Authors: J. Clayton Rogers
Stowaway with the Great White Fleet
.
An intriguing title for an article, no doubt. Would anyone publish it? The editors of the scientific journals would turn up their dry noses in horror. But there were plenty of magazines for the general public, and they paid quite well. It was possible he could come out of this with some of that newly minted gold in his pocket. Besides, he'd reached a point where the only thing left was to try.
One thing he felt confident of. Captain Oates could not toss him off the
Florida
now they were a hundred nautical miles from land. It would be difficult steeling himself against the scorn that would be heaped on him--but at least he did not have to concern himself with drowning.
One of the luxuries of residing as an honored guest of the Fleet was having hot running water in one's cabin. Singleton might no longer be honored, but he still had the water. After trimming his beard to the jawline, he washed himself off with a wet cloth and dressed. Oates must be sitting cozy, thinking he had rid himself of the doctor. My, how his eyes would pop!
Planting his straw hat on his head, he downed a jigger of I. W. Harper Rye, took up his gold
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knobbed cane, and stepped into the corridor.
A swagger. That's what he needed. Holding the cane loosely, he climbed the stairs and swaggered across the deck. He soon abandoned his eccentric walk, however. He couldn't tell if the sailors were staring at him because they had not expected to see him again
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or laughing at him because of his funny walk. He was famished. Mess had been sounded by the marine buglers, but he was at odds trying to decide where to eat. He briefly considered walking boldly into Oates' wardroom
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no sense delaying the inevitable. But the captain's mess was separate--sometimes a guard was posted outside it. Otherwise, Singleton could eat whenever he wanted to. And his primary concern was food--
now
.
The inevitable would have to wait.
Midshipman Davis never regretted an empty seat as much as he did now
. He did not see the doctor until Singleton lowered himself next to him in the junior officers' mess. He very nearly gagged on his beans. He'd been told the doctor would not return. In fact, the ensign who'd informed him of this
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not Garrett, thank God
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had known of the midshipman's travails with Singleton and had gone out of his way to reassure the younger man.
"You can breathe free, now. The old coot's gone."
Well, not hardly.
"Bless my soul, if it isn't Mr. Davis! Never expected to see me again, eh?"
"No, sir."
The midshipman's stunned expression told Singleton what he needed to know: Word had spread... he had been banished from the
Florida
. In confirmation of this two marines came up behind him.
"Beggin' your pardon, doctor. Captain Oates requests your presence in his wardroom."
"Does he, now? And he sent the marines to fetch me? That doesn't quite jibe with naval courtesy, does it?"
"Captain Oates--"
"Yes-yes-yes. Is it all right if I eat my supper, first?"
"The captain said immediately, doctor."
"And if I refuse?"
"I'll have to insist."
Davis heaved a sigh as wide as the galley as the doctor was escorted away. So, Singleton's presence was unauthorized
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or else the exec or an ensign would have been sent to get him, not the marines. Perhaps there was some justice in the world, after all.
A black hand appeared in front of him as one of the stewards retrieved Dr. Singleton's untouched plate. Glancing up, Davis found himself exchanging glances with Amos Macklin.
He had found it difficult facing Macklin ever since the day Singleton compelled the black man to sit in his 'truth' chair. Considering that humiliation, and the beating he'd taken, the midshipman was surprised he had not jumped ship in San Francisco. Why had he come back? Amos would be risking a more severe beating if he was caught taking French leave. But the odds would be with him. The Navy had the highest desertion rate of all the armed services. There wasn't enough manpower to track them all down.
But here he stood, for whatever reason. And his loyalty to the Fleet (if that's what it was) was paying dividends already. Seeing the doctor being taken away under guard must be giving him the laugh of his life. Hidden, of course. It wouldn't be prudent for a black man to laugh at a white. Not in front of hundreds of other whites.
Davis, too, thought it best to suppress his mirth--until he glanced up at his peers and saw them looking in his direction. He could not resist returning their grins. He envisioned Oates slinging Singleton into the brig, and his beans glowed like gold in his stomach.
The doctor's confidence waned as he was escorted through wardroom country, an area abaft the after twelve-inch barbette, where the chaplain, commissioned officers and captain maintained their quarters. When one of the marines knocked on the captain's paneled door, Singleton felt as if someone had rapped his heart with bare knuckles.
"Come."
Captain Oates was eating a gray, pasty gruel. It absorbed all his attention, leaving none for Singleton, who remained standing between the two marines. For the entire day previous, Singleton had remained hidden in his cabin; due to the haste with which they had departed San Francisco, it had not been reassigned. The oozing substance in the captain's bowl looked utterly revolting, a reminder of how stingy a captain's mess could be while at sea. They did, after all, have to pay for their own meals. But this carried economy too far. He wondered if Oates was eating this stuff on purpose, to tease the doctor. As though to say: "See? This is what I have to eat. Not very appetizing, is it? But you'd go at it like the finest New York tenderloin right now, wouldn't you?"
The loud clack of typing in the next room put an edge on his unspoken sarcasm.
His stomach growled volubly. Oates paused. With unprecedented delicacy, he dabbed his lips with a broad white napkin, then nodded. The steward took the bowl away.
"Is this what they call 'coming before the mast?'" Singleton said with forced jocularity. Oates ignored him, looked at one of the marines.
"Is Lieutenant Grissom on his way?"
"He was getting the day's coal diary, sir. He should be topside in a moment."
"Mmmm.... Well, I--Yeoman! Belay that typing!" Oates tapped his fingers on the edge of the table a few times, then pushed out his chair. Walking to the paneled wall, he turned a judgmental eye on a painting of the
Florida
.
Good Lord
, Singleton thought,
it's an oil by Reuterdahl
!
The exec entered the wardroom. Returning his salute, Oates reseated himself. "Mr. Grissom... as you may have heard, we have an unauthorized passenger aboard the
Florida
."
"A stowaway, Captain?" The exec gestured dramatically.
"Dr. Singleton will be confined to quarters for the duration of the voyage, however long it might take. I want a guard posted at his door every watch. His meals will be taken in his cabin. When he has to answer the call of nature, he will be accompanied to the head."
"Captain--"
"Did someone speak?" Oates turned his back on Singleton and left the wardroom.
Not exactly unexpected,
Singleton thought as he was taken away. After all, Oates could have thrown him in the brig.
"What's for supper?" he asked the exec.
"The galley's closed. You'll have to wait until tomorrow."
"Is it alive?"
"If you call it living. That's a sun fish. Saw one dragged up in the
Bahia
Escocesa
once. They stuck it with knives, shot it, cut off chunks--stank to high heaven--and the thing acted like nothing was happening. Damn fish didn't have more brains than a sponge, but it weighed a full ton. Wasn't 'til they cut out its heart we knew it was dead. They're alive, but it takes a day to tell."
A group of men had gathered next to the starboard lifeboats to observe the odd creature. At first they'd thought the huge fish was something that had fallen off a ship or something that had drifted out from land. Nothing alive, certainly.
A shiver ran through the less experienced bluejackets as the fish passed to stern. If any animal was hypnotized by God, here it was. It stared up at the sky without end. Its other eye, turned down, stared at depths without end.
"If family resemblances mean anything, I'd say it looks a bit like your mother, eh Mr. Beck?"
"Sir?" said Beck.
There was a threatening rise in his tone that caused everyone within hearing to glance at the midshipman.
"Mr. Garrett...."
"Aw...." Garrett turned away from the ocean and its peculiar occupant. His comment had been off the cuff. One of those insults he was forever handing out to the lower ranks with no thought to consequences. One look at Beck told him this time was to be different. The middy was going to do something rash. Worse, Garrett was touched by embarrassment. He knew he could be an ass. His dim popularity on the
Florida
was mingled with a potent bad taste. No one liked him to the same degree that some of them loathed him.
"Mr. Garrett, I'll thank you to take back that remark."
"And what remark was that?"
"The one about my mother."
Garrett tried to dismiss this with a flip of his hand, as if to say he'd not been paying attention to what he was saying--it was already forgotten.
There was a palpable, contrary energy in the air. The shout of the ocean thrust apart by the
Florida's
ram had drowned Garrett's words. Only a few men at the weather rail had overheard his comment to Beck, but no one could miss the sharp look the two men exchanged. Another of the ensign's insults. What else?
"Mr. Garrett!"
"Don't say something you'll regret." Truth was, a touch of fear advised Garrett's caution. He'd had no intention of verbally cutting to the bone--only a mild, denigrating slap. He was in the exquisitely awkward position of having to stand up for himself, while being clearly in the wrong.
"Mr. Garrett...." Beck dared not do anything to risk his career in the Navy. Yet he dared not do nothing. He stood stupidly for several moments, terrified by his own silence. And then he remembered the announcement that had been made that very morning. An announcement delivered to the mess by none other than Ensign Garrett himself.
Boxing matches would be held the next day.
"Mr. Garrett, I challenge you to a fight. Tomorrow, at the tourney."
Garrett stared at him. It was the worst thing he could imagine hearing. How could he have guessed, that morning, that he was announcing his own execution?
May, 1908
28°20'N, 177°22'W
1750 Hours
Hamilton Hart, late of the United States Army Signal Corps, did not blush in the least as he gave the marine lieutenant before him details of his 'mouth telegraph.'
Anthony stared at him with frank incredulity. "Is this how you've been spending your time? First you run off when I need you, then you run off when Sergeant Ziolkowski asked for help. I can't emphasize this enough: We need men digging
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"
"There's an hour of daylight left. The outpost bunkers are done, but you'll never get this finished by dark." He indicated the men toiling at the main compound bunker. Only half the men on the island were still working, the others having fallen exhausted on the sand. Had it not been for the repeated cave
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ins of loose coral sand, the bunker would have been completed hours before. Anthony was using the basement of the largest company house as a starting point, but two of its cement walls had been severely damaged in the first attack. The lieutenant considered Hart's words for one reason alone. If the bunker was not ready by nightfall, their only line of defense would be the gas drums Ziolkowski had circled the compound with. Experience showed they made excellent bombs. But they would need advance warning what direction the creatures were coming from to know which drums to set off.
Part of Hart's idea appealed to Anthony. By laying wires stripped from the trans
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oceanic cable from the outposts to the compound, lookouts could give a tug and warn of the creatures' approach.
"Not enough," Hart insisted. "What if they change direction? Or stop? You'd be blowing up your gas supply to no purpose."
"But what you propose
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"