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Captain George Crowe, C.B., D.S.O., R.N., stood on the bridge of H.M.S. Apache experiencing his first New York heat wave and looking at the skyline of New York from the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The skyline was amazing, just as amazing as the fact that here he stood on the bridge of a British destroyer which was about to be repaired by the United States Government. Commander Hammett came across and stood beside him.
"It's every bit as good as the pictures, isn't it, Hammett?" said Crowe.
"It's the first scenery I've ever seen that was," said Hammett.
Side by side they surveyed the landscape. Across the East River was downtown New York, while all round them the United States was preparing a navy for war. The din of automatic riveters echoed in their ears, and only a short way off a colossal crane was swinging a huge naval gun into the ship that was to bear it. The Apache had made her first contact with American soil; the British ropes were hitched round American bollards and close astern of her towered the bows of the U.S.S. Coulterville, a cruiser. Eight thousand tons she was, brand-new, with her fresh paint in striking contrast to the battered and dingy little British destroyer whose white ensign almost brushed her cutwater. On the destroyer's deck little groups of British seamen stared curiously at this fresh country and this fresh navy.
"Well, we're here," said Crowe. It was a banal sort of thing to say, but there had been times when he had thought he would never be able to say it; when the poor battered Apache had struggled with Atlantic storms and had fought against raiding cruisers.
It had been a long, long journey, and one in which incessant vigilance had been demanded. Even when they had come beyond the radius of action of the Condors, antiaircraft lookouts had to be maintained, lest some surface raider with a catapult plane should be on the high seas; all through the thousands of miles there had been the continual antisubmarine watch.
"Well, our troubles are over for a time, at any rate," said Hammett.
"Let's hope so," said Crowe. He remembered the very serious talks which he had given to officers and ratings of the Apache on the necessity for their good behavior in America. They were ambassadors of good relations, and they were expected to behave as such.
At the gangway stood a very elegant gentleman. He was wearing a beautifully pressed white suit and a Panama hat; he carried a pair of yellow gloves, and he bore himself, in the studied lack of hurry of his movements, like a typical Englishman in a hot country. It was this deliberation of movement, combined with the perfection of the cut of his clothes, which gave him the advantage of appearing lean instead of merely lanky, and his straight back and erect carriage belied the whiteness of his mustache and hair. Crowe looked down at this morsel of coolness in the sweltering heat.
"I fancy that means trouble, all the same," he said.
Crowe was right. The visitor introduced himself as Mr. Cockburn- Crossley, from the Embassy.
"I have made arrangements for you to pay your formal call upon the admiral commanding," explained Mr. Cockburn-Crossley. "Can you be ready in half an hour, Captain?"
The watch that Mr. Cockburn-Crossley consulted was just like Mr. Cockburn-Crossley, very slim and very elegant and very polished.
"I can," said Crowe, conscious of the fleeting glance which Mr. Cockburn-Crossley had passed over his slightly grubby whites. It was still hardly more than two hours since he had been in the open Atlantic, with the possibility every second of being torpedoed.
"I will expect you, then, in half an hour, Captain Crowe," said Mr. Cockburn-Crossley.
Ever since the heat of New York struck him, Crowe had been thinking about a cold bath, and he retired gratefully into this one; he had yet to learn that in a heat wave in New York one emerges from one cold bath thinking longingly about the next. He dressed himself carefully in his blues. In wartime the glories of full dress and cocked hat and lightning-conductor trousers were discarded. There was not even a sword on board — what they would do if ever a court-martial became necessary, Crowe could not imagine. The mere effort of dressing made him sweat afresh; the tiny cabin under the naked steel deck in the blazing sun was like a furnace, and yet there seemed to be no relief when he stepped out into the open air.
Exactly coincident with his arrival on deck there was a loud splash from astern, an unusual enough noise to attract his attention. What he saw aft, when he directed his gaze there, shocked him inexpressibly. That infernal monkey whom he had detested throughout the long and arduous campaign was standing there gibbering triumphantly and waving in his paw a small glittering object. Crowe raced up to him, but he arrived there no sooner than did Hammett and a perspiring chief petty officer and a couple of ratings.
"Little beggar," said the chief petty officer. " 'E's done it proper this time."
What the monkey had done was to release one of the depth charges that lay ready on the deck for action against submarines.
"Look at 'im wiv the key in 'is 'and," said one of the ratings.
" 'E's only done what 'e's seen us do often enough," said the other.
It was withdrawal of the key that actuated the detonating mechanism of the depth charge; the naval rating whose business it was to release the charge would always produce the key to show that he had not forgotten the most important detail of the operation.
"What are those things set for?" demanded Crowe of Hammett.
"Two hundred feet. It's twenty-seven here; and the safety device won't allow the detonator to operate before thirty feet," replied Hammett, and then, as another series of thoughts struck him, "But it's a soft bottom. The thing will go on sinking. And the tide's rising."
"And not just that," said Crowe, delving back in his mind to recover the memory of the mechanism of a depth-charge detonator.
There was a little hole through which water was admitted; regulating the size of the hole regulated the speed at which the water entered, and that controlled the depth at which the charge, slowly sinking from the surface, eventually exploded. But even if, as it soon would be in the present case, the charge lay at thirty feet, the water would still slowly penetrate, and when the detonator was full it would explode, whatever the depth was.
Crowe looked up at the towering bows of the Coulterville; the depth charge was under those bows as well as under the Apache's stern, and when the thing should go off, it would do terrible damage to the American ship as well as to the British ship. He did not expect that the Coulterville had any steam up to enable her to move; he doubted if even the Apache had now. And the explanations which would have to be made before he could get the Coulterville to move from her dangerous berth would consume certainly several minutes. He knew that if he were captain of a new cruiser and an apparently insane foreign officer came rushing up to him in port and asked him to move, he would ask a good many questions before he decided to consent. And what would happen to Anglo-American relations if the first British destroyer to visit Brooklyn were to signalize her arrival by blowing the bows off a brandnew American cruiser was something he did not like to think about.
The seconds were ticking by, although even now probably not more than ten had elapsed since the splash.
"We'll have to send a diver down," said Crowe. As he uttered the words he visualized the job that had to be done. If that depth charge were to go off while the diver was in the water, the man would be blown to pieces.
"Jones was killed at Crotona," said Hammett, "and we left Higgs at Alex. They're the only two divers we have."
"I'll go myself," said Crowe. He knew a momentary relief as he said it; the hardest task a leader can ever have is to order some other man into a danger he does not himself share.
"Let me go, sir," said Hammett.
"No," said Crowe. "I took the course myself once; I'm the best qualified. Get the pump and suit out quick, and have some slings rigged over the stern."
It was twenty years since he had last worn a diving suit and since he had made the three dives which comprised the sketchy course taken by a fair sprinkling of naval officers. He felt the heavy shoes clank over the steel deck as he made his difficult way to the side of the ship. Through the little glass window he could still see the skyline of New York across the East River. The speed with which the gear had been got out and made ready was a credit to Hammett and his first lieutenant; the intense orderliness of a ship of war — even a poor battered old thing like the Apache — was justified by this event. No one could ever know when any piece of equipment would be desperately needed immediately. Who ever would have guessed, when they made fast to the shore, that in ten minutes the diving suit would be called for in such a frantic hurry?
The air pump whispered steadily in his ear as he trailed pipe and lines behind him. Everything was satisfactory as far as he could see, except that in this appalling climate the sweat was already running in rivers down him and making him itch in a most unpleasant fashion at the same time as the suit prevented him from scratching. He felt his way down the short ladder and then let himself drop down through the muddy, turbulent water. The light faded rapidly from his glass window as he sank, and it was entirely dark by the time he felt his feet sinking into the soft ooze of the bottom. He felt a momentary distaste as he found himself thigh-deep in the filthy stuff. He took a few difficult steps to his left, and then a few forward, and he felt nothing solid. He knew a brief panic, and he swallowed hard. The swallowing seemed to clear his ears and his brain at the same time. He turned to his right and fumbled forward in the darkness with labored six-inch strides. Then his heavy boot felt and struck it, jarring against something solid, and as he ascertained its shape with his feet he confirmed his first hope. That barrel-shaped thing could only be a depth charge.
He spoke into the telephone. "I've got it," he said, "Send the slings down."
"Aye aye, sir," replied a strained voice in the telephone.
He had to wait a second or two for the slings to come down, long enough to feel a gust of savage irritation at the delay, until he remembered that in the increased air pressure of a diving suit every emotion, whether of anger or exhilaration, was proportionately heightened. Then something rapped against his helmet and his eyes took hold of the reassuring slings. He squatted slowly down on his heels, holding the two loops of rope, for he knew the danger of bending forward while wearing a diving suit — at anything more than a slight inclination from the vertical, the protecting air would bubble out, the water rush in, and at that pressure he would be drowned in a flash. Still squatting, and working in the slime, he prepared to guide the loops of the slings over the ends of the depth charge. He had to keep his head clear and make quite sure that the slings were securely round the thing. The depth charge was not lying quite horizontal, and he put one loop round the lower end and called through the telephone for a pull to be taken on that sling. He felt the rope tighten and the depth charge lurch in the darkness and settle itself horizontally. That was better. He was able to complete his preparations; this was a plain seamanship job, a matter of ropes and weights, to make sure that the depth charge would hang securely in the slings as it was hoisted. If it came loose and dropped again, he could not answer for the consequences. Well, his education in seamanship had begun thirty years ago. His fumbling hands made their last precautionary exploration, then he stood up with a grunt.
"Hoist away," he said into the telephone.
There was just enough light down here, despite the thickness of the water, to see a faint black shadow rise upward in front of his window. It was a shadow lifted in more than one sense, and he felt his spirits rise with every passing second. He wanted to sing now; he even felt like dancing in his leaden boots and breastplate, in the glutinous ooze — high atmospheric pressure certainly played strange tricks with one's feelings.
The seconds passed and there was no sign of the depth charge redescending.
"We've got it, sir," said an eager voice into the telephone. "You coming up, sir?"
"Yes. Hoist away," said Crowe.
He realized now how deliciously cool it was down here in thirty feet of water, and he grinned to himself at the thought that the best way to get cool in a New York heat wave was to put on a diving suit and go down to the bottom of the East River.
His lines tightened and he was dragged out of the clinging mud, slowly upward, while the light brightened before his window, increasing steadily until, blinding like a flash of lightning, the direct sunlight struck in through the glass. He felt the ladder in his grasp and started to climb to the deck with the assistance of a dozen willing hands. They busied themselves about him, whipping off his helmet, and he stood there blinking; even the humid New York air tasted much more pleasant when it had not previously been forced through an air pump. On the deck beside him lay the great barrel of the depth charge, filthy slime dripping off it onto the deck — that was the sort of stuff he had just been wallowing in. The torpedo gunner was hurriedly detaching the detonator.
"I'd say you 'ad about five seconds to spare, sir," said the torpedo gunner, squinting with a calculating eye at the amount of water that had entered, "maybe ten."
"A miss is as good as a mile," said Crowe. It was a cliché, but he did not feel capable of producing any original thought at that moment. Behind him the monkey suddenly chattered from his perch on the ruins of the after gunhouse.
"Damn that monkey!" said Crowe.
"That's the last mischief he'll get up to in this ship," said Hammett.
"I'll wring the little beggar's neck, shall I, sir?" said the torpedo gunner eagerly.
"Oh, let the little devil live," replied Crowe wearily. It was not easy to condemn even a monkey to death in cold blood.
"Wonder if they've got a zoo here?" said the torpedo gunner. "P'raps they'd take him."
"Maybe so," said Crowe. Then he suddenly remembered his appointment with Mr. Cockburn-Crossley. "Here, get these things off me!"
Even the best clothes that Gieve's can supply look rumpled after being compressed into a diving suit. Crowe went below and shouted for fresh clothes to be got out for him; he took another bath and dressed himself as rapidly as the heat permitted, and with all the care the occasion demanded. Then he slung his gold-peaked cap onto his head and hurried over the brow into the clattering din of the navy yard. Mr. Cockburn-Crossley was waiting with every sign of impatience consistent with his customary elegant nonchalance. He was putting his watch back into his pocket as Crowe hurried up.
"You're late, Captain Crowe," he said. "It is most unfortunate. I wish you could have been more punctual; punctuality is a virtue anyone can cultivate, and it is most important, that you should be punctual at this time when we have Anglo-American relations to consider."
Crowe looked at Mr. Cockburn-Crossley for a second or two before he replied, and he swallowed hard too.
"I'm sorry, sir," he said. "I was detained by business in the ship that could not possibly wait."
He felt there was nothing else he could say to Mr. Cockburn-Crossley.
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