor
waving his hand at them. When he got within hailing distance the inventor
called:
"It's all right, boys. We're just taking a little
walk, before breakfast, for an appetizer. It's been some time since we were on
land. Washington says he'll have some fine fried ham for us in a little
while."
"And here are the eggs to go with it," spoke
Jack.
"Have you found a hen house?" asked Mr.
Henderson in some wonder.
"No, but we discovered a turtle, which is just as
good," replied Mark. The professor agreed with him, and called for
Washington to come and get the eggs.
"Wall I 'clare to goodness!" exclaimed the
colored man as he gathered the product of the turtle up in his cook's apron.
"Dis suttinly am a queer contraption of a country to find eggs growin' in
de sand."
He shuffled back to the ship, while the others walked
up and down on the beach. In about half an hour the professor suggested that
they return.
"Washington must have breakfast ready by
now," he said, "and I, for one, am hungry enough to enjoy it."
They turned toward the stranded Porpoise but no
sooner had their eyes taken in the sweep of the ocean that lay before them than
they uttered cries of fear.
Spreading out from the beach in a big half circle that
enclosed within its curve the submarine, were three score of canoes, each one
filled with half naked savages.
"The natives are going to attack the ship!"
cried the professor. "We must hurry back or we are lost!"
He started on the run, accompanied by the boys and
men. Mrs. Johnson and her daughter brought up the rear. The adventurers had
gone from one misfortune into another.
At the top of their speed they approached the stranded
ship. The natives saw them coming and the next instant hundreds of paddles
broke the waves into a mass of sparkling water as the wily savages urged their
canoes swiftly toward the submarine.
"If we can only reach it first we can hold them
off until the tide floats us, and then we can escape," said the professor.
He increased his pace though the run was beginning to
tell on his aged frame. The adventurers were now within an eighth of a mile of
the ship, but the savages were closer, and had the advantage of being able to
make greater speed. The two forces approached nearer and nearer. Finally the
first of the canoes reached the submerged end of the Porpoise.
With wild shouts a score of the brown men leaped from
the boats and scrambled up the steel sides. An instant later they were joined
by several canoe loads of their companions. They swarmed up on the deck, and
some peered down the winding stairs that led to the interior of the ship.
"Too late!" cried the professor. "They
have captured the Porpoise!"
"But Washington is aboard!" shouted Jack.
As he spoke the colored man was seen clambering up out
of the companion way. He gave one look at the wild natives who swarmed over the
ship, and then, with a yell to be heard a long way off, disappeared below.
The shouts and cries of the savages grew louder and
they seemed to be doing a sort of war dance.
"We must make one effort to drive them
away," said the professor in desperation.
"We haven't even a revolver," spoke Andy.
"Let's use stones," suggested Jack, grabbing
up a handful from the beach.
"Look out!" yelled Mark. "They are
going to shoot some arrows!"
A second later a flight of the weapons filled the air.
Fortunately the natives were too far away to permit the shots taking effect,
but it showed that they intend to fight and take possession of the ship.
Even this did not frighten Mr. Henderson. His vessel
was more than life to him and he kept on. Several arrows fell dangerously close
and he might have been hurt had not old Andy run after him and induced him to
go farther up the beach and out of harm's way.
"They will kill Washington!" cried Jack as he
thought of the colored man at the mercy of the savages.
"There he comes!" yelled Mark.
He pointed toward the ship and as they all looked in
that direction they saw the colored man climbing out on the deck. Under one arm
he bore a long narrow box, and in the other hand he carried one of the electric
guns.
"He's goin' to fight 'em!" exclaimed Andy.
"He's got a gun and he will show 'em what's what!"
But Washington did not seem to have any such
intentions. With a yell that equalled the savage cries of the natives, he
sprang over the side of the ship, onto the sand and ran toward the group of
adventurers. A flight of arrows followed him, but he was not hit.
CHAPTER XVIII
ON LAND
"Why don't he shoot his gun at 'em?"
demanded Andy, capering about on the sand. "He could soon scare 'em
off!"
"I'm afraid Washington is too frightened to do
anything like that," answered Professor Henderson. "He is lucky to
have escaped alive."
"Wait until he gets here with that gun, an' I'll
do some huntin' that will make them savages skip!" exclaimed Andy.
In a little while Washington came up to where the
others from the Porpoise stood on the beach. The colored man was panting
from his run.
"De most monstrous disproportionately extradition
ob circumstantial occurrances dat ever transpositioned on my optical
vasionariness!" he exclaimed as he laid his gun and the black box
carefully down on the sand. "Ten thousand naked imps of darkness swarmin'
ober de ship an' not a pusson to say what dey ought to do an' where dey ought
t' go! It am suttinly terrible!"
"Why didn't you shoot some of 'em?" demanded
Andy.
"Me?" exclaimed Washington. "What for I
want t' shoot 'em? S'pose I want 'em t' git mad at me?"
"Well, you're a great one," went on Andy,
picking up the gun. "I guess I'll have to take a few shots myself."
"Yes, sah."
From Washington the adventurers learned how the
savages had silently come up in their canoes and surrounded the ship, gaining
possession of it before he could make any effort at defense, even had he so
desired.
"What are we to do now?" asked Mrs. Johnson,
when they had retreated out of sight of the savages. "The natives have
possession of the boat, and how are we to regain her when there are so many of
them?"
"It certainly is a hard nut to crack,"
admitted the professor. "We will have to camp out on the beach for a while
and see what happens. Perhaps they may leave the vessel when they find it will
do them no good. They can't run her."
"But they can tear her all apart and damage the
machinery," said Jack. "Then we would be in a pickle."
"Well, we won't hope for any such bad luck as
that," interrupted the professor. "We will look for the best."
"When are we going to have breakfast?" asked
the little girl, after a long wait. "I'm hungry, mother."
"We will have it pretty soon," replied Mrs.
Johnson in order to quiet her daughter's mind.
"But I want it now," continued Nellie.
"I'm very hungry."
"Hush!" said Mrs. Johnson.
"An' I had de finest brekfust what was ever
invented," said Washington, rolling his big eyes. "Mud turkle eggs,
ham, preserves, coffee--"
"That will do, Washington," said the
professor. "It only makes our mouths water to think about such
things."
At the mention of the turtle eggs Jack nudged Mark,
and signalled him to walk to one side. When they were out of earshot of the
others Jack said:
"What's the matter with cooking some of the eggs
that are left on the sand? There are plenty of them, and there is no sense in
our going hungry."
"How you going to cook 'em?" asked Mark.
"I'll show you," replied Jack.
He scooped a hollow place out in the sand until he had
quite a hole. This he banked up with stones until he had a small oven. By
arching the stones over toward the top there was left a sort of circular
opening. Over this Jack fitted a monster clam shell, with the concave side
uppermost.
This made an improvised stew pan. Underneath was piled
small bits of dry drift-wood, which a match soon set on fire. In a little while
the water in the big shell was boiling.
"Now get some other shells for dishes," said
Jack to Mark.
Soon Mark had piled up a lot of smaller shells.
"Help me gather some eggs now," said Jack,
"and we'll put them in to boil. Then we'll invite the rest of the folks to
breakfast."
The two boys soon uncovered from the sand a pile of
the eggs, and in a little while they were steaming in the hot water. Then Jack
arranged the shell-dishes on the sand. He went over to where the others were
gloomily considering their plight.
"Breakfast is ready," he announced.
"This isn't any time for joking," spoke Professor
Henderson, rather sternly.
"But I mean it," went on Jack. "Just
come over and see. I'm not fooling you."
Wondering what he had done they all followed him.
"Welcome to Hotel Terra del Fuego!" cried
Mark. "We haven't much of a variety, but what there is we can
recommend."
He began to dip the eggs out of the water with a bit
of shell and placed them on the improvised dishes.
"Everyone sit down," commanded Jack.
"The bill of fare is ready."
They all joined in the short laugh that followed, and
soon were seated in a circle about the beach-oven. The eggs proved to be very
good, even though there was no pepper. The salt of the sea water they were
boiled in was more than sufficient.
"Now if there was only bread in that ammunition
bag Washington brought with the gun," said Andy, "we wouldn't want a
better meal."
"He'p yo'se'f!" exclaimed the colored man
with a grin as he extended a canvas bag that was tied to the stock of the
electric gun.
The old hunter opened it and found it filled with ship
biscuits.
"Well I am stumped!" he exclaimed.
"I grabbed up de wrong thing in my haste,"
Washington explained. "I thought I had de electrical lightning bullets,
but I didn't. Howsomever de gun's got some in de chamber."
"It's a lucky mistake," commented the
professor as he munched a biscuit and an egg. "Bullets are good but these
are better, when one is hungry."
They managed to make a fairly good meal, so that even
hungry Nellie was satisfied. The boys found a spring of fresh water up on
shore, and this furnished something to drink, for which they were grateful.
They sat about on the beach, after the breakfast and
discussed what they had better do. It was evident that an attempt to regain
possession of the ship, with their small force and only one weapon, was out of
the question.
"We've got to use strategy," said Andy.
"If we could play some trick on the savages we might scare them away.
Otherwise I don't see what we are to do."
"It's a bad state of affairs," replied
professor Henderson. "Even if we got the ship we might find it so badly
damaged that it would be impossible to run it. It is a terrible thing,"
and he heaved a deep sigh.
The hours passed with no change in the situation. The
savages remained in possession of the submarine, and did not seem inclined to
quit the vessel. Most of them were inside, but quite a number paddled about the
stranded craft in their canoes.
There was nothing for the adventurers to do but to
await developments. With no chance of attacking the force of natives, they might
consider themselves lucky if the savages did not come ashore to give battle.
The sun was high in the heavens when, in the shade of
a big tree where they had all taken refuge from the heat, Nellie again
announced that she was hungry.
"I guess the boys will have to provide another
meal," said Mr. Henderson.
Jack and Mark said they guessed they could find some
more turtle eggs, and Washington volunteered to accompany them. As they were
looking for a nest in the sand they saw one of the tortoises scurrying down to
the ocean.
"Git her, quick!" cried the colored man.
"Turn her ober on her back!"
The boys did so, though they did not know what
Washington's object was. The big animal lay bottom side up, vainly moving its
flippers. In a few minutes Washington had killed the turtle and cut it out of
the shell.
"Now we'll hab turtle soup!" he exclaimed.
Soon the fire was again blazing in the improvised
stove, and a little later an appetizing smell filled the air. Washington had
made the soup, and, in addition, had cooked a number of the turtle eggs.
Big clam shells again served for dishes and a better
meal than the breakfast was served.
"Now if we only had some dessert," spoke Mr.
Henderson in a joking tone, "we wouldn't want much more. But I suppose
dessert is out of the question."
Jack and Mark looked at each other and, without a word
went off toward the woods. In a little while they came back, their arms filled
with cocoanuts.
"How will these do for dessert?" asked Jack.
"Fine!" cried Mr. Henderson.
The fruit was broken open with stones and the
delicious milk and soft pulp eaten with much relish. Then the adventurers
stretched out beneath the trees and rested. The thoughts of each one were busy
with plans for recovering the submarine, though no one seemed to be able to
suggest any thing.
It was getting dusk, when, somewhat discouraged over
the result of the visit of the savages, they were all seated on the beach. They
were beginning to think again of something to eat when Andy Sudds, discovered
the long black box which Washington had brought with him in his flight from the
Porpoise, and dropped in a hollow.
"I suppose you've got something very fine in
there, Washington?"
"I declare to goodness I don't know what dat air
contraption am conglomerated with," said the colored man. "I jest
grabbed it up and run."
The old hunter had, in the meanwhile, taken the cover
off.
"What in the world have we struck," he
exclaimed.
"Sky rockets!" cried Jack, with a glance at
the contents of the box.
"Yes," said Professor Henderson. "I took
some aboard in case we might have to signal for help on the water."
"Hurrah!" yelled Andy.
"What's the matter?" asked Jack.
"We'll use the sky rockets as weapons against the
natives!" shouted the old hunter, capering about on the sand.
CHAPTER XIX
REGAINING THE SHIP
At first the others did not know what he meant. Andy
seemed much excited, and for a time the professor thought the heat and worry
might have affected the hunter's mind.
"We'll show 'em a thing or two!" cried Andy.
"I once scared a lot of Indians this way so they didn't know whether they
were on their head or their feet. Hurrah!"
"What are you talking about?" asked Mr.
Henderson. "Hadn't you better sit down and rest a bit?"
"I'm all right," replied Andy. "I'm
talking about those sky rockets. They'll be better than bullets. You see,"
he went on, "after it gets dark we'll shoot the rockets over the ship. The
savages will think they are in the midst of a lot of falling stars, and if they
don't take to their boats and leave us the ship I'll miss my guess, that's
all."
"Good!" exclaimed the inventor. "We'll
try it."
The rockets were taken out and examined. They were big
affairs of several pound weight and were intended for far-off signalling at
sea.
Andy, with the aid of the boys, Tom and Bill, soon
constructed a rough sort of support from which to set off the fire-works. As
soon as it grew dark, which it did about seven o'clock, preparations were made
to try the experiment.
With a whizz and roar the first rocket went sailing
skyward. Up through the black night it went, trailing behind it a shower of
fire and sparks. Then, with a loud report like that of a gun it burst directly
over the ship and a rain of brilliantly colored globes of flame descended.
"Shot number one!" cried Andy, who was
setting off the rockets.
For a few seconds after the first flight there came no
sound from the natives at the ship. Then, just as the second rocket was set off
there issued a long-drawn howl, which was succeeded by cries of fear.
"We've waked 'em up!" shouted Jack.
In rapid succession several more rockets were sent
over the Porpoise. By the light of them could be seen a mass of natives
crowded out on the small deck, while others were in their canoes.
"I think I'll try it a little lower this
time," remarked Andy. "Maybe I can hit some of 'em!"
He slanted the support closer to the ground and set
off two rockets at once. Straight across the sandy beach they flew, directly
toward the crowd of natives on the ship. Right into the midst of the savages
the trailing comet of fire shot, with a hiss, roar and sputter that was enough
to strike terror into the bravest heart.
There was a long piercing howl of fear. Then, as the
natives felt the hot sparks scatter over their half-naked bodies, they broke
into a wild stampede. Over the side of the ship they plunged, into the sea, and
swam off. Those in boats paddled quickly away.
For good measure Andy sent another rocket into the
midst of the fleeing ones, and this served to quicken their departure. By the
light of the last one it could be seen that the ship was deserted, though the
water all about her was black with the swimming savages, and the canoes.
"I guess they won't come back in a hurry!"
cried Andy. "Come on! We'll board the ship now, and get the electric guns
to ward off any further attacks!"
"That's the talk!" cried Mark.
Toward the Porpoise all started on a run. As
they neared her they found that the rising tide had floated her.
"We must see if the natives damaged her,"
spoke Mr. Henderson as soon as he set foot on deck. "If they have it will
be a hard matter to make repairs so far from civilization."
A hasty examination, however, showed that the savages
had disturbed little. The engine was soon set in motion, and, in ten minutes
the ship was steaming away from the coast, headed toward the south, the goal
they were so eagerly seeking.
As soon as they were well out to sea, and all sight of
the canoes of the savages had been lost, supper was served, and all brought
good appetites to the table. For, though the improvised meals on shore had
tasted good, there had not been much to them.
For several days the Porpoise was kept on her
course, sailing along under the water by day, and upon the surface at night. It
was one pleasant afternoon, while Nellie, Jack and Mark were sitting out on the
deck, during one of the times when the boat had risen to the surface to renew the
air supply, that a strange commotion was observed off their lee. The ocean
seemed to be boiling.
"What is that?" asked the little girl.
The two boys looked to where she pointed. Indeed the
ocean seemed to be bubbling up and down in a strange manner.
"It's a school of porpoises," said Jack.
Just then the water became alive with big fish. They
leaped over each other, springing high into the air and falling back into the
sea with resounding splashes.
"They're not porpoises! They're whales! Baby
whales!" yelled Mark. "Look out or some of the big ones may ram the
boat!"
As he spoke the water all about the submarine was seen
to be fairly swarming with the small whales. There were scores of them, and, at
times, they were so thick that it appeared possible to walk out upon them
without getting very deep into the water.
Suddenly the ship careened to one side and the sea
rushed over the deck. It was evident that one of the big whales, which were
deeper down in the water, had struck the vessel.
Nellie screamed and tried to grab the hand rail that
was about the platform. She missed her grip. The next instant she was
floundering in the ocean, in the midst of the school of whales.
"Man overboard!" yelled Jack, remembering
vaguely that he had read this was the proper call to make in case of accident.
His cry brought Washington and the professor up the
companionway on the jump.
"Launch the boat!" cried the inventor as he
saw what had happened.
Mark was already in action. At the first sight of
Nellie slipping over the side he had thrown off his coat, broken the laces of
his shoes in order the more quickly to remove the foot coverings, and had dived
into the swirling water which surrounded the submarine.
He struck out in the direction where the little girl
had disappeared, and as her golden head appeared above the mass of foam he
yelled in encouragement.
By this time the small boat was launched and the
colored man and Jack were pulling toward him. Mark succeeded in reaching Nellie
as she was going down the second time. He grabbed her long locks and managed to
keep her up until the little craft was alongside of him.
"Git in quick, 'fore dem whales eat yo' up!"
cried Washington.
He hauled the unconscious child in first, and then
Jack gave Mark a hand. As if by magic all the whales had disappeared and the
sea was quiet again. In a few minutes the rescuers and the rescued one went
back again on the Porpoise, where Professor Henderson soon brought
Nellie around again. Beyond the shock and wetting neither she nor Mark was
harmed.
It was Jack's watch on deck that night. He had the
tour from eight until twelve o'clock and when, about ten, every one but himself
had retired, he took his position in the door of the conning tower and prepared
to pass the time as best he could.
The ship was moving along at half speed, and, as the
automatic steering attachment was working Jack had little to do. He sat looking
at the stars that twinkled in the sky, the blazing Southern Cross showing among
the constellations, when he heard a slight noise near the companionway.
He looked in that direction and, to his horror, he saw
the ghostly white shape that had, on previous occasions, caused him and the
others fright.
At first the boy resolved to shut himself up in the
tower and wait until the uncanny thing had disappeared. Then his courage came
back and he thought he would try to solve the mystery.
He argued that if the weird white object was human and
could witness his movements the best thing to do would be to try and creep upon
it unobserved. On the contrary, if the ghost was some natural phenomenon, or a
supernatural agent, all he could do would be of no avail.
So he decided the best thing to do would be to crawl
upon the thing, keeping as near to the deck as possible and trying to hide
himself. With this in view he put on a long rain coat that hung in the conning
tower, and then, like a snake, commenced to wiggle his way toward the middle of
the platform where the white object still stood.
Nearer and nearer to it Jack came. His heart was
beating fast and he was much frightened, but he nerved himself to continue. As
he came closer he could see that the object looked more and more like a man,
completely robed in white garments.
Jack was now within ten feet of the strange object. It
was a man, he was sure of it, but whether a present or former inhabitant of the
earth he could not decide. Jack's hair was beginning to raise. A cold shiver
ran down his spine as the white thing lifted an arm and seemed to point
directly at him. At the same time it groaned in a deep tone.
Jack let out a yell that could be heard all over the
ship. He made a spring for the object, determined to discover what it was or
die.
At that instant the whole ship seemed to rise in the
air. It left the water and began moving skyward. Right out of the waves the Porpoise
was lifted until the big screw was clear of the water and it was churning
around in the tunnel without any resistance, racing at top speed now that it
had no water to thrust against.
Then the ghost seemed to vanish into thin air, and Jack
felt himself falling down the hatchway.
CHAPTER XX
ON A VOLCANIC ISLAND
In an instant the ship was in confusion. The
professor, followed by old Andy, Washington, Mark, Bill and Tom, came rushing
from their berths, all in their night clothing, to see what the trouble was.
They met in a tangled mass, stumbling over Jack at the foot of the steps.
"Is the ship on fire?" called Mrs. Johnson
from her cabin.
"I hope not!" called the professor.
"But something has happened. Don't be frightened!"
By this time Jack, who had been somewhat stunned,
recovered his senses and worked his way out of the mass of bodies.
"The ghost! The ghost!" he cried. "I
saw him again!"
"Land a' massy!" yelled Washington.
"What has happened to the ship?" cried the
professor. "Is it a tidal wave?"
"I was on deck," panted Jack. "I saw
the white thing! I crept up on it! All at once the ship rose in the air!"
"And it's still rising!" shouted the
inventor. "I must see what this means!"
He made his way to the deck, and his loud shout soon
brought the others up to him.
"Shut off the engine!" Mr. Henderson called
down to Washington, who hurried to obey.
"What has happened?" asked Andy, rushing
towards him.
"We have run upon an island," answered the
professor. "This is the worst thing that has yet happened to us."
"What sort of an island is it that shoots you up
in the air?" asked the old hunter.
"It's hard to say," replied Mr. Henderson.
"We will have to wait until morning to find out."
The boys and men went up on deck and there beheld a
curious sight. The Porpoise had been lifted bodily from the surface of
the ocean where she had been sailing and was now raised about ten feet above
the crest of the billows. It was too dark to see the extent of the island she
rested on, but, from the circle of foam around the outer edge it did not appear
to be very big.
The excitement occasioned by the appearance of the
ghost, Jack's yells and fall, and the rising of the ship, had subsided
somewhat. Mrs. Johnson and her daughter, who were much frightened, were assured
there was no immediate danger, and the men and boys put on more substantial
clothing than that of their night robes.
It seemed as if morning would never come, but at
length there was a pale light in the east and soon it changed to a rosy glow,
showing that the sun was coming.
The professor was early on deck, and Mark and Jack were
not far behind. As soon as it was light enough they could see that the ship was
held fast on top of a small rocky isle, about one hundred feet in diameter,
which rose abruptly from the water.
"It's a volcanic island," decided the
professor. "We are in the midst of subterranean disturbances and this is
probably one of the effects of some under-sea eruption. The pinnacle of rock
rose from the ocean, forced up by some power underneath, just as our ship came
over it. That accounts for the sudden rising into the air of the Porpoise.
No wonder we were all scared."
"The next question," began old Andy,
"is how are we to get off?"
"That's the point," agreed Mr. Henderson.
"Here we are, high and dry, and we might as well be a broken flying
machine as a submarine for all the power we have."
"Will we have to stay here forever?" asked
Nellie, who had come up on deck.
"I hope not," answered the professor,
smiling for the first time since the accident. "We will find a way to get
down, never fear, little girl."
"I suppose we might dig some sort of a canal down
to the water," remarked Jack. "If we could we might float the
ship."
"I'm afraid you'd find it slow digging through
this volcanic rock," answered Andy. "It's like flint."
"Well, there's no use worrying over it,"
went on the professor in as calm a tone as he could muster. "It's time for
breakfast, and we have to eat whether we're on the top of an island that shoots
out of the water when you least expect it, or sailing along as we ought
to."
Accordingly Washington prepared the morning meal, and
they all found they had appetites for it, in spite of their fright. Afterward
they all came on deck again and looked about them.
They were in the midst of a wild waste of water. Not a
sign of land could be seen in any direction, and there was no evidence of a
sail or steamship as far as the horizon showed.
The little island which held the Porpoise so
close a prisoner was a mere speck in the vast ocean, but it was large enough to
put an end, temporarily at least, to the progress of the powerful submarine.
The professor and the boys went over the side and
climbed down to the rock. Then the inventor verified his surmise that the rocky
point was of volcanic origin. It was also seen that there was little chance to
get the craft back into the ocean.
"I guess we're doomed to stick here for some
time," remarked Mr. Henderson, with a grim smile. "The rock has
caught us squarely and nothing short of dynamite will free us. To use the
explosive might mean the destruction of the ship, and I dare not risk it."
Gloom settled over the party in spite of the efforts
the professor made to be cheerful. Washington, after the first few minutes of
fright, regained his usual good spirits, but, no matter how he laughed and
joked, there was a feeling of terror in every heart.
They realized their helplessness, and knew that unless
another upheaval of nature occurred there was small likelihood of their
release.
On the third day of their strange adventure Professor
Henderson resolved on a bold step.
"We must use dynamite," he declared.
"If we stay here on this desolate rock we are bound to perish sooner or
later, for our food cannot last many months, though we have a large supply. We
are out of the path of steamers and only by chance would one pass here. With
care we may be able to blast the rock so that the ship will not be permanently
damaged. What do you all say? I would like your advice, for this concerns all
of us."
One after the other all said they were willing to abide
by whatever the inventor did. Accordingly he made his preparations. Washington,
with a hammer and chisel, was set to cutting a fair sized hole in the big rock,
as far away from the ship as possible.
He was two days at the job, and, during this time those
on the stranded Porpoise watched in vain for the sight of a vessel.
"I am going to put the dynamite in,"
announced Mr. Henderson one morning. "We must all get into the small boat
and row some distance away, as there is no telling what the result of the
explosion may be."
"Suppose the submarine is destroyed?" asked
Mrs. Johnson.
"Then we will have to sail for the nearest land
in the small boat," replied the captain. "I will provision it and we
will take all the precautions we can."
It was with anxious hearts that the little party
embarked in the little craft that was carried on the Porpoise. It was
barely large enough to hold them. The professor was the last in, and he lighted
a long fuse that led to the dynamite before taking his seat. Then with Tom and Bill
at the oars the little craft moved away.
"How long before the explosion will take
place?" asked Jack.
"I timed the fuse for ten minutes," answered
Mr. Henderson. "That will enable us to get far enough away so we will not
be swamped by a wave."
Five minutes later Mark, who was intently watching the
volcanic rock, gave a loud cry.
"There she goes!" he shouted.
They all looked to behold a wonderful thing. As easily
as though it was some conjuring trick the rock began to settle down in the
water. Lower and lower it went until only the tallest jagged points showed
above the waves, whose crested tops the keel of the ship now almost touched.
"That isn't the explosion!" exclaimed the
professor. "The fuse has not had time to get to the powder yet."
"But the rock is disappearing!" yelled Andy.
As he spoke the big pile of volcanic stone vanished
completely and the Porpoise floated easily on the surface of the sea.
"Hurrah!" cried Mark.
"It am de most kloslostrous occurranceness dat
eber transpositioned itself!" exploded Washington.
"Let's row back to the ship now!" cried
Mark.
"Not yet!" said the professor quickly.
"The dynamite has not gone off yet."
"There it goes now," remarked Jack.
At that instant a big column of water shot upward and
a dull rumbling could be heard. A few seconds later the little boat rocked
violently from the effects of the waves. Then the sea became calm, and the Porpoise
could be seen dancing up and down on the heaving billows.
"Now we can go back in safety," spoke Mr.
Henderson, and Tom and Bill bent to the oars.
"What happened?" asked Mrs. Johnson.
"The rock seemed to disappear before the explosion occurred."
"That's exactly what it was," explained the
inventor. "By some strange freak of nature the volcanic mass dropped back
into the ocean a little before I was ready to blow it to pieces. In settling
down it lowered the ship. Then the explosion occurred beneath the waves. If I
had waited a little while I need not have risked the dynamite."
"Well, there was no guarantee that the rock would
go back where it came from," remarked Jack.
"No, we had to act," agreed the professor.
"But now let us go aboard."
They rowed back to the Porpoise, which they
found had sustained no damage from the queer experience it had been through.
The motors were set in motion and in a little while
the craft was again moving through the water out of the dangerous vicinity of
the volcanic area.
"Who has the two watches to-night?" asked
Mr. Henderson after supper had been served.
"Washington and Andy," answered Jack, who
kept track of the matter.
"I guess we'll change it, and have you and Mark
take them," went on the captain. He gave Jack a peculiar look, and made a
sign to him not to say anything. Wondering what was to come Jack went up on
deck to watch the sunset.
CHAPTER XXI
CAUGHT IN A WHIRLPOOL
The boy was joined a little later by the captain, who,
coming close to him whispered:
"I am going to try to discover the ghost
to-night. That is why I wanted you boys on hand to help me. This thing must be
stopped if it is a joke, and, if it isn't--"
"Do you think it is some one playing
tricks?" asked Jack.
"I don't know what to think," answered Mr.
Henderson. "We will see what happens to-night."
Mark came on deck a little while, and the three talked
of the strange appearances of the mysterious white object. The boys told of
their experiences, and Jack related more fully his on the night the ship went
up on the big rock upheaval.
"I don't believe in ghosts," said Mr.
Henderson, "I'm going to lay this one," and he smiled grimly.
Night settled down. Jack, who had the first tour under
the new arrangement, had made himself comfortable in the conning tower, and Mr.
Henderson had hidden himself in the companionway. His idea was to thus guard
both openings into the ship and ascertain whether the ghost came from within or
without the craft.
Up to a short time before twelve o'clock nothing out
of the ordinary happened. The only sound was the lapping of the waves on the
steel sides of the Porpoise, and now and then a splash as a big fish
leaped out of the water. There was only the slightest breeze.
Jack who, somehow or other, felt much sleepier than
usual, caught himself nodding several times. Once he awoke with a start and
realized that he had been dozing.
"Come, come," he remarked to himself,
"this will not do at all. This is a fine way to watch for a ghost."
He remained wide awake for perhaps five minutes. Then
he was off to the land of nod again. He was just dreaming that he was skating
on a pond and was playing snap the whip with a lot of boys, when he awoke with
a start.
He felt something pressing on his chest and to his
horror, as he looked up, he saw a big towering white object standing over him.
A second glance showed him it was a man, or the semblance of one, and the
thing's foot was on his chest.
With a terrified scream Jack sprang up, upsetting the
ghost, which, the boy thought at the time, seemed rather heavy for an unearthly
spirit.
"Did you catch it?" cried the professor.
"No! Yes! I don't know!" yelled Jack,
struggling to his feet in time to see the white object glide down the stairs
that led from the conning tower into the forward cabin.
"Run after it! We must solve the mystery!" cried
Mr. Henderson springing from the companionway up on deck.
But at that moment the ship began to whirl about in a
circle slowly at first, but with increasing speed until Jack and the professor
felt sick and dizzy. All about the water seemed to be bubbling and boiling,
while, at the same time, there arose on the air a mournful howl.
The professor jumped to the rail and looked over the
side. What he saw made him recoil with horror.
"Quick! Close the man-hole hatch!" he cried.
"Shut the door of the conning tower!"
"What is it?" Jack managed to ask.
"We are caught in a whirlpool!" Mr.
Henderson yelled as he leaped down the companionway and pulled the heavy steel
cover after him.
Stricken with a nameless dread, Jack closed the
water-tight door of the conning tower and made his way to the cabin. He could
hardly get down the stairs, so swiftly was the ship whirling about.
He found the captain busy in the engine room and, in
response to calls, Washington and Mark came hurrying in. They had been awakened
by the commotion and the strange movements of the Porpoise.
"Turn on all the lights," ordered the
inventor. "We must prepare for the worst."
The incandescents were soon glowing and in the glare
the frightened adventurers gathered about Mr. Henderson, wondering what new
terror had befallen them.
"See!" exclaimed the inventor. "We are
going comparatively slow now, but we are on the outer edge. Wait until we reach
the centre."
He pointed to a compass and, as the needle pointed
steadily to the north the card seemed to be going around like the hands of a
clock that has lost the balance and escapement wheels. The ship made three
complete circles a minute.
Pale and frightened, Mrs. Johnson came from her cabin,
whence the terrified cries of Nellie could be heard.
"Are we sinking?" she asked.
"Sinking will never harm the Porpoise,"
replied Mr. Henderson. "This is something decidedly worse."
"I know! It is a whirlpool!" exclaimed the
lady.
"I'm dizzy; I'm so dizzy!" wailed Nellie.
"Please stop the ship from going round, Mr. Henderson."
She came from her bed crying, and all her mother could
do did not quiet her.
Meanwhile the submarine continued to whirl about
faster and faster in the swirling waters. Five times each minute now it made
the circuit, and, like the coils of a boa constrictor that is enfolding its
victim, the circles continually grew smaller.
"We are being sucked down," said Jack in a
low tone as he glanced at the depth gage, and noted that it showed them to be
thirty feet under water.
"That is so," remarked Mr. Henderson
quietly.
"What will be the result?" asked Mrs.
Johnson.
"I do not know," was the answer, and the
captain turned aside. He seemed to have lost all courage in the face of the new
disaster.
"Can't we empty the tanks and rise to the
surface?" asked Andy.
"The tanks are not filled," replied Mr.
Henderson. "What is taking us down is the force of the whirlpool and not
the weight of water."
"Then you fear for the worst?" asked Andy.
"I do," said the captain simply.
"Don't give up the ship!" exclaimed the old
hunter suddenly. "Never say die! It's a long lane that has no turns! Hip!
Hip! Hurrah!"
They all turned to stare at the old man.
"Never mind," said Mr. Henderson in a
soothing tone, that one would use toward a baby, or a person not right in their
head. "Never mind. We may be saved."
"Oh I'm not crazy!" exclaimed Andy. He tried
to caper about but the motion of the ship made him dizzy and he had to sit
down. "I'm all right! I just happened to think of something!"
"What is it?" asked the captain eagerly.
"Send the ship ahead!" exclaimed Andy.
"Speed her as fast as she will go. Try her strength against the force of
the whirlpool! We may win!"
"Good!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "I was
too much depressed to think of that! The ship has powerful engines. Queer you
should remember that instead of me. Come, Washington, start the screw going! We
will try to beat the whirlpool!"
The submarine was now whirling around so rapidly that
it was difficult for any one to stand without leaning against the sides or
holding on to something. It was going lower and lower down, as the gage showed.
Soon a throb that was felt through the length of the
craft told that the engine had started. The vibration increased until it seemed
that the ship would be torn apart. Never had the big screw revolved at greater
speed.
For a while the struggle between the force of man
represented by the engine, and the power of nature, embodied in the whirlpool,
seemed equal. Neither could gain the mastery. The ship continued to slide
around in ever narrowing circles while the big cable of water, forced through
the tunnel by the screw, was like a cataract.
"Which will win?" asked the professor softly
to himself.
He crawled to the gages and watched them. Only by
their needles could it be told when the battle had turned in favor of the
adventurers.
The circular motion, that was now terrible in its
speed and power, seemed to culminate in a rush that almost overturned the ship.
In the engine room Washington was laboring to keep the machine at top speed. He
put on the last ounce of power.
"Hurrah!" yelled the professor suddenly.
"I think we shall win!"
He pointed to the depth gage. The needle, which had
showed a constantly increasing record, until it was now at two hundred feet,
had stopped. It showed they were going no lower.
Then Mr. Henderson looked at the indicator which
showed the progress straight ahead. The needle was beginning to tremble. As he
watched he saw it move, slowly at first, until, as the powerful screw won a victory
over the terrible whirlpool. The gage marked one, two and then three miles an
hour.
"We are leaving the swirling waters!" cried
Mr. Henderson.
Then, all at once, as though it was an arrow shot from
a gigantic bow, the Porpoise cleft the under-billows and shot ahead,
free at last from the grip of the whirlpool.
Man had triumphed over nature!
On rushed the ship like a race horse, for the engine
was working as it never had before, and it did not have the pool to contend
against.
"Slow down," said Mr. Henderson, "and
we will go to the surface."
Two minutes later, under the buoyancy of her empty
tanks, the Porpoise lay floating on the top of the waves, under the
shining stars.
CHAPTER XXII
UNDER FIRE
"I shouldn't want to go through that experience
again," remarked Mr. Henderson, as he, with all of the ship's company
except Mrs. Johnson and Nellie went on deck. "I thought we were lost,
sure."
"Lucky our engine didn't go disproportionatin'
herself at de mostess criticless moment," put in Washington. "Golly,
but she suttinly did hum!"
"And you deserve credit for making her do the
humming," went on the professor with a smile.
"Well, we didn't catch the ghost," remarked
Jack, "though I certainly saw him, it or her, whatever the thing is. I
felt it too."
"It's rather strange," spoke the professor.
"Every time, or nearly every time the ghost, as I suppose we must call it
for the present, makes its appearance, something terrible happens to the ship.
I hope it doesn't show up too often."
It was three o'clock in the morning, and they had
battled with the whirlpool over two hours. They talked of little else, and each
one told how he or she felt.
"It was just like twisting yourself up tight in
the swing, and then letting the rope unwind," said Nellie, and they all
agreed that she had described the sensation perfectly. They laughed, also, a
thing they had felt little like doing a short time previous.
The engine had run so hard, and some of the bearings
had become so warm, that for the rest of the night the professor decided to let
the machinery remain stationary. This would give it time to cool down he said,
and they could make up the time lost the next day.
Tired out with the night's worry and labors they all
slept late the next morning, and it was nearly ten o'clock before breakfast was
over. The ship was started on her course once more, and Jack, who was steering,
made the engine hum as the submarine scudded along, submerged about fifty feet.
"When you have time I would like to talk to
you," said Mrs. Johnson to Captain Henderson.
"I'm at your service now," replied the
inventor.
"What are you going to do with Nellie and
me?" the lady went on.
"Take you to the south pole with us," was
the answer, with a smile.
"It's very kind of you, and I don't want to put
you to any trouble," went on Mrs. Johnson. "But I would like to go
back north."
"I'd like to oblige you," returned the
inventor, "but I hate to turn back now. We are well on our voyage, and I
may never get another chance to locate the pole. Don't you want to accompany
us? Think of the glorious achievement!"
"I'd rather go back north," persisted the
lady. "But I wouldn't ask you to turn the ship around. What I was going to
suggest was to sail along on the surface for a few days and see if you cannot
sight a homeward bound steamer or sailing vessel. Then you could put me and
Nellie aboard her."
"Of course!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson.
"I never thought of that. Though we will be sorry to lose your company,
and that of your little girl, I will do anything to oblige you. We will at once
go to the surface."
He called the necessary order to Jack through a
speaking tube which led to the conning tower. In a few minutes the ship shot
upward, and emerged from the ocean in a little shower of foam and spray.
She lay undulating on the surface, and was just
beginning to move forward again, under the influence of the screw, when a dull
boom echoed off to the left.
Jack looked from the observation windows in the
conning tower and saw, about a mile away a big steamer. From her side a white
cloud of smoke floated, and then the water splashed about fifty feet from the
blunt nose of the submarine.
Once more came the boom, the white cloud of smoke and
this time the water splashed only twenty-five feet away from the bow of the Porpoise.
A third time came the sound, and the splash was even nearer.
"They're firing on us!" yelled Jack.
At his cry the professor ran on deck. He was just in
time to see the fourth shot made, and this time the shell dropped into the
water just astern of the Porpoise and so close that when it exploded it
sent a shower of spray all over the deck.
"Here! Stop that!" yelled Mr. Henderson,
shaking his fist in the direction of the steamer. "You nearly hit us that
time. Do your practicing in some other direction!"
"I don't think they can hear you," said
Jack. "And besides, I don't believe they are practicing."
"Then what in the world are they doing?"
"Shooting at us I guess."
"Why do they want to shoot at us? We haven't done
them any damage."
"Perhaps they think we are a torpedo boat,"
suggested Jack. "Maybe that vessel's nation is at war with some other one
and wants to sink us if it can."
"I believe you're right!" exclaimed Mr.
Henderson. "But this will never do. They must stop!"
Once more the big gun on the ship was fired and the
shell came dangerously close. At the same time several other reports, less in
volume were heard, and the water all about the submarine began to bubble as the
missiles from the machine guns cut the waves.
"Maybe it's an English vessel sent to capture
Mark and me because of that anarchist trouble at the hotel," Jack went on.
"Nonsense!" exclaimed the captain. "But
whatever it is, we must stop it, or they will sink my ship. Wave your
handkerchief, Jack."
The boy sprang to the top of the conning tower, in
order to permit those on the vessel to see him more plainly, and vigorously
shook the white rag. That it was observed was evident when some one on the
steamer wig-wagged back a reply. In a few minutes a boat was seen to put off
from the ship, and soon a little launch, in command of a lieutenant in uniform,
drew up alongside the Porpoise.
"Who is captain of this craft?" asked the
lieutenant as he came aboard.
"I am," replied Mr. Henderson. "What do
you mean by firing on me?"
"I am Lieutenant Muchmore," said the other,
saluting. "Captain Wackford, of the Sylph, in His Britannic
Majesty's service, presents his compliments, and asks you to pardon the
occurrence. You see we took you for a derelict and were trying to sink
you."
"I thought perhaps war had broken out between
some country and the United States since we left port," went on Mr.
Henderson, "and that you were trying to make a capture."
"No, it was only that we thought you a
waterlogged craft, and a danger to navigation," repeated the lieutenant.
"But what sort of a ship have you?"
"Come below and I'll show you the finest
submarine that ever was built," answered the inventor with pardonable
pride. "If you don't mind, give your launch orders to go back to the ship,
and I'll show something that will make you open your eyes."
Anxious to see what the strange little craft could do
Lieutenant Muchmore sent his launch back, and went below with Captain
Henderson. He was astonished at what he saw, and unlike most Englishmen was
willing to say so.
Mr. Henderson then went to the conning tower. He
directed the man-hole cover to be clamped on, and then filled the tanks. The
ship sank fifty feet below the surface and then shot forward.
Seated in the cabin the lieutenant was observing with
wonder showing on his face at the accomplishment of sailing along under water.
Suddenly the lights were shut off, and the shutters moved back from the
bull's-eye windows. The sea, glowing in the beams of the search light, was
alive with fish, large and small, beautiful and hideous.
"Wonderful!" exclaimed the Englishman.
The bull's-eyes were closed, the lights switched on,
and then, speeding the engine almost to the top notch the captain steered the
submarine straight for the war-ship.
He had carefully noted her direction before starting
his own craft, and he resolved to do a little manoeuvering that would still
further astonish the visitor. By careful reading of the different gages Mr.
Henderson was able to come to the surface right in front of the Sylph,
to the no small astonishment of the men on the deck of the vessel.
Then, just to show what the Porpoise could do,
the inventor darted around the war-ship in a circle. He sunk below the surface,
went under the keel of the Sylph and came up on the other side. Then he
went the whole length of her, under water, starting at the stern and ending at
the bow, where he brought the submarine to a rest in a smother of foam.
"Great! Wonderful! Surprising!" were some of
the adjectives Lieutenant Muchmore used as he stepped from the conning tower,
with Captain Henderson, onto the deck.
At the appearance of the officer and the inventor a
group of those on the Sylph gave three cheers for the little vessel.
"Is she for sale?" asked Captain Wackford.
"No, thank you," replied Mr. Henderson with
a laugh.
"Because if she is I'll give you free passage to
England with her, on my ship," went on the commander. "My government
would give a fortune for a boat that can do what yours does."
"It is not for sale," repeated Mr.
Henderson, "but I have some one on board who would appreciate a free
passage to England, or any northern port."
"Who is it?" asked Captain Wackford.
"A Mrs. Johnson and her daughter."
CHAPTER XXIII
CAUGHT IN AN ICE FLOE
Mr. Henderson soon explained the finding of the lady
and the little girl, and Captain Wackford readily agreed to give them passage
to New York, as the Sylph was to call at that port.
So Nellie and her mother were put aboard the warship,
after bidding farewell to the captain and crew of the submarine. Mr. Henderson
and the boys promised to write to them as soon as they got back from their
voyage to the south pole, and, amid a chorus of good-byes the Porpoise
resumed her journey.
For several days the submarine forged to the south,
and the weather became noticeably cooler. Some of the nights were chilly, and
those on watch were glad of the heavy coats they had brought along.
One morning, after a week of travel, when no
interruptions had occurred by reason of accidents, old Andy came up on deck,
and sniffing the air, said:
"We'll sight ice before night, or I'm a
Dutchman."
"What makes you think so?" asked Jack.
"I can smell it," replied the hunter,
whereat Jack, and Mark who had joined him, laughed.
"That is no joke," put in Professor
Henderson, who, coming up the companionway heard what was said. "Old sea
captains will tell you they can smell an iceberg long before they can see
it."
"I don't claim to be a sea captain," said
Andy, "but I once was on a whaling voyage and I learned to sniff ice in
the air. I saved the ship from collision with a berg once."
"Let me see," began the inventor as the
adventurers sat about the supper table after the meal was finished, "who
have the watches on deck to-night?"
"Washington first and Bill second," replied
Jack looking at the chart.
"Keep a sharp watch for the icebergs,"
advised the captain. "If you feel a sudden chill in the air, and see
something white, stop the engine at once and call for me."
When the Porpoise had been put in shape for the
night, and the company, tired out from their labors over a general "house
cleaning" which Captain Henderson had insisted on, went to bed, Washington
took his place in the conning tower.
It was quite cold, but as the temperature for several
days past had been steadily falling, nothing was thought of it.
"I guess I'll git out my fur-lined sealskin
coat," said the colored man to himself as he felt the chill night air,
that seemed to increase in frigidity along about eleven o'clock. He went to the
cabin to get his overcoat, and, returning on deck prepared to spend the rest of
his hour of watch in ease and comfort. He stretched out on the bench in the
conning tower, noted that the machinery was working right and that the proper
course was being steered, and then he let his thoughts drift to the many
adventures he and his employer had gone through of late, and also while on the
trip "Through the Air to the North Pole."
Washington gave one frightened, startled look, in a
few minutes, so comfortable had he fixed himself, but happening to look forward
through the glass-covered porthole of the tower, he saw something that made the
cold chills run down his back.
There, right in front of the Porpoise, and not
a cable-length away was a tall, mysterious, white thing which was shimmering in
the pale light of the moon that had lately risen.
Washington gave one frightened, startled look, and
then, with a tongue that could hardly move, he yelled out:
"De ghost! De ghost! He'll git me suah!"
Then the colored man made a dive for the stairway
leading to the cabin, but missed it and brought up with a crash on the steel
floor of the conning tower.
"What is it?" called Professor Henderson,
springing out of his bunk.
"De ghost!" wailed Washington from the
huddled up heap he was in.
"Catch him!" yelled the captain.
"I dasn't," moaned Washington.
The next instant the ship quivered from stem to stern.
There was a terrible shock, followed by a grinding, crashing sound. Then the
craft seemed to be pressed down by some great weight. It heeled over to one
side, and the water began to pour down the open man-hole.
"Quick! Clamp on the covers!" shouted Mr.
Henderson as he felt the sea dashing into the interior of the boat.
Jack and Mark sprang to obey. It took all their
strength, for the water was running in like a mill-race.
"What has happened?" asked Andy, as he tried
to climb up the companionway ladder, that was tilted backward.
"I guess we've hit your iceberg!" cried Mr.
Henderson.
"I knew I smelled the frozen stuff," replied
the old hunter.
They got the covers on the manhole only just in time
and they all crowded into the cabin, while Jack switched on the electric
lights.
"Is the ship damaged?" asked Mark.
"I think not," replied Mr. Henderson.
"But we are sinking. Look at the depth gage."
The hand on the clock-face was moving slowly around.
From ten it went to twenty feet, then to thirty and kept going until it stood
at seventy.
"Look to the air tanks," ordered Mr.
Henderson to Washington, who, by this time had recovered from his fright.
"See if they are all right."
The colored man came back in a few minutes and
reported that the supply of compressed atmosphere was safe and that there was
plenty of it.
"That's good," remarked Mr. Henderson.
"Whatever else happens we can breathe for a while."
"But what has happened?" asked Andy.
"I think the top part of an iceberg toppled down
on us," was the reply. "You know about nine-tenths of a berg is under
water. Sometimes there is a warm current of the ocean underneath the ice, and
it melts. Then it becomes top-heavy and tilts over. One of that sort must have
caught us, and has shoved us down into the sea."
"But why don't we rise again when the ice floe
slips off us?" asked Mark.
"Because, in all probability the ice will not
slip off us," answered the professor grimly. "It may be so large that
it has caught us like a bug under a barn door."
"Then we are fast in the ice under water,"
spoke Andy after a pause.
"It looks like it," came from the inventor.
"However we will not give up yet. We may be able to make our way out.
Start the engine at full speed, Washington."
The machinery which the professor had shut down at the
first cry of alarm was set going. Soon the throb and hum told that the big
screw was revolving.
Meanwhile the Porpoise had regained an even
keel, and had stopped sinking, remaining at the depth of seventy feet below the
surface.
"We will first try to go straight ahead,"
said the captain.
He turned on more power and they all waited in
anxiety. The test would tell whether they could escape in that direction or
not.
But, though the powerful screw churned the water to
foam in the tunnel, the Porpoise never budged. It was as if she was held
in a vice.
"It's of no use," remarked Mr. Henderson
with a shake of his head as he watched the speed gage and noted that it
remained stationary. "We must now try the other way."
Once more the big screw was set going, this time in
the opposite direction, so as to pull the ship out of the ice if it was
possible. But this, too, was of no avail.
"It looks as if the ice had us," said Andy,
trying to speak in a cheerful tone. "But there's one way more to
try."
"What is that?" asked Mr. Henderson.
"If we were in the air ship we could go up,"
replied the old hunter. "But, as it is, we had better go down. Why don't
you fill all the water tanks, and try to sink beneath the iceberg? It can't go
down so very far into the water, and I reckon we could slip under it."
"The very thing!" exclaimed the professor,
whose mind was too sorely troubled over the happening to enable him to think of
plans of escape. "That's the best thing to do."
Under the inventor's direction Washington filled the
tanks and then, ere the pumps had ceased working, the screw was started and the
deflecting rudder inclined to cause the ship to dive.
One, two, three minutes passed, and still the Porpoise
did not move toward the bottom of the sea. She remained submerged and
stationary. Anxious eyes gazed at the dials. The indicating hands trembled
under the throbbing of the engines, but did not move.
"It will not work!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson
in sorrowful tones.
"What does it mean?" asked Bill, who had
come up to where the others stood.
"It means that we are prisoners in the ice;
caught between the upper and lower parts of a gigantic berg, and held here
under the water."
"Can't we ever get out?" asked Jack, a
tremor coming into his voice. "Can't we escape when the ice melts?"
"The ice of the southern polar sea seldom melts
in this latitude," replied the professor.
An ominous silence followed his words.
CHAPTER XXIV
THE SHIP GRAVEYARD
Truly the adventurers were in a position that might
well cause the stoutest heart to quail. With hundreds of tons of ice above,
below, and on every side of them, their chances of escaping alive from this
frozen tomb were very small.
"Can't we make an attempt to get out of this
prison?" asked Jack.
"Indeed we will," said the professor.
"We will try all the means at our command. If they all fail--"
He dared not finish the sentence, but they all knew
what he meant. It was now about one o'clock in the morning. The ship had become
stationary after the uneasy motion caused by the oscillation of the big berg.
"We may as well turn in and get a little
sleep," remarked Mr. Henderson. "We can all work better if we get
some rest."
It is doubtful whether any of them slept, for the
horror of their position was too fresh in their minds. Still, lying down in the
bunks rested them.
It was six o'clock when Washington awoke. In spite of
the dangers of the icy grave, he had managed to get a little sleep. He prepared
breakfast and called the others.
"Make a good meal," advised Mr. Henderson.
"We have plenty of work ahead of us."
"Are you going to free the ship?" asked
Mark.
"I am going to try," was the answer.
A little later the inventor was busy in one of the
small store rooms aft when Jack came up. The professor was carefully taking out
a box labelled:
DYNAMITE! DANGEROUS!
"What are you going to do?" asked the boy.
"I am going to try the same experiment we
attempted on the volcanic island," was the reply. "Only, this time, I
am afraid we shall have to complete it to the end. There is little likelihood
of the ice falling apart."
"Then you are going to blow it up?" went on
Jack.
"That's what I hope to do," the inventor
went on. "I see no other way, and, though there is a risk, it is not so
great a one as to wait to be crushed in the ice as it freezes more
solidly."
Under the directions of Mr. Henderson they got out the
diving suits. The professor, the two boys and Andy put them on. The dynamite,
in specially prepared water-proof packages, with long fuses was laid in readiness
close to the door of the diving chamber.
Into the cell, the four who were to make the perilous
journey under the ice, took their places. The water was slowly admitted, and
then, with the electric lights in their helmets throwing out powerful gleams,
they started forward as the outer door swung open.
It was well they had all taken the precautions to don
thick undergarments and clothing, for, even through the heavy rubber diving
suits, the terrible cold of the southern polar sea struck a chill to their very
bones.
As the professor had said, the ship was caught between
the upper and lower parts of the iceberg. On either side, ahead and to the rear
there was open water. Beneath their feet there was a floor of ice. It was as if
they and the ship had been placed between two great sheets of the frozen matter.
Their progress was slow, for the water hampered their
movements and each one had some of the dynamite to carry. The footing, too, was
insecure, for the icy bed of the ocean was slippery.
As they were huddled together, the professor in the
lead, and their lamps making a faint illumination in the darkness, they
suddenly became aware of a great shadow over them. They looked up, and their
hearts nearly ceased beating as they saw a gigantic sperm whale right over
them, and between the ice. The terrible animal had observed them also, and,
food being scarce in those frigid regions, had evidently made up its mind to
dine on some choice morsels.
The whale was nearly as large again as the submarine,
and to the frightened voyagers seemed more immense than a house. With slow
motions of the flukes the animal placed itself right over the boys and men,
ready to rush at and take them into its terrible maw.
Old Andy, who alone seemed to retain his presence of
mind, stepped to the front. The professor and the boys wondered what he was
going to do. Then Andy held up one of the electric guns.
Always thinking of his chosen calling, the old hunter
had picked up the weapon as he was leaving the Porpoise. He waited until
the whale was within a short distance, so close in fact that the small eyes,
out of all seeming proportion to the rest of the big body, could be seen. Then
Andy fired one of the explosive bullets straight into the open mouth that was
fringed with rows of the springy bone that is a part of a whale's eating apparatus.
The shot took effect, and made a vital wound. In its
death struggles the beast lashed the ocean to foam, and, but for the fact that
Andy as soon as he fired the shot crouched down, pulling the others toward the
floor of ice, they might all have been killed.
The whale turned and made a rush in the opposite
direction to that of the divers. This was a welcome sign to the professor, for
he knew the animal was seeking open water and this told him it must be
somewhere in the vicinity.
Their hearts still beating loudly from the closeness
of death, the adventurers continued their way. On every side were fish, big and
little, and, though some of the larger ones thrust themselves to the men and
boys, as if wondering what strange creatures they were, none of them offered to
attack.
Led by the professor they made a complete circuit of
the ship that was held fast in the ice. As the inventor had surmised, the Porpoise
was nipped only above and below. If she could be freed at either of those
points she could rise to the surface, or sink down under the ice.
After making a careful examination of the position of
the craft, Mr. Henderson motioned to have the dynamite placed on the ice, in
front of, and about two hundred feet away from the nose of the ship.
He connected the cartridges with the fuse and wires
that were to explode them, and then, taking the free end, he started back
toward the ship. Washington was on the watch for them, and operated the diving
chamber. Soon the four were back in the Porpoise.
"Now to see if our plan will work," said Mr.
Henderson. "I am relying on the well known downward force of dynamite to
blow a hole in the bottom part of the ice, so that we can drop below."
"Why not make a hole above so we can rise and
escape?" asked Bill.
"Because," replied the professor, "we
are now in the region of perpetual ice. The ocean above us is one fast floe, or
a number of smaller ones, so that, in any event our progress would be
impossible. But we can sail far enough down under water to escape all the ice.
That is the purpose of the Porpoise. That is why I built her. We will
now begin on the last part of our voyage; that is if we can get free of the
fearful grip of this sea of ice."
There was little they could do to protect themselves.
They would either escape or be blown to pieces in case the explosive exerted
too great a force. They all put on life preservers to guard against the
contingency of the Porpoise being ripped apart and themselves cast into
the water, yet they realized that without their ship, they could live but a
little while in the ice-filled water near the south pole.
The professor saw that everything was in readiness. He
hesitated a moment and looked at the electric button in his hand, for this time
the dynamite was to be detonated by a battery. How much might depend on one
push of the finger!
There was a slight movement to the muscles of the
professor's hand. Then it seemed as if a thunderbolt had fallen into the midst
of the ocean about them.
There was a dull rumble, but the confined space and
the thick walls of the ship shut most of it out. It was followed by a sickening
dizzy motion to the submarine. She seemed about to roll over and those in her
grabbed frantically at the sides. The next instant the craft plunged down,
down, down, into the water which was filled with broken cakes of ice, that
rattled against the steel sides, like peas in a pan.
Down and down the Porpoise went, for her tanks
were full. More and more rapidly she continued to sink, until it seemed she
would fetch up in the deepest cavern of the ocean.
"We's gwine t' Mars Davy Jones's locker,
suah!" Washington exclaimed as he looked at the depth gages.
[Illustration: THEY WERE IN THE MIDST OF A GRAVEYARD
OF WRECKED SHIPS.--Page 200.]
"Has the experiment succeeded?" asked Andy
of Mr. Henderson.
"I think so," was the answer. "At any
rate we are free from the ice, temporarily at least. We are sinking down
through the hole the dynamite made, just as I hoped we would."
"Where will we end up?" asked Jack.
"No one knows," replied the captain.
"But I would say--"
At that instant the ship stopped sinking and brought
up with a bump.
"I should say we were at the end of this part of
our journey," finished the inventor.
He turned off the cabin lights and lighted the search
lamps that threw a gleam so the water could be looked at from the bull's-eyes
windows. The sight that met their gaze was an astonishing one.
They were in the midst of a graveyard of wrecked
ships, and, on every side, scattered over the ocean bed, were the broken hulks
that had once been stately vessels.
CHAPTER XXV
CAUGHT BY SEA SUCKERS
"What sort of a place is this?" asked Andy,
as he gazed at the last resting spot of the big ships.
"They have probably drifted here with the ocean
currents, become caught in the ice and have remained here hundreds of
years," said Mr. Henderson. "Some of the ships are very old, and, by
their build must have sailed the waters centuries ago."
"Maybe some of them are treasure ships,"
suggested Jack.
"They might be," admitted the professor.
"Then we'll go aboard and get the gold,"
spoke Mark.
"I'm afraid you'll be disappointed," went on
the inventor. "In the first place most treasure ships are looted before
they sink. And it would be very dangerous for any of us to venture to explore
those hulks."
"Why?" asked Jack.
"Because they are rotten, and liable to fall to
pieces any minute. If you happened to be in one at the time you would be caught
in the wreckage and eventually drowned even though you had on a diving suit.
Then, again, the ice here is constantly shifting about, and a sudden motion of
the under-water floe might carry you hundreds of miles away. So we will not try
to hunt for any fortunes on the sunken ships."
With this the boys were forced to be content. They
stood at the small windows looking at the skeletons of ships that lay on every
side of the Porpoise. Some of the craft were big steamers, and others
were small sailing vessels. A few had jagged holes in the hulls, showing how
they had been damaged. A few stood upright, with sails all set, as if disaster
had suddenly come upon them.
"Well, what is the next move?" asked Andy
after a pause. "Are we going to stay here?"
"We are going to find the South Pole," spoke
Mr. Henderson suddenly. "That is what I set out to do, and I am going to
accomplish it if possible. We have had many accidents and a harder time in some
respects than when we made our trip to the north in the air ship. But I am sure
we shall succeed. Start the ship to the south, Washington."
"But we may run into an iceberg," objected
the old hunter, who was inclined to be cautious.
"I think not," answered Mr. Henderson.
"I believe we are on a sort of level plane between two vast upper and
lower fields of ice. We can go freely in any direction excepting up or
down."
"How is that?" asked Mark. "I don't
quite understand."
"Because there is, I believe, a big sheet of ice
above us, one, say several hundred feet thick. The same thing is below us,
between us and the real bed of the ocean."
"But suppose we have to go up to renew our air
supply?" asked Jack.
"We can't go," replied the inventor.
"Then we will die."
"Not necessarily. We will steam along until we
come to a place where there is no ice above us."
"But I thought you said there was nothing but ice
above us now."
"So there is, but I intend to head due south and
there, I believe, we will find an open polar sea. If we do my theory will be
proved and we will have made a great discovery."
"Forward then!" exclaimed Jack. "Let us
strike for the open sea."
The Porpoise began to move ahead. She steamed
slowly, for Mr. Henderson realized that he was in dangerous waters. He took his
position in the conning tower, and had Jack with him to assist in looking for
any obstructions that they might unexpectedly meet.
The big searchlight gave a fine illumination, for the
ice above and below reflected back the beams, and what would otherwise have
been a sea of darkness was made one of daylight.
The water swarmed with fish, but they were like none
that the adventurers had ever seen or dreamed of before. There were monsters
with hideous heads, and eyes so large that they occupied nearly half of the
ugly bodies.
Then there were serpent-like forms, fish with long
slender bodies and whip-fashioned tails, with jaws that extended before them
for ten feet or more. Others there were, great lumbering monsters that crawled
along on the ice, somewhat as seals do.
After several hours' travel the submarine ran into a
school of fish that had shapes like those of polar bears, while their heads
were like those of sharks. The creatures swarmed up to the side of the vessel,
and some scratched with their claw-like fins on the glass windows of the
conning tower and the side bull's-eyes.
A meal was prepared by Washington, and all the
adventurers brought good appetites to the table. On and on rushed the ship,
every hour coming nearer and nearer to the pole.
Professor Henderson had turned the steering of the
craft over to Mark, who, with Jack as an assistant was sending her along at a
good speed, when suddenly the submarine seemed to slacken in her progress.
"What's the matter now I wonder?" asked
Mark.
"Maybe the engine bearings got hot, and
Washington had to slow up to cool them," suggested Jack.
He looked through one of the side windows in the
conning tower, a moment later, and uttered a cry of fear.
"What is it?" asked Mark.
Jack pointed with a hand that trembled from fright.
Staring at them through the thick glass of the bull's-eye the boys beheld the
most hideous sea monster they had yet encountered.
It seemed to be a vast circular mass of flesh, twenty
feet in diameter, and, in the middle were two openings each three feet across.
They were like big holes, and, at the farther end of them could be seen two
unblinking eyes. In the centre was a horrible mouth, armed with a triple row of
teeth.
Down below there was a short body, at the end of which
was a smaller disk, armed with a sharp horny point.
"What is it?" asked Jack in a whisper.
"I don't know," replied Mark.
A moment later Mr. Henderson came up the companionway
into the tower. He caught one glimpse of the monster.
"It is the great sucker of the polar seas!"
he exclaimed. "Quick! Speed up the engine! If that one, and the mates of
it, fasten on to us we will have trouble!"
He pressed the signal that connected with the engine
room, and told Washington to start the engine at its greatest power. The next
instant the ship throbbed and trembled under the vibrations of the big screw.
"We may escape!" cried the professor.
As he spoke the ship seemed to come to a sudden stop.
The engine could still be felt moving, and the big screw still churned the
water to foam in the tunnel, but the craft was stationary.
"We are caught!" exclaimed the professor.
"So we are!"
The windows in the conning tower were darkened. The
big sucker had thrown itself forward and spread itself over the glass, clasping
its horrible form half way about the submarine.
"Let's look at the other windows! There may be
only one of the creatures!" Mr. Henderson exclaimed, as he hurried down
the companion way and into the main cabin. He threw back the slides covering
the glass.
The sight that met his eyes caused him to recoil in
horror. There, pressing their shapes against the steel sides, and over the
bull's-eyes of the ship were two more of the gigantic suckers!
The ship had now ceased to move, and Washington, in
the engine room, feeling that something was wrong, had shut off the power. The
adventurers were caught in a trap more terrible than that of the ice, the
volcanic mountain, or the Sargasso Sea. It was a trap from which they might
never escape.
The suckers, thinking the submarine was perhaps a
species of fish, like themselves, and one of their enemies, had fastened on it
their fatal vice-like grip. To move through the water, with the weight of all
that clinging flesh was impossible.
"What sort of creatures are they?" asked
Jack, speaking in a whisper, so great was the terror inspired by the presence
of the gigantic sea suckers.
"I never saw any of them before," replied
the professor, "but I have read about them. They live only in the polar
regions and are a species of octupus, only more terrible. Their powers of
suction are enormous, and once they fasten on a fish or animal they never let
go until they have absorbed it completely. They act in the same way that a star
fish does on an oyster."
"But they can't eat the ship," said Jack.
"No, I fancy the steel and iron sides will
prevent them from making a meal of us."
"Then where is the danger?"
"They will not let go until they discover that
they cannot devour us, and it may take days. We can only remain under water a
comparatively short time at the most. So you see where the danger is."
"But can't we go out and kill them? Then they
would let go."
"It would be most risky to venture out, protected
even with a diving suit, and carrying the electric guns," the professor
went on. "No, I must think of some other plan to free ourselves from the
creatures."
"Blow 'em up wif dynamite an' send 'em inter
disproportionately contrastedable circumferences!" exclaimed Washington,
who had been listening to the conversation.
"This isn't any time to joke," Mr. Henderson
said sternly.
"I wasn't joking," replied the colored man.
"Can't we squirt acid on 'em or chop 'em up, or--or--"
"We can do nothing for the time being," said
the professor. "Come, we will have a consultation on the subject. Perhaps
some one may be able to think of a plan of rescue."
"Let us hope so."
They all gathered in the cabin. The professor
explained the nature of the creatures, as far as he knew them from what he had
read or heard. He pointed out, through the glass windows, over which the
suckers were still clinging, how they maintained their grip, by exhausting,
through their big mouths, the air between their saucer-like surfaces and the
ship to which they were clinging.
"Can't we go out and fight 'em?" asked Andy,
who was always ready to use a gun.
"I doubt if we could get out," replied the
professor. "Though we can not see them, I believe the creatures cover
every part of the ship from stem to stern. We could never open the door of the
diving chamber with that terrible sucker covering the iron portal."
"Maybe if we wait long enough a lot of sharks
will come along and eat 'em up," put in Jack.
"I am afraid sharks will not come to these frozen
waters," said the professor. "They like a warm climate."
"And you don't think it would be feasible to use
dynamite," asked Mark.
"We can't get out to place it where it would blow
up the fish and not us," answered Mr. Henderson. "If we could it
might serve."
A silence fell on the group. They were in sore straits
and there seemed no hope of rescue. The big disk-like bodies that covered the
windows did not move, but remained there, staring with horrible persistency
into the interior of the ship.
CHAPTER XXVI
LAND UNDER ICE
Suddenly the craft began to move. Slowly at first,
then, with more speed it forged ahead through the water.
"Are we free?" asked Andy, starting up.
"Who started the machinery?" demanded the
professor.
"No one," replied Jack. "We are all
here. There is no one in the engine room."
"But we are moving," said Mark.
"It's dem sucker-fish!" exclaimed
Washington. "Dey is takin' us off to der dens an' dere we'll all be eat
up!"
"I'm afraid part of it is true," said Mr.
Henderson. "The creatures are certainly making off with us. How powerful
they must be!"
"Will dey take us to a cave?" faltered
Washington. "Will dey eat us up?"
"I don't think they'll eat us up," spoke the
inventor. "It would defy even their powerful sucking apparatus to bore
through the steel sides of the Porpoise. What I am afraid of is that
they may move us to some hidden depth where we will be caught under the rocks
or in the ice, and so lose what little chance there is of getting free."
"And the worst of it is we can't do a thing to
help ourselves!" exclaimed Andy. "This is the worst game I was ever
up against!"
The adventurers were indeed helpless. They could not
get out of their ship to attack the monsters, even had they dared to. Their
engine, powerful as it was, had proved no match for the creatures, and now they
were being carried away, ship and all, to some unknown place.
The ship did not go through the water fast. Though the
suckers seemed to be working in union their bodies were too unwieldly, and the
ship so large, that their pace was slow. Nevertheless they kept steadily on.
Several times, in their desperation, the adventurers
tried the force of the big screw against that of the suckers. It was of no
avail. Neither was the device of emptying the tanks, and trying to force the
craft up as far as the roof of ice would permit it to go.
"It's of no use," announced Mr. Henderson
with something that sounded like a groan. "We must prepare for the
worst."
"How long can we live here without going to the
surface after a fresh supply of air?" asked Bill.
"About three days," was the answer. "I
took the precaution to put a double supply into the tanks, in readiness for an
emergency, but I never thought of such a terrible situation as this."
The submarine seemed to be moving more rapidly now. It
was useless to try to see through either the windows in the side or in the
conning tower, for all the glass was covered by the horrible bodies.
"What will they do with us when they get us where
they want us?" asked Andy.
"What can they do except hold us prisoners
until--until--" The professor broke off the sentence he dared not finish.
For an hour or more the craft was moved through the
water at moderate speed. Then it came to a stop. Those on board were alert for
what might happen next.
"I guess dey done got us in der cave," said
Washington with chattering teeth. "Now dey'll begin to devour us wid dem
terrible big mouths! Golly, I wish I was home!"
"Stop that nonsense!" exclaimed Mr.
Henderson. "Be a man! There is no danger yet. The sides of the Porpoise
will defy worse enemies than those attacking us!"
At that instant the ship began to move again. It was
hauled slowly through the water.
"They are pulling us backward!" said Andy,
as he watched the needle of the compass.
Once more the submarine was stopped. Then it moved
forward at a more rapid pace than at any time since the suckers had seized it.
An instant later it brought up against some solid object with such a jar that
those inside were thrown off their feet.
"Something has hit us!" cried Jack.
"More likely we've struck something," said the
professor.
Again the ship forged to the rear, and once again it
was sent swiftly ahead. Then came the second shock, harder than the first,
which sent some of the party headlong.
"They are banging us against a rock!" cried
Mr. Henderson.
"Do you mean those sea suckers?"
"Yes. They have probably found that the shell of
the Porpoise is too hard even for their powerful jaws. So they have
taken us to some place where the rocks show and are banging us against them in
order to break the ship, so they can get at what is inside."
Once more the ship was drawn backward and again dashed
against the stone. The shock was a hard one and toppled over all who were not
clinging to something.
"They are ramming us bow on against the
rocks," cried Andy. "It will break us apart if they hit us many more
times!"
Washington hurried forward. He came back with his eyes
showing terror.
"There's a lot of rocks right ahead ob us!"
he exclaimed. "I see 'em through th' little window jest above th' screw.
There's land under this here water!"
"Land under this ice do you mean?" asked the
professor.
"That's what I mean, an' we's bein' rammed agin
th' rocks!"
"There it goes again!" cried Jack, as the
ship shivered from stem to stern against the impact of the blow.
"This can not last long," said Mr.
Henderson. "If they strike us many more times some of the places will
start, the water will come in, and we will drown!"
"But what can we do?" asked Jack.
"Let's go out now and see if we can't kill some
of the beasts with the guns," suggested Andy.
"I cannot permit it," answered the inventor.
"Our position is bad enough as it is, but to go out would be to lose our
lives for a certainty. The suckers would swallow us up in a moment. I must find
some other way."
There was a period of silence, while all waited
anxiously for what was to happen next. It was not long in coming. The next
impact of the ship against the rocks was the hardest yet, and it seemed that
more of the suckers must have gripped the craft.
"She's leakin' a little!" exclaimed
Washington coming back from an inspection forward. "De water am tricklin'
in!"
"We must fight them!" exclaimed Andy. He ran
to get a gun and his diving suit.
"Don't try to go out!" warned the professor.
"You will surely be killed."
"I'd rather be killed out there than die shut up
in the ship!" cried the old hunter. "I'm going out!"
"Wait!" exclaimed Jack suddenly. "I
have a plan that may save us!"
"What is it? Speak quickly!" said Mr. Henderson.
"We are in desperate straits!"
As he spoke there came another crash against the
rocks.
"We must electrocute the suckers!" cried the
boy.
"Electrocute them? What do you mean?"
"Take the wires from the electric light circuit,
attach one to each end of the ship, and start the dynamo at full speed!"
answered Jack.
"What good will that do?"
"The ship is steel," went on the boy.
"It will become charged with a powerful current. We can insulate ourselves
by putting on rubber boots, but the shock of the electricity will kill the
creatures!"
"Good for you!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson.
"Quick boys, everybody lend a hand! Washington, detach the wires and run
one to the bow and the other to the stern of the ship. Then get out the
boots."
In a few minutes the dynamo was ready to send a
death-dealing current through the entire ship. The professor and all the others
put on the boots, that were a part of the diving equipment. The dynamo was
started at full speed and the purring hum told that electricity of great power
was being developed.
The professor stood with his hand on a switch, ready
to close the circuit as soon as sufficient power had accumulated. Once more the
suckers backed the ship in order to give it impetus for another impact on the
stones.
Click! The professor snapped the switch shut. There
was a burst of bluish-green flame, and the movement of the boat suddenly
ceased.
"I guess that does for 'em!" shouted Andy.
"Wait a few minutes," advised the professor.
"The suckers may not all be dead yet!"
He kept the current flowing throughout the length of
the ship for several minutes, and then turned it off.
"Now to see if the plan worked," he said.
The windows in the cabin were eagerly scanned.
"Hurrah!" cried Mark. "The suckers have
gone!"
"I guess the electricity killed them," spoke
Mr. Henderson. "We will venture out now in our diving suits and see what
sort of a place we are in."
Soon the adventurers were arrayed in the heavy suits.
Under them they wore thick clothing, and in each suit was placed a small flat
heater, operated by a storage battery. The heaters were made of coils of fine
wires, and the electric current, meeting with much resistance in passing
through them, heated the coils, so there was considerable warmth.
It was all needed as they found when they felt the
water entering the diving chamber, for the fluid was as cold as an ocean full
of icebergs could make it. Protected however by the heavy suits, warm clothing
and the heaters the divers were fairly comfortable.
The outer door was opened and they all started back in
amazement at the sight which met their eyes. Before them lay a forest of real
trees, with bushes growing among them, while the ground, instead of being like
the usual ocean bed was covered with grass.
As Washington had said, on getting a small view of the
place from the little window, it was real land under water.
Their first surprise at the strange spectacle over,
the adventurers glanced about for a sight of the terrible sea suckers. But they
need not have feared. Lying in a huddled up mass toward the rear of the Porpoise
were the dead bodies of the ugly creatures. The electricity had finished them.
CHAPTER XXVII
ATTACKED BY AN OCTUPUS
They walked some distance away from the ship, for the
land under the water was easy to travel on. It looked exactly as if some
beautiful valley had suddenly been submerged in the middle of summer, when
everything was fresh and green.
They had gone perhaps a quarter of a mile from the Porpoise
when Professor Henderson motioned to them that they had better return. On their
way back they passed what looked to be a large cave in the side of a hill.
Wondering what could be in it, Mark and Jack paused to peer into the black
opening.
The next instant two long white things, like slender
serpents shot out. With the rapidity of lightning they wrapped themselves, one
about each boy, and, before the horrified companions of the lads could do
anything the unfortunate youths were whisked out of sight into the cavern.
For a few seconds no one knew what to do. To rush in
to the rescue of the boys would have been foolhardy, as the terrible octupus,
which they knew had grabbed the lads, would have been a match for all of the
adventurers, unarmed as they were.
It would be necessary to return to the ship and come
back with some of the electric guns, which they had neglected to bring with
them. In the meanwhile the beast might, and probably would, kill Mark and Jack.
But there was nothing else to do.
The professor motioned for Andy to remain on the watch
at the mouth of the cavern, so as to be on hand in case he could help the boys,
while the others were hurrying toward the ship. Then, leading the way, the
Professor signalled for Tom and Bill to follow him.
They could not hurry much for the heavy suits and the
resistance of the water impeded their progress. But they made all the speed
they could, urged on by a terrible fear.
Meanwhile old Andy stood in front of the cave, hoping
against hope that there might be some way of aiding the boys. If it had
happened above water he would not have hesitated to rush in and give battle to
the beast, even though he was unarmed. If he had his knife now he would venture
in, at the risk of his life.
"Oh, why didn't I bring my gun along!"
thought Andy regretfully.
His hand dropped to his side and his fingers came in
contact with a big knife in the belt of the diving suit. Here was a weapon he
had forgotten all about.
He drew forth the blade. It seemed a small one with
which to attack so large and terrible a creature as the octupus. Yet to remain
there, knowing the boys were being killed was more than old Andy could stand.
Grasping the handle with a firm grip he started toward the cave. His foot
caught in something, and he nearly fell.
Looking down to see what had tripped him he saw a long
thin pole, straight as a lance. It had once been a tree limb, but all the
branches were stripped off.
"Now if I only had an iron point for that,"
Andy thought. Then he recollected the knife in his hand.
"The very thing," he remarked aloud, the
words sounding startlingly loud in the confinement of the copper helmet.
"If I only had something to fasten the knife on the pole I could make a
spear to attack the octupus."
Then he saw long streamers of sea weed growing up from
the ocean bed. They were very tough, a kind of wirey grass that was as strong
as rope. Andy cut several streamers and, with a hunter's skill bound the knife
to the end of the staff.
Now he had a weapon formidable enough to venture in
and give battle to the monster. He hesitated no longer, fearing that even the
short delay might have been too much and that the boys were dead. He entered
the cave. At first he could perceive nothing for it was quite dark. Then, as
his eyes became used to the gloom, which the lamp in his helmet faintly
illuminated, he saw, far back in the rear, the horrible octupus.
Two dark objects, around which were wrapped several
folds of the terrible arms, Andy guessed to be Mark and Jack, and when he was a
faint glow coming from them he was sure they were the boys, the gleams coming
from the lamps in their helmets.
Warily the hunter approached the creature. If he had
hoped to take it unawares he was disappointed, for, when he had come within ten
feet, holding his improvised lance outstretched ready for a deadly thrust, the
creature shot out two long arms toward Andy.
Now the battle began. The snake-like feelers, armed
with big saucer shaped suckers, lashed about in the water, seeking to clasp the
hunter in their deadly embrace. But Andy, who had fought many kinds of wild
animals on land, did not lose his presence of mind in confronting this beast of
the sea.
Nimbly, in spite of the handicap of the heavy diving
suit, Andy dodged the arms. Watching his chance he thrust at one, and the sharp
knife severed the end. But another arm shot out, while the wounded one was
drawn in, and the battle was as much against the old hunter as before.
Once more he thrust his lance, and this time he
severed one of the arms close to the ugly body. The creature, in its rage and
pain, redoubled its efforts to clasp Andy.
The hunter decided to try to get to closer quarters
where he could use his spear on the body of the beast. He stooped down and
wiggled along on the bottom of the cave. But the creature saw him, and darted
an arm out to pull the old man in. Andy squirmed to one side, and then, being
as close as he desired, he rose to his feet and, drawing back the pole thrust
it with all his force straight at the centre of the whitish-yellow body that
was like a horrible lump of soft fat directly in front of him.
At the first touch of the knife the creature squirted
out an inky substance that made the water about it as black as night. Andy
could not see, but he could feel that the lance was still in the body. He
pulled it back a little and thrust again and again, turning it around to
enlarge the wound he had made.
Then, what he had feared all along happened. Two of
the creatures arms found him, and he felt the terrible pressure as they wound
themselves about him, the sucker-plates clinging fast. Yet in it all he did not
lose his presence of mind, nor did he let go of the pole.
Tighter and tighter the arms clasped him. He struggled
with all his strength but he was in a grip more powerful than that of a boa
constrictor. Suddenly the pole he was holding snapped off. He let go the
useless end and pulled the shorter part, to which the knife was bound, toward
him. Andy felt his senses beginning to leave him, but he determined to make one
more effort.
One hand was free, that holding the knife. With his
last remaining strength he cut and slashed at the arms of the creature that
were clasped about him.
Again and again he stuck the blade into the gristle
like substance. Could he win? Could he save his own life, to say nothing of
that of the two boys?
The creature was lashing about now so that the water
was a mass of black foam. The ink-color was beginning to fade away. Andy could
dimly observe the horrible front of the octupus, and see the wound his lance
had made. Then all seemed to grow dark again. He dimly remembered trying to
thrust the knife into one of the saucer-shaped eyes, and then of a sudden his
senses left him.
When Andy came to his senses he found himself lying on
the ocean bed just outside the cave. About him stood the professor, Washington,
Tom and Bill. His head buzzed and he felt weak, but he knew he was uninjured,
and that his diving suit had not been punctured in the fight with the octupus,
for he could feel the fresh air entering from the tank at the back of his
helmet.
Were the boys killed, Andy wondered. Had his fight to
save them been in vain? He managed to stand up, and then, to his relief he saw
Mark and Jack standing behind Tom and Bill. The boys seemed weak but otherwise
uninjured.
The professor motioned to know if Andy could walk and
the old hunter soon demonstrated that he could by stepping forward. Then the
party proceeded slowly to the ship.
Little time was lost by each one in divesting himself
of his diving suit as soon as they had left the water chamber. The first thing
Andy asked when his helmet was off, was:
"Did I kill the beast?"
"Indeed you did," replied the professor.
"And just in time, too. You were about done for when we came back with the
guns, but they were not needed. My! But you must have had a terrible
fight!"
"I did, while it lasted," said the hunter.
"But were the boys hurt?"
"They can speak for themselves," replied Mr.
Henderson. "I guess not, though."
"Having the wind almost squeezed out of us was
the worst that happened," said Mark. "The octupus must have recently
dined when it grabbed us, for it didn't offer to eat us. And it didn't grip us
as tightly as it might have or I reckon we wouldn't have come out alive. I
thought sure we were going to be killed, however."
"So did I," put in Jack.
"I don't want any more such fights this
trip," said Andy with a weak smile.
CHAPTER XXVIII
OUT OF THE ICE
Worn out with their encounter with the octupus, Andy
and the boys were glad to take to their bunks. The others, too, who were weary
from traveling under water, felt the need of rest, and so it was decided to let
the ship remain stationary down on the bottom of the ocean for several hours
before going on further.
"When we get rested up we'll have a good meal,
and then try to gain the surface of the ocean," said the professor.
There was quiet on board the Porpoise for a
long time. Washington was the first to awake and he at once set about getting a
meal. When it was ready he called the professor, and, one after another all the
adventurers rose from their bunks and refreshed themselves with hot coffee,
bacon, eggs and preserves, all prepared from condensed foods, of which a large
supply had been brought.
"Now to see if we can make our way upward through
the ice," announced Mr. Henderson.
"We ought to be far enough south to strike the
open polar sea which I believe exists."
The engine was started after the small leaks in the
bow, caused by the ramming of the boat on the rocks, had been stopped up, and
the professor, entering the conning tower, turned her due south.
The screw vibrated in the tunnel, the water rushed out
in a big stream, the engines and dynamos hummed, and the hearts of all were
lightened as they knew they were nearing the goal of their journey.
Several hours passed and the professor, who was
keeping watch of the gages noted they had covered more than one hundred miles.
As the supply of compressed air was getting low Mr. Henderson, not wanting to
run any chances, decided to make an attempt to reach the surface and refill the
tanks.
Accordingly the water tanks were emptied of their
ballast, the rudder was set to force the ship to the surface, and soon the
depth gage showed a constantly decreasing amount of water over the heads of the
adventurers.
"Now, if we don't hit the ice above us we'll be
all right," spoke Mr. Henderson. "We are within fifteen feet of the
surface."
Hardly had he ceased speaking when the Porpoise
brought up against something with a bump that jarred everyone. Then the
submarine went scraping along, hitting the conning tower every now and then.
"Not clear of the ice yet," said Mr.
Henderson. "We must go down a little and try again."
The tanks were filled with enough water to keep the
boat about fifty feet under the surface, and at that depth she was sent ahead
at full speed. The professor's face wore an anxious look, and when Washington
asked him if it was not time to replenish the air supply of the boat the
inventor told the colored man to be very sparing of the contents of the
compressing tanks.
"I'm afraid we are not as near the open sea as I
at first thought," Mr. Henderson finished.
On and on rushed the Porpoise. The engines were
kept at full speed, and after two hours of this fast run another attempt was
made to reach the surface. Once more the thick ice intervened.
"Guess we'll have to blast our way out,"
observed Andy. "We seem to have lots of trouble on this trip."
"Why not try to ram your way through,"
suggested Jack.
"How do you mean?" asked Mr. Henderson.
"I mean to sink the boat say two hundred feet.
Then start her up obliquely and perhaps the sharp prow will cut a hole through
the ice."
"Hardly through ice fifteen feet or more
thick," said the captain despondently.
"But it may be thinner now," persisted Jack.
"At any rate it will do no harm to try," the
inventor admitted. "We can not last much longer down here."
Again the tanks were filled, and by the aid of the
deflecting rudder the Porpoise went down into the depths. Then the
ballast tanks were quickly emptied, and the rudder turned so as to force the
craft upward on a slant. The engine was set going at top speed.
"Hold fast everybody!" called the professor.
"It is kill or cure this trip!"
Like an arrow from a bow the Porpoise shot
upward. On and on it sped, gathering momentum with every foot she traveled.
Suddenly there came a terrible crash, a grinding sound
and a rending and tearing. The ship trembled from end to end. Every one was
knocked from his feet. There were bumpings and scrapings all along the sides of
the submarine. Then, with one final spurt of speed, the little ship tore her
way through the ice and emerged, with a splash and shower of foam into the open
sea!
Quickly the man hole was opened and, half dead from
lack of fresh air, the adventurers crawled out on deck. It was night and the
stars glittered in the sky above. They were just beyond the edge of the ice
field, and all about them was a wide open sea.
"I was right after all," said the professor,
"but I miscalculated the distance. Had we gone on a few feet farther it
would not have been necessary to break through the ice."
"I guess it's a lucky thing we didn't try it
before either," remarked Andy. "We never could have bored through
fifteen feet of the frozen stuff. Where we plowed up it is less than two
feet," and he pointed to where the immense floe came to an end.
It was decided to go no farther that night, however,
as the professor wanted to take some observations by daylight and ascertain his
position. So filling their lungs with the air, cold and piercing though it was,
the adventurers descended to their cabin, and lots were drawn to see who would
stand the two night watches. It fell to Mr. Henderson to take the first, and
Washington the second. The captain accordingly took up his position in the
conning tower and prepared to pass several hours.
He was busy thinking over the exciting times he and
his companions had passed through, and planning new trips to see more wonders
of the world, when his attention was attracted by slight noise near the man
hole leading to the amidship companionway.
The professor looked up, and was startled to see a
tall white object, with outstretched arms advancing toward him with slow and
stealthy tread.
"The ghost again!" exclaimed the inventor
softly. "I must catch it now, and see what foolishness it is," for
the professor did not believe in spirits.
He got down on his hands and knees the better to
escape observation, should the white thing prove to be a bodily substance, and
started to crawl toward it. He came within ten feet of the thing, and could
make out that it was a man, or at least the semblance of one, all clothed in
white.
Nearer and nearer the inventor crawled to the thing.
It turned to face him now and Mr. Henderson could not help feeling startled as
he saw the object had no head. The neck ended in a white stump.
In spite of a little feeling of qualmishness, which
even his boasted disbelief in ghosts did not save him from, Mr. Henderson was
about to spring upon the thing and solve the mystery.
At that instant, however, Washington, who was coming
on deck to take up his watch, appeared at the head of the companionway, and
caught sight of the terrible object.
The yells of the colored man as he dove downward and
back into the cabin, aroused the ship. Determined to solve the mystery, in
spite of everything, the professor made a leap forward. He slipped, and tumbled
down the iron stairway. At the same time, the ghost, with a blood curdling
yell, leaped over the professor's back, and disappeared down the stairs of the
conning tower.
In an instant the crew were rushing from their bunk
rooms, seeking a meaning for the disturbance.
"It was the ghost again," explained the
professor as he picked himself up, not much the worse for his tumble. "I
tried to catch it, but I didn't. Come, Washington, it is your turn to stand
watch."
"Not to-night," said Washington firmly.
It was no use to urge him, so Jack good-naturedly
stood Washington's trick. Nothing further however occurred that night.
In the morning the professor made several observations
and found that he was within one hundred and fifty miles of the south pole.
"We'll make it to-morrow, if we have luck,"
he said.
CHAPTER XXIX
THE BOILING WATER
The hours passed and the strange voyage continued.
The Porpoise traveled along at good speed, and
the professor devoted most of his time to looking after the different
scientific instruments and gages, for they were nearing the south pole. The
deflecting compass, which when it came directly over the place corresponding to
the pole, would point straight up and down, was assuming more and more of a
perpendicular position.
"We are getting there!" exclaimed the
professor with delight. "A few hours more and we will have won the
goal!"
There was considerable excitement on board when the
professor's announcement was made. Though few of the adventurers cared as much
for the scientific achievement as did Mr. Henderson, they were all glad he was
about to succeed. To most of them the locating of the south pole was no
different from visiting some new country, excepting that there were more
adventures than on most voyages.
At dusk the Porpoise went to the surface and
during the night traveled along atop of the billows. In the morning she dived
below again. The engine was started at high speed and the deflecting needle
dipped still more.
"We's gittin' dar!" exclaimed Washington as
he oiled the various bearings of the machinery.
Breakfast was served and hurriedly eaten, for the
excitement was telling on every one. After the meal had been cleared away they
all sat in the darkened cabin looking out at the water as it slipped past the
glass windows. Big and little fish swam up and peered into the bull's-eyes and
then darted away.
"That's sort of queer," remarked Jack a
little later.
"What is?" asked Mark, who was sitting near
his chum.
"All the fish seem to have suddenly
disappeared," replied Jack. "There were hundreds a little while ago,
and now I haven't seen one looking in the windows for some time."
"Perhaps there's a big fish on their trail,"
observed Mark. "That's what makes 'em take to the deep sea weed."
"Maybe so," replied Jack.
A little later Professor Henderson entered the room.
He went over, looked at the thermometer, and then called to Washington:
"Have you got the heat turned on?"
"No, sah! I ain't done truned on no superheated
vapor into de radiators," replied the colored man. "I were jest
thinkin' dat we'd hit de south pole by de feel of it."
"It is getting strangely warm," admitted Mr.
Henderson.
"Ain't that what you expected at the south
pole?" asked Andy. "I thought it was hot at the south pole and cold
at the north."
"That's what lots of people imagine," said
the professor, "but except for the open sea, which I have proved does
exist, I guess it's just as cold at the south as at the north, especially in
the winter. We have struck the summer season."
"And a mighty warm one at that," observed
Jack. "Whew! I've got to take off my coat."
Indeed it was getting uncomfortably warm in the ship,
and the adventurers who had dressed in thick clothing to guard against the
rigors of the icy climate, soon had to lay aside many of their garments.
"No wonder!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson, as he
looked at a thermometer. "It is eighty degrees in here!"
"Worse than workin' in a hay field,"
observed Bill, as he wiped the beads of perspiration from his forehead.
"Let us see what sort of water we are traveling
through," suggested the professor, as he again turned off the lights in
the cabin so that a view could be had from the bull's-eyes.
Wondering what would meet their gaze the adventurers
peered out of the small circular windows. At first they could hardly believe
their eyes.
There, right before them, the sea was bubbling as if
it was an immense tea kettle. Steam formed on the glass, and big clouds of
vapor could be seen. The atmosphere of the cabin became almost unbearable.
"We are in the midst of a boiling hot
ocean!" cried the professor.
"Are we sailing through hot water?" asked
Andy.
"I should say so, from the feel of it,"
answered Mr. Henderson. "Put your hand on the side of the cabin."
Andy laid his fingers against the steel plates. He
drew back.
"I burned myself!" he exclaimed.
"What are we to do?" cried Jack.
"Get out of this by all means!" exclaimed
the inventor. "If we stay in this hot ocean we will be boiled alive like
fishes in a pot. Send the ship up, Washington!"
Indeed it was high time. The thermometer marked one
hundred and ten degrees, and was rising. The interior of the Porpoise
was like that of a steam laundry three times heated. Stripped to their
undergarments the adventurers were obliged to lie down on the floor of the
cabin where it was a little cooler.
It was all Washington could do, used as colored people
are to the heat, to go into the engine room, and start the machinery that
emptied the tanks, so as to allow the ship to mount to the surface.
The Porpoise began to rise slowly, and to the
suffering men and boys it seemed that she never went up so reluctantly. The
heat was becoming unbearable. They could hear the water bubbling even through
the steel sides of the submarine.
CHAPTER XXX
CONCLUSION
Could they live to reach the surface? was the thought
in the mind of every one. The heat was terrific. They were breathing in gasps.
Professor Henderson went to the water tank, thinking to throw some of the fluid
over himself and his companions, but he found it so warm that it almost burned
his hand.
"Keep up your courage!" exclaimed the
inventor. "We will soon be at the top!"
Almost as he spoke the Porpoise bounded from
the waves, and fell back in a splash of foam on the surface of the billows.
They were at the surface.
The professor rushed for the manhole and soon opened
it. He crawled out on the deck, followed by the others. They breathed in deep
breaths of the fresh air.
The submarine continued to sail on. Every minute the
sea seemed to boil more violently, until at last the waves were covered with a
cloud of steam, through which it was difficult to observe where they were
going.
"Hadn't we better turn back," suggested
Mark.
"Our only hope is to press on," replied Mr.
Henderson. "We may cross this zone of boiling water soon."
He went into the conning tower to make an observation.
He came on the deck the next minute, very much excited.
"What's the matter? Are we sinking?" asked
Andy.
"We are directly over the south pole!"
exclaimed the professor. "We have reached the goal! We have come to the
spot hundreds of men have tried to reach! It has been left for us to succeed.
Look at the deflecting needle!"
They crowded into the conning tower to note it. The
slender hand of steel stood straight up and down, indicating that the ship was
over the south pole, one of the two chief centres of magnetism of the earth.
"If we only dared stop to make some scientific
notes and observations," said the professor, "we could render much
valuable aid to the seekers after truth. But it would be sure death to stay in
the boiling water!"
"I guess we'd better be getting out of this if we
want to reach home alive," spoke Andy.
Indeed they were all suffering very much, for the heat
from the water was awful.
"Speed her up, Washington!" called the
professor. "We must get out of here!"
"Which way shall I steer?" asked the colored
man.
"Straight ahead. We are now bound north!"
"Bound north!" cried Jack.
"Certainly," answered the professor.
"We have passed over the exact spot where the south pole is. The
deflecting needle is beginning to tilt again. The compass is indicating a
northerly direction. You know that after you go as far south as you can, you
have to begin to go back north. Well, we have gone as far south as we can. Now
we are going north. We have turned the southern end of the globe, and are on
our way back."
For several hours the Porpoise continued along
on top of the water. By degrees, as they left the vicinity of the boiling
ocean, it became cooler. The water ceased to seethe and bubble, and Jack found,
on experiment, that he could bear his hand in it.
"Hurrah!" he cried, "we are safe
now."
"Next we'll have to prepare to freeze to
death," spoke Mark. "It's either one extreme or the other this trip.
But we've had lots of fun and excitement."
"Plenty of the last," agreed Jack.
On and on went the submarine. Once it was out of the
range of the terrible heated zone, the atmosphere rapidly cooled, until the
adventurers were glad to don their heavy garments again.
"This marks the ending of the first half of the
voyage," announced the professor. "Now we are going back. We have
accomplished something no other living man has done and I am proud of it. Proud
of all of you, and proud of the ship!"
Several hours later, when it was deemed safe, the Porpoise
was sunk beneath the waves, and once more she speeded along through the water
at a fast speed. The ship seemed to know she was going home, for never had she
made better time.
"We have solved every problem that we met,"
said the professor while he, with Jack and Mark, were in the conning tower, as
Washington was preparing a meal.
"Except two," said Jack.
"What are they?"
"The ghost of the submarine, and the identity of
the anarchists who blew up the Easton hotel."
"Perhaps both riddles may be solved before we get
back to Maine," answered Mr. Henderson.
They both were, sooner, and in stranger ways than
either of the boys expected. That night it was Jack's first watch on deck. The
ship was speeding on, and by the air the boy knew they were approaching
icebergs. At midnight a strange and sudden chill in the air made him look up.
Almost dead ahead was a big berg. He quickly shut off
the engine, and narrowly avoided a collision. Then happening to glance back he
saw, standing near the companionway leading down into the man-hole a ghostly
white shape.
"I'll find out what you are this time, or go
overboard with you," said Jack to himself, clenching his teeth. He crawled
along the deck until he thought he was within leaping distance of the weird
white thing. Then he made a leap.
He landed on something soft, which, the moment he
struck it, let out a yell that sounded loud on the quiet night. Then the thing
began to fight. But Jack fought back and held on bravely.
"Here! What are you tryin' to do?" exclaimed
a voice in his ear.
"What are you trying to do?" asked Jack
indignantly, finding that the words came from the "ghost."
"Nice way to treat a man! Half kill him!"
the white thing went on. "Just when I'm trying to get a little sleep you
come along and pull me out of bed!"
"Why, it's Bill Jones," exclaimed Jack, as
the light from the conning tower lamp fell on the face of the
"ghost."
"Of course it is; who did you think it was?"
asked Bill.
"What are you doing on deck in your night
shirt?" asked the boy, letting the helper rise.
"Me? On deck? Ain't I in my bunk?"
"I should say not," replied Jack. "What
are you doing on deck?"
"Well! well!" remarked Bill, rubbing his
eyes. "I've gone and done it again."
"Done what?"
"Walked in my sleep. I'm a great sleep walker.
Greatest you ever knew. Once I climbed to the top of our barn when I was
asleep."
"So you're the ghost of the submarine,"
exclaimed Jack. "That explains it."
"I guess you're right," admitted Bill, as
the others came on deck to see what all the row was about. "I never
thought of it when I heard about the ghost, but I can account for it now. I'd
get out of my bunk, wander out on deck, and then crawl back again. Of course,
being barefoot, or in fur slippers, I made no sounds. I don't wonder you
thought I was a spirit. Queer I didn't wake up after some of the things I went
through."
"And you always managed to get back to your bunk
in time so that we never caught you at it," said Jack. "However, it's
all over now."
And so it was, for after that Bill tied a chair in
front of his bunk, and if he did get out in his sleep he stumbled against it
and awoke before he had gone far.
Northward the Porpoise continued on her
journey. She entered a vast field of ice, and only her ability to sink below
the surface enabled her to get through it unharmed. There were few adventures
going home. Once a big whale rammed the ship, as had happened on the going voyage,
and several times they were surrounded by hordes of wild polar fish and
walrusses, but there were no accidents, and in a couple of weeks the ship
entered the temperate zone.
Then came lazy happy days of sailing through the
tropical region. They landed at several islands and renewed their supply of
food.
"I'm coming back this way some day,"
observed Mr. Henderson one afternoon as the ship was sailing along on top of
the waves.
"What for?" asked Jack.
"To investigate that strange island with a big
hole in the middle that seems to lead to the centre of the earth," was the
answer. "I have a fancy we can explore that by means of a balloon. I'm
going to try."
"Will you take us along?" asked the two
boys.
"I'll see," replied the professor.
And later on he did take them on a trip, a thousand
miles underground,--but that is another story to tell.
It was about a week later that the voyagers came
within sight of Key West.
"Off there lies the United States," said Mr.
Henderson.
"Hurrah for home!" cried Mark.
Three days later they landed at a small Florida town.
The sight of the Porpoise attracted throngs of people to the dock where
she tied up. Among them was a newsboy.
"Get me all the papers for the past month,"
said Jack. "I want to see what the news is."
"Same here," put in Mark, and the papers
were soon brought.
"Hurrah!" exclaimed Jack, as soon as he had
looked at several of the sheets.
"What is it?" asked Mark, who was unfolding
a paper.
"Anarchists Confess," read Jack. "Two
Englishmen Admit They Blew Up Hotel Where Lord Peckham Was Stopping. No
Suspicion Attaches to Two Youths Who So Mysteriously Disappeared!"
"Hurrah!" joined in Mark.
"Those are only the head lines," went on
Jack. "There's a long story, and I guess it lets us out."
The two boys were completely cleared of the slightest
shade of suspicion of the outrage, and there was even an interview with the
English detective in which he admitted that he was wrong.
A week later the Porpoise tied up at her own
dock, whence she was launched.
"Back again," remarked the professor as he
stepped ashore. "I've been to the south pole, and to the north pole. I
wonder where I shall go next?"
"To the big hole and underground," suggested
Jack.
"We shall see," said Mr. Henderson with a
twinkle in his eyes.
THE END
The Dave Dashaway Series
By ROY ROCKWOOD
Author of the "Speedwell Boys Series" and
the "Great Marvel Series."
=12mo. Illustrated. Price per volume, 60 cents,
postpaid.=
=Never was there a more clever young aviator than Dave
Dashaway. All up-to-date lads will surely wish to read about him.=
[Illustration: DAVE DASHAWAY THE YOUNG AVIATOR]
DAVE DASHAWAY THE YOUNG AVIATOR or In the Clouds
for Fame and Fortune
This initial volume tells how the hero ran away from
his miserly guardian, fell in with a successful airman, and became a young
aviator of note.
DAVE DASHAWAY AND HIS HYDROPLANE or Daring
Adventures Over the Great Lakes
Showing how Dave continued his career as a birdman and
had many adventures over the Great Lakes, and how he foiled the plans of some
Canadian smugglers.
DAVE DASHAWAY AND HIS GIANT AIRSHIP or A Marvellous
Trip Across the Atlantic
How the giant airship was constructed and how the
daring young aviator and his friends made the hazardous journey through the
clouds from the new world to the old, is told in a way to hold the reader
spellbound.
DAVE DASHAWAY AROUND THE WORLD or A Young Yankee
Aviator Among Many Nations
An absorbing tale of a great air flight around the
world, of adventures in Alaska, Siberia and elsewhere. A true to life picture
of what may be accomplished in the near future.
DAVE DASHAWAY: AIR CHAMPION or Wizard Work in the
Clouds
Dave makes several daring trips, and then enters a contest
for a big prize. An aviation tale thrilling in the extreme.
* * * * *
CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK
THE FRED FENTON ATHLETIC SERIES
By ALLEN CHAPMAN
Author of "The Tom Fairfield Series,"
"The Boys of Pluck Series" and "The Darewell Chums Series."
=12mo. Illustrated. Price per volume, 60 cents,
postpaid.=
* * * * *
A line of tales embracing school athletics. Fred is a
true type of the American schoolboy of to-day.
* * * * *
[Illustration: FRED FENTON THE PITCHER]
FRED FENTON THE PITCHER or The Rivals of Riverport
School
When Fred came to Riverport none of the school lads
knew him, but he speedily proved his worth in the baseball box. A true picture
of school baseball.
FRED FENTON IN THE LINE or The Football Boys of
Riverport School
When Fall came in the thoughts of the boys turned to
football. Fred went in the line, and again proved his worth, making a run that
helped to win a great game.
FRED FENTON ON THE CREW or The Young Oarsmen of
Riverport School
In this volume the scene is shifted to the river, and
Fred and his chums show how they can handle the oars. There are many other
adventures, all dear to the hearts of boys.
FRED FENTON ON THE TRACK or The Athletes of
Riverport School
Track athletics form a subject of vast interest to
many boys, and here is a tale telling of great running races, high jumping, and
the like. Fred again proves himself a hero in the best sense of that term.
FRED FENTON: MARATHON RUNNER or The Great Race at
Riverport School
Fred is taking a post-graduate course at the school
when the subject of Marathon running came up. A race is arranged, and Fred
shows both his friends and his enemies what he can do. An athletic story of
special merit.
* * * * *
CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK
Everybody will love the story of
NOBODY'S BOY
* * * * *
By HECTOR MALOT
* * * * *
[Illustration: NOBODY'S BOY]
The dearest character in all the literature of child
life is little Remi in Hector Malot's famous masterpiece Sans Famille
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All love, pathos, loyalty, and noble boy character are
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"Nobody's Boy" is one of the supreme
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THE BOYS' OUTING LIBRARY
12mo. Cloth. Illustrated. Jacket in full color.
Price, per volume, 60 cents, postpaid.
[Illustration: THE SADDLE BOYS OF THE ROCKIES]
=THE SADDLE BOYS SERIES=
* * * * *
BY CAPT. JAMES CARSON
* * * * *
The Saddle Boys of the Rockies The Saddle Boys in the
Grand Canyon The Saddle Boys on the Plains The Saddle Boys at Circle Ranch The
Saddle Boys on Mexican Trails
=THE DAVE DASHAWAY SERIES=
* * * * *
BY ROY ROCKWOOD
* * * * *
Dave Dashaway the Young Aviator Dave Dashaway and His
Hydroplane Dave Dashaway and His Giant Airship Dave Dashaway Around the World
Dave Dashaway: Air Champion
=THE SPEEDWELL BOYS SERIES=
* * * * *
BY ROY ROCKWOOD
* * * * *
The Speedwell Boys on Motorcycles The Speedwell Boys
and Their Racing Auto The Speedwell Boys and Their Power Launch The Speedwell
Boys in a Submarine The Speedwell Boys and Their Ice Racer
=THE TOM FAIRFIELD SERIES=
* * * * *
BY ALLEN CHAPMAN
* * * * *
Tom Fairfield's School Days Tom Fairfield at Sea Tom
Fairfield in Camp Tom Fairfield's Pluck and Luck Tom Fairfield's Hunting Trip
=THE FRED FENTON ATHLETIC SERIES=
* * * * *
BY ALLEN CHAPMAN
* * * * *
Fred Fenton the Pitcher Fred Fenton in the Line Fred
Fenton on the Crew Fred Fenton on the Track Fred Fenton: Marathon Runner
Send For Our Free Illustrated Catalogue.
* * * * *
=CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY, Publishers New York=
* * * * *
Transcriber's Notes:
Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
Page 3, "Main" changed to "Maine".
(coast of Maine)
Page 7, "stearsman" changed to
"steersman". (for the steersman)
Page 16, "stearing" changed to
"steering". (or steering tower)
Page 16, "beeksteak" changed to
"beefsteak". (fry a beefsteak)
Page 19, "speciments" changed to
"specimens". (pretty nice specimens)
Page 20, "steared" changed to
"steered". (professor steered her)
Page 24, word "be" added to the text. (it'll
be all)
Page 32, "lauched" changed to
"launched". (she had been launched)
Page 36, "reined" changed to
"reigned". (pandemonium reigned)
Page 56, "stear" changed to
"steer". (to steer properly)
Page 57, "stear" changed to
"steer". (ship will steer)
Page 63, "helmet" changed to
"helmets". (their helmets were)
Page 67, "stearing" changed to
"steering". (professor was steering)
Page 72, "assasinate" changed to
"assassinate". (to assassinate Lord)
Page 76, "want's" changed to
"wants". (cabin wants to)
Page 82, "innner" changed to
"inner". (inner door was)
Page 87, "stearing" changed to
"steering". (Washington was steering)
Page 89, "propellors" changed to
"propellers". (about the propellers)
Page 90, "propellor" changed to
"propeller". (big propeller in)
Page 140, "begining" changed to
"beginning". (run was beginning)
Page 158, "wierd" changed to
"weird". (weird white object)
Page 162, "subterreanean" changed to
"subterranean". (of subterranean disturbances)
Page 182, "Britanic" changed to
"Britannic". (His Britannic Majesty's)
Page 182, word "was" removed from text.
(show something that) Original read "show was something that".
Page 187, "beeing" changed to
"being". (was being steered)
Page 187, "firghtened" changed to
"frightened". (gave one frightened)
Page 192, "folowed" changed to
"followed". (silence followed his)
Page 193, "oscilation" changed to
"oscillation". (oscillation of the big)
Page 195, "preparel" changed to
"prepared". (prepared water-proof)
Page 215, "impossile" changed to
"impossible". (flesh was impossible)
Page 226, "hemlet" changed to
"helmet". (his helmet was off)
Page 229, "see" changed to "sea".
(polar sea which)
Page 236, "hurridly" changed to
"hurriedly". (and hurriedly eaten)
Page 239, "degress" changed to
"degrees". (and ten degrees)
Page 242, "seeth" changed to
"seethe". (to seethe and bubble)
Page 243, extraneous word "more" removed.
(once more she) Original read "once more more she".
Seven instances of "manhole" and nine of
"man-hole" were retained.
"Octopus" is spelled "octupus" in
this volume. This was changed in the table of contents and a chapter header to
reflect text usage.
One instance each of Penson/Pensen was retained.
End of Project Gutenberg's Under the Ocean to the
South Pole, by Roy Rockwood
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