The captain grinned.
"Our Sam, that deck-hand, was telling me. He said Mr. Keating put it on you, sort of to spite you--is that so?"
"Oh, I wanted to come," said Channing.
The captain laughed, comprehendingly. "I guess we"ll be in a bad way,"
he said, "when we need you in the engine-room." He settled himself for conversation, with his feet against the rail and his thumbs in his suspenders. The lamps of Port Antonio were sinking into the water, the moonlight was flooding the deck.
"That was quite something of a bombardment Sampson put up against Morro Castle this morning," he began, critically. He spoke of bombardments from the full experience of a man who had seen sh.e.l.ls strike off Coney Island from the proving-grounds at Sandy Hook. But Channing heard him, eagerly. He begged the tugboat-captain to tell him what it looked like, and as the captain told him he filled it in and saw it as it really was.
"Perhaps they"ll bombard again to-morrow," he hazarded, hopefully.
"We can"t tell till we see how they"re placed on the station," the captain answered. "If there"s any firing we ought to hear it about eight o"clock to-morrow morning. We"ll hear "em before we see "em."
Channing"s conscience began to tweak him. It was time, he thought, that Keating should be aroused and brought up to the reviving air of the sea, but when he reached the foot of the companion-ladder, he found that Keating was already awake and in the act of drawing the cork from a bottle. His irritation against Channing had evaporated and he greeted him with sleepy good-humor.
"Why, it"s ol" Charlie Channing," he exclaimed, drowsily. Channing advanced upon him swiftly.
"Here, you"ve had enough of that!" he commanded. "We"ll be off Morro by breakfast-time. You don"t want that."
Keating, giggling foolishly, pushed him from him and retreated with the bottle toward his berth. He lurched into it, rolled over with his face to the ship"s side, and began breathing heavily.
"You leave me "lone," he murmured, from the darkness of the bunk. "You mind your own business, you leave me "lone."
Channing returned to the bow and placed the situation before the captain. That gentleman did not hesitate. He disappeared down the companion-way, and, when an instant later he returned, hurled a bottle over the ship"s side.
The next morning when Channing came on deck the land was just in sight, a rampart of dark green mountains rising in heavy ma.s.ses against the bright, glaring blue of the sky. He strained his eyes for the first sight of the ships, and his ears for the faintest echoes of distant firing, but there was no sound save the swift rush of the waters at the bow. The sea lay smooth and flat before him, the sun flashed upon it; the calm and hush of early morning hung over the whole coast of Cuba.
An hour later the captain came forward and stood at his elbow.
"How"s Keating?" Channing asked. "I tried to wake him, but I couldn"t."
The captain kept his binoculars to his eyes, and shut his lips grimly.
"Mr. Keating"s very bad," he said. "He had another bottle hidden somewhere, and all last night--" he broke off with a relieved sigh.
"It"s lucky for him," he added, lowering the gla.s.ses, "that there"ll be no fight to-day."
Channing gave a gasp of disappointment. "What do you mean?" he protested.
"You can look for yourself," said the captain, handing him the gla.s.ses.
"They"re at their same old stations. There"ll be no bombardment to-day.
That"s the Iowa, nearest us, the Oregon"s to starboard of her, and the next is the Indiana. That little fellow close under the land is the Gloucester."
He glanced up at the mast to see that the press-boat"s signal was conspicuous, they were drawing within range.
With the naked eye, Channing could see the monster, mouse-colored war-ships, basking in the sun, solemn and motionless in a great crescent, with its one horn resting off the harbor-mouth. They made great blots on the sparkling, glancing surface of the water. Above each superstructure, their fighting-tops, giant davits, funnels, and gibbet-like yards twisted into the air, fantastic and incomprehensible, but the bulk below seemed to rest solidly on the bottom of the ocean, like an island of lead. The muzzles of their guns peered from the turrets as from ramparts of rock.
Channing gave a sigh of admiration.
"Don"t tell me they move," he said. "They"re not ships, they"re fortresses!"
On the sh.o.r.e there was no sign of human life nor of human habitation.
Except for the Spanish flag floating over the streaked walls of Morro, and the tiny blockhouse on every mountain-top, the squadron might have been anch.o.r.ed off a deserted coast. The hills rose from the water"s edge like a wall, their peaks green and glaring in the sun, their valleys dark with shadows. Nothing moved upon the white beach at their feet, no smoke rose from their ridges, not even a palm stirred. The great range slept in a blue haze of heat. But only a few miles distant, masked by its frowning front, lay a gayly colored, red-roofed city, besieged by encircling regiments, a broad bay holding a squadron of great war-ships, and gliding cat-like through its choked undergrowth and crouched among the fronds of its motionless palms were the ragged patriots of the Cuban army, silent, watchful, waiting. But the great range gave no sign. It frowned in the sunlight, grim and impenetrable.
"It"s Sunday," exclaimed the captain. He pointed with his finger at the decks of the battleships, where hundreds of snow-white figures had gone to quarters. "It"s church service," he said, "or it"s general inspection."
Channing looked at his watch. It was thirty minutes past nine. "It"s church service," he said. "I can see them carrying out the chaplain"s reading-desk on the Indiana." The press-boat pushed her way nearer into the circle of battleships until their leaden-hued hulls towered high above her. On the deck of each, the ship"s company stood, ranged in motionless ranks. The calm of a Sabbath morning hung about them, the sun fell upon them like a benediction, and so still was the air that those on the press-boat could hear, from the stripped and naked decks, the voices of the men answering the roll-call in rising monotone, "one, two, three, FOUR; one, two, three, FOUR." The white-clad sailors might have been a chorus of surpliced choir-boys.
But, up above them, the battle-flags, slumbering at the mast-heads, stirred restlessly and whimpered in their sleep.
Out through the crack in the wall of mountains, where the sea runs in to meet the waters of Santiago Harbor, and from behind the shield of Morro Castle, a great, gray ship, like a great, gray rat, stuck out her nose and peered about her, and then struck boldly for the open sea. High before her she bore the gold and blood-red flag of Spain, and, like a fugitive leaping from behind his prison-walls, she raced forward for her freedom, to give battle, to meet her death.
A sh.e.l.l from the Iowa shrieked its warning in a shrill crescendo, a flutter of flags painted their message against the sky. "The enemy"s ships are coming out," they signalled, and the ranks of white-clad figures which the moment before stood motionless on the decks, broke into thousands of separate beings who flung themselves, panting, down the hatchways, or sprang, cheering, to the fighting-tops.
Heavily, but swiftly, as islands slip into the water when a volcano shakes the ocean-bed, the great battle-ships buried their bows in the sea, their sides ripped apart with flame and smoke, the thunder of their guns roared and beat against the mountains, and, from the sh.o.r.e, the Spanish forts roared back at them, until the air between was split and riven. The Spanish war-ships were already scudding clouds of smoke, pierced with flashes of red flame, and as they fled, fighting, their batteries rattled with unceasing, feverish fury. But the guns of the American ships, straining in pursuit, answered steadily, carefully, with relentless accuracy, with cruel persistence. At regular intervals they boomed above the hurricane of sound, like great bells tolling for the dead.
It seemed to Channing that he had lived through many years; that the strain of the spectacle would leave its mark upon his nerves forever. He had been buffeted and beaten by a storm of all the great emotions; pride of race and country, pity for the dead, agony for the dying, who clung to blistering armor-plates, or sank to suffocation in the sea; the l.u.s.t of the hunter, when the hunted thing is a fellow-man; the joys of danger and of excitement, when the sh.e.l.ls lashed the waves about him, and the triumph of victory, final, overwhelming and complete.
Four of the enemy"s squadron had struck their colors, two were on the beach, broken and burning, two had sunk to the bottom of the sea, two were in abject flight. Three battle-ships were hammering them with thirteen-inch guns. The battle was won.
"It"s all over," Channing said. His tone questioned his own words.
The captain of the tugboat was staring at the face of his silver watch, as though it were a thing bewitched. He was pale and panting. He looked at Channing, piteously, as though he doubted his own senses, and turned the face of the watch toward him.
"Twenty minutes!" Channing said. "Good G.o.d! Twenty minutes!"
He had been to h.e.l.l and back again in twenty minutes. He had seen an empire, which had begun with Christopher Columbus and which had spread over two continents, wiped off the map in twenty minutes. The captain gave a sudden cry of concern. "Mr. Keating," he gasped. "Oh, Lord, but I forgot Mr. Keating. Where is Mr. Keating?"
"I went below twice," Channing answered. "He"s insensible. See what you can do with him, but first--take me to the Iowa. The Consolidated Press will want the "facts.""
In the dark cabin the captain found Keating on the floor, where Channing had dragged him, and dripping with the water which Channing had thrown in his face. He was breathing heavily, comfortably. He was not concerned with battles.
With a megaphone, Channing gathered his facts from an officer of the Iowa, who looked like a chimney-sweep, and who was surrounded by a crew of half-naked pirates, with bodies streaked with sweat and powder.
Then he ordered all steam for Port Antonio, and, going forward to the chart-room, seated himself at the captain"s desk, and, pushing the captain"s charts to the floor, spread out his elbows, and began to write the story of his life.
In the joy of creating it, he was lost to all about him. He did not know that the engines, driven to the breaking-point, were filling the ship with their groans and protests, that the deck beneath his feet was quivering like the floor of a planing-mill, nor that his fever was rising again, and feeding on his veins. The turmoil of leaping engines and of throbbing pulses was confused with the story he was writing, and while his mind was inflamed with pictures of warring battle-ships, his body was swept by the fever, which overran him like an army of tiny mice, touching his hot skin with cold, tingling taps of their scampering feet.
From time to time the captain stopped at the door of the chart-room and observed him in silent admiration. To the man who with difficulty composed a letter to his family, the fact that Channing was writing something to be read by millions of people, and more rapidly than he could have spoken the same words, seemed a superhuman effort. He even hesitated to interrupt it by an offer of food.
But the fever would not let Channing taste of the food when they placed it at his elbow, and even as he pushed it away, his mind was still fixed upon the paragraph before him. He wrote, sprawling across the desk, covering page upon page with giant hieroglyphics, lighting cigarette after cigarette at the end of the last one, but with his thoughts far away, and, as he performed the act, staring uncomprehendingly at the captain"s colored calendar pinned on the wall before him. For many months later the Battle of Santiago was a.s.sociated in his mind with a calendar for the month of July, illuminated by a colored picture of six white kittens in a basket.
At three o"clock Channing ceased writing and stood up, shivering and shaking with a violent chill. He cursed himself for this weakness, and called aloud for the captain.
"I can"t stop now," he cried. He seized the rough fist of the captain as a child clings to the hand of his nurse.
"Give me something," he begged. "Medicine, quinine, give me something to keep my head straight until it"s finished. Go, quick," he commanded. His teeth were chattering, and his body jerked with sharp, uncontrollable shudders. The captain ran, muttering, to his medicine-chest.
"We"ve got one drunken man on board," he said to the mate, "and now we"ve got a crazy one. You mark my words, he"ll go off his head at sunset."