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.. meta::
   :PG.Id: 41037
   :PG.Title: The Marines Have Landed
   :PG.Released: 2012-10-12
   :PG.Rights: Public Domain
   :PG.Producer: Al Haines
   :DC.Creator: Giles Bishop
   :MARCREL.ill: Donald S. Humphreys
   :DC.Title: The Marines Have Landed
   :DC.Language: en
   :DC.Created: 1920
   :coverpage: images/img-cover.jpg

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THE MARINES HAVE LANDED
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      Cover

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   .. _`THE THIN BROWN LINE OF MARINES`:

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      :alt: THE THIN BROWN LINE OF MARINES

      THE THIN BROWN LINE OF MARINES

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      THE MARINES
      HAVE LANDED

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      By
      LIEUT.-COL. GILES BISHOP, JR.

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      United States Marine Corps

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      Illustrations by
      Donald S. Humphreys

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      THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
      PHILADELPHIA
      1920

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      Copyright 1920
      by The Penn Publishing Company

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      The Marines Have Landed

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      *To*
      MAJOR GENERAL GEORGE BARNETT,
      *Commandant, United States Marine Corps,*

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      *who, while holding the chief position of honor
      in that organisation since nineteen hundred
      and fourteen, has accomplished so much in
      furthering its efficiency and its prestige, and
      who has at all times and in all ways endeared
      himself to his officers and men, this volume
      is respectfully dedicated*

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   Introduction

How many of our boys, in times past, while
glancing through the morning paper have read the
following statement: "The United States Marines
have landed and have the situation well in hand."  The
cable message may have come at any date, and
from any part of the world.  If those words caused
any comment on the part of the young American, it
was probably a mild wonder as to just who the
marines were.  Sometimes he may have asked his
father for enlightenment, and the parent, being no
better informed than the son but feeling a reply was
necessary, would say in an off-hand manner, "Oh,
they are just a lot of sailors from one of our
battleships, that's all," and there the subject rested.

It is the author's desire in this volume to explain
just who the marines are, what they do, where they
go, so as to make every red-blooded American boy
familiar with the services rendered by the United
States Marine Corps to the nation in peace and
war.  And if in this endeavor you suspect me of
exaggeration I ask that you will get the first real
marine you meet to tell you where he has been and
what he has done.  Then, if at the end of a half
hour you are not convinced that the adventures of
Dick Comstock, in this and the books to follow, are
modest in comparison, I shall most humbly apologize.

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   THE AUTHOR.

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   Contents

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   I.  `A Bitter Disappointment`_
   II.  `"The Oldest Branch of the Service"`_
   III.  `Uncle Sam's Uninvited Guests`_
   IV.  `Semper Fidelis--Always Faithful`_
   V.  `A Drummer in the U. S. Marines`_
   VI.  `A Queer Conversation`_
   VII.  `Off for Treasure Island`_
   VIII.  `An Adventure Ashore`_
   IX.  `Historic Battlefields`_
   X.  `Winning His First Medal`_
   XI.  `A Republic in Distress`_
   XII.  `Señor Perez Asks for Aid`_
   XIII.  `Circumstantial Evidence`_
   XIV.  `Dick Makes The Acquaintance of Columbus`_
   XV.  `The Escape from the Barrio`_
   XVI.  `The Attack on the Consulate`_
   XVII.  `A Map-Making Expedition`_
   XVIII.  `Mexican Pete Again`_
   XIX.  `A Brave Act and a Clever Ruse`_
   XX.  `"To the Ditch at Panama"`_
   XXI.  `The Marines Have Landed`_
   XXII.  `Dick is Left Behind`_
   XXIII.  `Dick Makes a Flying Leap`_
   XXIV.  `The Situation Well in Hand`_

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   Illustrations

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   `The Thin Brown Line of Marines`_ . . . . . . *Frontispiece*

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   `How the Accident Occurred`_

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   `The Marine Orderly Answered the Summons`_

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   `The Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal`_

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   `"Look, There is Your Horseman!"`_

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   `The Sampson Medal`_

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   `Medal for Campaign in the West Indies and for Spanish War`_

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   `A Leaf From Dick's Score Book`_

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   `Marksman's Badge`_

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   `Sharpshooter's Badge`_

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   `Expert Rifleman's Badge`_

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   `"Hands Up!"`_

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   `Map Showing Position of Hut in Which Boys Took Refuge`_

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   `Dick's Map of Camp Pendleton`_

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   `"Do You Ride?"`_

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   `Map Showing Position of Rock and Track`_

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.. _`A Bitter Disappointment`:

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   The Marines Have Landed

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CHAPTER I

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A BITTER DISAPPOINTMENT

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"Dick Comstock, you've been fighting!  What
will Mother and Father say when they see your
black eye?" and Ursula Comstock looked with
mingled pity and consternation at her brother, who, at
the moment, cautiously entered the cheery living-room.

"And to-day of all days in the year to have such
a thing happen," she continued.  "Everyone in
town will see it to-night when you deliver your
oration.  I do think, Dick, if you had to fight, you
might have waited until to-morrow, at least."

"It couldn't be helped, Sister, so stop scolding,
and get me a raw steak or something to put on my
eye," answered her brother, ruefully.  "I know it's
going to mortify Mother fearfully that her
'handsome son' is so badly banged up, but necessity
knows no law, in war anyway.  Now be a good
sister and help me.  Maybe by to-night it won't
look so bad, and if you are as clever painting my
face as you are your canvases it may not even be
noticed."

"How did it happen?" inquired Ursula a little
later, after first aid had been applied to the injured
eye.

"Oh!  It wasn't anything really of any account.
I had to teach 'Reddy' Doyle a lesson he has been
needing for a long time, that's all," answered Dick,
bending over a basin of hot water while the tall,
lithe girl, one year his junior, handed him steaming
hot compresses.

"Tell me about it," demanded the girl, for
between Richard and herself there were few secrets,
and a more devoted brother and sister would be
hard to find in all New England.

"Well, you see, Doyle and I never have been
good friends in all the years we've been classmates
at school.  He goes with a gang I never cared for
and he has always been inclined to bully.  We've
often had little tussles, but nothing that amounted
to a great deal.  You know he's a dandy athlete
and I couldn't afford, half of the time, to have
trouble with him.  He is just cranky enough to
have resigned from the school teams, and he's really
too valuable a fellow to lose, consequently I've so
often swallowed my pride in order to humor him
that he began to believe I was afraid of him, I guess.

"But he has one mean trait I simply can't
endure, and that is the torturing of dumb animals.  I
often heard from the other fellows of his tricks in
that line.  To-day I witnessed one, and--well--I've
a black eye to pay for my meddling."

"That is not all the story, and you know it,
Dick, so you may as well tell me now, for I
shall get it sooner or later.  What did he do that
caused you to take such chances on this day of all
days?"

"I didn't happen to think much about the day,"
grinned Dick, "but I do guess I'm a sight.  Dad
won't care; yet, as I said, I do feel sorry on
Mother's account."

"Richard Comstock, if you do not stop this
evasion and tell me at once what occurred, fully
and finally, I'll refuse to help you another single
bit.  Now talk."

While Ursula was speaking she unconsciously
shook a piece of very raw, red beef at her brother
in such an energetic manner that he feared it might
land in any but the place for which it was intended
unless he obeyed without further delay.

A final rehearsal for the high school graduating
exercises which was scheduled to take place in the
evening had been held in the theatre, and after
dismissal, as a number of the boys were going along
Broad Street, a poor, emaciated cat ran frantically
across the road towards them and climbed a small
tree just in time to escape the lathering jaws of a
closely pursuing bulldog.  Percy Doyle, the
red-haired owner of the dog, not satisfied with witnessing
the poor feline barely escape his pet, ran quickly
to the tree, grasped the cat by the neck and threw it
to the eager brute.  Almost instantly the powerful
animal had shaken the cat to death.

This cold-blooded act was more than the
good-natured Dick could stand and with a warning cry
of anger and indignation he called upon Doyle to
defend himself.  Then there followed a royal
combat, for these two lads were strong for their age and
their years of activity in all kinds of sports had
made them no mean antagonists.

In the end Doyle was beaten, but the victor had
by no means escaped unscathed.

By the time Dick finished his recital the raw beef
was properly bound over his eye and the grime of
battle washed from his face by his gentle nurse, who
completed her task by kissing him as she exclaimed
with enthusiasm:

"Good for you, Dick, I hope you thrashed him
well while you were about it, for he certainly
deserved a beating.  Now run along and get a bath
and clean up properly before Mother comes home.
She has gone to the station to meet Father.  You
have no time to spare; the New York express is
about due," and with the words she shoved him
towards the doorway leading to the hall.

"Call me when you are ready, and I'll come and
paint you up like an Indian," she added as he
disappeared up the stairs.

A half hour later when Dick appeared in the
living-room and greeted his parents, Ursula's
efforts at facial decoration proved so successful that
no one other than his fond and adoring mother
discovered the deception.  Her searching eye was not
to be deceived, however, and once again Dick was
obliged to recount the details of his afternoon's experience.

"No one will notice my black eye, Mother, and if
so half of the audience will have heard how I got it,
so you need not worry."

Dick's father said nothing, but the look of pride
and approbation in his eyes was enough to quiet
any qualms as to his father's attitude.

John Comstock, having laid aside the evening
paper he was reading when his son entered, now
began searching through its pages, speaking as he
did so:

"Have you seen to-night's paper, Dick?"

"No, Dad.  Why, is there anything of particular
interest in it--that is aside from the
announcements of the big event being staged at the theatre?"
inquired Dick.

"Unfortunately, yes," replied his father.  "When
I left home last week I told you I would see
Senator Kenyon while in Washington and try to get
him to give you that appointment to the Naval
Academy we all have been hoping for and which we
believed as good as settled in your favor until a few
weeks ago."

"Did you see him?  What did he say?" asked
Dick in one breath, his face lighting up with excitement.

"Yes, I saw him, but my visit was fruitless.  He
politely but firmly told me he could not give it
to you; and he would not tell me at the time
who was to be the lucky boy.  In to-night's
paper I have just read that the selection has been
made."

The look of disappointment which came over
Dick's countenance was reflected in the faces of
both his mother and sister.  He gulped once or
twice before he finally mustered up courage to
reach out his hand for the paper, and the tears
blinded his eyes while he read the brief article which
so certainly delayed if it did not entirely destroy
his boyhood's dream.

For a few moments silence reigned in the little
group, and Ursula, rising quietly, walked to her
brother and placed an affectionate, consoling arm
over his dejectedly drooping shoulders.

"Never mind, Dick, the appointee may not pass
the exams, and then possibly you will get your
chance after all," she said consolingly.

"There's no hope he won't pass," answered Dick
dolefully, and then more bravely, "neither would
you nor I wish him such bad luck."

"Is it anyone we know?" now inquired Mrs. Comstock.

"I should say we do.  It's one of my best
friends;--it's Gordon Graham, our class valedictorian."

"Gordon Graham!" exclaimed Ursula, a slight
flush tinging the peachy contour of her cheek,
"Gordon Graham!  Why, I never knew he even
wanted to go to Annapolis!"

"He doesn't," answered Dick ruefully, "but his
father does want him to go, and now Gordon has
no choice."

"Mr. Graham is a rich man, and a politician.  I
suppose he wields such an influence in this district
that Senator Kenyon could not afford to go against
his wishes in the matter," said Dick's father, "and
unfortunately I am not wealthy, and have always
kept out of politics.  Consequently, my boy, you
may blame your father for this miscarriage of our
plans.  With the election so near, a senator has to
look to his fences," he added as they arose to answer
the summons to the evening repast.

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"Our Policy in the West Indies and the Caribbean,"
was the subject of Richard's salutatory
address in the crowded theatre that evening at the
graduation exercises of the Bankley High School.
To his friends it seemed something more than the
average boyish ebullition.  At any rate, Dick was
a thoughtful lad and had expended his best efforts
in the preparation of his oration.  During its
composition he had even looked into the future and in
the measures he advanced as necessary for the
military, naval and commercial integrity of the nation,
he had always liked to think of himself as a possible
factor.

To-night he experienced his first bitter
disappointment, and instead of "Admiral Richard
Comstock" being an actor in the stirring events that
some day indubitably would occur, he saw his more
fortunate chum, Gordon Graham, writing history
on the pages of his country's record.

After the exercises he met Gordon, and the two
boys walked home together along the lofty,
elm-arched streets.

"Naturally I'm fearfully disappointed," said
Dick, having first congratulated Gordon on his
good fortune, "but I'm not churlish about the
matter, and I guess the chief reason is because you
got it.  I'm mighty glad for you, Gordon."

"It is too bad, old man," Gordon replied
feelingly, "because I know how you have looked
forward to being appointed, and you know, Dick, I
never was anxious for it.  If it was not for frustrating
my father's wishes, I should almost be inclined
to flunk the examinations.  In fact I may be
unable to get by anyway, for they are very difficult."

"You'd never do that, Gordon!  You couldn't
afford to do such a thing--humble your pride in that
manner.  That wouldn't be helping me and you'd
only injure yourself and hurt your father beyond
measure," said Dick bravely.

"Oh, I suppose I shall have to go, and I will do
my best, Dick; only I do wish we both were going.
It is beastly to think of separating after all these
years we have been together."

"We have a few days left yet before you leave,
so cheer up," answered Dick, "and suppose we
make the best of them.  What do you say to a
swim and row to Black Ledge to-morrow morning?"

"Good!  I will meet you at eight o'clock.
Bring along your tackle, for we may get some bass
or black-fish, and we will make a day of it,"
responded Gordon enthusiastically, as they parted at
the corner.

On entering the house Dick immediately sought
his father.

"Father," he said, "what do you propose for me
now that the Annapolis appointment is closed?"

"I have been thinking over the question for
weeks," answered Mr. Comstock, leaning back
wearily in his chair.  "I counted on the Naval
Academy more than you did, I might say; for,
Dick, things have not been going well in the
business, and the family exchequer is at a very low
point, so low in fact I hardly know just how things
will end."

Dick, immersed in his own selfish thoughts, for
the first time realized how worried and care-worn
his father appeared.

"What is the trouble, Dad?" he asked with a
world of solicitude and tenderness in his voice.

"To tell you the truth, Dick, I cannot afford to
send you to college.  I am afraid that unless I can
recoup my recent losses I shall be unable even to
allow your sister to finish her art studies after her
graduation next year, as we had planned.  My
boy, I have very little left."

He stopped for a moment and his hand visibly
shook as he passed it over his troubled brow.

"I broke the news to your mother some time ago,
and my visit to Washington was in the hope of
recovering something from the wreck, but it looks
dark.  Also while there, beside seeing Senator
Kenyon, I tried my best to get you into West
Point.  But that, too, was a failure."

"Dad, don't worry about me," said the boy,
rising and going to stand by his father's side; "I'll
get along all right, and between us we will fasten
on something I can turn my hand to.  I have
had a mighty easy time of it for seventeen years,
nearly, and I'm only too glad to pitch in and help out."

"The situation is not so bad as all that, Richard,"
answered Mr. Comstock, gazing at his manly boy
with a proud look.  "You do not have to strike out
for yourself for a good while yet.  I even thought
another year at Bankley, taking the post-graduate
course, would be the best plan for the present.  In
the meantime you have a whole summer's vacation
ahead of you, which your good work at school richly
deserves."

"No, I've finished with Bankley," said Dick with
finality in his tone.

"Well!  Well!  We must talk about the matter
some other time, my son, and if you intend to go to
Black Ledge to-morrow morning with Gordon, you
had best be getting under the covers."

Whereupon Dick said "Good-night" and slowly
climbed the stairs to his bedroom.

Before Dick succeeded in getting to sleep he
firmly resolved to relieve his father's shoulders of
some of the burden by shifting for himself, but just
how he proposed to go about it was even to his own
active mind an enigma.





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.. _`"THE OLDEST BRANCH OF THE SERVICE"`:

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   CHAPTER II


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   "THE OLDEST BRANCH OF THE SERVICE"

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When Dick ran down the wharf the next
morning he found Gordon and several other boys there
already.  He was later than he had intended;
unless an early start was made their sport would be
spoiled.  Black-fish bite well only on the flood tide,
and the row to Black Ledge, situated at the mouth
of the broad river, near the entrance to the spacious
harbor, was a distance of at least four miles.

In order to better their time Dick and Gordon
invited Donald Barry and Robert Meade, two boys
of their own age, to join them and help man the
oars, while Tommy Turner, a freshman at Bankley,
was impressed as coxswain of the crew.

Lusty strokes soon carried them away from the
landing out into the sparkling waters of the river.
Tommy Turner, though not a "big boy," knew his
duties as coxswain, so he set his course diagonally
for the opposite bank.  Already the tide had
turned, and to go directly down-stream would have
meant loss of more time, while under the shelter of
the left bank of the river the current and wind were
not so strong as out in mid-channel.

With expertness born of much experience he
guided the little round-bottomed craft in and out
amidst the river traffic.  The swell from an
outward-bound excursion steamer caused the rowboat
to rock and toss, but not a single "crab" or
unnecessary splash did the rowers make as they bent
their backs gladly to their task.

"Those farmers from up state on board the
*Sunshine* thought we would all be swamped sure,"
remarked Tommy, laughingly.  "I'd like to bet
that half of them never saw blue water before in
their lives."

Dick, stroking the crew, only grinned
appreciatively at Tommy's sally, but Donald Barry
called out from his place as bow oar:

"Don't get too cocky, Tommy, for if they knew
you had never learned to swim, they might well
have felt uneasy about you."

"I'll learn some day, fast enough," answered
Tommy, slightly chagrined at Donald's remark,
"but in the meantime, Don, if you would feather
your oar better maybe the wind against it wouldn't
be holding us back so much."

Tommy Turner was always ready with a "come
back," as the boys expressed it, and for a while
nothing more was said.  Suddenly the coxswain,
who had been gazing fixedly ahead for some time,
gave a loud shout.

"Say, fellows, the fleet is coming in!  I thought
I couldn't be mistaken when I saw all that smoke
way out there, and now it's a sure thing."

By common consent the rowers ceased their
exertions and looked in the direction indicated by
Tommy.  Far out over the white-capped waves of
the Sound could be seen against the deep blue sky,
dark, low-lying clouds of black smoke, while just
becoming distinguishable to the naked eye the huge
hulks of several battleships could be discerned.

"This sure is luck," exclaimed Robert Meade.
"I've often wanted to see a lot of battleships come
to anchor together, but never have been on the spot
at the right moment."

"Let's call off the fishing and row out to their
anchorage; it's only a little over a mile farther out.
What do you all say?" asked Donald, appealing to
the others.

"Yes,--let's!" spoke up the ubiquitous Tommy.
"We can go after the fish later if we like."

"You would not be so much in favor of that
extra mile or two if you were pulling on an oar,
kid," vouchsafed Gordon rather grimly, for the
sight of the ships brought to his mind that sooner or
later he might be passing his days on one of those
very vessels.

"Right you are, sir, Admiral Graham, sir,"
quickly retorted the coxswain, and even Dick joined
in the laughter now turned on Gordon.

How differently he gazed at the ships to-day
from what he would have done a few days since.
Then they would have meant so much to him, while
now he seemed to resent their very presence in the
harbor.

The rowers had resumed their work and without
further words Tommy changed the boat's course.

By the time the five boys in their tiny craft
reached the vicinity the great vessels were
steaming in column towards the harbor entrance.  On
the fresh morning breeze was borne the sound of
many bugles, the shrill notes of the boatswain's
pipes calling the crew on deck, and the crashings of
many bands.

The boys resting on their oars drank in the
beauty and majesty of the scene with sighs of
complete satisfaction while they interestedly watched
every maneuver of the approaching ships.  The
powerful dreadnaught in the lead flew the blue flag
with two white stars of a rear admiral.  From the
caged mainmast and from the signal yard on the
foremast strings of gaily-colored flags were
continually being run up or down, and sailors
standing in the rigging were waving small hand flags to
and fro with lightning rapidity.

"Those colored and fancy flags make the outfit
look like a circus parade," remarked Tommy, lolling
back in the stern sheets with the tiller ropes lying
idly in his hands.

"That's the way the Admiral gives his orders to
the other ships," volunteered Dick.  "You'll
notice they run up every set of flags first on the
flagship, then the ships behind follow suit, finally when
the order is understood by them all and it comes
time to do that which the Admiral wants done, down
they all go together."

"Jinks!  I'd think it a pretty tedious way of
sending messages," remarked Donald Barry,
watching the gay flags go fluttering upwards in
the breeze; "just imagine spelling out all those
words.  I'd think that sometimes they'd all go
ashore or run into each other or something before
they half finished what they wanted to say."

Dick, having spent considerable of his spare
moments in reading up about naval matters, smiled at
Donald and continued his explanation.

"It isn't necessary to spell out the words.  Each
group of flags means some special command, and
all you have to do is to look it up in the signal book
as you would a word in the dictionary.  Most of
the commoner signals become so well known after a
little experience that it is only a matter of seconds
to catch the meaning."

"I wish we could go on board one of the ships,
don't you, fellows?" mused Robert rather
irrelevantly.  He was generally the silent one of the
party, but the lads agreed with him that his wish
was a good one.  Yet such luck was hardly to be
expected.

The flagship was passing but a few yards away,
and the watchers could readily see the sailors on her
decks all dressed in white working clothes, while on
the broad quarter-deck a line of men, uniformed in
khaki and armed with rifles, were drawn up in two
straight military rows.  Near these men glistened
the instruments of the ship's band as they stood
playing a lively march.

Suddenly the boys heard a sharp command
wafted to them over the water.  "Haul down!"
were the words, and simultaneously from every ship
in the column the lines of flags were hauled down
to the signal bridges.  Then came the splash of
anchors, the churning of reversed propellers, the
smoke and dust of anchor chains paying out
through hawse pipes, and the fleet had come to
anchor.  Hardly had the great anchors touched the
water when long booms swung out from the ships'
sides, gangways were lowered, and from their
cradles swift launches with steam already up were
dropped into the water by huge electric cranes.

"What is the blue flag with all the stars they
hoisted at their bows when they stopped?" questioned
Donald, turning to Dick as being the best
informed member of the party.

"That is the Union Jack," Dick replied, "and
they fly that from the jack staff only when a ship is
in dock, tied up to a wharf or at anchor; and also, if
you noticed, they pulled down the National Ensign
from the gaff on the mainmast and hauled another
up on the flagstaff astern at the same time.  When
the flag flies from the gaff it means the ship is under
way."

"It certainly is a shame, Dick, you cannot go to
Annapolis in my place," remarked Gordon,
regretfully; "you already know more than all of us
combined about the Navy.  But do you know, seeing
these ships to-day and the businesslike way they do
things has stirred my blood.  It is just wonderful!
But for the life of me I cannot see how a chap can
learn all there is to know about them in only four
years.  I rather think I shall have to do some
pretty hard digging if I ever expect to be a naval
officer."

"Keep your ship afloat, Admiral Graham, and
hard digging won't be necessary," interposed
Tommy, and a roar of laughter followed his quip,
as was usually the case.

The boys now began rowing towards the flagship,
which in anchoring had gone several hundred yards
beyond them.  Nearing her, the strains of a lively
march were heard, and an officer in cocked hat, gold
lace and epaulettes, went down the gangway into
a waiting motor boat.  No sooner had the officer
stepped into the boat than she scurried away for the
shore landing.  Again the boys stopped to watch
proceedings.  When the motor boat started from
the gangway one of the sailors on deck blew a shrill
call on a pipe and the khaki-clad line of men, who
had been standing immovably with their rifles at
the position of "present arms," brought them to
the deck as if actuated by a single lever, and a
moment later they were marched away.

"Those soldiers are marines, aren't they?" asked
Robert.  "Anyway, they are dressed the same as
the marines up at the Navy Yard."

"Sure they are marines," answered Tommy; "I
know all about 'em, for my Uncle Fred was a
marine officer once.  He swears by 'em, and says they
are the best fighters in the world."

This was Robert Meade's first year at Bankley
High School, having spent all his life previously in
an up-state town, and the soldier element on board
ship was not clear in his mind.

"I always used to think that the marine was
a sailor," said he.  "At least, most of the papers
half the time must be wrong, for you see
pictures supposed to be marines landing at this or
that place and they are almost always dressed as
sailors."

"That's because the papers don't know
anything," commented Tommy indignantly.  "Why,
the marines are the oldest branch of the service;
older than the Navy or the Army.  Aren't they, Dick?"

"Well, to tell the truth," Dick answered, "I'm a
bit hazy about marines myself.  Of course I've
seen them around town and on the ships all my life,
off and on, but I've been so much more interested
in the work of a sailor that I haven't paid much
attention to the military end of it."

"The marine is 'soldier and sailor too,'" said
Tommy, sententiously.  "That English poet,
Kipling, says he can do any darned thing under the sun;
and if all my uncle tells me is true, it must be so.
He was a volunteer officer of marines in the war
with Spain and fought in Cuba with them."

"Well, if they are soldiers also, why don't they
stay ashore with the army?" persevered Robert,
wishing to understand more about the men who had
excited his interest.

"It's a pretty long story to tell you in a minute,"
answered Tommy; "besides, I may not get it all
straight."

"That will be all right, Tommy," Gordon called
out.  "I do not know anything about them, either,
and I suppose I had better learn everything I can
about the Navy now.  I've made up my mind,
boys, that I do want to be an officer on one of these
ships, and I am going to tell my father so to-night,
as I know it will please him.  So, Tommy, I
propose that when we start for the boat-house, as you
will have nothing else to do but steer, you tell us all
you know about these 'Sea Soldiers.'  Is my motion seconded?"

As Gordon finished speaking they were lying a
little off the starboard quarter of the flagship, idly
tossing in the short choppy sea that the breeze from
the Sound had stirred up.  A whistle from the deck
now attracting their attention, the boys looked up
in time to see a small marine with a bugle in his
hand run along the deck and, after saluting the
naval officer who had summoned him by the shrill
blast, receive some instructions from the officer.
After giving another salute to the officer, a second or
two later the little trumpeter blew a call, the
meaning of which was unknown to the silently attentive
lads in the rowboat.

All the boys had some remark to make at this.

"Hello, look at Tom Thumb blowing the bugle,"
called Tommy, and he added, "If all the marines
are his size, I should think someone had been
robbing a nursery."

"Wonder what all the excitement means,
anyway?" inquired Donald, as he saw various persons
on the ship running about, evidently in answer to
the summons of the bugle.

"You know all the bugle calls, Dick, because you
were the best bugler in the Boy Scouts when we
belonged; what was the call?" Gordon asked.

"You've sure got me buffaloed," answered Dick.
"I learned every call in the Instruction Book for
Boy Scouts, and I know every army call, but that
one wasn't among them."

During this time their little boat was drifting
slowly astern again when suddenly a long heavy
motor boat rounded the battleship, just clearing
her, and at terrific speed bore down on the drifting
rowboat.

Instinctively the occupants of the rowboat sprang
into action.

A warning cry was shouted to them through a
megaphone from the deck of the battleship, the
coxswain of the fast flying motor boat sounded two
short blasts on his whistle, threw his helm hard
over, and the crew shouted loudly.  Tommy
Turner in the excitement of the moment mixed his
tiller ropes and sent his frail craft directly across
the sharp bow of the approaching vessel.

With a smashing and crashing of wood the heavy
motor boat practically cut the rowboat in two,
forcing it beneath the surface and passing over it, and
more quickly than it has taken to relate it the five
boys were thrown into the sea.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

.. _`How the accident occurred`:

.. figure:: images/img-034.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: How the accident occurred

   How the accident occurred

.. class:: center

   How the accident occurred

.. class:: small

   1.  B is the position of the rowboat when the motor boat A came
   under the stern along dotted line, heading directly at rowboat.
   Tommy pulled on wrong rope and sent his boat in direction of B'.
   It can be seen the coxswain steered in the same direction and the
   boats smashed at the point B'.  The motor boat stopped about A'.

.. class:: small

   2.  The diagram illustrates also the manner of designating the
   directions of objects from the ship by lookouts.  Example: A sailboat
   at "C."  The lookout would call out "Sailboat, Broad on Port
   Bow" or he might say "Four Points on Port Bow."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

Dick Comstock, coming first to the surface,
looked about him for his companions.  The motor
boat was now about fifty yards away; her engine
had stopped and her crew were looking anxiously
towards the spot where the accident had taken place.

As Dick shook the water from his eyes and ears,
he heard the voice of the coxswain answering a
question apparently addressed him by someone
from the deck of the flagship.

"I can't reverse my engines, sir.  Something
fouling the propellor," he called out.

By this time Dick saw the bobbing heads of
Robert, Donald and Gordon not far from him.

"Where's Tommy?" called Dick, anxiously,
trying to rise from the water as far as possible in his
endeavor to sight the missing boy.

To these four lads the choppy sea meant nothing,
in spite of the fact they were fully clothed when so
suddenly upset.  But in Tommy's case it was a far
different matter, for, as has been stated, Tommy,
though a plucky little fellow, was unable to swim.

The wrecked rowboat had floated some distance
away and with one accord the four boys swam
rapidly towards it in the hope that Tommy might
be found clinging to the débris.

Meanwhile on the deck of the battleship there
was great excitement.  A life-boat was being
quickly lowered from its davits and active sailors
were piling into it.  The starboard life-lines of the
quarter-deck were lined with men in white uniforms
and dungarees, for many of the engine room force
had been attracted to the deck to witness the episode
though they were not allowed there on ordinary
occasions in that attire, and also there was a
sprinkling of marines in khaki.  Shouts, signals and
directions were coming from all sides, while two of
the motor boat's crew were already in the water
swimming back towards the boys to lend them aid
if necessary.

On reaching the wreck, Dick, who was first to
arrive, half pulled himself out on the upturned
bottom in order to search to better advantage.
Discovering with sinking heart that Tommy was
not there, without a moment's hesitation he
disappeared beneath the boat searching with wide
open eyes for his little friend, nor was he alone in
his quest, for each of the boys in turn dove under
the boat on arrival.  Staying as long under water
as he possibly could Dick came to the surface to
free his lungs of the foul air with which they were
now filled.  Again his anxious eyes swept the
roughened water in eager survey and then with a
loud cry of gladness he was going hand over hand
in the famous Australian crawl, but this time away
from the boat and towards the ship.

In that momentary glance he saw an arm and
hand emerge from the waves, the clenched fist still
holding fast to a piece of tiller rope.  It had shown
but an instant above the surface and then
disappeared.  Could he reach the spot in time?  Could
he?  He would--he must, and with head and face
down his arms flew like flails beating the water past
him as he surged forward.

On board the flagship, Sergeant Michael Dorlan,
of the Marines, had been an eye-witness of the
whole occurrence.  For some time previous he had
been watching the boys in the boat.  The manner
in which they handled their oars showed him they
were no novices.  He noted also that there were
five occupants in the unlucky craft when she was
struck.  Calmly he counted the heads appearing in
the water beneath.

"One," counted Dorlan aloud to himself as
Dick's drenched head almost instantaneously
bobbed up, "two, three," he continued in rapid
succession, "four----," and then he waited, holding
his breath, while his honest Irish heart beat faster
beneath his woolen shirt.

"They kin all shwim," he muttered aloud as the
four lads struck out vigorously in the water, "but,
bedad, the fifth kid ain't up yet."

During all this time Dorlan was unlacing his
shoes with rapidly moving fingers.  His coat he
unconsciously took off and threw to the deck and
then he climbed to the top rail of the life-lines,
steadying himself by holding to an awning
stanchion.  Never once did his sharp, gray-blue
eyes leave the surface of the water.  As Dick cried
out and dashed through the waves towards the spot
where he momentarily glimpsed the tightly clenched
hand of Tom Turner, a brown streak appeared to
shoot from the rail of the dreadnaught and with
hardly a splash was lost and swallowed up in the sea.

Sergeant Michael Dorlan had also seen that for
which he was looking and like a flash he had gone
to the rescue.  From the height of over twenty feet
his body shot like a meteor in the direction of the
drowning boy.  To the officers and crew on board
the flagship it seemed an eternity before a
commotion below them and a spurning and churning of
the water announced his reappearance.  And
Dorlan did not come to the surface alone, for it was
seen that he was supporting the form of the boy he
had gone to rescue.

A great cheer filled the air as the crew of the
ship spontaneously gave vent to their relief, and a
few seconds later the unconscious lad was hurried
up the gangway by willing hands, followed
unassisted by his four drenched and solicitous comrades.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`UNCLE SAM'S UNINVITED GUESTS`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER III


.. class:: center medium

   UNCLE SAM'S UNINVITED GUESTS

.. vspace:: 2

"Right down to the sick bay[#] with him," ordered
an officer as Tommy was carried over the side in
the strong arms of Sergeant Dorlan, who, on
climbing up the gangway, had tenderly taken the boy
from the sailor holding him.  "Hurry along,
Sergeant, the surgeon is already there waiting."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Sick bay--The ship's hospital.

.. vspace:: 2

After giving these directions the officer turned to
the four dripping lads and said:

"Are you boys injured in any way?"

"No," they replied as if with one breath.

"You look as though you had been struck in the
eye pretty badly," said the officer, giving Dick's
bruised cheek a close scrutiny, and for a moment
the boy blushed as if caught in a misdemeanor.

"I was hit in the eye yesterday," he finally
managed to stammer; "it wasn't caused by anything
that happened to-day," and then to change the
subject if possible, he inquired:

"May we have permission to go down where they
have taken Tommy Turner?  We are all mighty
anxious about him."

"Don't you all want to get on some dry clothes
first?" inquired the officer.

The boys preferred, however, to hear first the
news as to their friend's condition; consequently
they were taken below, where already the ship's
surgeon and his assistants were working hard to
restore life to the still unconscious Tommy.

Sitting on a mess bench which some men had
placed for them, each boy wrapped in blankets
furnished by other thoughtful members of the crew,
they waited silently and with palpitating hearts
while a long half hour slowly ticked away.  Though
many sailors were continually passing to and fro
they were all careful not to disturb the four
shipwrecked boys who sat there with eyes fastened in
anxious hopefulness on the door to the "sick bay,"
as the hospital is called on shipboard.

After what seemed an eternity, the door opened
and Sergeant Dorlan came out quietly, closing it
behind him.  Immediately the watchers jumped to
their feet.

"Is he all right?" whispered Dick, plucking at
Dorlan's wet sleeve.  "Is he----"

"Lord love ye, me lads, he's as fit as a fiddle and
will live to laugh at ye in yer old age," replied
Dorlan, cheerfully, and it was with a mutual sigh
of relief they heard the announcement.  A messenger
approaching at this moment, called to the boys:

"The Officer of the Deck says, seeing your
friend's all right, that you are to follow me to
the Junior Officers' Quarters, where you can get
a bath and your clothes will be dried out for you."

"We'd like to see our friend first, if we might,"
suggested Dick.

"The little lad's asleep and old 'Saw Bones'
wouldn't let ye in to disturb him for love nor money.
Go ahead and get policed up," suggested the
sergeant, turning aft towards the marines'
compartment as he spoke.

"We do not know your name, Sergeant," spoke
up Gordon, placing a detaining hand on the
marine's arm, "but we all want to thank you for
saving Tommy Turner's life.  It was just too fine
for words, and I for one should like to shake hands
with you."

"It's all in the day's wurruk, me lad," said
Dorlan, confused by this frank praise, "but it's happy
I am to shake the hands of such plucky lads as ye
are yersel's, so put her there," and he extended a
brown horny hand which they all grasped simultaneously.

"When ye git all fixed up and dhried out, come
on back here and it's proud I'll be to show ye about
the old tub," with which remark he left them at
liberty to follow the Officer of the Deck's messenger
to the Junior Officers' Quarters.

Divesting themselves of their soaked garments on
arrival there they were supplied with soap, towels
and bath robes and were soon enjoying the bath.
With spirits no longer depressed for fear of danger
to their friend, the four lads were now beginning
thoroughly to enjoy their novel experience.

"Which fellow said he wished he could visit a
man-of-war?" questioned Donald from the
confines of a little enclosure where the sound of
splashing water announced he was already under the
shower.

"It was the Sphinx," laughingly answered
Gordon from his own particular cubby hole.

"I didn't want to come on board in quite the
manner I did, though," called out Robert, "and
furthermore, don't call me Sphinx in the future.
If I'd had the sense of that old hunk of stone, I
could have foreseen the danger and been able to
avoid it."

"Hurry up, you fellows, and don't talk so much.
Let me have a whack at one of those showers,"
called Dick, who had been forced to wait, there
being not enough bathing places to allow all to
indulge at the same time.  "I want to hurry out of
this and take a look around this ship before I go
ashore."

"Speaking of leaving," remarked Gordon as he
emerged for a rub down, "how do you suppose
we are going to leave?"

"To tell the truth, I hadn't thought of that,"
Dick replied, "and how about your boat?  It's all
smashed up."

"She was about ready for the junk pile, anyway,"
said Gordon, "and I was going to give her to
the boat club before I left for Annapolis next week."

"I wonder what Uncle Sam does when he
smashes up your boats like that?" questioned
Donald.

"In this case," Dick vouchsafed, "I rather guess
'Uncle Sam' will say it is altogether our own fault.
Poor Tommy was so rattled that he pulled on the
wrong rope and steered us right in front of the
motor boat even after they had veered off to avoid
hitting us."

"Well, if they permit us to take a look around
the ship, I am willing to call it square," Gordon
remarked philosophically.

A little later the boys were escorted to a vacant
stateroom or cabin where they found their
underwear already dry and waiting to be donned.

"I call that quick work," exclaimed Gordon, and
while he was speaking a knock sounded at the door.

"Come in!" he called out, and a colored mess
boy stuck his woolly head into the room.

"Yoh clo'es will be ready foh yoh all in jest a
jiffy, sah.  Here am yoh rubber shoes dry a'ready
an' de tailor am a-pressing yoh pants and yoh coats, sah."

"Where did you find our coats?" inquired Dick.
"They were in the rowboat the last I knew."

The colored boy grinned broadly, showing an
expansive row of shining white teeth.

"Ah don't rightly know foh shu, boss, but Ah
reckon dey foun' 'em floatin' on de water an'
fetched 'em aboahd wid yoh boat, sah."

"You mean to say they have rescued the rowboat
too and have it on board this ship?" asked
Gordon incredulously.

"Shu as shootin', sah, an' Chips wid his little
Chips is fixin' of her up good as new.  Dey ain't
nuthin' we cain't do on one ob Unc' Sam's ships, sah."

With which closing encomium the black face was
withdrawn and the door closed.

"Wonder what he meant by his 'Chips wid his
little Chips'?" laughingly questioned Robert Meade.

"You will have to ask Dick," answered Gordon
rather enviously.  For now that he had become so
enthusiastic over his determination to follow his
father's wishes and become a naval officer he felt he
had neglected many past opportunities for
learning about the service.

"He meant the Chief Carpenter and his helpers,
I 'reckon.  'You see, 'Chips' is a nickname in the
Navy for the man who handles the saw and
hammer," Dick announced.

"When you boys are dressed come out into the
mess room.  Put on your bath robes till your
clothes are ready for you," called a voice from the
passageway outside their door and needing no
second bidding they all walked out into the comfortable
room where a number of junior officers were
standing about.

"I am Ensign Whiting, and these are the junior
officers of the ship," announced the officer who had
previously called to them, and he introduced the
lads to the others with an easy wave of his hand.
"Sit down and tell us all about the accident.  By
the way, your friend Tommy is still sleeping, and
as it is noon we should be very glad if you would
accept our invitation to lunch.  The Captain sent
word he wishes to see you, but I told him you
probably would eat with us, so, unless you are in a
hurry to get away, you need not go up to see him
till later."

The boys gladly accepted the kind invitation and
as the meal was immediately announced they sat
down in the places already provided and proceeded
to enjoy thoroughly their first meal on board a
battleship.

During the repast they related how the accident
occurred, and all were high in praise of the marine
sergeant who so promptly came to their rescue.
They learned that their wrecked boat had been
towed back to the ship and hauled out on board,
and the damage to it was not so great but that the
ship's carpenters could easily repair it.

"Mike Dorlan is a bit too fond of the firewater,"
volunteered one of the officers, "but when
it comes to being the right man in the right
place at the right time, it would be hard to find his
equal."

"We tried to thank him for rescuing Tommy,"
said Gordon, "but we could not make him
understand what a noble thing it was."

"That's Mike all over.  He's a gruff old chap as
a rule, and I suppose saving anyone in such an easy
manner, as he would call it, doesn't seem much to
him," remarked Ensign Whiting.  "Mike already
owns gold and silver life-saving medals presented
to him by the Navy Department."

"I never knew that," said an officer who had
been introduced to the boys as a Lieutenant of
Marines.  "He never wears them at inspection nor
the ribbons for them at other times."

"Dorlan?  Wear medals?  Not that old leatherneck!"[#]
exclaimed Whiting.  "Yet I happen to
know that he has several in his ditty box[#] and if you
tackle him just right he will spin you some mighty
interesting yarns.  Why, he was all through the
Spanish War, first on a ship and then ashore at
Guantanamo; he fought in the Philippine
Insurrection and was one of the first marines to enter
Pekin during its relief at the Boxer uprising in
1900, and later he was in Cuba during the
insurrection there in 1906, and I believe he has landed
for one reason or another in about every place
there ever was trouble brewing in the last fifteen
years.  To cap the climax he even has a medal of
honor which he received for some wonderfully
impossible stunt he did out in China.  Ah!  Old Mike
is a wonder, all right!"

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Leatherneck--A sobriquet often applied to marines.  Supposed
   to have originated from the leather collar which formed part of the
   uniform of marines in the early days of the last century.

.. class:: left small

   [#] A small wooden box issued to the men in which they keep writing
   paper, ink, and odds and ends.  It is fitted with a lock.

.. vspace:: 2

"Do you suppose we can see Sergeant Dorlan
later?" asked Dick eagerly.  "You see, he
promised to show us over the ship, and this being the
first time that any of us has ever been lucky
enough to get on board a United States ship, we all
want to make the best of fortunate misfortune, as
you might say."

"Why, certainly: right after you see the
Captain," replied Ensign Whiting, "and as your
clothes are now ready, suppose you get into them
at once and I will take you up above for your interview."

Captain Cameron, of the U.S.S. *Nantucket*,
flagship of the Battleship Division of the Atlantic
Fleet, was a big jovial man of ruddy complexion
and his greeting of the shipwrecked boys who were
ushered into his cabin by the marine orderly was
hearty, and complimentary.

"It is a pleasure to meet you, young gentlemen,"
he said, shaking each of them by the hand.  "I
only regret your introduction on board my ship was
attended by such an unhappy incident.  However,
it is to be hoped that you won't bear the Navy any
grudge after I explain to you that we are doing
our best to make full amend for the accident.
Mr. Ennis, the ship's carpenter, reports that his men
will soon have your boat in nearly perfect
condition, and the surgeon states your young friend will
have no ill effects from his experience.  Please be
seated and make yourselves at home, for I have a
few questions to ask you."

It was indeed an interesting place to sit, being
filled with curios which the Captain during his many
years of service in the Navy had collected in nearly
every corner of the world, and while he talked they
found it difficult to keep their eyes from wandering
about the room on cursory inspection of the idols,
weapons, pictures and objects of art, attractively
arranged on walls and tables.

"Now that we are all comfortable, suppose you
tell me how the accident occurred," said their host,
turning first to Dick, who was seated nearest him.
Whereupon the boy told him the entire story and
each of the others added the details that came to
their minds.

"It is needless to say that I wish it had not
happened," said he; "my coxswain was at fault for
coming around so close under the stern of the ship,
but I can see that you are inclined to place the
blame on your own coxswain, who steered you
across the bow of the motor boat after she had
blown the proper whistles.  However, I have
endeavored to do the best I can by you.  Your boat
is nearly repaired; your oars and stretchers
replaced, your clothes recovered, and though they
may have suffered a little from their wetting I do
not imagine any great harm has resulted.  It is
true you lost your lunches but I am inclined to
believe you have not suffered on that account either,
and even the box of fish lines was picked up.  The
only thing really worrying me is your friend
Tommy, but even in his case nothing more than a
slight bruise on the forehead has resulted.  Now I
want to know if there is anything else I can do to
even up our account?"

"Well, sir," Richard answered, looking a little
embarrassed while he turned the edge of a rug with
the toe of his shoe, "there is one more thing you
may do for us if you will."

Captain Cameron, believing he had already done
more than he was called upon to do under the
circumstances, was surprised at this reply.

"And what may that be?" he inquired rather sharply.

"If you would permit all of us to have a good
look around your ship, sir, before we leave, it would
be greatly appreciated and also, sir, we should like
it very much if Sergeant Dorlan could act as the
guide.  You see, he offered to do it," and Richard
ended his request by looking directly at his host.

"If that is all, my boys," said the Captain, once
again his genial self, "I gladly grant it, and
furthermore, during our stay in port I shall be happy
to see you on board at any time outside of working
hours."

Ringing a bell, the marine orderly answered the
summons.

.. _`THE MARINE ORDERLY ANSWERED THE SUMMONS`:

.. figure:: images/img-050.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: THE MARINE ORDERLY ANSWERED THE SUMMONS

   THE MARINE ORDERLY ANSWERED THE SUMMONS

"Orderly, present my compliments to Captain
Henderson and ask him to detail Sergeant Dorlan
to accompany these young gentlemen on an inspection
tour of the ship."

The marine snapped his hand to his cap in salute,
and after his "Aye, aye, sir," which is the naval way
of replying to an order, he turned and left the
cabin, followed by the delighted youngsters.

Captain Kenneth Henderson, United States
Marine Corps, was holding five-inch gun drill when
the orderly found him.  After receiving the
message from his Commanding Officer he immediately
called Sergeant Dorlan and gave him his instructions.

"Before you start out, Sergeant, you had better
stop in the sick bay and pick up the other member
of the party.  When I came by there a while ago
he was feeling fine and getting ready to dress.  He
of course will wish to go around with you."

Tommy was feeling perfectly well.  A small blue
mark still remained on his forehead showing where
he had been hit by some part of the wreckage in the
accident and knocked insensible.  Being fully
dressed when the others arrived, they all were soon
investigating the wonderful battleship.  For two
full hours they pestered the patient Dorlan with
more questions and inquiries than he could have
answered in a lifetime.  In the course of their
personally conducted trip they were on a visit to the
bridge when their attention was again attracted to
the small bugler of marines who had been the
innocent cause of their presence on board the
flagship.  He was again sounding the call which they
had been discussing when the motor boat dashed
under the stern of the vessel and crashed into them.

"What is the meaning of that call?" asked Dick
of their guide.

"He's callin' away the motor sailer," replied Dorlan.

"Is he a marine--the little fellow blowing the
bugle?" inquired Tommy.

"Surest thing ye know," was the answer.

"Why!  He can't be as old as we are,"
remarked Dick; "how old do you have to be to
enlist in the Marines?"

"Those kids sometimes come in at the age of
fifteen," answered Dorlan; "they enlist as drummers
and trumpeters and serve till they're twenty-one
years old."

"May anyone enlist?" Dick asked.

"Sure, if yer old enough."

"And work your way up to a commission, as they
do in the army?"

"Indeed ye can, if ye've got it in ye," replied the
Sergeant; "Captain Henderson come up from the
ranks, and a mighty good officer he is, too," he added.

After this talk Richard Comstock remained very
thoughtful.  A sudden idea had come to his mind,
and he wanted to think it over.  The sight of the
neat-looking marines, their military bearing, smart
uniforms and soldierly demeanor attracted him
powerfully, and when he learned that enlisted men
were afforded the opportunity to rise in rank to that
of commissioned officer, he saw in this a means of
following a career which, if not exactly the one he
had always desired to pursue, was similar in many
respects, at least.

A little later the boys were taken ashore in one
of the flagship's steamers, first being assured that
their own boat would be sent to the boat club in the
morning.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`SEMPER FIDELIS--ALWAYS FAITHFUL`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER IV


.. class:: center medium

   SEMPER FIDELIS--ALWAYS FAITHFUL

.. vspace:: 2

The actions of Dick Comstock for the next few
days were clothed in mystery so far as his own
immediate family was concerned, for he kept his own
counsel as to his movements when away from home.
Even his sister Ursula was not taken into his
confidence.  In the meantime the day of Gordon
Graham's departure for Annapolis arrived, and his
friends went to the station to give him a proper
send-off.

Ursula and Dick were there, also Donald, Robert
and Tommy Turner and many of Gordon's classmates,
of whom Dick was the closest friend.

"I still wish you were going, Dick," said Gordon
sadly when the express pulled in under the train
shed.  "It will be fearfully strange down there
with none of the old crowd around.  Have you
made any plans yet regarding what you are going
to do?"

"Not fully," answered Richard.  "I expect to
be leaving town in a day or two, though."

"Where are you going?" inquired Gordon in
surprise.  But Ursula approached them at that
moment, and Dick gave a warning signal for silence
which Gordon saw and understood.

"Good-bye, Gordon," she said prettily, and
Gordon suddenly regretted that so many of the boys
and girls were there to bid him farewell.  He would
have much preferred to say his adieus to Ursula
with no others present.  Strange he never before
realized what a beautiful girl she had become, with
her blue eyes looking straight out at one from
under the black eyebrows and the hair blowing about
her delicately tinted cheeks.

"A-l-l A-b-o-a-r-d!" rang the voice of the
conductor, standing watch in hand ready to give the
starting signal to the engineer.  The porters were
picking up their little steps and getting ready to
depart.

"Good-bye, Ursula," said the lad simply, wringing
her hand with a heavier clasp than he knew, and
though he nearly crushed the bones, she never gave
the least sign of the pain he was causing her;
perhaps she did not really feel it.

"Kiss me, Gordon," cried his mother, as she
threw her arms around him.  "Don't forget to
write immediately on arriving."

"Come on, my son, time to jump aboard," cautioned
his father in a suspiciously gruff tone, and in
a moment more Gordon mounted the steps where
from the platform of the moving train he stood
waving his hat in farewell.

"Give him the school yell, fellows," shouted
Tommy Turner at the top of his lungs, and with
that rousing cry ringing in his ears Gordon Graham
started on life's real journey.

That same evening while Dick's father was
engaged with some business papers, the boy came
quietly into the room.

"Father, may I interrupt your work for a little
while?" he inquired.

"Nothing important, Dick, my boy," answered
Mr. Comstock, laying aside the document he was
reading; "what can I do for you?"

"Mother has just told me you are going to New
York to-morrow; is that so?"

"Yes, I have business there for the firm.  Why?"

"I was hoping I might go along with you,"
returned the boy.

Dick's father scrutinized his son's face for a
moment, wondering what was behind the quiet glance
and serious manner of the lad.

"What is the big idea?" questioned Mr. Comstock.
"Want to spend a week or two with Cousin
Ella Harris?"

"No," replied Dick slowly, "I have something
else in mind, but I don't want to tell you what it is
until we get on the train.  It's a matter I have been
thinking over for some time and--well, you will
know all about it to-morrow, if I may go with you."

"Very well," replied his father, turning again to
his work; "pack up and be ready to leave in the
morning.  We'll take the ten o'clock express."

"Good-night, Dad, and thank you," said Dick simply.

"Good-night, Dick," answered Mr. Comstock,
without looking up, consequently he failed to see
the lingering look the boy gave the familiar scene
before him, as if bidding it a silent last
"good-night."  For Dick was drinking in each detail of
the room as if trying to fix its every feature
indelibly in his memory.

At breakfast next morning he was more quiet
than his mother had ever known him, and both she
and his sister Ursula were surprised to see the tears
fill his eyes when he kissed them.

"I never knew you to be such a big baby, Dick,"
said Ursula.  "If you feel so bad about leaving us
why did you ask Father to take you on for a visit
with Cousin Ella?"  Although Dick had not said
that this was his object in going away, it was a
natural inference on Ursula's part, and as he
vouchsafed no reply to the contrary she consequently
watched him depart with a light heart.

In the crowded train Mr. Comstock and Richard
succeeded finally in getting a seat to themselves, and
while his father finished reading the morning paper,
Dick spent his time in looking out the car window
at the familiar sights along the road.  But before
long he was talking earnestly.

"Dad, I've decided what I want to do," he began,
"but I can't do it unless I get your consent."

"What's on your mind, son?" said Mr. Comstock,
folding his paper and smiling at the boy beside
him.  "Go ahead and I will pay close attention."

"If I went to Annapolis," Dick observed, "I'd
finish my course there at the age of twenty-one,
shouldn't I?"

"Yes, the course is four years at the Naval Academy."

"It would be the same if I went to West Point.
In other words, by the time I was twenty-one years
old I would, if successful at either institution, be
either an ensign or a second lieutenant, as the case
might be!"

"Quite true," remarked Mr. Comstock, still
unable to comprehend where this preliminary fencing
was leading.

"Have you ever heard of the United States Marine
Corps?" asked Dick after the silence of a second or two.

"Most certainly I have," was the reply.  "The
marines figure in nearly every move our country
makes in one way or another.  They are always
busy somewhere, though they get but little credit
from the general public for their excellent work.  I
am not as familiar with their history as I should
be--as every good American who has his country's
welfare at heart should be, I might add, though
perhaps I know a little more about them than a vast
majority.  Were it not for the marines our firm
would have lost thousands of dollars some years ago
when the revolutionists started burning up the
sugar mills and the cane fields in Cuba.  Our
government sent a few hundred marines down there in
a rush and they put a stop to all the depredations
in a most efficient manner.  The presence on the
premises saved our mill beyond a doubt.  But, how
do the marines figure in this discussion?  You don't
mean----"

"Well, you see, it's this way," said the boy, and
now his words no longer came slowly and haltingly,
"I've made up my mind to become a Marine
Officer, and if I can't do it by the time I'm
twenty-one, then my name isn't Richard Comstock."

"Bless me!  How do you propose going about
it, Dick?  As I have told you, there is no chance
of going to the Naval Academy this year, and I
understand that all marine officers are appointed to
the Corps from among Annapolis graduates.  For
that reason I do not believe you have----"

"Excuse me, Dad, but that's just where you are
mistaken.  All the marine officers don't go through
the Naval Academy.  Some of them enlist and go
up from the ranks.  They win their shoulder straps
on their own merit.  That's what I expect to do if
you will only give me the chance.  And you will,
won't you, Dad?"  Dick's voice trembled with
eagerness as he put the momentous question.

A few moments elapsed before his father
answered and when he began speaking he reached out
and gently placed his hand over that of his son.

"Evidently you have been looking into this
matter thoroughly.  I know now what has been
keeping you so silent these last few days.  I
suspected you were grieving over your disappointment
at my inability to send you to the Naval School or
possibly over the departure of your chum, Graham,
but I might have known my boy was using his time
to better advantage than 'crying over spilled milk.'"

Mr. Comstock paused a moment and then continued:

"I know how your mind is wrapped up in a military
career, Dick.  Ever since you were a little
shaver you have played at military and naval mimic
warfare.  You love it, and I believe you would
become a good officer some day with proper training.
Anything I may honorably do for the attainment of
your desires and your advancement I am but too
willing to undertake.  But, my boy, I am not sure
of the advisability of permitting you to become an
ordinary enlisted man with that uncertainty of ever
gaining your point--I imagine it is a more or less
uncertain proposition.  Besides, Dick, you are
pretty young to be allowed to start out on such a
hard life.  The career of an enlisted man is not a
bed of roses--full of trials and temptations of all
kinds.  At West Point or Annapolis you will be
given kind treatment and be under careful
surveillance for four years and not subjected to the
roughness and uncouthness which must attend a
start in the ranks.  In another year there may be
an opening for you at either place.  However, I
will not deny your request until I have looked
further into the case.  I am afraid your mother would
never hear of such a thing for her only boy.  Why
not wait and consult her regarding it?"

"I'll tell you why, Dad," began Dick, launching
again into his subject at once so as to press home
the slight advantage he believed he had gained, "on
the Fourth of July I'll be seventeen years of age.
Mother didn't happen to think of that, or she would
have made me wait a few days before going to
Cousin Ella's, where she believes I have gone.
You know, Dad, that for years I've been able to
blow a bugle and handle the drumsticks better than
any other boy in town.  Well, last week, when we
were on board the *Nantucket*, I saw some young
boys belonging to the Marine guard of the ship, and
I found out all about them.  Why, they were
smaller than Tommy Turner!

"It appears that there is a school for musics[#] at
the Marine Barracks in Washington, D.C., where
boys between the ages of fifteen and seventeen are
given training.  They enlist to serve until majority,
but often after they have served a short time as
drummer or trumpeter they get permission to
change their rank and become privates.  This puts
them in line for promotion to the rank of corporal
and sergeant.  I've been talking with Tommy's
uncle, and he was kind enough to have me meet an
officer of Marines stationed at the Navy Yard back
home, who recently came from recruiting duty.
That officer, Lieutenant Stanton is his name, told
me that the Corps is filled up just now, and all
enlisting stopped, so that my only chance to get in
right away would be in this school for musics.  In
two days more I'll be too old to get in.  I knew if
I proposed the subject at home, Mother would offer
such objections that I just couldn't refuse to do as
she wished.  Therefore I've packed up and left
home for good.  Dad, you--you won't stop me,
will you?  You'll give me this chance?  I've set
my heart on it so much!"

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] In the Army and Marine Corps drummers and trumpeters are
   generally called "musics."  On board ship the sailor man who blows
   the trumpet is called a "bugler."  The school for Marine Corps
   musics is now located at Paris Island, S.C. (1919)

.. vspace:: 2

Dick stopped talking.  It was the longest
extemporaneous speech he ever had made in his life,
and as he watched his father's face, he wondered if
he had said too much or not enough!

Once again a long silence ensued, while Mr. Comstock
reviewed all the boy had said.  What should
he do?  To deny Dick's request might be the very
worst step he possibly could take, for he knew the
process of reasoning by which this purposeful,
upright son of his arrived at his conclusions.  He
believed thoroughly in his son, and wanted to make no
mistake in his decision.

"Let us go in to luncheon, Dick, and give me a
little time to think this over.  It is a little sudden,
you know, and should not be gone into unwisely."

During the meal John Comstock questioned
Dick closely regarding this subject uppermost in
the minds of both.  He saw that the lad was bent
upon carrying out his project; that the boy had
given it careful thought; that he had weighed its
advantages and disadvantages with more acumen
than most boys of his age.

Richard was a good student, and not for a moment
did the father doubt that his son if given the
opportunity would win his commission.

"Was it your idea to go to the New York
recruiting station to-day on our arrival?" asked
Mr. Comstock, when they resumed their seat in the day
coach.

"Yes, Dad, for if I enlist in New York the
government sends me to Washington and pays my way
there."

"I have a better plan than that," said his father.
"I will let my business in New York wait on my
return, and we will both go to Washington this
afternoon, and spend the night in a comfortable
hotel.  To-morrow I will go to the Commandant of
the Marine Corps with you, armed with a letter of
introduction, and we will talk it over with him.  In
this way I shall have a much clearer and more
authoritative view of your prospects.  Then if you
get by the physical examination and are accepted I
shall be able to see for myself how and where you
will be fixed."

"Then I may go?  You will allow me?" cried
Richard, almost jumping out of his seat in his
enthusiasm.  "You are just the finest Dad in the
world!  And what is best of all about your plan is
that Mother will be less worried if you are able to
tell her everything as you see it."

"That is one of my chief reasons for going about
it in this way," quietly remarked his father.  "I
know she will be heart-broken at first, and probably
will accuse me of being an unworthy parent; so, my
boy, it is a case of how you manage your future,
which must prove to her that we both acted for your
best interests."

"I'll work hard; I don't need to tell you that,
Father," Dick replied.

On arriving in New York they hastened across
the city, luckily making good connections for
Washington, and the following morning the schedule as
planned was begun.

It was Richard's first visit to the capital, and
consequently everything he saw interested him.  The
wonderful dome of the Capitol building; the tall
white shaft of Washington Monument, the
imposing architecture of the State, War and Navy
Departments, the broad streets, the beautiful parks
and circles with their many statues, all claimed his
attention.

After securing the letter of introduction,
Mr. Comstock first took Richard to the Navy
Department where, on inquiry, they found that Marine
Corps Headquarters was in a near-by office building.
The original structure built for the Navy was
even then getting too small for the business of its
many bureaus.  The building they sought was but
a few steps away, and their route led them directly
past the White House, the official residence of the
President of the United States.

While on their journey they saw but few persons
in uniform.  Even in the Navy Building there was
a decided absence of officers or men in the dress of
their calling.  This seemed very odd to the boy, as
he always pictured in his imagination the "seat of
the nation" was gay with uniformed officials of his
own and other countries.

"Why is it, Father, you see so few uniforms in
the capital?" he inquired.

"I am not positive I am right," replied Mr. Comstock,
"but the American officers, soldiers and
sailors object to wearing their military clothes
except when they are actually required to do so.[#]  Our
nation is so democratic that they believe it makes
them appear conspicuous.  Furthermore, in
uniform they are often discriminated against,
particularly in the case of enlisted men.  This is one of
the reasons why a better class of men do not go into
the service--they consider the wearing of a
uniform belittles them in the eyes of the public."

.. vspace:: 2

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   [#] Previous to the war with Germany officers of the United States
   services were not required to wear uniforms when off duty and
   outside their ship or station.
   Enlisted men were also permitted to wear
   civilian clothing while on liberty,
   under certain restrictions.  Civilian
   clothing was generally called "cits" by those in service.

.. vspace:: 2

"I think a uniform is the best kind of clothing a
fellow can wear.  I'll be mighty proud of mine, and
never will be ashamed of it."

"In Europe," continued Dick's father, "a soldier
is looked upon in a different light, depending
to a great extent in what country he serves.  They
are honored and usually given every consideration,
or at least the officers are, and particularly in
Germany, where militarism is the first word in culture.
The United States, on the other hand, maintains
such a small and inadequate army and navy that
our men in uniform are really more like curiosities
to the people than anything else."

"But there are a lot of men in uniform back
home," Dick remarked.

"Yes, enlisted men, seldom officers.  The reason
is, the proximity of several army forts, a navy yard
and the frequent visits of the men-of-war in our
harbor.  So we at home are familiar with the
different branches of the service; but it is far from
being the case in most cities of our republic,"
answered Mr. Comstock.

They were now approaching the building wherein
the headquarters of the Marine Corps were located,
when Dick exclaimed:

"Look, Father!  There are some marines now;
aren't they simply great?"

Two stalwart men in uniform were crossing the
street just ahead of the speaker.  In their dark
blue coats piped in red, with the five shiny brass
buttons down the front and yellow and red chevrons
on the arms, trousers adorned with bright red
stripes and blue caps surmounted by the Corps
insignia over the black enameled vizors, they were
indeed a most attractive sample of the Marine Corps
non-commissioned officer at his best.

"It's their regular dress uniform," Dick
announced, "and I think it's the best looking outfit
I have ever seen, but, Dad, you should see the
officers when they get into their full dress!"

"Where did you pick up all your knowledge of
their uniforms, Dick?" asked his father curiously.

"Oh, Tommy Turner made his uncle show them
all to us.  You see, he stayed in the Corps for some
years after the Spanish War, and he has always
kept his uniforms.  He believes that some day he
may need them again if ever the United States gets
into a big fight, and if that time comes he is going
back into the marines."

Following the two non-commissioned officers into
a tall structure, Mr. Comstock and Richard were
whisked up several stories in an elevator and found
themselves before an opened door upon which were
the words, "Aide to the Commandant."

A young man in civilian dress rose as they entered
and inquired their business, which Mr. Comstock
quickly explained.

"Sit down, sir, if you please, and I will see if the
General can talk with you," he said.

They did as directed, while the young man
disappeared into an adjoining room.  A few moments
later he returned and motioned for them to follow him.

"What may I do for you, Mr. Comstock?"
inquired a large, handsome, gray-haired gentleman
standing behind the desk when they entered.  He
too was in civilian clothes, but despite the fact,
looked every inch the soldier he was known to be.

Mr. Comstock introduced Richard to the General
and then told him the reason of his visit.

"My boy is anxious to become a marine, and I
have promised to look into the necessary preliminary
steps.  I understand that you are not recruiting
just at present, but we were told that possibly
my son would be taken into the Corps as a bugler
or drummer."

"Yes, we do take boys in for training as field
musics," said the General, glancing at Dick for a
moment, "but your son, I fear, is too old; the ages
for this class of enlistment are from fifteen to
seventeen years, and judging by the lad's size he
already passed the age limit."

"He is very nearly, but has yet a few hours of
grace," replied Mr. Comstock.  "He will be
seventeen to-morrow, and I was hoping that you might
enlist him to-day.  My son's object in going
into the Corps is to work for a commission.
That is one of the inducements which I understand
the Corps offers its enlisted personnel, is it not?"

"You are right, Mr. Comstock; at the present
time our officers are taken from graduates of the
Naval Academy or from the ranks.  There have
been times when civilian appointments were
allowed, but the law has now been changed."

"In that case then, could you take my boy into
your organization?  He understands that his
advancement depends entirely on his own merit, and
he has taken a decided stand as to what he intends
to do and has my full consent to try it."

"Does he also understand that the number of
officers appointed from the ranks are few, and
picked for their exceptionally good records and
ability, and that he serves an apprenticeship until
he is twenty-one years of age?" inquired the Commandant.

"Yes, sir," answered Richard, speaking for the
first time.

"Why do you not enter the Naval Academy,
young man, and after graduation come into the
Corps?" asked the General, looking at Dick with
his stern eyes.

"Well, sir, I failed to get the appointment at the
last minute."

"Do you also realize there are many unpleasant
things connected with the life of an enlisted man,
and are you prepared to meet them?"

"Yes, sir, and I believe I can make good."

"I like your spirit, young man," said the
General approvingly; "the motto of the Marine Corps
is '*Semper Fidelis*--Always Faithful,' and to be a
true marine you must bear that motto in mind at
all times and under all conditions, if it is your hope
to succeed in the service."

He now turned to Dick's father:

"Ordinarily, Mr. Comstock, our young men are
held at the school for a few days before we complete
their enlistment in order that they may get an idea
of the life and duties to which they are about to
bind themselves when taking the oath of allegiance.
In your son's case, I believe he knows what he
wants, and he is the kind of young man we wish to
get.  Were he compelled to wait according to our
usual custom he would be past the age limit,
consequently I will further your desires and arrange to
have him sworn into service immediately, providing
he passes the surgeon's examination.  I will give
you an order to the Commanding Officer of the
Marine Barracks which will answer your purpose."

Saying this he gave the necessary directions to
the aide, who had remained standing near by, and a
little later Dick and his father were on a street car
bound for the barracks, where the School for
Musics was located.  Arriving there they soon
found themselves in the presence of the colonel
commanding the post, who, on reading the instructions
of the Commandant, looked the boy over with
an approving eye.

"I reckon you will be about the tallest apprentice
we have here," he said, and calling an orderly
directed him to escort Dick to the examining surgeon,
and invited Mr. Comstock to sit and await the result.

The Marine Corps is primarily organized for
service with the Navy, though this has by no means
been its only function in the past, nor likely to be
in the future.  On many occasions the Corps has
acted independently and also with the Army, which
is provided for in the statutes.  Being attached to
the Navy and operating with it at Navy Yards,
Naval Stations and on board ship its medical
officers are supplied by the Navy, for the Corps
maintains no sanitary service of its own.

The Navy surgeon gave the lad a very thorough
examination, one even more thorough than usual,
and after Dick had been passed and departed he
remarked to his assistant:

"That boy is one of the finest specimens of the
American youth I have ever examined.  He is so
clean limbed and perfectly muscled that it was a
joy to look at him."

After this visit, Dick, with the attendant orderly,
returned to the office of the Commanding Officer.

"Well, the surgeon states you are all right," said
Colonel Waverly, having glanced at the slip of
paper the orderly handed him; "you are quite
positive that you wish to undertake the obligation,
young man?"

"Quite, sir," was Dick's laconic response.

"Very well," and the Colonel then called loudly
for the Sergeant Major.  "Sergeant Major, this
young man is to be enlisted as an apprentice at
once.  Make out the necessary papers."

Fifteen minutes later, with his right hand held
high, his head proudly erect, Richard Comstock
took the solemn oath of allegiance to his country,
which so few young men seriously consider as they
repeat its impressive vows, and with the final words
he graduated to man's estate.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A DRUMMER IN THE U. S. MARINES`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER V


.. class:: center medium

   A DRUMMER IN THE U. S. MARINES

.. vspace:: 2

"Rise and shine!  Come on, you kids, shake a
leg and get up out of this!"

Dick Comstock sleepily rubbed his eyes for the
fraction of a second and then sprang out of his
comfortable bunk as the sergeant's voice bellowed
through the room.  In the long dormitory thirty-odd
boys, their ages ranging from fifteen to Dick's
own, were hurrying their preparations to get into
uniform and down on the parade ground in time for
reveille roll call.  Another day in a marine's life
had begun.

Out the doors and down the stairs clattered the
noisy, boisterous throng, fastening last buttons as
they emerged into the light of the midsummer
rising sun.

August was half gone and Dick had now
completed over a month and a half in Uncle Sam's
*corps d'elite*, for such it was acknowledged to be by
well informed military men of both continents.
During that time he had not found the days hanging
heavily on his hands.  Being fortunate in
knowing, before he came into the service, how to handle
the ebony sticks and blow a bugle, he had escaped a
good deal of the monotonous preliminary ground
work which the boys in the "school for musics"
were required to undergo.  It is true that he first
had to prove his ability to his drill masters, and
having received no regular instruction previously,
he made no mention of his accomplishments during
his first few days at the school.

With the others he had gone each morning to the
basement, where the drumming lessons were given;
sat astride the wooden benches with his companions
and lustily pounded out "Ma-ma, Dad-dy," till the
very walls seemed to shake and tremble from the
fearful racket.

The old retired drummer who called him up for
his first lesson asked Dick no questions.

"Comstock!" he had called out, and Dick went
modestly forward to receive his instructions from
the old martinet, for such he was, and had to be with
that mischievously inclined, irresponsible lot of
young Americans.  "I want you to start in practising
this to-day--yes, that is right--you hold the
sticks correctly!  Now, make two strokes with the
left hand,--slow, like this,--then two with the right.
Now watch me," and the old fellow tapped the
bench before him demonstrating his meaning.

With each two strokes of the left-hand stick he
would say aloud, "Ma-ma," and with the right-hand
strokes, "Dad-dy," slowly at first then more
quickly, till finally the plank beneath gave forth the
wonderful roll of sound never acquired except by
long and faithful practise.

"Now you see how it should be done!  At first
you must only try to do it slowly, for unless you get
this down thoroughly at the start you will never be
a drummer.  Next!"  And Dick was moved along
to practise in playing "Mama, Daddy," "Mama,
Daddy," for the next hour.

It had been otherwise with the bugle instructor.
He saw at once that the boy knew how to "tongue"
the mouthpiece, and that his lip was in condition,
and after trying him out the first day and finding
him able to read notes, Dick was told to learn the
calls with which he was unfamiliar and left to work
out his own salvation.

In a little over a month he passed the required
examination and was regularly appointed a drummer.

The prediction of Colonel Waverly that Dick
would probably be the largest boy in the school
proved nearly correct, there being but one other
boy, Henry Clay Cabell, a Southerner, who
approached him in size.  "Hank" or "Daddy"
Cabell, as he was called by the rest of the school
until Dick's entrance, had been the oldest boy there;
he was as tall as Richard, but did not have the
weight nor strength.  From their first meeting
Dick and Henry formed a liking for each other
which daily increased and strengthened.  Henry
confided to Dick that he hoped to work his way up
to a commission, and they agreed to help each other
with that end in view.  At the same time Dick was
graduated and made a drummer Henry Cabell was
appointed a trumpeter, and it was their fondest
desire to be detailed for duty at the same station if
sent away in the near future, as was very likely to
be the case.

On this particular August morning while the two
walked back to their squad room after the regular
physical drill which followed the reveille roll call,
they were discussing this matter.

"I reckon it won't be long before we get our
walking papers," said Henry in his deliberate
Southern drawl, "now that we are no longer apprentices.

"I'll be glad to leave that crazy bunch, anyway,"
he continued as they stopped for a moment under
the barracks arcade and watched the apprentices
racing wildly across the parade ground after being
dismissed from their drill.  "I don't reckon they
ever will learn anything.  They are only mischief-making
children, and seem to have no sense of responsibility
at all.  Sometimes I wonder why they
take such babies into a crack organization like this.
Do you reckon it ever pays in the long run?  They
try to fuss 'Old Grumpy' the entire time, and
never make the least attempt to learn their lessons
at school."

"I guess you've still a great deal to learn about
the marines," remarked Dick drily.  "In the first
place, those boys seldom fool Gunnery Sergeant
Miller with their tricks.  He has been handling
boys for such a long time in the capacity of
'N.C.O.[#] in Charge' that they have to get up
pretty early in the morning to put one over on him.
He has been through the mill himself, for he is a
graduate from this very school.  It's just because
they are kids, that's all, and most of them have not
had the advantages you and I have enjoyed, Hank,
in the way of schooling and home training and
associations.  They get the spirit of the Corps sooner
or later, I guess.  You see, we were fortunate; we
both went through high school, and that is why we
were excused from taking the lessons those boys
have to labor over.  Some of those chaps never got
beyond the primary schools till they came here."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Non-commissioned officer.

.. vspace:: 2

"Where did you get all your dope, Dick?"
inquired Henry, rather curious to know how his
friend found out so many things.

"Well, you see, Hank, I'm in the Marine Corps
to learn all I can about it.  I want to be familiar
with its history in every way, and I've had several
talks with Miller and other N.C.O.'s about service
things.  In this way I get quite a little valuable
information not put down in the rules and
regulations; and it may come in handy some day."

"Oh yes, I reckon so, and you may be right; but
for my part the N.C.O.'s are such an ignorant lot
themselves, and more or less vulgar too, that I
avoid all of them as much as possible.  Until you
came along, Dick, I hardly spoke to anyone in the
barracks.  It goes against the grain to have too
close an intimacy with them."

"Henry, you are too good a fellow to hold such
ideas; and besides, you are wrong about their being
ignorant, or vulgar either.  I am beginning to
believe that every individual can teach us something
which, if we use the knowledge properly, is bound
to help us and make us better men.  If you hope to
become a successful officer you will have to know
your men, how to treat them and to deal with them;
you will have to make their interests your interests
to a great extent; but if you despise your men
because they all don't happen to measure up to your
standard, socially, mentally and morally, I'll tell
you right now you've got a hard row to travel ahead
of you, old boy."

"Your argument doesn't appeal to me, Dick,"
responded Henry, with a little coolness in his voice.
"I reckon I'll get along.  So, as we can't agree on
that point, let us cut out the discussion and get our
quarters policed up.  It is nearly time for mess call."

It was Saturday morning, and the quarters of the
apprentices were due for an extra cleaning, for on
this day of the week the Commanding Officer of the
Post held his weekly inspection, and woe betide any
luckless youngster whose bunk was not properly
made up, shoes not accurately lined and shined, or
whose steel clothes locker was not in "apple pie order."

Each boy had his own work to do.  The narrow
aluminum painted bunks were carefully aligned
along either wall of the long room.  Folded back
on the wire springs towards the head of the bed
were the mattresses in their immaculate white
covers; on top of each mattress were the folded
sheets, their smooth edges to the front.  Next came
the pillow in its linen case; and finally surmounting
these were the gray blankets with the initials "U.S.M.C."
woven in dark blue lettering across their
centers, while plainly in view were the owners'
names in white stencil.

In the five-foot spaces between bunks were the
dark, green-painted steel lockers in which were
stored toilet articles, knickknacks, and wearing
apparel.  Each bit of clothing was laid with the folded
edge outward and flush with the front of the locker
shelves.

The hard-wood floors needed but a careful sweeping
and dusting, for Friday is field day in every
Marine Corps garrison, consequently the scrubbing
and preliminary polishing had been previously attended to.

The work was barely completed when the blaring
call of a bugle announced breakfast.

   |   "Soupy, soupy, soupy,
   |   The worst I 've ever seen:
   |   Coffee, coffee, coffee,
   |   Without a single bean:
   |   Porky, porky, porky,
   |   And not a streak of lean."
   |

Thus sang the bugle!

Again the clattering down the stairs, as not only
the music boys, but the entire garrison "fell in"
under the arcade and were marched into the spotless
mess hall to a breakfast of bacon and eggs, hot cakes
and coffee.  Then the clatter of heavy china dishes
on the wooden mess tables, the noise of knife and
fork and spoon, the clatter of voices filled the air.
Messmen, who were themselves marines detailed for
the duty, for which they received an extra compensation
of five dollars pay per month, their uniforms
covered with long white aprons, scurried to and
from the galley, with steaming pitchers of hot
coffee or large platters of golden-brown flapjacks,
serving the hungry men at the tables.

In the middle of this tumult an officer entered,
dressed in khaki, and wearing at his left side the
famous "sword of the Mamelukes" in its glittering
scabbard.

"'Ten--shun!"

The command rang out in stentorian tones
through the room.  Each man sat bolt upright in
his place.  The hustling messmen[#] stood halted in
their tracks and instant silence reigned.  Some
N.C.O., catching sight of the Officer of the Day
coming through the doorway to inspect the
morning meal, called out the order, but only for a
moment was the progress of the repast delayed; almost
before the noise had ceased the O.D.'s command,
"Carry On,"[#] was heard, and the din and clatter
began with redoubled energy.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] By Navy Regulations one mess-man is allowed for every twenty
   men in the mess.

.. class:: left small

   [#] A Navy and Marine Corps command, by voice or bugle, meaning
   for the men to continue work, drill, or occupation in which they
   were engaged when interrupted.  This command has been in vogue
   for many years.

.. vspace:: 2

In and out among the tables walked the officer,
asking this or that one questions about the food or
calling the attention of the busy messmen to some
trivial defect, then he disappeared in the direction
of the galley to taste for himself the quality of the
articles served.  This routine was part of the
O.D.'s duty.

In service, meals are quickly over, and no
loitering is allowed at tables, especially on inspection
day.  Richard, having finished his rations with all
the gusto of a healthy boy, strolled from the mess
hall back to his squad room.  The apprentices were
supposed to have their quarters in proper "police"
by mess call in the morning, and while they were
engaged in filling their stomachs, the N.C.O. in
charge, Gunnery Sergeant Miller, usually made his
unofficial morning inspection in order to discover
and correct any violations of requirements before
the regular function by the O.D., or on Saturdays
the Commanding Officer.

"Old Grumpy" knew boys from "A to Izzard,"
and though they were ever attempting to play all
sorts of pranks on him it was seldom they
succeeded.  Tall, lean, gruff, the boys soon found he
possessed a heart under the weather-beaten
exterior, and honestly admired and respected him.  He
was never unjust, he gave them no work not
necessary to their welfare.  He heard their complaints,
settled their disputes; or, if he believed these could
be settled only by a fistic encounter, he arranged the
match, and acted as referee, timekeeper and general
adviser.

He also took charge of their scholastic career, so
sadly neglected in many cases.  It was called
"Grammar" school, but its curriculum was little
more than the "three R's."  Besides being the drill
instructor, Gunnery Sergeant Miller strove at all
times to teach his young charges the manly virtues
of honesty, courage, self-control, obedience,
industry and clean living.

When Dick entered the squad room he thought at
first it must have been occupied during his absence
at breakfast by a menagerie of wild beasts.  At the
far end, where there happened to be a few empty
bunks, a regular free-for-all fight seemed to be in
progress.  Shoes were flying about the room in all
directions, boys wrestling on the floor, pulling at
one another, yelling, laughing, punching, crawling.
During "Old Grumpy's" inspection, while they
were at mess, he had found several pairs of shoes
unblackened, others not aligned, and still others
poked away in improper places.  So he gathered
all the shoes in the room in a heap and left them for
their owners to disentangle and set aright.  It was
not an easy job to find one's shoes when mixed up
in a jumbled mass of over sixty pairs, and by the
time the owners secured their rightful property, get
them again cleaned (for the scrimmage had effectually
destroyed any previous gloss), and aligned
under the bunks, brass work of drum and bugle
polished, leggins khaki-blancoed, clothing and
equipment brushed and adjusted, guard mounting
was over and first call for inspection sounded from
the area of barracks.

At the sounding of assembly the lads formed in
two ranks on their allotted parade ground, while
the companies under arms and the band marched to
their assigned places.

This was the first Saturday inspection for some
of the apprentices recently arrived, so Gunnery
Sergeant Miller took occasion to give them a few
last cautions regarding their duties, and ended by
addressing them as follows:

"I want to tell you boys that every time in the
future I don't find your shoes properly policed at
early inspection they all go into a pile as they did
this morning.  That means more work for all
hands.  I can't stop to pick out the few that are all
right when so many are all wrong.  Take the hint
and all of you coöperate and save yourselves extra
and useless work.  That's all!  At Ease!"

The strains of the band were now heard and the
apprentices watched the movements of the
companies as they went through the ceremony of
inspection and review.

The United States Marine Corps band is one of
the most famous organizations of its kind in the
world.  It is stationed at the Marine Barracks in
Washington, D.C., and plays during all parades,
guard mountings, and other like ceremonies.  Once
John Philip Sousa was its leader, and the band has
always rendered his well-known march music to
perfection.  At this moment following the sounding
of "Adjutant's Call," the space between the
barrack buildings was filled with marching men
forming in one long line with the band on its right,
swords flashing, guns glinting in the sun, and the
red, white and blue of the silken flag fluttering.  It
was indeed a martial and inspiring sight.  Later,
as the armed men passed in review before Colonel
Waverly to the sound of the Marines' own march
by Sousa--"Semper Fidelis"--every step and
movement was in perfect unison.

"Any man whose feet don't just naturally keep
in time to that music never will be a soldier if he
lives to be as old as Methuselah," remarked
Gunnery Sergeant Miller to the latest recruit near
whom he was standing, "and when you get to blow
the bugle like those musics in rear of the band, then
you're a field music and no mistake."

Behind the band twelve boys, all recent
graduates from the school, among them Richard
Comstock and Henry Cabell, were adding volume to the
music during certain parts of the march.  It was
then that the whole enclosure fairly vibrated with
the soul-stirring strains.

The review ended: the extra musics fell out and
joined their fellows under Miller, and the inspection
of the troops began.  During this function the
band rendered various selections much to the
delectation of many curious sightseers who had been
admitted at the Main Gate to the barracks.  Many
of these people were music lovers and could be
found seated on the same benches day after day,
listening to the band.

"Do you see that pretty girl across the parade,
Dick?" asked Henry.  "No, not where you are
looking, but the one standing near the bench under
the trees--the girl looking this way."

Dick's eyes following the directions of his friend
soon spied the girl referred to.  How familiar she
looked!  She reminded him of--yes,--it was,--Ursula,
his sister, and by her side stood his mother
and father.

Forgetting he was no longer a free agent, Dick
gave a wild "whoop" and started from the ranks.
Just in the nick of time Henry caught him by the
coat-tails and jerked him backward to his place in line.

"Watch yourself, Dick," muttered Henry
between his teeth, "here comes the 'Old Man!'"  His
prompt action probably saved Dick a severe
reprimand, if nothing worse.

Gunnery Sergeant Miller had whirled about on
hearing the unaccustomed war whoop but he was
not swift enough to catch the culprit.  So he was
forced to postpone further investigation of the
untoward circumstance until another time, for Colonel
Waverly was now but a few yards away, coming to
inspect the apprentices.

"Attention!  Prepare for inspection; Open--Ranks; March!"

The apprentices became a stiff line of human
ramrods and at the command of execution--"March,"--the
rear rank took three paces backward
and halted, while in both lines heads and eyes
were turned smartly to the right.  Having verified
the alignment of both ranks the Gunnery Sergeant
stepped to the front and commanded:

"Front!"

Each head snapped to the front.  The N.C.O. in
charge then saluted the Commanding Officer by
bringing the sword he carried up to a position in
front of the center of his body, the right hand
grasping the hilt a few inches from his chin, with
the blade slanting upward and slightly outward.
This part of the ceremony being over Colonel
Waverly carefully inspected every boy in line.  He
examined their shoes, the fit of their clothing, their
equipment, the cut of their hair and even, if truth
must be told, their necks, to see if soap and water
had been recently and properly applied.

All this time Dick was nearly bursting with
impatience.  He began to believe the Colonel never
would finish.  At last the ordeal was over and
immediately on being dismissed he requested and
received of "Old Grumpy" permission to speak to
the Commanding Officer.  Approaching him, Dick
rendered his most military salute.

"What do you wish, Music?" questioned Colonel Waverly.

"Drummer Comstock would thank the Commanding
Officer for permission to go to the visitors'
benches and speak with his mother, father and sister.
They have just arrived, and are over near the
gate, sir."

"Granted, young man, and you are excused for
the rest of the day."

Dick Comstock cannot recollect whether or not
he saluted his colonel after a fervent "Thank you,
sir," but he still remembers the feeling of those
motherly arms about him and the sweet kisses on
his lips as Mrs. Comstock gathered her stalwart
drummer boy to her bosom,--drum, drumsticks
and all.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A QUEER CONVERSATION`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER VI


.. class:: center medium

   A QUEER CONVERSATION

.. vspace:: 2

"We were here all the time, Dick," said Ursula
soon after the first outburst of joyful greeting had
subsided, "and we all tried our level best to catch
your eye but, goodness--you were so military you
would look neither to the right nor left," and she
straightened her back and puffed out her cheeks in
comic imitation of her brother on parade.

"It is quite as well I didn't see you, for if I had,
I'd have forgotten every bit of military discipline
I've absorbed since being here," responded Dick,
smiling good-naturedly at his sister's mockery; "as
it was I came near making a break when Hank
Cabell pointed you out to me; but fortunately he
grabbed me and saved my reputation as a marine."

"Is 'Hank,' as you call him, the boy about whom
you wrote to us--the Southerner?" inquired Dick's father.

"Yes, Dad, and I want you to meet him.  He's
a dandy chap and comes from a good family,
though I believe they are very poor, and likewise
very proud."

"Sometimes that combination isn't all that could
be desired as an asset," drily remarked Mr. Comstock.

"But he is all right, Dad," said Dick, quickly
coming to the defense of his friend against any
possible insinuation.  "There he is now.  I'll get him
to come over here."

Suiting actions to his words Richard presently
returned with Henry, and the formality of introductions
over, Mr. Comstock invited his son's friend
to join them at luncheon and for the day.  Henry's
rather sombre face lighted up with pleasure.

"I should be very glad to go, sir, providing I can
secure early liberty," he said.

"How about you, Dick, are you in the same boat
as your friend Henry?" inquired his father.

"No, Dad; you see, when I told Colonel Waverly
you were here he excused me for the rest of
the day," replied Richard, and turning to Henry he
said, "Suppose you hurry up and get permission,
Hank, while I go and put away my implements of
warfare."

"Implements of war, indeed!" laughed Ursula,
pointing banteringly at the drum slung over her
brother's shoulder, "and are your weapons as
dangerous as my brother's?" asked she, turning her
questioning eyes on Henry.

"Mine consists of a brass trumpet," replied the
boy with a smile, "but it has one advantage over
the drum as a weapon, for it makes a handy
bludgeon in time of need."

"Run along, boys," cautioned Mrs. Comstock,
"it is nearly noon and I for one am famished."

"I reckon it would be better for us to get
permission to wear cits; it might be less embarrassing
for you all," and Henry looked inquiringly at
Richard's parents.

"Not for me," interposed Dick, with some emphasis;
"I'm in uniform, and I'm proud of it, and
so are my people."

"I didn't mean it in that light," Henry replied,
flushing at the suggested rebuke.  "I was merely
thinking of your mother and sister and the
possibility of saving them embarrassment.  You may not
know this, but enlisted men in uniform are not
greeted cordially everywhere, even here in Washington."

"Excuse me, Henry, for being so hasty; I
had not thought of that side of the question,"
said Dick frankly, and he turned red himself
because of his readiness to find fault with his chum's
remark.

"Yes, Henry was quite right in what he said,"
stated Mr. Comstock.  "I read of many such
incidents in the papers; but there are laws now which
slowly but nevertheless surely are making people
understand that the enlisted man in uniform may
no longer be treated with disrespect.  A better
class of men seem to be joining the colors these
days, and they are calling their defamers to a strict
accounting.  But this is not getting something to
satisfy our appetites.  You boys hurry up now and
get yourselves ready."

After a bountiful luncheon at one of the best
hotels in the city a tour of the capital was proposed
and an enjoyable afternoon of sightseeing followed.
In Dick's spare moments during his stay in Washington
he had visited nearly every one of the public
buildings and he took great pleasure in showing his
sister about.  The three young people even climbed
the thousand steps of Washington Monument,
scorning the slow-moving elevator which carried
their elders up the five hundred feet which still left
them fifty-five feet beneath the apex of the
wonderful shaft.

Ursula was enchanted with this superb view of
the "magic city," as she was pleased to call it, and
for a long time they all enjoyed the panorama of
land and water, field and forest, country and city,
spread before them to the distant horizons.

After this they walked back to their hotel, and
while Mrs. Comstock enjoyed a little rest before
dinner and Mr. Comstock departed on a business
engagement the trio of young people occupied
themselves in animated conversation in one of the
ornate reception rooms.

Feeling that Ursula and Richard might appreciate
being alone together for a while, Henry excused
himself, promising to return in time for the evening
programme, which would not end until after the
roof garden supper following the theatre.

After his departure Ursula and Dick strolled
over to one of the low windows and pushing aside
the long curtains which reached to the floor they
stepped into the vacant space of a small narrow
balconied window ledge and stood looking at
the passing traffic.  A group of palms, the
half-closed blinds and the long curtains effectually
concealed them from the view of people inside the
room.

The mere fact of being together was happiness
in itself for these two devoted young people and
gradually a silence fell upon them as they stood
absorbed in the scenes outside.

A subdued murmur of voices came from the room
behind them, and Dick heard someone say:

"Here is a quiet place where we may talk freely."

Glancing over his shoulder the boy saw three men
seating themselves and deliberately placing their
chairs near the window where he and his sister were
standing.  He was wondering why they took such
care with the chairs, when again the same voice gave
him the reason.

"We can see from here whomever comes into the
room, gentlemen, and it is well to observe caution
while discussing this question."

"Shall we speak in German, Señor?" brusquely
inquired a heavily built man whose blond hair stood
up in short stiff bristles on his head.

"Si, Señor," deferentially replied the third
member of the party, a slender, black-haired man whose
dark skin announced him a resident of some
Latin-American country, and from then on they spoke in
the tongue agreed upon, and so quietly that Dick
could not overhear.  Knowing that he was an
unintentional eavesdropper he turned back again to the
street feeling it was unnecessary to move from the
window, for unless he made an especial attempt the
words of the speakers were inaudible to his ears.
A little time passed in this way, when suddenly
Dick placed his hand over Ursula's mouth, for she
had turned, meaning to address him.  At the same
moment he motioned her to be silent.

To both Richard and Ursula Comstock the
German spoken language was an open book, for
Mrs. Comstock had employed German nursemaids to
attend them when they were little tots, and until
Ursula was twelve years of age she had had a German
governess.  Even the cook, a family retainer for
years, was a native of Cologne.  In consequence
the loud remark which Dick heard from the room
behind was as significant as if spoken in English.
He knew that the big foreigner from across the
ocean had uttered it.  There was no mistaking the
deep, abrupt, explosive voice.

"The United States can do nothing!  Germany
can whip her any day!  Germany can whip the
whole world; and some day she will!"

The speaker had risen and the others now pushed
their chairs back and stood beside him.  Their
voices came distinctly to the ears of the boy and girl
tensely listening in the shadow of the blind.

"Well, I should not go so far as that, you
know!" protested the tall man who had led them
to the window for their talk and whom Dick decided
was an Englishman.

"Maybe you wouldn't, but it's so," reiterated
the German, using his words as a ruffian would a
cudgel.  "Now, Señor, I must have your decision
regarding this canal business at once, or it will be
too late to be of any use to us.  If your revolution
in Nicaragua is a success, will the man you put in
the presidential chair grant Germany the canal
right-of-way or not?"

"I cannot tell you, Señor.  It is a question
which must be placed before the committee.  I am
only empowered to offer you the things already
mentioned in return for financing our uprising.
The United States has a concession, I believe--had
it as far back as eighteen eighty-two.  They would
not permit us to agree to your proposal."

"I tell you that you are wrong.  The United
States never made any treaty with Nicaragua.
Your government granted a concession to a private
corporation in 1897 to build a canal, and they bluffed
for a while at digging it on the Atlantic side.  The
United States also sent a commission down to
Nicaragua several times, but nothing came of it.
Then they forced Panama into revolt against the
Colombian Government, and made her give them
the present location.  Therefore if you want our
money and our secret aid your candidate must
agree to Germany's terms."

"Suppose we give Señor Cabanas a few days to
consult with his committee," suggested the Englishman
in his mild voice.

"The committee knows it already," exclaimed the
exasperated Teuton.  "The subject was thrashed
out in Leon while I was there six months ago.  I
tell you it is subterfuge, pure and simple.  They
know what we want, and they should have
deputized their man to grant our demands."

"Pardon me again, Señor," came the suave voice
of the little man, yet his eyes must have flashed
ominously at the brutal pounding of the German's
heavy voice, "I assure you that this is absolute
news to me."

"It shouldn't be!  Your committeemen are a set
of vacillating fools; that is all, and the best I can
say of them.  Go back to them and arrange it; but
I warn you--not a mark,--not a single mark,
unless----"

"Be careful, Mein Herr, here comes the house
detective--they are all secret service men in
Washington.  We had best postpone this and meet
again."

It was the Englishman who gave the warning,
and with the words the three conspirators moved
towards the door leading to the hotel lobby.

Behind the curtains Richard and Ursula still
stood, hardly daring to breathe for fear of
disclosing their presence.  Every word uttered by the
plotters since Dick placed his hand over Ursula's
lips had been distinctly heard and understood by
both, and they realized the import of the
information they had obtained so unintentionally.

Barely had the three men disappeared when
Dick, exclaiming, "Wait for me here!" was
running towards the door in pursuit.

Henry Cabell, returning from his self-imposed
absence, came around the corner of the entrance at
that identical moment, and the lads collided
forcibly.  The delay caused thereby was sufficient to
enable the quarry to efface themselves and though
Dick made a careful search his efforts were futile.

Returning, he found Ursula excitedly relating
their experience to Henry.  They both looked up
expectantly at Dick's entrance.

"Did you catch them, Dick?" his sister inquired
breathlessly.  "Did you have them arrested?"

"No, I lost them," announced Dick in a disgusted
tone; "I couldn't have them arrested anyway
on the little we know; this is a free country.  But I
sure would have liked to see their faces.  All the
time they had their backs towards us, and I merely
glanced at them when they first came in.  I do wish
I'd been more observing."

"What would you have done had you caught
them?" asked Ursula.

"I'm sure I don't know; only I'd have pointed
them out to that house detective, for one thing."

"Could you identify any of them if you saw them
again?" asked Henry.

"I'd know that big brute of a German by his
back, in a million, but I'm not sure of the others,--yes,
I believe I could tell the Englishman too."

"I should know him if I ever saw him again,"
said Ursula.  "I never should forget that peculiar
suit of clothes he wore, nor----"

Both the boys broke into a shout of laughter at
this remark and Dick said:

"That's like a woman; noticing the dress first of all."

"Oh, you need not laugh, Dickie dear; I do not
doubt that he has other clothes, but the chief thing
I should recognize him by was a peculiar patch of
white hair on the right side of his head behind his
ear, and also half the middle finger of his left hand
was missing."

"We apologize most humbly for our premature
expression of opinion regarding your powers of
observation," said Dick, bowing low to Ursula with
mock deference, "but now the question is,--what
shall we do with this information we have acquired?"

"Here is Father; let us ask him," and Ursula
ran to greet Mr. Comstock who at that moment
approached them.

After hearing of the episode, Mr. Comstock
advised Dick to write out all the details as he and
Ursula remembered them, and he, Mr. Comstock,
would see that the report was placed in proper hands.

"I believe you have discovered a very pretty plot,
which would seriously damage us if carried to an
ultimate conclusion," said Dick's father.  "We all
know that Germany is expanding her trade lines
enormously and making greater strides in systematic
foreign commercialism than any other nation,
but I can hardly conceive she would dare to finance
such a risky venture with the canal right-of-way as
her only payment."

"Would Uncle Sam permit Germany or any
other country to build a canal across Nicaragua
now that the Panama Canal is almost completed?"
asked Henry.

"I doubt it so much that I feel perfectly safe in
saying, most emphatically,--No!"

"The United States would never allow any
country to acquire territory in the Western
Hemisphere--it would be contrary to the provisions of
the Monroe Doctrine," said Dick.  He leaned over
and picked his campaign hat from the floor, then
pointing to the small metal object thereon, he continued:

"This little insignia of the marines tells its own
story; this is the Western Hemisphere; across it
the anchor and above the eagle with spreading
wings, holding a ribbon on which is inscribed
the motto of our Corps.  It is our part to look
out for these little countries, and according to
history the marines have been doing it mighty
effectually since the United States became a
nation.  And I guess we can keep up the good work."

"With the able assistance of one Drummer
Richard Comstock, U.S.M.C.!" slyly interposed
Ursula, and Dick joined in the laughter which
followed her remark.

"The thing I can't figure out," said Henry, "is
what the Englishman is mixed up in it for!  Do
you reckon England is joining hands with Germany?"

"No, I doubt anything of that nature,"
answered Mr. Comstock.  "The interests of
England and the United States are too closely allied for
her to risk rupturing them by any such hazardous
undertaking."

"I would not trust an Englishman as far as I
could see him!  I cannot bear them!" exclaimed
Ursula, vehemently.

"Why do you feel so bitter against our mother
country?" asked Henry, who was surprised at her
outburst.  "Is that the general feeling up North?
For I am quite certain it is not in the South."

"Ursula's feeling is largely due to local
influences," answered her father.  "In our home town
the English have never been popular since the day
during the Revolutionary War one of their officers,
a major, after having received the surrender of our
brave Colonel Ledyard at the Battle of Groton
Heights, took that officer's proffered sword and ran
him through the heart and then commanded his
troops to massacre the surviving gallant defenders
of the fort, who were drawn up, unarmed, in one of
the bastions.  That same day our city was burned
to the ground by the traitor, Benedict Arnold."

"The brute!  Why!  I'd rather be Benedict
Arnold than that Englishman," and Ursula's pretty
face looked very stern and her hands clenched in anger.

"It was fortunate you both understood German,"
said Henry a little later in the evening.  "I
never could bear the study of languages, though I
did struggle along for a year or two with Latin at school."

"We neither of us have studied German, merely
picked it up as children, and we always use it
talking to the cook.  But I like French and had it three
years at school, but really no practise in it," said Dick.

They were at the theatre and Dick sat next to his
father, which afforded the two many opportunities
to converse during the vaudeville acts.

"I am glad, Dick, that you keep writing to your
mother regularly," said Mr. Comstock; "it is a fine
habit to form and to stick to.  If every boy wrote
home at least once a week, I believe the world would
be a better place.  So many boys grow careless and
after a while lose touch with the home ties and
associations.  Then, too, besides being a good thing for
you personally, you have no idea what those letters
mean to your mother."

"I like to get letters, and unless I wrote them on
my part my mail would be pretty slim," replied
Dick.  "I have seen already how the men welcome
the sight of the mail orderly, and some who never
get mail envy those who do.  Some of our boys
never receive home news, and they must be
homesick and heart-sick at times the way they sort of
hang around and listen when some fellow happens
to read out a few of the things that happen back in
the home town.  I know I'd be, were I in their place."

"You will never regret being thoughtful when it
comes to giving your mother a little line or two of
written happiness.  But in your letters I have
noticed an absence of complaints.  Is it because you
have none to make or that you didn't want us to
feel bad by recounting them?"

"I haven't a single kick coming, Dad, for we are
treated splendidly.  Good food and well cooked,
good clothes, fine beds and healthy work.  I only
wish it was more strenuous than it is.  I spend a lot
of time in the gym and playing ball.  I did hope we
musics would get more military drill than we do,
but outside of a little marching and physical drills
and a 'hike' across the river into Maryland, we do
nothing of real soldiering.  One of the privates has
taught me the manual of arms and bayonet
exercises, so I'm not wasting my opportunities.  I
think that in a year more I can get my rank changed
to a private, then I shall be in line for promotion to
corporal."

"Time enough, my boy.  It is better to make
haste slowly and thoroughly, for I don't doubt you
will have to be very thorough if you are to succeed.
Have you any idea what books you will require?"

"Well, I'm studying the U.S. Army Guard
Manual, which the marines have adopted, and there
is a book called 'Landing Force and Small Arms
Instruction' for the Navy which is just filled with
meat and will take some time to digest.  I shall
have no difficulty in getting the books as I need
them, and my high school education was along the
lines that would have helped me most at
Annapolis--physics, chemistry, astronomy, surveying and so
forth.  All these are sure to be valuable, to say
nothing of the mathematics up to trig."

"It pleases me to hear you like the life," said
Dick's father.  "That is more than half the battle
always,--the interest and liking we have for the
task at hand.  No man ever became successful
without being in perfect harmony with his work and
his environments, no matter what his walk in life."

Richard's mother was more solicitous regarding
her son's creature comforts, and the following day
she insisted on making a visit to the barracks and
seeing with her own eyes exactly how and where
her boy lived.  The manner of her request so
enchanted Colonel Waverly when she asked to be
taken around the post that he volunteered to act
as her escort, nor was her New England sense of
cleanliness and order once outraged with what she saw.

They visited the living quarters, offices, mess hall,
auditorium, storerooms and galley, and she even
tasted with approval the food in preparation for
the noonday meal.  A youthful Lieutenant of
Marines, accompanying the party, insisted on
presenting Ursula with several pairs of N.C.O. dress
chevrons and trumpet cords from the Quartermaster's
stores, with which she might decorate a sofa
pillow, and not to be outdone in gallantry, Henry
Cabell, on seeing these evidences of the officer's
regard for the charming sister of his friend, made a
dash for the post canteen before its closing hour
and purchased for her a dainty little gold and silver
pin, a miniature of the Marine Corps emblem, for
which he required her to give him a copper in payment.

Dick and Henry had not been included in the
inspection tour but they later accompanied their
visitors to the train which carried them away that
beautiful Sunday afternoon back to New England.

"These two days have been, sure enough, the
happiest days I have spent since leaving home,"
remarked Henry as the boys retraced their way to
the barracks.  "I didn't half thank your folks for
the great pleasure they have given me."

"It was fine, wasn't it?" said Dick simply, for
his mind still dwelt on the last proud look his father
had given him; the suspicion of tears bravely
suppressed in Ursula's eyes and voice; and the
never-to-be-forgotten good-bye kiss from his mother's
trembling lips.

Yes, it was fine indeed!

And how fortunate this visit was, for two weeks
later came orders sending aboard the cruiser *Denver*
a detail of marines to replace men whose tour of
sea-duty had expired, and with that detail went
Richard Comstock and Henry Cabell, Drummer
and Trumpeter.





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.. _`OFF FOR TREASURE ISLAND`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER VII


.. class:: center medium

   OFF FOR TREASURE ISLAND

.. vspace:: 2

The little detachment for the *Denver* were
ordered to go on board fully equipped.  This
necessitated packing all personal belongings in the
khaki-colored canvas knapsacks and haversacks.

Gunnery Sergeant Miller happening through
the squad room found Dick and Henry thus
engaged soon after they had been notified to be ready
for departure in two hours' time.

"Want some help?" he questioned, stopping
near their bunks.

And indeed they did want help, for though they
had been taught how to make up their packs, they
had never before been required to stow away every
blessed thing they owned in one of the infernal
things--this being about the way they expressed
themselves in answer to his query.

"To begin with, you won't be allowed to have
any cit clothing on shipboard," said the Sergeant.
"The best thing to do, if you don't want to send
them home, is to sell them to Ikie Cohen across the
street, or if you choose, you can pack them up with
the things you won't need and turn them over to
the Police Sergeant for storage; then when you
transfer to shore duty again have them sent to your
new station."

Following this sound advice the boys proceeded
to divide their possessions into two lots.  Even
then it did not seem possible to carry along
everything laid out for their taking.

"Now dump the whole outfit on your bunk,"
directed Miller, "and first fold your blankets and
clothing in the way you have been taught.  The
detachment will travel in blues, so before doing
anything else run down to the Post Tailor and tell him
to press them in a hurry and send them up.  Here,
Cabell, you take both uniforms with you and
Comstock will help you on your return."

Henry picked up the new blue uniforms, which
the boys had not worn as yet, and hurried to the
Post Tailor.  Then proceeding under his able
instructor, Dick first packed his knapsack to its limit.
Two blankets, three suits of khaki, two O.D. shirts,
three suits of summer underwear, one pair of tan
shoes, six pairs of socks, a towel or two, and his
toilet articles, one by one disappeared into the
enchanted bag.  His overcoat, recently issued him,
was rolled and tied in straps to the top of the pack
after fastening down the flaps by means of the
rawhide thongs.  In the meantime Henry had returned.

"Put that extra pair of tan shoes in your
haversack with all the rest of your odds and ends,"
advised their instructor.  "You will wear leggins and
campaign hats, though personally I think it a poor
combination with blues, and you can hook your blue
cap to the pack after you get it on."

"Sergeant, didn't you tell me that marines used
to have dress coats with long skirts, black spiked
helmets, white helmets and white uniforms?" asked
Dick, while he stowed away a little pocket edition
of the New Testament in his haversack as the final
act of his work in hand.

"Yes, that's right," answered Miller.

"Well, for the love of Mike, how did you ever
travel with all that junk and still always be the
first to get there when there was trouble brewing?"

"Indeed it was a question in the old days," said
Miller reminiscently, "but you must understand
that when hurry-up orders came along we took
what was needed for the work in hand and no extra
stuff at all.  When we made a permanent change
of station then we hauled along our whole
equipment, and what we could not carry on our backs was
shipped to us by the Quartermaster."

"About how much do you reckon this knapsack
weighs, Sergeant?" asked Henry.

"I should say at least sixty pounds--that means
all your equipment, and it is about the weight you
would carry on a regular hike, counting arms and
ammunition and all that.  Now when you boys
come to leave ship and go to a shore station, you will
be surprised to find how much more junk you will
have to send ashore than you took on board.  It's
always the way.  Things accumulate, and you
never seem to know where they all come from.
Many a souvenir and trinket I've left behind or lost
in my time which I'd like to have right now.  If
you are able to, take my advice and send all your
little keepsakes back to your home people.  The
day will come when you will have a heap of fun
looking them over and living again the pleasure
you experienced in acquiring them."

Word having been passed for the detachment to
"fall in" for the O.D.'s final inspection, Dick and
Henry struggled into their harness.  Canteens and
haversacks were slung by their leather straps over
opposite shoulders and the galling heavy knapsacks
adjusted as comfortably as possible.  Besides these
impedimenta each boy was armed with a web belt
from which hung a forty-five calibre Colt's revolver
in a fair leather holster, tightly strapped to the
right leg to prevent swinging.  Dick was also
loaded down with his drum and sticks, and Henry
carried his trumpet with the red trumpet cord
attached.  The other men of the detachment carried
their Springfields--among the best military rifles in
the world--and bayonets in leather scabbards.

The trip to Philadelphia and its Navy Yard,
where the *Denver* was lying, occupied a little over
three hours, so that the men from the Washington
Barracks reported on board their future home in
time for evening mess call.

First Sergeant Stephen Douglass, commanding
the Marine Detachment of the U.S.S. *Denver*, a
gray-haired, clean-shaven, wiry little man, was
known throughout the service as a "sea-going
marine."  Never, if he could prevent it, would he
serve at a barracks, and his length of service and
known ability generally secured a respect for his
wishes from his superiors.  The meal having been
quickly disposed of by the new arrivals, he called
them to his tiny office to assign them their stations.

"Here is where we begin our web-footed existence,"
whispered Dick to Henry as they stood waiting
their turn outside the door.

"It is a little bit of a boat, isn't it?" irrelevantly
answered Henry.

"Don't say 'boat,'" cautioned Dick, "for in the
Navy everything big enough to fly a commissioned
officer's pennant is dignified by being called a ship."

"What is a 'commissioned officer's pennant'?"
inquired Henry.

"It is a long narrow flag tapering to a point,
with the wide part near the hoist, where it is
attached, you know--blue with thirteen white stars in
the field, and the rest is divided in half
lengthwise with a red and a white stripe.  Vessels
commanded by a commissioned officer of the Navy
only are entitled to fly it at the truck of the
mainmast."

"Thanks, Dick; I reckon I am pretty green, but
what's a 'truck'?  It sounds like a wagon of some
sort!"

"That is the name given to the very top of a
mast or flagstaff.  You'll soon pick up these little
points," said Dick generously.  "I just happen to
know some of them because of being brought up in
an old whaling port and having seen and known
about ships all my life; but I've a lot to learn myself."

First Sergeant Douglass now called the boys in
to interview them.

"Your first duty, eh?" he said after adjusting
his glasses and glancing over the enlistment record
which accompanies every marine in his travels.
"Either of you know anything about a ship?" and
he looked up at the two youngsters with an approving gaze.

Dick said nothing, but Henry spoke for him:

"Drummer Comstock does; he has been making
me acquainted with some of the many things I
never knew before."

"To-morrow morning I'll have Corporal Dorlan
take all the new arrivals over the ship, and I want
you two musics to become acquainted with every
nook and corner of her.  You will have to act as
messengers for the Officer of the Deck and must
be ready to go to any place and find any person
without hesitation.  If you shouldn't happen to
know where the place or person or thing is located
then you must be prepared to know how and where
to find out about 'em in the most expeditious
manner.  The Officer of the Deck can't be bothered with
questions, so it's up to the messenger to know."

"Is Corporal Dorlan any relation to a Sergeant
Michael Dorlan who was on the *Nantucket*?" asked
Richard.

"Couldn't be closer related," answered the First
Sergeant; "he is one and the same person.  Do you
know him?"

"I should say I do," beamed Dick; "he saved the
life of a boy friend of mine this past summer; but
I thought he was a sergeant."

"He was a sergeant, but unfortunately an enemy
of Dorlan's got the best of him, and he was reduced
to the rank of corporal by sentence of a court-martial."

"My, I'm sorry to hear that," returned Dick,
honestly grieved over the misfortune of his
brave acquaintance.

"Yes, boys, everyone who knows Mike Dorlan
is sorry, and I hope neither of you will ever
have an enemy like his, nor a 'court' against
your record, nor any other kind of an offense,
for that matter.  Your slate is clean now; keep
it so, and when you've finished your enlistment
you'll be wearing one of these,--and proud of it
too, I'll warrant."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

.. _`The Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal`:

.. figure:: images/img-115.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: The Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal

   The Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal

.. class:: center

   THE MARINE CORPS GOOD CONDUCT MEDAL

.. class:: small

   Awarded to any enlisted man in
   the corps at the expiration of his
   enlistment who receives a mark of
   "Excellent" and who has not been
   tried by Court-Martial.  If the man
   reënlists the possession of this medal
   entitles him to receive 83-½ cents a
   month additional pay.  If at the
   end of subsequent enlistment he
   receives the Excellent discharge--a
   bronze bar is awarded to be attached
   to the ribbon and suitably engraved.
   These bars also bring additional
   monthly pay.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

The old sergeant opened a little drawer of
his desk and took from it a bronze medal
suspended from a bar of like metal by a bright
red silk ribbon through the center of which ran
a narrow band of deep blue.  Across the
ribbon, almost covering it, were other narrow bronze
bands fastened.

"This here is a Marine Corps Good Conduct
Medal, and each of the smaller bands of bronze
means a renewal of the medal's original significance
for a whole enlistment.  But to earn one of these
you must 'mind your p's and q's' and be 'Johnnie
on the spot' if it is your duty to be there at all."

After the boys finished their examination of the
trophy, the First Sergeant continued:

"Now to return to business.  Comstock, your
pay number is six, your watch number is
seven-twenty-one, your locker number, twenty-three, and
you are in the port watch; your station at 'Abandon
Ship' is in the sailing launch.  Yours, Cabell, are,
pay number, seven; watch number, seven-three-naught-seven;
locker number, twenty-four, and you
are in the steamer for 'Abandon Ship.'  Report to
the Police Sergeant, get your locker keys, draw
your hammicks and find out where you swing.
You will find plenty of work to keep you busy from
now till 'taps.'  Remember, I am always ready to
listen to your complaints if you have any and will
right them if able, but I also expect you to do your
duty up to the handle.  And just a word more
before you go.  The marines of this detachment are
proud of their reputation of being the best looking,
cleanest, smartest division on this ship.  You are
now responsible that that standard isn't lowered in
the slightest degree.  You will find a copy of the
ship's routine on the Bulletin Board in our
compartment.  That's all."

The sergeant rose as he finished his talk and both
boys had unconsciously straightened up to the
position of attention.  At their dismissal they
simultaneously rendered the old veteran a military salute,
but First Sergeant Stephen Douglass was too much
the proper and precise marine to accept an honor
to which he was not entitled.

"Wait!" he commanded as they turned to leave
the office, "you salute only commissioned or
warrant officers in our service, never non-commissioned
or petty-officers, except at certain prescribed times
during drill or ceremonies.  Run along."

"I knew better than to salute him," said Henry
while they were waiting for Police Sergeant
Bruckner to return from some duty he was at the time
engaged in, "but somehow it seemed to be the only
proper thing to do, he was so fine."

"Glad to hear you talk like that, Hank, old boy!
I told you that the N.C.O.'s were a pretty fine lot
when you get to know them," and Dick was very
well pleased that his friend was beginning to come
to his own way of thinking.

Outside the office were the rest of the men who
had journeyed with them, all waiting to draw
hammocks.  None of these men had served at sea
before this, consequently their conception of a
"hammock" was formed from those artistic things of net,
made up in gay colors which decorated the piazzas
and lawns ashore.  It was quite a different article
that Police Sergeant Bruckner dealt out to each of
them.  It consisted of a white piece of canvas, six
feet long by three and one-half feet wide.  Across
either end eyelets were worked, through which
passed the small lines called "nettles," and these
in turn were fastened to a galvanized iron ring.
These last two articles combined were called the
hammock "clews."  In addition to these, a manila
rope lanyard was spliced to one of the rings to
facilitate swinging the hammock between hooks
fixed rigidly, in almost every conceivable corner, to
the overhead beams of the ship.  Each man's
hammock had a small piece of canvas sewed to it about
eighteen inches from the head upon which was his
watch number in stencil.  These watch numbers
corresponded to the numbers over the hooks where
their hammock berths or sleeping places were
located.  Every man on shipboard who swings in a
hammock has two issued to him; one of them is in
constant use and the other kept below in the
sail-room, each division stowing their own hammocks
separately in large canvas bags made for the purpose.

Mattresses made of "kapok"[#] and mattress
covers were also given each man, and with these
articles under their arms the new arrivals returned
to the marines' compartment where, after receiving
the keys to their lockers, they proceeded to "stow
away their gear."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Kapok is the product of a tropical American tree which was
   introduced into the Island of Java and there extensively cultivated.
   The tree has numerous uses.  It puts forth a pod somewhat similar
   to a milkweed pod, filled with seeds to which a cottony substance is
   attached.  This fibre is impervious to water and consequently being
   buoyant has been found to be better than cork for use in
   life-preservers.  Of late years
   our navy has utilized great quantities of
   kapok in making sea mattresses, which in emergency could be used
   as life rafts,--also jacket life preservers.  Kapok is very
   inflammable.

.. vspace:: 2

"This is like having the 'makings' for a
cigarette and not being able to roll one," remarked
Henry, as he gazed ruefully at the heavy canvas,
the rings, strings and rope, his mattress and
blankets, lying on the deck at his feet.

"The only difference being we don't smoke, while
we do sleep," sagely added Dick.  "Perhaps some
of these other fellows will initiate us into the
mysteries of this folding bed.  Let's ask them."

With the help of willing hands the clews were
soon tied in place, mattress and blankets rolled
inside the canvas, and the lashings properly made.
Then their long sausage-like beds were stowed
away in the hammock nettings to remain until the
proper time came for reissuing them to their
owners, which was regulated by routine calls and
schedule.

"I've learned another sea-going expression,"
said Henry as the two boys finally completed their
work, "and that is, never call a 'hammock'
anything but a 'hammick,' or they will know you are a
rookie."

At taps the boys found it to be quite an athletic
feat to get into those swinging contraptions, but
having once succeeded they settled down for a well
earned sleep.  But who ever heard of rookies
coming on board ship for the first night who escaped at
least one tumble to the hard deck below, sent there
by the sharp knife blade drawn across the taut foot
rope, in the hand of the omnipresent practical
joker?  And the experience of the two music boys
this first night on board the *Denver* was in no way
different from hundreds of others before them.

Richard and Henry found the daily routine on
board ship very pleasant.  At first Henry was
inclined to feel peeved because there was not a
commissioned officer in command of the marine
detachment which was honored by his presence.  But he
admired First Sergeant Douglass, and daily he was
losing his snobbish ideas regarding his messmates.
Shipboard life is a much closer relationship than
life in the barracks, and he was beginning to find
that manhood did not necessarily go hand in hand
with riches, polished manners and a finely branched
family tree.  At the first opportunity, Richard had
made himself known to Corporal Dorlan, and that
worthy individual acted much in the status of guide
and mentor to the two boys, nor could they have
had a better, for though Michael was his own worst
enemy, where others were concerned, he was
constantly preaching against the "Demon Rum," as he
dubbed the agent of his misfortune.

"'Twould be far better for me," said he sadly,
"if the powers that be never would promote me.
For whinever I git to be a sergeant, then begorra, I
always have to celebrate, and it's all off with old
Mike."

Having taken the necessary stores aboard for her
cruise, the gunboat quietly slipped from her berth
one brisk morning in November and was soon on
her way down the broad reaches of the Delaware
River.  At the Delaware Breakwater the pilot was
dropped.  Many of the crew took advantage of this
opportunity to send ashore last messages and
letters, for the *Denver* was bound for the West
Indies; her first port of entry would be Culebra
Island, and her first landfall Porto Rico, a six days'
voyage.

It is a peculiar fact of ocean travel that whenever
a ship is about to put to sea the general topic
of conversation seems to hover around one
point--seasickness.  Everywhere one turned that beautiful
morning the fatal word pursued one.

"Ever been seasick, Jack?"

"Well, only onct in a big typhoon coming across
from Formosa," or:

"Nuh, this is the first time I've been to sea, but
I've struck her some rough in the lakes, and I guess
I can stand it," or:

"Son, if you get sick and want a quick cure, take
a nice piece of fat pork, tie a string to it and----"
but why go into further detail, when the men who
never before had seen blue water were half sick
before they left the wharf, so vivid their imagination,
and thoroughly sick when finally the *Denver* began
digging her nose in the short seas they encountered
on leaving the protection of the inland waterways!

Henry Cabell had fully determined he would not
be seasick, but the sight of so many in that
predicament placed his resolutions in the realm of other
broken vows, and he was soon *hors de combat*.
Dick, on the contrary, never felt the slightest
discomfort, over which good fortune he was highly
elated.  He did not do as many others did, namely,
gloat over the misery of the less fortunate ones.

The evening of the second day out found nearly
all the sick men on the upper decks, albeit many
were "green in the gills" from their unpleasant experience.

"You feel as if you didn't care whether you died
or not," said Henry, while he and Dick stood at the
bow of the ship holding to the life-lines that
encompassed the entire main deck, "but I don't
reckon I'll be sick again.  I feel nearly all right
now, and even this sudden dipping and
stomach-dropping rising hardly gives me a squirm."

Dick did not answer.  He was hanging over the
rail looking down at the slight lines of phosphorescence
spreading out in quivering angles from the
bows with each plunge of the ship.  He was enjoying
every moment of this new life.  No longer did
he regret his inability to get the appointment to
Annapolis, for already the spell of the Marine
Corps was clutching at every fibre of his being,
claiming him body and soul for its service.  In the
crew's library he had found a copy of Collum's
History of the Corps and for the first time he was
reveling in its illustrious deeds from the day of its
inception, which antedated the regular Navy and
even the Declaration of Independence,--November
11, 1775, up to and including the part they took in
the relief of Pekin in July, 1900.  As they stood
there, Corporal Dorlan, making the round of
sentinels, stopped for a moment's converse.

"How goes it, me lad?" he inquired of Henry,
and without waiting for a reply, he continued,
"To-morrow we'll be findin' of ourselves in the
waters of the Gulf Stream, and ye will believe that
ye never saw such blue water in yer livin' born days.
And ye will keep on believin' that till ye see the
waters of the Caribbean and then ye will be changin'
the moind of ye, like as not."

"I'd rather see some good brown earth and a
little green grass at this present moment," said
Henry, wistfully.

"And there'll be a-plenty of both on this cruise,
I'm thinkin'," said Mike cheerfully.  "But do you
know where we're goin'?  If ye don't then I'll tell
ye.  We're bound for Treasure Island, and a foine
place it is to roam around in for a bit.  Ye can't
git lost and ye can't git into trubble unless ye look
for it, and that's more'n ye can say for most places.
Its right name is Culebra, which is the Spanish for
'shnake,' but some feller wrote a wonderful story
about it under the name I've just mentioned to
ye, so like as not if ye look in the right spot ye
may yet find some of the old pirates' buried gold.
Heigho!--I'd better be on me way, for it's
about time to make me report of lights to the
bridge.  Good-night, me lads," and off he tramped.

"And as a better man than I just said,"
remarked Dick a few moments later, "'Heigho!
I'd better be on me way'; let us get to bed."

"I second the motion," said Henry, "for I'm
getting sick of this motion, and the 'hammick'
sounds good to me.  Maybe by to-morrow I won't
be bluer than the Gulf Stream, after a good night's rest."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`AN ADVENTURE ASHORE`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER VIII


.. class:: center medium

   AN ADVENTURE ASHORE

.. vspace:: 2

Saturday afternoon!  Under the azure dome of
the tropic sky the verdured hills of "Treasure
Island" sparkled with emerald brilliancy.  Stretches
of glittering-white, sandy beaches connected abrupt,
green-clad headlands in the semblance of Nature's
own rosary.  Coral reefs everywhere, with varying
depths of water over their treacherous beauty,
afforded so many wonderful shades of blue and green
that the cleverest artist would despair of
reproducing their tantalizing colors on his canvas.

In the deep but sheltered waters of Target Bay,
close anchored to the beach, swung the *Denver*, her
graceful outlines reflected with startling
perfection in the mirror-like depths.  Under her white
spread awnings, members of the crew dozed,
conversed or played games as their fancy
dictated.  On the bridge, the ever alert
Quartermaster attended the duties of his watch; while
pacing the quarter-deck, the Commanding Officer
of the ship, Commander Bentley, and his Executive
Officer, Lieutenant-Commander Ogden, were
earnestly conversing.  Near by, the Officer of the
Deck, with a telescope, the insignia of his office,
tucked beneath his arm, was trying to catch the
drift of his superiors' conversation without
appearing to be too inquisitive.

"It is apparent, Mr. Ogden, that someone
ashore is furnishing liquor to our men.  The
reports at the mast[#] for the last few days show it
clearly.  In spite of all the 'Alcalde' at Dewey
may say, the men are getting the stuff somewhere."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] The "mast"--A fixed place on deck, often not near a real mast,
   where complaints against the conduct of enlisted men are heard by
   an officer, and judgment passed on them.

.. vspace:: 2

"I agree with you, Captain, and I wish we could
get a clue sufficient to convict the guilty party.  By
your order the men are not allowed in the towns of
Dewey or Roosevelt, and every day that liberty
parties are ashore I have had patrols along the
trails to stop men going in that direction.
Furthermore, we maintain a patrol in town, each ship
taking a turn at it, to arrest any of the men seen
inside the restricted district.  The revenue officer
on the island has assured me that not a store or
shack this end of the place has a license to sell
alcohol."

"It beats the Dutch," remarked Captain Bentley,
after a short silence, "how enlisted men will go
out of their way to get into trouble.  A lot of
youngsters think it smart to be tough and rough,
imagining they are then real sailors.  They haven't
the brains to see that the navy man is revolutionizing
his habits and trying to live down the idea of
him which years ago was so prevalent.  The desire
to 'spend their money like a drunken sailor' still
holds an attraction for some of these brainless idiots.
Our older men have been through the mill, and the
worst element among them is weeded out.  They
have sense enough to keep out of harm's way,
but----  Oh, well, the fact still remains, they are
getting liquor, and bringing it on board too."

"I have had a talk with the officers and they in
turn with their C.P.O.'s, and also I have put
Sergeant Douglass on the trail, so I hope of getting
some results soon."

"Keep at it, Mr. Ogden, and for the sake of all
hands I hope we can run the parties to earth;
nothing is worse for the discipline of a ship," and with
that parting remark Commander Bentley turned
and descended to his cabin.

For over a month the cruiser had been in and
around the waters of Culebra Island, generally
anchoring for the night in Target Bay, but during the
day, excepting Saturdays and Sundays, joining
with three other ships of her class in division drills
and maneuvers while at the same time preparing
for target practise.

The *Denver's* marines, having only two
six-pounders in their charge, did not take as great an
interest in the gunnery work as marines generally
do on board the battleships and dreadnaughts,
where they have guns assigned them of larger
calibre.  During this time they were mostly
occupied with work pertaining to their profession on
board, or with boat drills, and hikes on shore.  For
this latter drill they were landed twice a week and
worked in coöperation with the detachments from
the other vessels.  Later on when the Fleet arrived
combined maneuvers ashore on a grand scale would
be carried on.

Liberty was granted, to those whose duties did
not intrude, on Saturday and Sunday afternoons.
On this particular Saturday, Drummer Comstock
and Trumpeter Cabell went ashore in the first
liberty boat to leave the ship.  Dick, already having
made a name for himself as an oarsman, was a
member of the marines' dinghy racing crew, and
this afternoon he and Henry helped pull the big
cutter ashore and well up on the coral beach in
Firewood Bay.

From this spot it was about a two-mile walk over
the hills, down into the valley past Laguna de
Flamingo to the perfect, crescent-shaped, smooth,
level sands of Flamingo Bay, where the mighty
rollers swept in with unrestricted grandeur from
the blue Atlantic, stretching northward farther
than the eye could reach.  Here, in spite of the
wonderfully high surf there was little or no
undertow and the bathing was considered safe, and free
from venturesome sharks.

According to their habit, the two boys undressed
at Firewood Bay and leaving their clothes in the
cutter, wearing only rubber-soled sneakers and
bathing trunks, they were soon dog-trotting over
the narrow trail leading to a group of shacks on the
saddle of the ridge they had to cross.  With their
swifter pace they soon passed the others of the
party.  After breasting the summit of the ridge
they followed the torturous downward trail to the
Lake of the Flamingos.  The trail led past an
unused hut half-way down the hillside, at one end of
which it abruptly turned to the left.

Dick, well in the lead, having turned the corner
of the hut, saw a man dashing towards him,
mounted on a fiery little West Indian pony.  There
was plenty of room for the rider to turn aside so as
to avoid the boy, while ordinary politeness would
have led him to do so, therefore Dick continued at
his slow trot in the center of the path.  Nearer
came the rider, and the boy now saw he was reeling
in his saddle and lashing his horse viciously as he
came tearing up the hill.  Still the boy did not
change his course.  The next moment the pony
had of its own volition jumped out of the trail to
avoid collision.

At the moment he passed the native rider cut
Dick a fearful lash across the shoulders with his
leather quirt, yelling loudly some vile expletive in
Spanish.  For the fraction of a second Dick did
not comprehend what had happened.  The blow
across his bare back nearly brought him to his
knees and, missing his footing, he fell headlong.
In an instant he was up again holding a rough,
jagged piece of rotten-rock in either hand and
running back after the reckless horseman.

Never before in his life had Dick been thoroughly
angry--never before had he felt that insane
rage within him that knew no other impulse than
the desire to inflict bodily harm on another human being.

The horseman must have disappeared behind the
deserted shack, for he was nowhere in sight.  By
this time Henry came swinging along the trail, and
he was surprised to see his chum coming towards
him like a raving maniac.

"Did you see him?" yelled Dick furiously.

"See whom?" questioned Henry.

"That black drunken scoundrel on horseback."

"What are you talking about, Dick?  I've seen no horseman."

"Didn't a native just pass you on the trail, riding
a pony like mad and lashing the poor brute with a
rawhide quirt?"

"Nope,--I reckon you must have been seeing
things, Dick," and Henry started to laugh.

"'Seeing things,' nothing!  Look at that red
welt across my back, if you think I've been 'seeing
things'!" shouted Dick, and he turned while Henry
examined with amazement the angry looking ridge
across the broad, sun-browned shoulders.

"I see it, right enough, Dick, but--you say a
man on horseback did it?"

"Yes, and if he didn't pass you on the trail then
he turned by this hut and went off into the bush,
and I'm going to get him and thrash him before this
day is over," said Dick, and having delivered his
outburst he rushed off towards the clump of bushes,
tall grass and cabbage palms, clustering close to the
far corner of the hut.

"Hold on, Dick," called Henry, "we can't get
through that jungle without our clothes.  You stay
here on watch while I go back and fetch them.
The rest of the liberty party will be along any time
now and they will lend us a hand."

"I don't need any help to thrash that cowardly
Spig,"[#] muttered Dick, but seeing the wisdom of
Henry's suggestion he consented to wait.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] "Spig" or "Spiggoty"--A generic term for all inhabitants of
   Latin-American countries and of the Philippines and Guam, given by
   sailors, soldiers and marines only since the Spanish War of 1898.

.. vspace:: 2

Left to his own devices, he began a systematic
scouting of the ground in the vicinity.  The trail,
baked hard by the sun, showed no signs, but across
the ground in front of the palm-thatched hut he
found distinct traces of recent hoof prints.
Following them he came to a newly broken trail
through the long grass leading to the thicker
undergrowth beyond.  Returning to the hut he pushed
open the dilapidated door and entered the musty
interior.  The place was bare of furniture or
utensils, a few bits of rubbish littered the floor and
in one corner were several bottles and flasks, all
empty.  Picking up one and extracting the cork
he found a strong smell of whisky.  Evidently this
was the rendezvous of those men from the ships
recently found under the influence of liquor while on
shore.  Presently he heard the sound of footsteps
coming down the trail.  Probably members of the
liberty party with whom he came ashore, thought Dick.

"Say, Joe," he heard a voice question, "where
do you suppose that marine was hot-footing it to?"

"I dunno," answered the one addressed, "when
he ducked past me he yelled something, but I didn't
get it, did you?"

"Nuh!  Glad he's out of the way, 'cause him
and the kid he runs with think they are some class.
They'd put a crimp in our game if they got next
to it."

"Any of the others in sight?" Joe now asked as
the two stopped beside the corner of the shack.

"No; get a hustle on," and with that Dick heard
the two speakers run past the front of his refuge
and dash into the woods near the spot he had just
been investigating.

"The plot thickens!" mused Dick, looking at the
empty bottle he still held.

Again the sound of footsteps, but this time the
men passed the shack without stopping.  These
men were bound for the beach at Flamingo Bay.

At first the boy thought of calling them back, but
on second consideration he decided not to.  He
preferred working out this affair with only Henry's
assistance.

That very morning First Sergeant Douglass had
given the marines a talk about the liquor traffic and
asked them to try and trace it.  He had said it
would be a feather in their caps could they succeed
in finding the guilty parties.  For that reason, all
the more honor if he and Henry carried it through
by themselves.

It seemed an interminable while before the soft
patter apprised him of his companion's return.  As
Henry reached the corner of the hut, Dick's
warning hiss attracted his attention to the open door.

"Come in here, Hank," he called, and Henry
entered, breathing hard from the grind of his
strenuous race up-hill.

While he dressed, Dick explained more fully
about the drunken native and of what had
transpired during Henry's absence.  The young
trumpeter was equally enthusiastic over the prospect of
an exciting adventure ahead of them and thoroughly
agreed they alone could manage the business.

"I reckon we are on the right track for sure,"
said Henry, struggling into his O.D. shirt.  "That
fellow Joe Choiniski is one of the tough nuts who
joined us from San Juan in the last draft right
after we came here.  He's been on some 'spit-kit'[#]
stationed down in these waters for a long time and
speaks the native lingo.  The man with him is a
bad egg too, though he has never been caught so far."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] "Spit-kit"--Really "spit-kid," a small wooden cask set about
   the deck for spit-boxes.  Spitting upon decks is an unpardonable sin.
   The name is slangily applied to the smaller vessels of the Navy.

.. vspace:: 2

"What is his name?" asked Richard, preparing
to open the door.

"Never did hear his right name; the men on
board call him 'Slugger.'"

"I know now," said Dick, "they say he used to
be a prize-fighter and he's all the time bragging how
he can mix it up with the gloves, but no one ever
saw him put them on since he came on board.  He's
husky enough, but all out of training."

"That's the fellow,--a tough customer, I reckon."

The boys, finding the coast clear, emerged from
the hut and were soon following the trail which the
two men and horseman before them had presumably
travelled.  For a while the way led through a
veritable tangle of briers, weeds, bamboo and
underbrush, but after a quarter of a mile with no break
on either side the path joined into a wider and well
worn trail through a piece of timberland leading
almost due north and south.  In the shade of the
tall hardwood trees the ground was softer and the
spoor of the horse was distinctly shown turning to
the right.  This fortunate discovery saved the boys
any possibility of going wrong.

The island at this point was sparsely settled, as
in 1906 the Navy Department had required all
squatters to move off the government reservations.
The trail was now nearing the boundaries of the
northern tract.  For another quarter of a mile they
went on, each moment hoping to discover some
evidence to substantiate their deductions, but the
silence of the wilderness was about them, only
broken occasionally by the cooing of the blue doves
high up in the tree-tops.

Here and there the woods gave place to clearings
covered with waving grass or untended banana
patches, affording long vistas of land and water but
not a house nor animal nor human being rewarded
their sharp searching.  To their left was South
West Cay, separated from the larger island they
were on by a narrow dangerous channel.  To their
right they caught occasional glimpses of Flamingo
Bay or the distant top of Mount Resaca.

During one of their halts before emerging into
plain view on the hog-back trail, Henry caught
Dick by the shoulder and pulled him down in the
shelter of the long grass which carpeted a steep
slope on their left, down to the very edge of the water.

"Look, there is your horseman!" he whispered
excitedly, forgetting his voice would not reach half
the distance to the object at which he was pointing.

.. _`"Look, There is Your Horseman!"`:

.. figure:: images/img-137.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: LOOK, THERE IS YOUR HORSEMAN!

   LOOK, THERE IS YOUR HORSEMAN!

"I see him," said Dick grimly, "coming up from
that shack at the foot of the hill."

"Yes, and see those two sailors going down to
the beach; they're toting sacks or something over
their shoulders.  They can go around to Firewood
Bay that way.  We've got 'em, all right,"
exclaimed Henry joyfully.  "What do you reckon
we'd better do now?"

"I 'reckon' there's going to be one native of this
'Treasure Island' who's going to get the beating
of his life in just about five minutes," answered
Dick, taking an extra tug to his belt.  "That
fellow is coming right up the hill to this trail, and I'm
going to be right at the top to welcome him.  Come
along, Hank, but lie low and leave him to me."

Stooping low, both lads ran across the open
space till they came to the edge of the farther wood,
where they found an entrance to the trail up which
the lone horseman could be seen spurring and
lashing his worn-out steed.  The animal was too far
gone to respond to the cruel treatment, and plodded
slowly and wearily upward.

"Hank, you go to the other side in case he should
happen to turn that way," directed Dick.  "That
brute won't escape us; and let me tell you
something, I'm not going to beat him up for lashing me,
alone, I'm going to try and even up some of the
debt for that poor dumb animal he's torturing."

Henry scuttled to the north side of the trail, while
Dick waited impatiently where he first had hidden.

The labored breathing of the horse came to his
ears, and then, preceded by a volley of oaths, rider
and horse reached the ridge trail.  The native, a
dark, swarthy, pock-marked man, about thirty-five
years of age, with black, bloodshot eyes and long,
yellow teeth, was broad shouldered, and though
slender, was well knit.  On reaching the crest of
the hill the horse's head was turned southward and
again the rider raised the heavy quirt to bring it
down on the bleeding, swollen flanks.  That blow
never fell, for with the quick spring of a tiger Dick
grabbed the rider around the waist and tore him
from the saddle, throwing him to the ground.  At
the same time he snatched the quirt from the
surprised man's hand and began belaboring him as he
groveled at the boy's feet.  The startled horse
meanwhile had turned down the slope and was
stumbling towards the foot of the hill.

"How do you like that, you yellow cur?" questioned
Dick coolly, giving the coward a final blow
across the legs.  "Do you think you want to try
any more tricks on me?"

"No!  No!  Señor!  Pardon, Señor!  Por Dios,
no mas!" cried the man as he saw Dick's arm rise
again and the lash snap ominously.

"Get up and vamoose," ordered Dick, pointing
along the trail they had followed.  "Never mind
your horse; you can get him when I get through
with you."

Never taking his eyes from the man, Dick made
him march in front of them.  The native limped
along protestingly, but every time he stopped to
argue Dick applied the lash with good effect.

On reaching the trail leading down to Firewood
Bay, Dick pointed towards the town of Dewey.

"You savvy Dewey?" he inquired.

"Si, Señor," came the surly response, and the
shifty black eyes glared for a moment at the boy.

"Well, beat it--pronto," ordered Dick, and with
the words he gave the man a push in the right
direction, while both boys, as if performing a military
drill, simultaneously aided him with a persuading kick.

"Just to help you along a bit," called Henry and
then he turned to Dick.  "Shake, Dick; that was a
job well and nobly done."

As he spoke five bullets whistled past them, one
dusting the ground at their feet and ricochetting
with a shrill "Z-z-z-i-i-n-n-g."

Instantly the startled boys dropped to the grass
beside the trail and, keeping under cover until a
fold in the ground effectually protected them, they
ran for the boat landing.

"Wonder why he didn't use that shooting iron
before?" questioned Dick, looking back over the trail.

"Reckon he was too plumb scared to remember
he owned a gun," said Henry, still beaming with
joy over the adventure.  "Do you believe he'll take
any more pot shots at us?"

"No, we are out of pistol range down here, and
he can't come down the hill without being seen.
Those shots were too close for comfort to suit me,
and yet I hated to have to run away as we did.
Still it would have been worse than foolhardy to
tempt Fortune by hanging around up there with
that rascal in hiding.  How do you like being under fire?"

"Can't say I've any hankering for it, but it
didn't scare me as I thought it would," said Henry.

The men from Flamingo Bay were now coming
over the brow of the hill and soon reached the boat.
They had not seen the native on the other side of
the hill, but all had heard the five shots.  The boys
did not enlighten them as to the cause, having
decided to report the whole matter to First Sergeant
Douglass on their return to the *Denver*.

While they were shoving the heavy cutter into
the water the two men, Joe Choiniski and
"Slugger" Williams, came from around the point and
joined the group.  Both men wore rubber boots,
and Dick remembered that they had taken them
ashore that afternoon under their arms, whereas
now they carried their shoes, from the tops of which
were sticking some finely branched pieces of
unbleached coral.  Dick also noticed how carefully
they got into the boat when all was ready to shove
off for the ship.

"Wonder where they hid their booze," said
Henry, "for I'd bet a month's pay they have it
somewhere."

"I guess I know, and you watch Corporal Dorlan
frisk them when they go up on deck," answered
Dick with a knowing wink.

Arriving at the port gangway, the liberty party
went aboard and fell in on the quarter-deck for
inspection before being dismissed.  Corporal Dorlan,
standing at the top of the gangway, was surprised
to hear Dick whisper as he passed, "Search the
rubber boots, Corporal," but he was not slow of
comprehension, and as soon as the men were all in
line he went directly up to Joe and "Slugger" and
feeling down their boot legs brought forth several
flat flasks carefully wrapped in dry seaweed.

"What is this?" said Mr. Thorp, the Officer of
the Deck.

And Corporal Dorlan merely answered:

"'Wilson--that's all,' sir."

"That is fine work, Corporal.  I congratulate
you," said a hearty voice behind the line of men who
had witnessed this little scene, and turning Dorlan
found Commander Bentley standing near him.

"It's not me what discovered it, sir.  All the
credit belongs to Drummer Comstock.  He's the
lad what put me wise, sir."

"We will hold 'mast' and investigate this matter
at once, Mr. Thorp; have Comstock report here
immediately."

Dick, having heard his name called, approached.

"Now, young man, tell me all you know of this
business," ordered the Captain, and having heard
the entire story of the exciting afternoon ashore he
ordered Dick to go to the Executive Officer's office
and dictate a full report to the Yeoman.

"A man like the one you describe has no business
to be at large," he said.  "I will communicate with
the authorities ashore and have him locked up.  In
the meantime, Mr. Thorp, send a detail of marines
ashore under arms to search and destroy the shack
these two boys discovered.  It's on the government
reservation and has no business there.  Trumpeter
Cabell will go ashore and act as guide."

Then turning to the two culprits, Commander
Bentley said:

"I'll keep you men in close confinement until a
court-martial can dispose of your case.  Have these
two men taken to the brig[#] at once, Mr. Thorp."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Brig--Cell for confinement of men under punishment.

.. vspace:: 2

"Aye, aye, sir!" and Ensign Thorp gave the
Master-at-Arms the necessary orders.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`HISTORIC BATTLEFIELDS`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER IX


.. class:: center medium

   HISTORIC BATTLEFIELDS

.. vspace:: 2

"Speaking of that report against our horse
beater," remarked Henry a few days later,
"reminds me, Dick, that I never thought to inquire if
you ever heard from the report you wrote out in
Washington against those plotters."

"No," answered Dick, looking up from the
signal card he was studying, "I wrote it the following
Monday and sent it to Dad, but never heard
anything from it."

"We heard from your last report," said Henry.
"That Spig was a wise hombre, right enough.  The
revenue officer found out all about him, but
'Mexican Pete' was too quick.  He left for parts
unknown that same day, and all the authorities in
Porto Rico are on the lookout for him.  He's a
famous smuggler down in these regions and a
regular bad man in the bargain.  It's said he has served
jail sentences in nearly every town from here to
Vera Cruz.  He's a Mexican by birth, a bad man
by nature and a wanderer most of the time by
necessity."

"That is all true, Hank, but it is not getting
down this Morse code," replied Dick.  "We've
learned the semaphore, wigwag and Ardois, and I
think we can give the signal boys on the bridge a
run for their money; but I can't seem to get these
sound signals.  Guess my ear isn't attuned properly!"

"I don't see why you want to bother with it,
anyway.  You don't have to learn it."

"Never can tell when such knowledge will come
in handy; besides, Hank, it helps pass the time
when we've nothing else to do.  It proved pretty
useful last week when we were having that scouting
drill ashore and by knocking two rocks together I
was able to tell you to go to the left of that clump
of bamboo.  If you'd gone the other way the enemy
would have captured you and your message, which
would have meant the capture of our whole detachment."

"Yes, I'd forgotten that, Dick, and seeing that
we both hope to be made privates some day the
extra pay we will pull down as first class signalmen
is not to be sneezed at.  Well, here goes; see if you
can get this!"

Thereupon Henry began a quick tap-tap with a
pencil against the rim of the brass bugle he held on
his knees.

For an hour the two boys practised at their
self-appointed task, never using a spoken word in the
meantime, but often smiling at each other over the
messages they sent back and forth.

Richard Comstock was not wasting his time in
the service.  He had enlisted with one stated
purpose in view, and all his work was to him a means
to an end.  Every new bit of knowledge acquired
connected with his profession was just one more
step in the ladder he meant to climb, until his hopes
and ambitions were realized.

The friendship existing between Henry Cabell
and himself was of great help to both boys.  They
often had their differences of opinion, but petty
quarrels and bickerings never entered in their
discussions.  Both lads were high spirited, quick to
take offense but as quick to acknowledge their
errors in the light of reasoning.  Day by day,
Henry was losing his attitude of snobbishness.
His association with Richard, who tried to find
something worthy in every person with whom he
came in contact and to see the bright side to every
cloud, was the best thing which could have
happened for the hot-headed Southerner.

Their duties on board ship were not particularly
arduous.  They stood four-hour watches as
messengers for the Officer of the Deck, dividing this
duty with the ship's sailor-buglers; assisted in the
work of keeping their part of the ship clean,
accompanied the marines on their drills ashore and
participated in the routine drills of shipboard life.
Sometimes the musics on the larger vessels are
members of the secondary battery gun's crews or have
other battle stations at "general quarters,"[#] but
not so on the *Denver*, which was only a third-class
cruiser of a little over three thousand tons.  Also
on shipboard the marine drummer has but little
use for his drum and sticks, which are generally
put away in the storeroom and a bugle issued in
lieu thereof, as all calls are given by means of the
trumpet or the piping of the boatswain's whistles.
Therefore, in so far as their duties were concerned,
the boys did identically the same work on the
*Denver*, and except when their watches interfered they
were generally to be found together.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] When the ship is ready to go into action.  The drill for this
   preparation is called General Quarters.

.. vspace:: 2

One day they were conversing about the former
achievements of the marines, and Dick, who by now
had read Collum's history from beginning to end,
said:

"I wonder if when they put those new
dreadnaughts in commission they will reverse the
time-honored custom and move the marine detachments
up forward!"

"I don't reckon I know what you mean, Dick;
why shouldn't they put the marines wherever they
want to on the ships?"

"These days there is no real reason why they
shouldn't," said Dick.  "But you know what the
relation of the marines was originally as regards the
ship's crew, don't you?"

"Y-e-e-s; at least I think I do.  They were the
policemen on the ship, weren't they?"

"Oh, Hank, you simply must read the history
of this organization before you go any further.  It
will be the best thing to make you get the right kind
of ginger into your work.  It will make you proud
of your job and proud to be a U.S. Marine; it is
one of the chief things you need:--*esprit de corps*--it's
what has kept this outfit up to snuff, and without
it no organized body of men could make a name for
themselves any more than you can 'make a silk
purse of a sow's ear.'"

"All right, if you say it takes *esprit* to make that
purse, Dick, I'll take your word for it, but don't
get started preaching.  Now tell me why should or
should not the marines be moved, and if not, why
not, or whatever it was you began on when you lost
yourself on Pulpit Street.  Go ahead, I'm listening!"

"To begin with, the sailors in the early days were
a mighty tough lot of customers, picked up from
nearly every nation under the sun.  They were
employed to work the ship; whereas the marines were
organized to do the fighting and were picked men.
Because of the mixed and unruly element in the
crew the sailors often became mutinous.  In those
days all weapons, and firearms particularly, were
stored in the after part of the ship where the officers
had their quarters and having this advantage, they
were able to keep the crews under subjection.  But
there were only a few officers as compared to the
crew, consequently the trustworthy marines were
given that part of the ship to berth in between the
officers and the sailors, who generally were berthed
in the forecastle.  I don't know just when this was
made the fashion, but I do know that it has been
handed down to the present day and you will always
find marines in a compartment next the ward-room.
Now do you see what I mean?"

"I understand what you have said, Dick, but
what has it to do with the new battleships?"

"Why, I was wondering if another old Navy
custom is going out of vogue, that's all.  For in
these new ships the officers are going to change
places with the crew--their living space is going to
be the forecastle instead of the stern.  Question:
What will they do with the marines?"

"When did you say that custom started, Dick?"

"Oh, I don't know, Hank; way back in the days
of bi-remes and tri-remes, I guess."

"Then all I have to say is that it's high time a
change was made; allow the officers a chance to take
care of themselves--we marines have nursed them
altogether too long," said Henry, and they were yet
laughing at the remark when Police Sergeant
Bruckner came along the deck seeking them.

"The 'Top'[#] says you boys should go with me
to the storeroom and draw rifles, so come right
along and get 'em."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] "Top"--Top sergeant--first sergeant, or also applied to the
   highest ranking sergeant at a post.

.. vspace:: 2

"Get rifles?" questioned Dick.  "What are we
going to do with rifles, I'd like to know?"

"Ask the Top; don't bother me with your
questions;" and Bruckner led the way below.

"They're brand new shooting irons, and you will
have some job getting off the cosmoline, so I
adwise you to get busy before you report to the First
Sergeant," cautioned Bruckner, whose German
origin accounted for the manner in which he
pronounced his letter "V" on occasions.  He had
come to the United States as a lad of fifteen years
and after ten years spoke, with this exception,
almost like a native-born citizen.  Six of these ten
years he had spent in the Marines.

After noting the number of each rifle in order to
enter them on the public property card of the
musics, they all repaired to the upper deck and the
work of cleaning the new rifles was soon under way.

"You musics will fall in for aiming and sighting
drill each morning," called out Sergeant Douglass,
who saw them at their labors.  "Although you
aren't required to handle a gun you are required to
know how to shoot straight.  Come to my office
when you get through with that work, and I'll give
you each a score book which one of our Marine
Officers got up and it will give you all the best dope
on rifle shooting."

It was not long before the boys were applying
for the promised books.

"When shall we have a chance to fire on the
range?" asked Dick.

"From the 'galley yarns'[#] flying about the ship,
it would not surprise me if we were on our way to
Guantanamo in a day or two, and when we get
there I'm going to try my best to have the guard
put through the regular Marine Corps practice as
well as the Navy course, and I want to keep our
high showing up to standard."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] In some mysterious way stories get started on shipboard,
   generally founded on guess or rumor
   and turn out to be true; all are
   supposed to start in the "galley," hence the name.

.. vspace:: 2

"Do we get a medal or anything like that out of
it?" asked Henry.

"Yes, you have an opportunity to get a number
of things out of it.  The marines shoot the same
course for qualification as that prescribed for the
army.  There are three grades which pay you well
for trying to do your best.  The highest is that of
expert rifleman.  If you qualify, you get five
dollars more pay per month from the date of qualification
to the end of your enlistment and also a silver
badge,--crossed rifles with a wreath around them.
Sharpshooter pays you three dollars per month till
you next shoot for record the following year and a
badge consisting of a silver Maltese cross, while a
marksman's qualification pays two dollars and you
get only a silver bar with 'Marksman' on it.  But
you will find out all about it in those books.  Run
along now and don't bother me any more with your
questions.  By the way, Cabell, to-morrow morning
you will report to Ensign Gardiner as orderly
for the summary court-martial at ten-o'clock, in the
ward-room.  Mr. Gardiner is the recorder of the
court."

"What is the recorder of a court?" asked
Henry, who was as full of questions at times as a
hive is of bees.

"He is to a summary court what the judge
advocate is to a general court, and the prosecuting
attorney to a civil court," answered the First
Sergeant patiently, "and I hope your acquaintance
with all of these gentlemen may be that of an
orderly or a witness only.  And, Comstock, speaking
of witnesses, reminds me you had better stand by
for a call, as both Williams and Choiniski are to be
tried to-morrow for smuggling liquor on board
ship."

Promptly at ten o'clock the next morning the
"musics" were in attendance at the meeting of the
court-martial, but no testimony was required, as
the accused sailors both pleaded "guilty" to the
specifications[#] preferred against them, and merely
put in a plea for clemency.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] The written statement of specific acts for which the accused
   person is being tried.

.. vspace:: 2

Richard was standing outside the ward-room
door when Chief Master-at-Arms Fitch brought
the two prisoners aft for their trial.

"I'll get you for this, you fresh Leatherneck, and
I give you fair warning to keep out of my way when
I get out of the brig," muttered Choiniski, glaring
malignantly at the drummer.

"Shut up and don't talk so much or I'll see that
you get hung," snapped Fitch on hearing the
remark.  "After you two birds get out of your cage
you'd better be looking round for friends, not
enemies, I'm thinking."

And two days after the trial with the entire crew
of the *Denver* mustered aft on the quarter-deck, the
sentences were published to the two offenders.

"Whew!  You'll never catch me smuggling any
liquor on a man-o'-war," said Dick to his friend,
Corporal Dorlan, as they sat talking in the marines'
compartment soon after the crew had been dismissed.

"No, it's bad business no matter how ye bring
it on board, inside or outside," said Mike, dolefully,
"and it's meself who should know, bad 'cess to the
stuff."

"Have those two men got to stay in those hot
little cells up forward with nothing but bread and
water to eat for thirty days, and lose three months'
pay, and in addition, do three months' extra police
duties with no liberty meanwhile?"

"Not quite that bad, me lad; they'll be after
gittin' a full ration on every fifth day, so as to show
them what they're missin' in the way of good chow,[#]
and accordin' to my way of thinkin' it will do them
both a world of good.  Until they came to this
packet 'twas the happy ship; but the likes of them
are always makin' trouble."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] A Chinese term generally used by men
   in the service for food.

.. vspace:: 2

"Did you hear that we are going to Guantanamo
Bay before the fleet arrives here, Mike?"
questioned Richard.

"Well, it won't be the first time Michael Dorlan
has been in that place, and well I remember the time
we showed the Spaniards they couldn't fool with
Uncle Sam's Marines and git away with it."

"Were you in a fight there during the Spanish War,
Corporal?"

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

.. _`The Sampson Medal`:

.. figure:: images/img-155.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: The Sampson Medal

   The Sampson Medal

.. class:: center

   THE SAMPSON MEDAL

.. class:: small

   The medal commemorating the
   U.S. Naval Campaign in the West Indies,
   during the war of 1898.  The ribbon
   has a blue center with red on either
   side.  Commonly called The Sampson
   Medal after the Commander-in-Chief--William
   Sampson, U.S.N.

.. class:: small

   A similar medal for Admiral Dewey's
   victory in Manila Bay was awarded,
   suspended from a ribbon with broader
   band of blue in center and yellow on
   either side.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

"Right ye are, me lad, and 'twas no
slouch of a scrimmage, at all, at all.  The
Navy wanted a good sheltered harbor as a
base for their ships close to Santiago,
where that foine old Spanish Admiral,
Cervera, was bottled up. So Guantanamo Bay,
being the foinest kind of a place, they
decided to go in there, dhrive away the
enemy and hold it.  Well, the ships shelled
the beach before we landed and then us
marines was sent ashore under Colonel
Harrington; and a hot reception we got, I'd
like ye to know."

"How many marines were there in the fight?"

"About four hundred altogether, and out in the
bosky[#] there were over three thousand Spaniards
pouring the lead into us at every opportunity.  We
took the beach with a rush and charged up the hill
back of our landin' place, and then havin' got a
toe-hold we dug in and we stayed dug in, with the
Dagoes a-takin' pot shots at us every time we
showed a hat."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Really the word "Bosque"--Spanish word meaning wood, and
   pronounced--boskay.

.. vspace:: 2

Henry, having joined the little group surrounding
Dorlan and Richard, as usual asked a question
at this point in the recital:

"Did the army come to help you, Corporal?"

"Army nothin'.  They was busy gettin' ready to
take Santiago, and didn't bother about us.  We
marines was the first to land and the first to fight,
but unless we drove those Dagoes out of the woods
it wasn't goin' to be a very healthy place to stay put."

"And did you drive them away?" inquired Dick.
He had read all about the fight, but to get first hand
news from one who had participated in the actual
fighting was much better than reading it from a book.

"Of course we did.  You see, the Colonel
learned from friendly Cubans that the Spaniards in
that region depended for all their water on a well a
few miles away over the hills--Cusco Well, it was
called.  So if we took that well then they'd have to
git out of the country.  It was up to us to destroy
the well.  We made all the arrangements, and one
of the ships was told to shell the locality where the
well was located.  Finally we started off dhriving
the Dagoes ahead of us, when suddenly the shells
from the ship began droppin' all about us instead
of into the ranks of the enemy.  Every minute they
kept comin' hotter and faster and there was little
chanct of us bein' successful as things were goin'.
Then I saw one of the nerviest jobs pulled off that
mornin'--one of the things ye often read about and
believe is fiction.  Right behind us in plain view
was a high bare hill and on the top of that there hill,
his back to the Spaniards and facin' the flashin'
guns of the ship, was a marine sendin' wigwag
messages to the ship and tellin' them where to shoot.
Begorra, the bullets was a-flyin' around him like
hail.  Kickin' up little spats of dust at his feet,
cuttin' down the cactus on either side of him, singin'
through the little flag he was a-wavin', but did he
stop?  Not onct--and before long the shell fire
lifted and began fallin' among them Dagoes and off
they went with us marines after them, chargin' and
yellin', sweatin' and swearin'.  Yes, we found the
well and destroyed it and went back to our own
lines carryin' our dead and wounded with us.  And
onct again the good old Corps had scored, for
Sergeant Major John Quick, the feller what did the
signalin', won the first medal of honor in the War
of 1898."

"Tell us some more, Dorlan," one of the bystanders pleaded.

"Ah, g'wan with ye.  Sure I'm so dhry now
from so much blabbin' I can drink the scuttle-butt[#]
dhry, and that without half tryin'."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] A tank holding drinking water.

.. vspace:: 2

"Let us see the campaign medal the government
gave you, will you, Mike?" asked Dick.  One of
his chief ambitions was to be able some day to wear
some of those little bronze medals suspended from
the bright colored silk ribbons on his own coat.
Their intrinsic value was small but what an honor
it would be to have the right to wear them.

Mike Dorlan opened his ditty-box, upon which he
was sitting, and fumbling around in its interior
brought forth two bronze medals; one considerably
larger than the other.

"This one," said he, holding up the larger medal,
"is the Sampson Medal, given for bein' on board
of a ship of the U.S. Navy in some of the actions
against the coastwise towns or with the Spanish
Fleet.  You all know that Admiral Sampson was
in command of our naval forces that bottled up
Cervera in the harbor of Santiago.  That feller
Cervera was a brave man indeed, and he fought like
the gentleman he was, with no more chance of
escapin' than I have o' bein'
made the Commandant of the Corps, and you know
how likely that is, bedad.  This other little piece of
bronze is the regular medal everyone got who was in
Cuban waters or on Cuban soil durin' the war.  It's
the Spanish or West Indian Campaign Medal."

"Why don't you ever wear your ribbons and
medal, Mike?" asked Dick.  "Believe me, if I had 'em
I'd be so proud I'd want to show 'em to everybody I
met.  I would like to see you with them all on some
day at inspection."

"I'll tell ye why, me lad, and ye can belave it or not,
as you please; there's one medal I want mor'n all of
these combined and until I can wear that one, I'll
not be wearin' of any."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

.. _`Medal for Campaign in the West Indies and for Spanish War`:

.. figure:: images/img-159.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: Medal for Campaign in the West Indies and for Spanish War

   Medal for Campaign in the West Indies and for Spanish War

.. class:: center

   MEDAL FOR CAMPAIGN IN THE WEST INDIES AND FOR SPANISH WAR

.. class:: small

   Issued to those of the Army, Navy and Marines
   who served on the high seas en route to or in immediate
   vicinity of Cuba, Porto Rico or Philippines between
   certain dates.  In case if the army or navy service was not
   in the West Indies the inscription read "Spanish Campaign."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

"Which one is that, Dorlan?"

"It's one of them good-conduct medals the Top
Sergeant was showin' of ye that first day ye come
on this ship, and I'll git one yet!  In three days
more me present enlistment expires.  I'm going to
ship over right off, and I'll be makin' a bargain with
ye right now!"

"What's the bargain?" asked Dick.

"Well, if I don't git one of them little bronzes
at the end of my next enlistment, I'll be givin' all
the rest o' me medals to ye, and ye can melt 'em up
into copper pennies; but if I do git it, I'll string the
hull lot of them across me chest at the first
inspection what comes along."

And midst much laughter from the group
surrounding them, Dorlan and Richard shook hands
on the "bargain."

Ten days later the "galley yarns" came true, as
they sometimes do, and the *Denver* steamed
through the narrow entrance and into the
wonderful, green bordered, blue waters of Guantanamo
Bay, where she anchored for an indefinite stay.

Upon the first opportunity, Sergeant Douglass
took the entire guard ashore for a view of the
historic battlefields.  Landing at Fisherman's Point,
they climbed the steep slopes of McCalla Hill,
where stands the monument erected in memory of
the heroes who lost their lives in the memorable
engagement.  But it was Corporal Michael Dorlan
who explained to the interested men every phase of
the landing and the attack; who showed them the
hill from which the intrepid Quick had signalled so
calmly oblivious of personal danger, and finally he
took them through the dusty cactus and chaparral
to the old well, the destruction of which forced the
Spanish troops to evacuate and leave the field to
the sturdy soldiers of the sea.

At a later date, the boys in company with Dorlan
and others made a week-end "liberty" to Santiago,
where the winning battles of the war were fought
on land and water.  They saw the exact spot where
Hobson and his brave crew blew up the *Merrimac*
in the harbor entrance; they scaled the walls of
Morro Castle, which withstood with hardly a scar
the fierce bombardment of our fleet; and they rode
out to San Juan Hill, where the gallant soldiers of
Shafter's army fought so valiantly and successfully.

These little trips to old battlefields resulted in a
great demand for books dealing with the wars of
that period, and the crew's library of the *Denver*
was more popular than it had been for months.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`WINNING HIS FIRST MEDAL`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER X


.. class:: center medium

   WINNING HIS FIRST MEDAL

.. vspace:: 2

Overhead the sun shone mercilessly from a
cloudless sky.  Hardly a breath of air stirred the
stubby grass and scrubby bushes which covered
abrupt little hillocks of piled-up coral lightly
spread with clinging bits of sandy soil.  From the
floor-like level of the baked sand flats, covered with
white streaks where the sun's rays had gathered up
the water and left small deposits of salt, the
heat-waves rose, bubbling and boiling, a snare to the
unwary or unknowing riflemen, who, from various
ranges and positions, were sending little pellets of
lead encased in steel jackets at rows of paper
targets surmounting the earth and concrete parapets,
known as the "butts."

It was a busy and interesting scene of action.
Marines in khaki and sailors in white were sprinkled
over the vast plain, all intent on watching the
bobbing rectangles of brownish paper with black,
round, bull's eyes whereon was marked each
shot-hole caused by the bullets in their flight.

For days the preliminary drill had been under
way.  To the men who never before had fired there
seemed to be much useless labor and time wasted.
Position and aiming drills are monotonous at best,
and to stand at long intervals raising the rifle from
the hip-position of "load" to a certain height, then
bringing it to rest against the right shoulder,
bending the head and squinting over the sights at small
round black pasters an inch in diameter stuck to a
bulkhead or wall and finally snapping the trigger,
seemed the height of folly.  When, however, the
sighting drills progressed to their making tiny
triangles by getting points on a piece of white paper
twenty feet distant from the rifle sights and
connecting these with straight lines, followed by
explanations why certain triangles were good and if
a bullet had actually travelled along the indicated
path, excellent or poor scores would have resulted,
then the drills held more interest for Richard and
Henry.

Each day Sergeant Battiste, one of the famous
shots of the Corps and attached to the *Denver*, gave
lectures on rifle shooting.  A celebrated coach,
member of many winning teams in the National
Rifle meets, holder of the coveted Distinguished
Marksman Medal, and Military Rifle Champion of
America for two consecutive years, he was well
fitted for his task.

Marines are entitled to fire the regular record
practise for qualification under the Small Arms
Firing Manual of the United States Army once
during each target year; but those men who made
the grade of Expert Rifleman were not required to
fire again during their current enlistment and for
that time received each month the extra pay which
is a reward for their merit.  Naturally all hands
were anxious to make the score necessary to acquire
these benefits and Sergeant Battiste left no stone
unturned to help them in their desires.  Each step
had been carefully rehearsed, instruction practise
completed and to-day the record firing would
decide their final merit.

"I've already told you," said Battiste, the men
being gathered around him on arrival at the
200-yard firing point, "not to get excited and to take
your time.  Get your rear sight in perfect alignment
with the front sight and the 'bull' sitting oh
top; fill your lungs--then, the moment you are
ready to fire hold your breath for that instant and
squeeze the trigger--don't pull or jerk it, first take
up the 'creep,' and by now every one of you should
know just when that little additional pressure will
be sufficient to release the firing-pin.  We've a
perfect day for shooting, and if you don't make good
scores it's your own fault.  As we go back to the
longer ranges the wind will come up, but it will
blow steadily from the left or nine o'clock,[#] if I
know anything about this range and the action of
the wind here, and I claim I do.  We shall have to
watch out for mirage.  Your targets have been
assigned.  Each man knows the number he will fire
at and there is no excuse for shooting on the wrong
target.  To do so would possibly spoil another
fellow's score, and it means you will receive a 'goose
egg'[#] for your own shot, and goose eggs mean low
qualifications."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] When facing the target the range is supposed to represent the
   face of a clock.  Twelve o'clock is at the target; six, at the firing
   point; three, to the right, and nine, to the left.  The direction of the
   wind is easily designated by reference to any hour of the clock dial.
   A clock-face is also imagined on the target-face; twelve at the top
   and six at the bottom, facing the firer.

.. class:: left small

   [#] A Zero on the score.

.. vspace:: 2

"Are we permitted to blacken our sights on
record practise, Sergeant?" inquired Dick, as Battiste
paused for a moment.

"Yes, you may blacken both front and rear
sights.  I'd suggest the use of camphor, and I
should also smoke the barrel well, as this sun makes
the blued metal glare badly.  The red flag is up
in the pits, so the 'sand rats'[#] are ready for us
to begin.  Get on the line, men, and begin firing
when your target comes up.  Each shot will be
marked.  If you fail to hit the target a red flag
will be waved across its face, indicating a miss; the
white disk placed over the shot hole means a
bull's-eye, or five; the red disk, four; the black and white
disk a three and the black a two.  If any of you
wish to challenge the marking, Mr. Gardiner, who
is the Range Officer, will call up Mr. Thorp in the
butts and have the target gone over carefully.
Remember to keep your own score in your book and
see that it corresponds with the marking and with
the scorekeepers' records."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Men who operate the targets and signal the hits from the butts.

.. vspace:: 2

"How many shots do we fire?" called out
Private Jones, the most inattentive man of the guard,
but also the one always spotlessly clean, which
reputation had gained for him the position of one
of Commander Bentley's cabin orderlies.

"This is slow fire at 200 yards," answered the
coach, who seldom lost his temper and had the
patience of Job.  "Each man will fire two strings of
five shots each from the standing position, then we
shall move back to 300 yards, and fire the same
number of shots from either the sitting or kneeling
position.  No sighting shots allowed at either of
these ranges.  The targets are up, men!  Commence firing!"

Immediately following the command came the
crack of rifles all along the line--the record practise
was under way.

Neither Richard nor Henry, before this week on
the range at Guantanamo Bay, knew anything of
rifle shooting, though both, one in the New England
woods, the other along the bayous of the Mississippi,
had spent many happy hours with dog and
shotgun.  Practise with the high-powered military
rifle was a decidedly different proposition, but they
took to it as a duck does to water, and during
instruction practise they agreeably surprised
Sergeant Battiste with work that was excellent for
beginners.

Dick, having more patience and being more
cool-headed, strong and nerveless, was without doubt
the better of the two.  Henry's one failing was his
impatience to "get the shot off."  In case he failed
to bring his sights in perfect alignment on the bull's
eye with a steady hand, he would fall back on the
quick "fly shot" so necessary to the hunter armed
with a fowling piece, but disastrous to one who
aspires to perfection with the military weapon.

"Five o'clock three for you, Cabell," sang out
the coach; "must have pulled down on your gun at
the last moment.  Remember my caution--take
your time and squeeze the trigger.  Good work,
Drummer Comstock; you've found the bull first
shot.  It's nipping in at twelve o'clock.[#]  It pays
to be calm and deliberate."

"I'm way off to the right, Sergeant," called out
Jones irritably; "all three of my shots have gone in
the same place--twos at three o'clock, and you said
there wasn't any wind blowing."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] "Nipping in at twelve o'clock"--A rifleman's term
   for a bull's-eye just barely cutting the black at the top.

.. vspace:: 2

"Not a bit of wind, Jones, and if you would only
remember to set your wind gauge properly those
twos would have been bulls, every one.  You have
almost three points of right wind on, and you
shouldn't have any.  Apply your quarter-point
rule.  Each quarter-point on your wind gauge at
200 yards moves your shot how many inches on the
target?"

"It moves it two inches, and three times two is
six inches," said Jones smugly.  "My shots are
about two feet from the center of the bull, so there
must be wind blowing from the left."

"Your arithmetic needs a little oiling, Jones.
There are four quarters in every full point and that
makes twelve quarters altogether for your three
points.  Each quarter point moves you two inches,
making twenty-four inches in all.  You see, that is
the two feet that your shots are out, which is what
I said in the beginning."

Jones sheepishly corrected his sight, and the next
shot on his target was marked a "pinwheel."

Thus it was the coach went up and down the
firing line, offering the advice of long and
successful experience.

At the completion of the firing at 200 yards the
line of riflemen moved back to the 300-yard point,
and taking the sitting or kneeling position, began
the next stage of the course.  A "possible" or
perfect score of ten shots would mean fifty points
towards the three hundred points necessary to qualify
the men as marksmen, and this they would have to
get in order to be permitted to shoot the
sharpshooter's course.  The firing at 200 yards was the
hardest in Dick's estimation, and though he had
started off with a bull's-eye, or five, as already
stated, he did not continue to see the little white
marker or spotter in the black space as he hoped
would be the case.  His first and last shots were
fives and the rest fours, making his total score
forty-two.  Henry was six points below centers, or
thirty-four.

Three hundred yards was an easy range for Dick
and he surprised himself with the high score at that
stage--forty-seven points, all bulls but three, which
fell close outside in the four-ring.  Henry had
made one over centers, or a score of forty-one.

"Now we will go back to five and six hundred
yards," said Battiste.  "Each man must fire two
sighting shots at both those ranges before he can
count his shots for record.  The firing will be the
same as it was in instruction--from the prone
position.  I expect every man to average up his score
at the 500-yard range, for the bull looks as big as a
barn-door, and you can't miss it.  You know we
change the size of the targets now and use the
mid-range or B-target, and the bull's-eye is twenty
inches in diameter.  In the short-range or A-target
it is but eight inches, and in the long-range or
C-target it is thirty-six inches.  For this reason
B-target at 500 yards and C-target at 800 yards are
what we call 'easy marks.'"

"Supposing we fire the twelve shots and the first
ten are bulls but the last two goose eggs, would the
latter count against you?" asked Henry, as he
rearranged the leather sling on his rifle around his left
arm before lying down.

"It's your last ten shots which count," replied
the coach.  "Firing regulations require you to
take the two sighting shots, and you can't juggle
them around to suit yourself; they've got to be the
first two fired.  The mirage is no longer boiling
straight up,[#] but it's moving off to the right a bit,
so I'd advise you all to take your sighting shots,
make your own deductions and then wait for me to
see how nearly correct you are."


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Mirage--Heat waves near the earth, visible on some days to the
   naked eye, but more clearly seen through a telescope.  It is really
   the air travelling on the range, and the best guide for windage, as it
   is the actual air through which the bullet travels.  When there is no
   movement to left or right the wind is either still for a moment or
   carrying the mirage directly towards or from the target.  It appears
   to rise and is said to be "boiling."

.. vspace:: 2

The moment Dick's target appeared he lay flat
on his stomach with his body at an angle of about
forty-five degrees to the firing line, feet spread
apart with the heels turned inwards.  His leather
sling was fastened tightly about the upper part of
his left arm, and the left hand was well under the
rifle, bearing against the lower swivel, which held
one end of the sling.  The butt of the rifle was
placed, with the aid of his right hand, against the
right shoulder, both elbows on the ground, the right
hand grasping the small of the stock with the
forefinger curling around the trigger.  His cheek was
against the left side of the stock and his right eye
so near the rear of the cocking-piece that to one
uninitiated it would appear dangerous.  But it was
the safest position he could assume, and the rifle in
his grasp was steady as a rock.

Crack!  Crack!  The first shots sped on their
way to the butts, as Dick and the man on his right
fired almost simultaneously.

Nothing followed!  Dick's target screen did not
move.  He was certain his position, his aim, his
pull, were all perfect.  The shot must have gone
through the black paper in the center or one of the
black annular rings and was not seen by the "sand
rat" in charge.

"Mark number three target," shouted the sailor
who was keeping Dick's score, and the man at the
field-telephone relayed the message to the butts.
A second or two later "number three" was
"sashed," or pulled down; then up it popped with
the fatal red flag waving back and forth across it as
if in derision.

Dick was surprised at this, for he was positive his
first shot must have been a bull's-eye.  He looked
at his sight critically.  What was wrong?  Perhaps
the wind was blowing enough to throw him off the
"bull," but never could that light breeze throw him
off the target altogether.  He had one more sighting
shot, and unless he found the target with that one
he would have no "dope" for his ten record shots
that were to follow.  Already he had a quarter-point
of left wind on his gauge, which meant, at this
range, if he took one-half a point windage that
would move the shot one-half the width of the
"bull"--enough to put him in the four-ring if his
aim deviated the slightest and his "dope"
happened to be wrong.

He was about to make the change, even though
against his better judgment, when the man at the
end of the telephone called out:

"Two shot holes in the bull on Number Four target!"

Dick drew a long breath of relief.  He had fired
his first shot not at his own but at his right-hand
neighbor's target.

"Thank your lucky star, young man, for the
sighting spots, or else your score would have been
spoiled in the making," quietly remarked Sergeant
Battiste, who was standing back, enjoying the lad's
perplexity.  "Let it be a lesson to you--always
take a squint through your peep sight at the
number below your target before you fire.  One of
those fives in Four Target was right in the
center--a pin wheel!  How much windage did you have?"

"A quarter-point of left wind," answered Dick.

"Just right--now, go ahead and make a possible."

And that is exactly what Drummer Comstock
did--every one of his following shots hitting the
bull's-eye for a perfect score, and to the present day
he shows that page from his score book with great
pride.

Dick's luck continued with him at 600 yards,
which to many old and tried riflemen is one of the
most interesting ranges.  With forty-three points
here and the fifty at 500 yards, Dick now had a
total score of one hundred and eighty-two points.

"What's your total, Hank?" asked Dick while
they rested during the noon hour.

"One hundred and sixty-three, so far; but do
you know who has the highest total for the day?"

"No, I didn't get through at six hundred in time
to look over the score-boards; why, who is it?"

"Oh, a fellow named Richard Comstock!  Great
Scott!  If you keep this up they will be hailing you
as the Military Champeen of the World, Dick.
That was great shooting you did at 500 yards, old man."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

.. _`A Leaf From Dick's Score Book`:

.. figure:: images/img-174.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: A Leaf From Dick's Score Book

   A Leaf From Dick's Score Book

.. class:: center

   A LEAF FROM DICK'S SCORE BOOK

.. class:: small

   1. This leaf is from Dick's Score Book, which he inked in
   after he left the range.

.. class:: small

   2.  It will be noticed the mirage was bad and Dick's 2nd
   sighting shot and first four record shots were low, therefore he
   raised his sight 25 yards.  The bull's eye of this target (B) is 20
   inches in diameter.  25 yards up on sight gauge would be about
   6-¼ inches.

.. class:: small

   3.  "The square rule" is, changing the elevation 100 yards at
   any range gives change on the target equal to the number of
   inches in the square of the range.  Example: at 500 yards equals
   25 inches.

.. class:: small

   4.  On the 9th and 10th shots, Dick raised his sight again and
   kept in the bull.  The mirage had increased, tending to "throw"
   his shots low.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

"I am proud of it, of course, but when you read
how some of these crack shots make a string of
bulls as long as your arm at that range then it
loses some of its lustre as a star score."

"They didn't get those wonderful records,
though, on the first real practise, as you have done,
Dick; and Battiste says you have a natural gift for
shooting which further practise will surely develop."

"Yes, I got along pretty well with the slow fire,
Henry, but I'm rotten in rapid fire, especially at
200 yards.  Somehow I can't get the knack of it."

"That is funny, for I am perfectly at home in
rapid fire," said Henry.

"If I can get on my tummy and shoot 'em I am
safe, therefore I don't fear the skirmish runs.  How
many more points can be made from now on?
Let's figure it out!"

"We could make three hundred more.  Each of
the two skirmish runs counts one hundred, and the
scores at rapid fire at 200 and 300 yards are fifty
each, but I don't reckon we will get anything like
that.  Besides, you shouldn't worry, and I need but
one-thirty-seven to qualify as marksman, and you a
hundred and eighteen."

"You are wrong, Hank.  It's true you require
but three hundred points to make you a marksman,
but you need as many points as you can get.  I'm
not satisfied just to scrape through in a matter of
this kind, and because the thing appears easy is all
the more reason we should try for the highest score
we possibly can get.  Then there is another reason;
your marksman's score is added to what you make
in the sharpshooter's course, and you've got to make
a total of four hundred and fifteen points to get the
qualification, which then gives you the right to shoot
the expert test."

"You are right again, Dick, and thank you for
the tip, or I might have missed my badge and the
extra pay."

.. _`Marksman's badge`:

.. figure:: images/img-176.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: Marksman badge. This is the badge of the lowest qualification.  Below this men are rated as "1st class," but receive no badge.

   Marksman badge. This is the badge of the lowest qualification.  Below this men are rated as "1st class," but receive no badge.

That night when the different divisions of the
*Denver's* complement returned, tired and hungry,
to their ship, Sergeant Battiste worked till late
arranging the scores of those who had fired, and out
of twenty aspirants for the honor all had qualified
as marksmen and would shoot the following day.
Of the twenty, the top notch shot was none other
than Dick, and fighting for last place were
Trumpeter Cabell and Private Jones, both with 323
points to their credit.  Dick had made the excellent
score of 449 out of a possible 500 points.

.. _`Sharpshooter's Badge`:

.. figure:: images/img-177.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: The Badge Awarded to Henry Cabell

   The Badge Awarded to Henry Cabell

The following evening when the shooting
cohorts returned on board having finished
the Sharpshooter's[#] Course, he was still
leading the detachment with a total score of
586 points.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] This course consisted of ten shots slow
   fire at 800 yards, same
   at 1,000 yards, and ten shots rapid fire at 500 yards;
   a possible score
   being 150 points.

.. vspace:: 2

"The 1,000-yard range was my Waterloo to-day," he
explained to First Sergeant Douglass, who did not
have to fire, being already an expert rifleman; "a
fellow needs a lot more practise than I've had to be
able to find and hold the bull at that distance,
especially if there is a 'fish tail'[#] wind blowing, as
happened to-day.  Anyway, I'm sure of my
Maltese Cross; but I want to pull down that
expert's badge to-morrow, for it's the finest of the
lot."


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] A wind coming from a direction nearly parallel with the flight of
   the bullet:--the course the bullet travels through the air is called its
   trajectory.

.. vspace:: 2

The expert rifleman's test consisted
in first firing ten shots slow fire from
600 yards over an embankment at the
silhouette of a kneeling figure of a man
with his arm raised as in shooting.  Then
came five shots at 500 yards and five at
400 yards at the same figure, only in this
shooting it bobbed up above the butts for five
seconds and might show up at any point, with
five-second intervals between appearances.  Next,
two strings of five shots each at the "ducks," or
Target F, the silhouette of a man lying, are
fired at 500 yards.  These "ducks" are supposed
to fall over when hit, and at 300 and 200 yards
the target first fired at, Target E, is pulled
across the range on a track fifty yards long, in
thirty seconds, while ten shots are being fired.
Every hit counts one point, and the firer must make
twenty-five hits out of fifty shots to qualify.

.. _`Expert Rifleman's badge`:

.. figure:: images/img-178.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: Expert Rifleman badge. 1.  This badge is of silver metal. For every three years of re-qualification a bar is awarded with years engraved thereon and suspended between the crossed rifles and the top bar.  This is the badge won by Dick at Guantanamo Bay Rifle Range.

.. class:: center

   Expert Rifleman badge.

.. class:: small

   1.  This badge is of silver metal. For every three years of re-qualification a bar is awarded with years engraved thereon and suspended between the crossed rifles and the top bar.  This is the badge won by Dick at Guantanamo Bay Rifle Range.

It is a true test of the individual's ability, where
steady hand, quick eye and excellent judgment are
prime qualities for its successful accomplishment,
yet, in spite of his fine showing on the two previous
days, Dick barely scraped through with the exact
number of hits to win out.  But he had won, and
two months later when the little silver emblems
were received from Headquarters, it was with
mingled pride and thankfulness he saw his own name
neatly engraved on the reverse of the pin which
Sergeant Douglass handed over to his keeping.

Five new experts, eleven sharpshooters and four
marksmen was the final result of Sergeant
Battiste's course of training.

"Well, I don't believe," Dick remarked as he
strained his eyes to see the bright new badge he had
pinned to his khaki coat preparatory to Saturday
morning inspection, "that I'll ever have as much
pleasure in winning anything as I had in winning
this, my first real medal."

"You may be right, Dick," said Henry, looking
a little regretfully at the new sharpshooter's badge
he held in his hand, "but what appeals more to me
is that extra pay these little silver gadgets bring in
each month."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A REPUBLIC IN DISTRESS`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XI


.. class:: center medium

   A REPUBLIC IN DISTRESS

.. vspace:: 2

Christmas and the New Year's holidays passed
by uneventfully, and the *Denver* still remained at
anchor in Guantanamo Bay.  Other vessels arrived
and departed, but no orders came for the cruiser,
much to the disappointment of all hands.

Rumors of trouble at various points often
reached their ears, but the crew finally began to
lose hope of moving.  The Department must have
forgotten them!  The Secretary of the Navy was
going to make her a station ship!  The Admiral of
the Fleet had it in for the Captain, and wouldn't let
him move!  All sorts and kinds of excuses and
reasons were forthcoming, but they were as
unsatisfactory as they were improbable.

Over six months of outdoor life, swimming, boating,
fishing, riding horseback, taking a leading part
in athletics, for which his days at Bankley High
School and the healthy life in the New England
seaport formed a splendid foundation, had developed
Richard Comstock into a tall, broad-shouldered,
small-waisted, powerful young man, one able to
give an excellent account of himself, no matter what
the situation.  As bow oar of the winning marines'
dinghy race-boat crew he had already given
evidence of the strength and endurance of his well-knit
muscles.  He was nearly as brown as the Cubans
who plied their bum-boat[#] trade at the port
gangway during meal hours, and with his straight black
hair and dark eyes he might easily have disguised
himself as one of them.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] A shore boat which sells fruit, post-cards,
   curios, etc., to ships visiting the port.

.. vspace:: 2

The months had likewise worked a change in
Henry Cabell, but his figure was much slighter and
less robust than that of his boon companion.  The
boys were trying to master the Spanish language,
and when ashore on visits to Caimanera and
Guantanamo City, as frequently they were, it became a
practise to carry on all their conversation in that
tongue, much to the amusement of themselves and
particularly the natives with whom they came in
contact.  However, the practise was good for them,
and they were able to converse quite fluently, and to
chatter glibly with the Phillipino cooks and mess
attendants, of whom a number were attached to the ship.

Usually their evenings were spent ashore at the
Marine Barracks on Fisherman's Point, where a
nightly programme, consisting of the best
moving-picture plays, were shown on the screen or boxing
and wrestling matches, in both of which Dick
occasionally took part, helped pass the hours.

In the meantime Joe Choiniski and "Slugger"
Williams, having completed their term of
punishment in solitary confinement, were released and
restored to duty.  The long enforced diet seemingly
wrought a change in Williams' attitude towards the
world in general; and the ship's athletic officer,
Lieutenant Robling, hearing of the "Slugger's"
reported prowess with the gloves, had interested
him anew in boxing, and he had gone into training
with a view of winning laurels when the Fleet should
finally put in its appearance during the winter
maneuvers and target practice.  Choiniski belonged
to the "black gang,"[#] and his living space was far
removed from the marines' compartment,
consequently the boys rarely came in contact with him,
but if black looks could speak for anything it was
certain that Joe's feeling for them was still full of
animosity.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] A nickname for the Engineer Division on shipboard.

.. vspace:: 2

Altogether Captain Bentley's ship was having
a peaceful, rather than a wildly exciting time.

Then like a bolt from the blue came a cable
message--received at the little station near the lighthouse.

"Revolution in San Domingo.  Proceed immediately
to Monte Cristi and report to Senior Officer
Present for further assignment on arrival."

Thus ran the order.

It was Saturday afternoon, and most of the crew
were ashore.  Immediately the "Cornet"[#] was
hoisted at the foremast, which was a peremptory
order for everybody to return on board at once
regardless of length of leave.  It told those on shore
that the ship was under sailing orders and about to
get under way.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] A signal flag used to recall all boats and liberty parties.

.. vspace:: 2

Conjectures were rife in the boats hurriedly
returning from all the various places to which they
had gone for the afternoon's outing.  Swimming
parties hardly waited to get into their clothes before
shoving off for the cruiser; officers playing golf did
not stop to look for the balls they had sent flying
along the "fairway" or bouncing into the "rough";
the baseball game in progress halted as a batsman
in the act of making a "home run" cut swiftly
across the diamond from second base and, grabbing
his sweater, made his final spurt for the boat landing.

"Back to the good old U.S.A. for us, boys!"

"Hooray!  Broadway and the white lights, fellers!"

"Philly's good enough for me!" called out one
enthusiast from the stern sheets of the loaded
sailing launch.

These and many other such remarks filled the air.

"Whoop her up, boys, for ten days' leave in the
old home town, no matter where it may be!" yelled
one joyful youngster, and all who could lent a
willing hand on the heavy oars.

Then came the disappointment!

Within an hour the gangways and boat booms
were rigged in, awnings furled, cutters and
steamers hoisted aboard, life-boats secured for sea,
all the hundred and one things necessary to the
departure of a man-of-war attended to.

Last of all the mail was sent ashore, for this
might be the only opportunity for days,--possibly
weeks; who could tell?

Now came the peeping of the boatswains' whistles
and raucous voices bellowing throughout the ship.

"All hands, Up anchor!"

Silently the divisions fell in at their proper
stations.  Slowly the propellers began their revolutions,
which would not cease until the arrival at that
island of trouble, San Domingo--the Hispaniola of
the Spanish Main.

Ashore the little garrison of marines lined the
beach at Fisherman's Point.  They had heard the
news and when the *Denver* passed, clouds of smoke
issuing from her funnels, her ensign snapping in
the breeze, and her crew drawn up on deck, the
envious men ashore gave her three rousing cheers to
speed the parting guest.  On past the lighthouse,
out through the narrow entrance of the harbor into
the deep indigo waters of the Caribbean, where,
once the coral shoals were well astern, the course
was changed to due east, and one by one, buildings,
bay, and lighthouse were swallowed in the
distance and the bluish haze which hovered over
the terraced hills and shore of Cuba's southern
slopes.

Captain Bentley, unlike most naval officers of his
day, believed in informing his officers of all the
reasons underlying his official actions and the
movements of the vessel he commanded.  The idea which
so many officers held,--divulge nothing, keep
officers and crew in ignorance of situations,
destinations and intentions until the last possible moment,
was not in accord with his conception of good
management, executive ability and coördination,
therefore, unless absolutely forbidden by his instructions,
he made it a point to explain fully all orders which
would sooner or later affect them, so that they
might familiarize themselves with all the
ramifications of the probable events.

Following out this policy he summoned the heads
of all departments to his cabin after supper, and
there being no officer in charge of the marines, he
included First Sergeant Douglass among those
present, and furnished them with a short résumé of
all the messages he had received since the first one
ordering him to sea so unexpectedly.

"Gentlemen, for some months the political
situation in the Dominican Republic has been hovering
on the brink of another revolution, and from these
despatches received to-day, armed conflict has at
last become a fact.  Our government anticipated
this state of affairs, but owing to various causes we
have not sufficient ships in San Domingan waters
adequately to guard the interests of American
citizens nor protect the customs, which as you are
aware, are under the supervision of the United
States.  The situation is so acute, in the belief of
the Department, that already marines are
embarking on board the *Dixie* at Philadelphia, and by
morning will be on their way to Monte Cristi, where
the greatest activity against the organized
government seems centered.  It will be five days at best
before the marines will reach here.  I have been
ordered to proceed there also and report to the
S.O.P. for assignment.  Barring unforeseen
accidents we should arrive at our destination on
Monday morning.  It is advisable for us under the
circumstances to make ourselves acquainted with such
facts as are available regarding the political,
economical and geographical features of the unfortunate
republic.  Our duties may take us to any one
of its ports; therefore a study of the charts and a
glimpse at the island's history will be beneficial to
all.  I believe the day is not far distant when San
Domingo will become a territory of ours, or at least
a protectorate under us."

"If you have time and inclination, sir, I believe
all present would appreciate a short talk along the
lines you indicate," said Lieutenant Commander
Ogden.

"Very gladly, and I will not waste time on
preliminaries," said Captain Bentley.  "Of course,
you all know Christopher Columbus discovered
Santo Domingo on his first voyage, and by his
direction his brother Bartholomew founded the first
European settlement in the New World on August
4, 1494, naming it New Isabella.  From this time
to the present the island has been the scene of more
continual fighting, and strife, and dissension, than
any other portion of the globe of equal size.  The
Spaniards were the first people to believe in the
policy that 'a good Indian is a dead one,' and they
proceeded to make them 'good.'  English, French,
and Spanish armies and navies have fought along
and on its shores.  Revolution has succeeded
revolution.  The French end of the island was declared
a republic in 1801 after an uprising of the blacks
under Toussant L'Ouverture, who incidentally was
the son of a Royal African King.  The French and
Spanish long disputed certain portions of the
island, and a treaty establishing the boundary was
made January 3, 1777, but with the independence
of Haiti the whole island came under the rule of the
negroes.  Soon the Spanish element revolted
against the blacks and formed an independent
republic, and the old boundary lines were
reëstablished in 1844.  In 1849 President Baez
endeavored to lease Samana Bay to the United States, but
our President, Mr. Pierce, did not succeed in
putting the measure through.  The countries of
Europe were fearful of our securing a base in the West
Indies of such prime importance, and a revolution
against Baez, incited so it is claimed by the English,
overthrew the government.

"Strife was again rampant, and finally Spain
was invited to take over her former colony by the
people in 1861.

"This lasted till 1865, when the Spanish yoke
was again thrown off and another futile attempt
made to interest us in Samana Bay.  Hardly a
year has passed since without dissension and
bloodshed.  In the interests of our own and foreign
citizens, and to carry out the policy of the Monroe
Doctrine, the United States has at all times
endeavored to settle these sanguinary conflicts, and with
some success; but never has a permanent peace
resulted.

"About 1905 we agreed to manage their customs
for San Domingo, and to assist them to liquidate
many of the enormous financial claims against their
government by various foreign and domestic
concerns.  Germany, ever on the alert to expand her
power, was only too anxious to establish herself in
the Western Hemisphere, and in order to continue
our stated policy of protection against such
invasion, some such act on our part was absolutely
necessary.  Deprived of the rich benefits of custom
dues, revolutions did not prove profitable, and a
period of comparative quiet ensued.  But it seems
that a Latin-American people cannot long remain
stable, and now they are again on the rampage.
European influence is undoubtedly behind it, but I
do not feel free to divulge that phase of the matter.
I hope I have not bored you."

"Are you able to give us the present situation
regarding the contending forces?" asked Lieutenant
Robling, the engineer officer.

"Only in a general way.  The rebels seem to
hold the interior towns and country, and with the
exception of Monte Cristi the seaports are all in the
hands of the government troops.  A great amount
of smuggling is being carried on between the rebels
and Haitians, and the officials are powerless to
prevent it."

"Do you believe we shall land?" inquired the
Executive Officer.

"That I cannot say; however, we must be
prepared for any emergency."

"I will make all arrangements for the landing
force to be ready for instant service.  To-morrow is
Sunday, but with your permission I will 'turn to'
in the morning, go over the details, and break out
and stow on deck our equipment."

"Go ahead with the work as you see fit, Mr. Ogden,
and be sure that the gunner gets his small-arms
ammunition ready for issue.  Turn over to
First Sergeant Douglass enough rifle and pistol
ammunition to equip the guard.  The marines may
be needed immediately on arrival for service ashore.
If that is all, gentlemen, I will bid you good-evening."

No feeling of disappointment prevailed among
the *Denver's* crew upon receipt of the news that
they were en route to aid in putting down a
full-fledged rebellion, and everybody was once again
full of cheerfulness and smiles.  This elation was
particularly noticeable among the marines, for if
there was "anything doing" ashore their participation
was a foregone conclusion.  The mere fact
that a thousand of their fellows were already sailing
from Philadelphia was indication enough that the
situation was critical.

Time and again the marines had been rushed here
and there and everywhere to police up this or that
fractious republic; it was an old yet ever new story
with them, and though the activities and general
status of this fighting branch of Uncle Sam's armed
forces were obscure to the majority of people at
home, they were well known and greatly respected
in those lands where they labored, fought and often
died in their country's service.

Richard and Henry were greatly excited over
the prospect and worked with a will the following
day in getting out stores, munitions, clothing
and otherwise preparing for the hoped-for duty
ashore.

"It's lucky we went to Guantanamo, Dick, else
we might not have had any experience with these
big Colt's forty-fives we pack around on our hips,"
Henry remarked.

The two lads were at the time carefully oiling
and cleaning their heavy revolvers, the weapons the
"musics" of the Corps carried into conflict.
Splendid shooting arms they were, too, and during
the stay in Cuba they had received a certain amount
of practise with them in connection with the Navy
Small Arms Course, wherein scores with both rifle
and revolver were required.

As he spoke, Henry whirled the open cylinder
about, and with a clever twist of the wrist snapped
it shut, then pointing the empty revolver at a
passing man he snapped the hammer rapidly.

"Stop that!" came a curt command, and looking
up Henry found Corporal Dorlan standing over
him.  The look in Dorlan's eye was not pleasant to
see, and the usual good-natured smile was missing
from the older man's face.

"Stop what?" asked Henry, flushing because of
the harshness in Dorlan's voice and glance.

"Stop that foolishness!  Ye ought to be gettin'
sense in the noodle of ye after bein' these months in
the marines."

"I reckon I've as much sense and maybe a little
more than some marines around here, who've been
in as many hitches[#] as I have months, and I don't
need a trial by Summary Court to teach me
lessons," and Henry glared hotly at the veteran
soldier.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] "Hitches"--Enlisted man's term for enlistments.

.. vspace:: 2

"If that's the case, me lad, let's see ye use it, both
in yer actions and yer manners," said Dorlan, and
the twinkle was now returning to the gray-blue
eyes; "but I'll tell ye one thing sure;--it won't be
a 'summary' but a 'general' ye will be after
gettin' if ye go around so careless like aimin' and
shootin' yer gun at human bein's, and ye can put
that in your pipe and shmoke it for the rest of yer
life, and 'twill do ye a wurrld of good."

By this time Henry's better nature asserted itself
and rising he put out his hand frankly and asked
the elder man to excuse his unwisely chosen words.

Richard, witnessing the incident, was happy to
see these two good friends of his settle so amicably
what might have developed into a bitter animosity
on the part of the young Southerner.

"Now that 'the battle is over, Mother Dear,'"
quoted Dick, "suppose you sit down, Corporal
Michael Dorlan, and tell us the causes of the
Revolutionary War."

"And I could do that too, me lad," said Dorlan,
smiling at Richard, whom he claimed as his own
particular protégé, "but I'll sit me down and tell
ye somethin' that may be of interest and profit to
the two of yez."

Seating himself on a near-by sea-chest, Dorlan
continued:

"Just a bit ago, young man, I saw ye pointin' a
gun at one of yer shipmates and not only that, but
pullin' of the trigger," and he looked severely at
Henry.

"What of that?  The revolver wasn't loaded--it
couldn't harm anyone," stated Henry.

"That's where ye are wrong, lad, for it's the gun
what ain't loaded which generally goes off and kills
yer best friend.  It's the kind of accident ye read
about in almost any paper ye pick up in any part of
the world, and I'd make a bet with ye that the
weapon the other fellow 'didn't know was loaded'
since the invention of gun-powder has caused more
deaths and serious accidents than have the aimed
shots in actual warfare."

"But, Corporal, I knew my pistol was empty,"
protested Henry; "I looked through the cylinder
before I closed it.  Besides, we've had no
ammunition given us."

"Nevertheless, what I say is true, Henry, and
here is a safe rule for ye to follow for the rest of
your life: never point a gun, loaded or unloaded, at
any human bein' unless ye mean to kill or wound him."

At the instant Dorlan finished speaking a half
dozen laughing bluejackets came running around a
corner into the marines' compartment.  Following
in close pursuit was a companion flourishing a
noosed rope in one hand and a revolver in the other.
As he appeared he called out:

"Catch the bandits!"

It was innocent horse play and the men in the
vicinity turned to watch the chase.  The "bandits"
disappeared through a door on the port side of the
deck, the pursuer aimed his revolver at them and
pulled on the double-action trigger.  There was a
loud report and a leaden bullet flattened itself
harmlessly against the iron bulkhead.

The young apprentice seaman who had fired the
shot stopped short and, with a white face, looked in
horror at the smoking weapon as it fell from his
nerveless grasp to the deck.

"I never knew it was loaded!" he cried hoarsely.

Reaching for the heavy Colt's, Corporal Dorlan
picked it up and broke open the cylinder,--every
chamber but the one just discharged was filled with
death.

"Come up to the Officer of the Deck, young
feller," ordered Dorlan grimly, taking the trembling
sailor by the arm, and as they turned to leave,
he looked towards Dick and Henry, saying:

"As I said before--never point a gun unless ye
mean to kill."

No more salutary lesson could have been given
than old Mike's talk and its startling sequel.

.. vspace:: 2

Out into the windward passage; northward then
eastward into the trade-wind-tossed, white-capped
waters of the Atlantic; past the mountainous shores
of Haiti and the famous or infamous island of
Tortuga, whence came the buccaneers and their
notorious chief, Sir Henry Morgan.

Then the character of the land changed from
rugged mountains rising at the shore line to low,
gray, misty ranges rearing their serrated ridges far
inland.  Finally from out the sea a lone peak
reared its crest; growing ever higher and higher--the
well-known Monte Granero, so called by the
great discoverer when he first saw it, and from the
summit of which can be seen the site where now are
the ruins of New Isabella on the northern shore of
San Domingo.  On the low-lying plain a few miles
southwestward from the base of the mountain was
the straggling town of Monte Cristi, sweltering in
the morning sunshine.

Since before dawn the spluttering snap of the
wireless filled the air on board the *Denver* as the
message sped through the intervening miles of
space to the flagship lying in the open bay off
Cabras Island.

Captain Bentley on the bridge read the aerograms
with interest, and particularly the last one.

.. vspace:: 2

"Large force rebels reported operating vicinity
Samana Bay.  Proceed to Sanchez, investigate
conditions, protect American and foreign lives and
property.  Guard customs.  Report conditions."

.. vspace:: 2

"We will continue on our present bearing,
Mr. Ogden," said the Captain; "read this, and send
word to the Navigating Officer to report to me at
once in my cabin."

Captain Bentley then went below, and soon was
poring over the chart of Samana Bay, one of the
finest harbors and most desirable bases in the whole
of the West Indies.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`SEÑOR PEREZ ASKS FOR AID`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XII


.. class:: center medium

   SEÑOR PEREZ ASKS FOR AID

.. vspace:: 2

Before the mud caused by the dropping anchor
rose to the surface of the water, a shore boat
containing two oarsmen and one passenger put out
from the wharf and pulled for the *Denver*.  That
the passenger was in a hurry was evidenced by his
gesticulating hands, and by the black cotton
umbrella held by its bulging center which he waved in
an attempt to make the clumsy boatmen pull
together.  From under the white cork helmet his
dark face worked spasmodically as with a mixture
of Spanish, English and German words he urged
on his laggard crew.

Interested sailors and marines lined the ship's
rail, watching the approach of the stout, excited
little foreigner.  His rapid speech was now quite
audible though not intelligible.

"He is giving those peons what my mother would
call 'gowdy,'" said Dick to Henry, "and that is
her worst swear word."

"Meaning our excitable friend is rather strong
in his choice of expletives?" inquired Henry.

"You've got it, Hank!  His language is hot
enough to make a bottle of Tobasco sauce weep
tears of envy."

By this time the boat was within a few yards of
the ship.

"Boat ahoy!  What do you want?" hailed the
Officer of the Deck.

"I want to see the Captain.  I am the consul.
I am Señor Perez.  There is much trouble."

"Come alongside," ordered the Officer of the
Deck, and walked to the gangway to meet the
consul who, with surprising agility, sprang from his
boat and waddled hurriedly on deck.

"Excuse the absence of honors, Señor, but we
did not expect you.  The Captain will see you at
once, sir."

"I do not want the honors, I want the protection.
I want----"

"Orderly, conduct Señor Perez to the Captain's
cabin," said the officer, and still talking volubly the
little man disappeared below, the marine orderly
leading the way.

"It was a regular vaudeville show," said Private
Jones later, hardly able to control his laughter
while he related the interview to a group of friends
accosting him for news after he came off watch.
"The little Spig is our consul, all right enough, and
after the Old Man had quieted him down a bit he
appeared to be a pretty agreeable sort.  But, say!
He was going strong when he first opened up, and
that's no idle jest."

"All right, Jonesie, cut that part and tell us what
all the excitement's about."

"From what I gathered seeing the door to the
cabin was open all the time," continued Jones,
"he's all wrought up over the arrival of a bunch of
rebels in the hills back of the town.  He has just
returned from a trip to the States; came on a Clyde
Liner Saturday.  His daughter was struck in the
leg by a stray bullet during the revolution two
years ago and has been in New York for treatment.
He brought her back, also a new German
governess for his four children, the oldest being this
little girl--her name is Sol-la-de-da or something
like that----"

"Guess you mean Soledad," volunteered Dick.

"That's it,--Soledad!  Well, last night the rebs
shot up the town, but no one was hurt.  The little
girl--he sort of worships her--was scared stiff, and
so was everyone else.  The government troops were
afraid to leave the fort, but added their shots and
shouts to the general uproar.

"Some of the bullets hit the consulate, and Perez
believes, because he is the American Consul and
Americans are unpopular with the rebs--also
because he was active in electing the present
president--that they are after him.  He's a native of
San Domingo, and I expect he ought to know what
he's talking about."

"What did the Old Man tell him?" asked one
of the men.

"The Captain told him he'd received orders not
to send any forces ashore unless absolutely
necessary; in other words, that we are not to get mixed
up with any of the fighting at all if we can help it.
He offered to take him and all his family on board
for a while."

"What did the Spig say to that?"

"Oh, he went up in the air at first, but it was
finally settled to arrange signals from his house to
the ship, and if he was actually attacked he could
send up a rocket or two and we'd land in a jiffy.
You see, there are only about fifty insurrectos in
the hills, so it's estimated, and there are two
hundred government troops in the town, and the rebs
are afraid to come in to attack, even though the
federals are afraid of them.  We are going to keep
our search-lights on all night, and though we can't
see the Spigs in the bosky they'll think we can, and
that'll be enough to scare 'em.  After that Mr. Consul
went ashore with a bundle of rockets under
one arm and his old bumbershoot under the other,
mollified but not satisfied."

"Is that all you know?" inquired another
inquisitive man.

"You can't expect me to remember everything;
besides, I'm no evening paper," answered Jones.

"You ain't no yeller journal, that's sure," said
Joe Choiniski, sneeringly, from the edge of Jones'
audience.  "I, for one, wouldn't give two cents to
read all you've chawed about so far."

"Nobody asked you to butt in and listen,"
promptly answered Jones, looking at the speaker,
who was none too popular, especially with the
marines, "but I've got a dime thriller up my sleeve
for the Sunday edition."

"Loosen up, Jonesie," said a big marine, tossing
into the circle a quarter, which Jones deftly
caught, "here's two bits; you can keep the change.
What's the scandal?"

Rather proud at being the center of so much
attraction, an honor not ordinarily accorded him,
Jones continued:

"Well, the chief thing old Perez was excited over
is a bunch of money he's got in his house.  He's
about the richest man in town, and is a kind of
banker too, and he's got several thousands of
dollars of government money in his keeping.  He
can't get rid of it, for the railroad is busted up.
He's afraid to let the Commanding Officer of the
government troops know about it, for the simple
reason that a lot of pay is already due him and his
men, and they'd be liable to confiscate it and his
own coin too.  He claims that the rebel chief is an
enemy of his and wouldn't hesitate to kill him and
his whole family if he heard about the money and
could get it.  He can't let the money out of his
house for the reason he's received word a federal
officer is expected at any old time to get it, and if
he didn't have it ready for instant delivery, he'd
always be in bad with the authorities, and----"

"You have done enough talking, young man,"
interrupted First Sergeant Douglass, who
overheard the latter part of Jones' discourse, "and I
want to tell you, if ever I hear you or any other
orderly disclosing, without authority, official
matters which you may happen to overhear while on
duty in a position of trust, I'll see that you get
well and properly punished.  You may not have
thought of it in that light, but it's a sneaking,
unmanly trick, and marines are supposed to be men,
not sneaks."

Private Jones was honest enough to feel the
humiliation of this rebuke, but that did not stop the
tales he told from being quickly carried to every
member of the crew.

Soon after, "all hands" was called.  Rifles and
ammunition issued to the sailors and word passed
that the landing force would sleep under arms until
further notice, after which recall sounded and the
routine drills were resumed.

Much to the disappointment of the crew, no one
was allowed ashore, and though the town did not
offer much in the way of diversion or entertainment,
it was a new country and a new people for the
majority, and all were naturally curious.

On the steep slopes of the hill, rising abruptly
from the water's edge, nestled the little town,
consisting of one principal street following generally
a contour line, while from it on either hand were
cobbled lanes and narrow paths with no general
symmetry or direction.  Back of the town on a
spur of the mountain stood the red-walled fort, a
winding road leading to its entrance.  Barefooted
soldiers in red caps and blue denim coats and
trousers and armed with nearly every make of
antique rifle lined the walls of the fort or marched
along the road.  At frequent intervals strange calls
sounded on high pitched bugles to which no one
seemed to pay the slightest attention.

Night fell!  A glorious rising moon spread its
effulgent rays over a peaceful scene.  From the
little village on the hillside came the tinkle of
guitars, the shouts of playing children.  The shore
lights twinkled cheerfully, while in a large building
a dance was in progress.  Added to the moon's
brilliancy were the beams of the ship's search-lights
constantly moving over woods and town, making
objects clear cut and distinct but casting massive
black shadows where house or hillock intervened.

"This is the bloodiest war I've ever heard about,"
said Henry in disgust at the peaceful turn of
affairs.  "I do wish they'd start something, don't
you, Dick?"

Dick glanced about at the sleeping men, their
rifles by their sides, canteens and haversacks and
bayonets within easy reach, ready for any
emergency, but instead of answering he emitted an
unintelligible grunt, turned over on his side and was
soon asleep.

For two nights peace and quiet.  The insurrectos
had withdrawn from the near-by hills, so
it was reported, but were guarding all the roads
and keeping fresh supplies from reaching the inhabitants.

On Wednesday afternoon liberty was granted a
limited number of officers and men.  Henry,
being on duty, was unable to go ashore, so Dick found
himself alone soon after his arrival on the beach.

A small hotel attracted most of the men with its
one decrepit pool table, tinny piano and refreshment
café.  The town was a little garden spot,
each yard filled with a profusion of flowers.  Dick
turned to the left at the main street and strolled
along in the direction of the consulate.  Passing
the house, easily the finest residence in sight, he
noticed the bright colors of the American flag
hanging from the white pole, and on the spacious piazza
three children, olive-skinned and dark-eyed, waved
their hands in friendly greeting to the young
marine.  He addressed them in his halting Spanish,
but they hung back bashfully, making no reply.

Señor Perez's residence was at the end of the
well-kept street on the outskirts of the town.  Dick,
not noticing where the winding road to the fort
branched off, continued into the country before he
became aware that the road was little more than a
wide trail, which had turned and twisted away from
the bay.  Occupied with his thoughts, and the
tropical vegetation and strange birds on every hand,
he had gone much further than was his intention.

He was about to retrace his steps when a
woman's scream from around the bend ahead
arrested him.  Though no words were uttered it was
distinctly a call for help, and without a second
thought Dick ran towards the spot.  Arriving at
the bend of the road he saw a young woman in the
grasp of two disreputable looking natives, while a
few yards beyond a half dozen others with rifles
slung over their shoulders were turning off the trail
into the dense underbrush.

The leading man of those in the distance carried
a struggling child, a girl, in his arms.  From where
he stood Dick noticed her face was covered with a
dirty cloth which stifled any outcry.  The two men
holding the woman were so occupied in keeping her
from breaking away in pursuit of the men with the
child, and attempting to gag her, that they were
unaware of Dick's timely approach.  The fact that
the ruffians did not see him favored the attack
which the boy delivered silently and swiftly.  One
of the men was holding the woman's arms while the
other, bending, endeavored to bind them behind her
with a piece of rope.  She twisted her supple body
and kicked vigorously with her stout walking shoes.

As Dick reached them he swung his right fist
with all his strength on the jaw of the standing
man, knocking him senseless to the road.  Grabbing
the other about the waist he fairly lifted him off the
ground and threw him heavily.

Like a cat the native was on his feet.  Rushing
at Dick with a savage cry he drew back his right
arm, in which was a dangerous looking knife.  His
assailant was within a few feet of him when Dick
launched his one hundred and sixty-five pounds of
brawn and muscle in a low tackle which did credit
to his football training at Bankley.  Unaccustomed
to such a method of attack, the native had no chance
at all, and again he fell to the path, his head
striking against a rock; the knife flew from his hand into
the bushes, and he lay there motionless.

In another moment Dick was up, and taking the
pieces of rope he found near by, he quickly tied both
men securely, nor did he do the task at all gently.
The man whom Dick had first struck was now
groaning, for the terrific blow had fractured his
jaw; as for the other, it was not certain in Dick's
mind whether he was dead or not, for he had not
moved since his second fall.

For the first time Dick looked at the woman
whose summons for help he had so effectually
answered.  To his surprise she was lying in the road,
her eyes closed and face deathly pale.  What should
he do?  Was she dead?  Had her assailants dealt
her some fatal blow?  Had he arrived too late to
save her?

Kneeling at her side Dick looked anxiously into
her face; he felt incompetent to cope with this
phase of the situation.  She was a comely woman
about thirty years of age, her fair complexion and
light hair proclaiming her of a northern race.  As
he watched, the color began slowly returning to the
white cheeks.  He saw her lips move and bending
he caught the one word they uttered:

"Soledad!"

He was still bending over her when the eyelids
quiveringly opened and drawing a deep sigh the
blue eyes of the woman looked straight up into the
dark eyes of the brown-skinned boy, whose straight
black hair and aquiline features, now covered in
dirt and dust, brought to her mind but one
thought--the horrible men who had attacked her.
She started to scream, but the unspeakable terror
again crept over her and again she fainted.

Dick's mind was working with lightning rapidity.
The name "Soledad" must be that of Señor Perez's
daughter; this woman must be the new governess!
Her two assailants, securely bound, were no
longer a menace, but the child was in a dangerous
predicament.  The German woman would soon
regain consciousness and be able to secure help--but
Soledad, the little girl already in mortal fear of
rebels, who for two years had suffered from a
former revolution, what of her?  If he returned for
help her abductors would be far away by that time.
If he set out in pursuit at once he might overtake
them and--and what?

He was unarmed!  What could he accomplish
against so many?  Six men had disappeared in the
tangle of woods,--there might be more, and those
he had seen were armed with rifles.  He remembered
that point distinctly.

How fast his brain worked!--the pros and cons
flashing before his mind's eye with kaleidoscopic
clearness, in all their varying positions.  Would
those who had gone wait for their two comrades?

In that thought was a glimmer of hope, for it
might be they were even now waiting not far off.
Could he find them?  The trail, the country,--all
were new to him!

His roving eyes swept the two men lying at the
roadside.  Here were weapons.  He at least would
not go unarmed.  Rising, he went to the trussed-up
men and calmly took from them their revolvers,
holsters and ammunition belts.  The man with a
broken jaw was suffering, but with the stoicism of
a brute rather than of a man.  From him Dick also
removed a two-edged dagger in its sheath, while the
fellow glared at him silently.  A moment in
adjusting his weapons, another to find his campaign
hat, a final inspection of the bound legs and arms
of the natives, a last look at the woman, who was
showing signs of returning consciousness, and he
was running off down the road.  Not a mad dash
such as he made in his attack, but the long swinging
stride of the cross-country athlete.

It seemed to Dick as though hours had elapsed,
when in reality the minutes had been but few.  In
the stress of action, when brain and mind, flesh and
bone, nerve and muscle, are working in perfect
coördination even Time in his flight appears to stop
and wait.  But Dick's mind was not engaged in
thoughts of this character as he turned from the
trail and disappeared into the tropical jungle on
his precarious errand of mercy.

Fräulein Stauche opened her eyes slowly.  She
almost feared to do so, for the last thing she
remembered were the black eyes of a dirty ferocious native
glaring into her own, his face so close she could feel
his breath fanning her cheek.  This time she saw
nothing but the blue sky overhead.  The sun, low
on the western ridge, would soon sink, bringing a
premature twilight hour to the little town nestling
at the base of the lofty mountain.  The glare,
however, hurt her eyes and she closed them.  It was
easier to collect her thoughts thus.  Why was she
lying here under the open sky, and who had been
the man staring at her when she looked but a second
or two ago?  Where was Soledad?

Soledad!

The name brought back with such startling
poignancy the fearful tragedy through which she had
lived that she struggled to her feet and looked about
her in fear and trembling.  She recalled how, with
Soledad holding her hand, they had strolled along
this path, when without warning two men sprang
at her from the bushes and attempted to gag her,
while others, how many she could not remember,
grabbed her dainty little charge and ran along the
path and disappeared in the thicket, leaving her
fighting and struggling.  She looked down the
trail and caught sight of a man just turning where
the others had turned.

What had they done with the child?  What
should she do?  Fear was tugging at her heart and
her knees shook with weakness.  A movement at
the roadside attracted her.  She looked.  Lying
there were two men.  They were now still, but the
eyes of one were fastened on her.  With a scream
of terror, Fräulein Stauche turned and ran as fast
as she could for the town behind her.

At last the consulate--and from the pole flew the
stars and stripes in the evening breeze!  Thank the
good God that the gray ship was in the harbor.
Help would soon be forthcoming, and as she
struggled on she prayed it would not come too late.

.. vspace:: 2

When the officers reported their divisions at
evening quarters on board the *Denver* that night
another of the ship's force was among those
missing.  For Drummer Comstock had already been
reported as absent upon the return of the liberty
party at five-thirty, but now the Engineer Officer
stated that Joe Choiniski had jumped ship.

"How do you think Choiniski got ashore?"
asked the Captain of Mr. Ogden.

"The only solution I can offer is that during the
noon hour, while the men were buying fruit from
the bum-boats, Choiniski secreted himself aboard
one of them.  He was seen hanging around the
port gangway at that hour in dungarees and Chief
Master-at-Arms Fitch ordered him below."

"Did he obey the order?"

"Fitch does not know, sir.  The Officer of the
Deck called him at that second to drive away some
bum-boatmen trying to tie up to the starboard
gangway, and when he returned Choiniski was gone."

"That coal passer is a bad man, and I hope, now
that he's gone, that we have seen the last of him;
but, isn't it a strange coincidence that Drummer
Comstock did not return on time?  Do you attach
any significance to that?"

"Oh, no, Captain, Comstock and Choiniski are
not in the least friendly.  They would not hob-nob
together."

"That is not what I mean.  I have heard that
Choiniski threatened to get even with Comstock on
account of the affair in Culebra.  I was thinking
that he might have made his threat good.  I believe
him capable of almost any act.  I don't like his face."

"Here is Sergeant Douglass, sir; he may give us
some information," said Mr. Ogden, and the
Captain turned to the old marine.

"Sergeant, what have you heard regarding the
actions of Drummer Comstock while on shore?"

"From inquiries, sir, I find he did not stay with
the others, but went around town by himself.  Some
sailors were talking with him in front of the hotel,
and they state that he started off for the fort.
After he had gone some distance they also decided
to visit the fort and followed him, but when they
came to the road that leads up the hill they saw him
still going along the main road in an easterly
direction.  They thought he acted queerly in not asking
them to accompany him, for they were discussing
the matter between them, and when they saw he
didn't go towards the fort at all, they decided he
must have some reason for not wanting them along.
That was the last seen of the boy."

"Thank you, Sergeant, that is all.  Let me know
if you hear anything further."

"Aye, aye, sir," and Sergeant Douglass saluted
and turned away.

"It's after six o'clock, sir, and if that is all for
the present I will get ready for mess."

Captain Bentley was about to reply when the
Gunner came hurriedly up the ladder and, spying
Lieutenant Commander Ogden, he approached and
saluted.

"Mr. Ogden, the chief gunner's mate reports to
me that two Colt's forty-fives, and a dozen boxes
of ammunition have disappeared from the armory
since morning quarters.  He put the revolvers
away himself and locked the door--it is a snap
lock--which was still as he left it when he went in
the armory a while ago."

"Who has access to the armory, Mr. Nelson?"
asked the Captain, and a dark frown appeared on
his face.  Too many inexplicable things were
happening on board his ship this day to suit him, and
he was becoming decidedly annoyed.

"I have the only key, sir, and I never allow
anyone in the armory except the chief gunner's mate.
Whenever he gets through his work there he
always brings the key to me.  Of course, Mr. Ogden
has duplicate keys, as you know, sir."

"Does the chief gunner's mate permit anyone in there?"

"No, sir, I believe he obeys my order to the
letter.  A few days ago he asked and received
permission to allow Drummer Comstock of the
marines in there.  The boy wanted to familiarize
himself with the mechanism of the Colt's machine-gun."

"Hm-m-m-m!  What do you think now, Mr. Ogden?"
and Captain Bentley gazed scowlingly at
the darkening shadows on the mountainside, and
the lights appearing, one by one, in the houses
ashore.

Even while he looked there came distinctly to his
ears the loud:

Sh-h-h-s-h-h! like escaping steam as from the
vicinity of the consulate a streak of fire shot into
the air.  Then came the sound of an explosion,
while directly over the ship three green balls of fire
cast a ghostly glare on the upturned faces of
officers and men.

Señor Perez had called for aid!





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XIII


.. class:: center medium

   CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE

.. vspace:: 2

The three green balls of fire floated past the ship
and slowly faded away in the heavens.  Absolute
silence reigned, while those on the *Denver's* deck
watched with fascination their weird progress.

From the shore came no sign nor sound of
disturbance.  No calls, shouts, nor firing of guns.
What, then, was the meaning of the rocket?

"It was fired from the consulate," said Captain
Bentley.  "My agreement with the consul was to
send up a rocket in case he absolutely needed
assistance, but he is such an excitable individual and
his nerves are in such state that he is quite capable
of committing any error of judgment."

"The shore looks peaceable enough," remarked
Mr. Ogden.  "Shall I have the search-lights
turned on, sir?"

"Yes, and then I wish you to go ashore and
investigate.  Take a squad of marines with you and
a bugler.  If in your estimation an immediate
landing is required, he can sound 'call to arms'
from the consulate.  It will save time.  I seriously
doubt if there is need of such drastic action."

The search-light beams lighted up the shore while
the Captain was speaking and those officers who had
binoculars scanned the town for evidences of
excitement.  A few people strolled about the streets
turning their faces from the glare as the travelling
rays momentarily flooded them with daytime brilliancy.

"Call away the steamer, Mr. Gardiner, and
send word to Sergeant Douglass to have a squad
of men and a trumpeter ready to get aboard
when she comes alongside.  I will go ashore
in the same boat," and having given his orders
Mr. Ogden disappeared below to get his sidearms.

Ensign Gardiner, Officer of the Deck, issued his
orders promptly.  In the marine compartment
Douglass was besieged with requests from eager
marines to be among those landed, but his announcement
that Corporal Dorlan's squad was detailed for
the duty blasted the hopes of all but the fortunate
ones included.  Henry Cabell, being the only
music left in the guard, was also detailed, and a few
minutes later Mr. Ogden followed the last of his
guard into the steamer.

"Shove off, coxswain.  Take your orders from
Mr. Ogden," ordered Mr. Gardiner, and the little
steamer started on its way to the landing, full speed
ahead.

A little after five o'clock that afternoon Señora
Perez awaited the return of the governess and little
Soledad.  The rebel forces had withdrawn; the
American sailors were ashore, and no thought of
danger entered her mind.  From the high ground
of the garden in front of the house she could now
see the boats returning to the ship laden down with
the liberty party.  It was high time for Fräulein to
be back.

A sound as of someone trying to lift the latch of
the gate came to Señora's ears.

"They have come home," she thought as she
turned to watch the entrance, but the next moment,
with a cry of apprehension she was running to
support the faltering form of the German governess.

"Where is Soledad?  Where is my child?" she
demanded in a shrill, strange voice.

But Fräulein Stauche was unable to answer.
She had reached the limit of her endurance, and she
fell into Señora Perez's arms, overcome and speechless.

With the help of servants she was carried into
the house and restoratives given.  Messengers were
sent for the consul and a physician.  In the
meantime the distracted mother listened to the
disconnected words and sentences which told her of her
child.  Finally the consul arrived and in turn was
given the sad news.  But all this took time, and
nearly three hours had elapsed since Soledad was
snatched from the keeping of Fräulein.  Unhesitatingly
the consul fired the signal which would
bring the most efficient aid he could command, and
while he watched its gracefully curving arc shooting
out over the darkening waters, and the three green
balls of fire slowly drift across the bay, he lost all
hope of ever seeing his child, for he knew the rebel
chief Gonzales whose forces held the approaches to
the town and he knew nothing but evil of the man.
Waiting there in the darkness he heard the bugle
on board ship calling away the boats, bringing aid
to his door.  He saw the search-lights illuminate
the shore line and then he paced from door to gate,
back and forth waiting--waiting!  No longer a
fussy, ridiculous figure, for the despair which
gripped his heart lent him a new dignity.

Soon the tramp of men on the macadam road!
No native soldiers ever walked with that long
swinging stride.  He watched them pass beneath a
glimmering street light at the corner, "two, four,
six, eight," he counted, as the rifle barrels flashed
by.  What!  No more than eight men, when
hundreds were needed if ever they hoped to catch
Gonzales!  Yes, more than hundreds!

Then he saw two more Americans pass the light,
one a naval officer in his white uniform.  Ah,
perhaps this little body was merely an advance guard!

Rushing to the gate, he met Lieutenant Commander
Ogden and in the fewest possible words,
brokenly related his pitiful story.  Meanwhile
Dorlan and his men entered the grounds and stood at
ease, silently attentive.

"May I see Fräulein Stauche?" asked
Mr. Ogden.  "Perhaps she may remember more
incidents now that she has recovered a little.  Does
she speak English?"

"Si, Señor[#] Ogden, she speaks four languages
fluently.  Come this way," and the Consul led the
officer to the hysterical governess, and while the
questions he asked her were being answered Dorlan
stood by listening.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Yes, sir, or master, or mister.
   Señora is lady, madam, etc.  Niña
   means little girl and niño, little boy.

.. vspace:: 2

"Yes, two men first attacked her.  No, they
were not soldiers.  On second thoughts she was
positive one with whom she fought was dressed like
the American soldiers from the ship.  He was the
one she remembered bending over her when she
recovered consciousness, and now she recalled seeing
him run down the road after the others with the
child.  Yes, he was armed with two revolvers.
No, she did not understand why two natives were
lying near her on the road--she only remembered
seeing the eyes of one of them fastened on her and,
becoming terrified, she fled.  Not a word had been
spoken, but the last man looked like a Spaniard.
He was good looking but very dirty."

Mr. Ogden was at a loss as to what action he
should take.  It was out of the question to send a
searching party into the country; in the night they
could accomplish nothing.  Leaving Dorlan and
his men in charge he returned to make his report to
Captain Bentley.  The Consul had sent word to the
Commandant at the fort, but that official said he
could not order his men out on such an errand
without permission of higher authority.  More than
likely his men would refuse to go in any case.

"The evidence against Drummer Comstock and
Choiniski seems to be growing," said the Captain
when Mr. Ogden had ceased speaking as they sat
in the cabin, after the Executive's return.

"Yes, it is, startlingly so, for to-night Corporal
Dorlan told me that every man on the ship knows
the Consul has a large sum of money in his house.
I supposed that fact was known only to you, the
Consul and myself."

"How did it leak out?"

"Your orderly, Jones, repeated what he had
overheard the first day Señor Perez came on board.
Both the absentees were present and Choiniski even
questioned Jones later regarding the talk.  As for
the Drummer, Fräulein Stauche describes him very
accurately, dark eyes, black hair, dark skin,--you
know how tanned he is--and 'dressed like soldiers
from the ship.'  Comstock claimed he was bound
for the fort, and apparently was anxious to be
alone, but we know he did not go up there.  He
was last seen on that very road, and shortly before
the attack happened.  Dorlan swears that the boy
is innocent, and believes he was hurt and possibly is
lying on the road wounded or else he has gone in
pursuit of the men who abducted the child."

"It is a serious matter," said the Captain.  "I
dislike to hold a suspicion of the kind against the
young marine, but the circumstances are certainly
damaging, and there are some points you have overlooked."

"Something derogatory to the marine?"

"Yes.  If you recall, he was allowed in the
armory as a favor, and to-day two revolvers are
missing from there; also the governess says the last
man who disappeared had on two revolvers."

"Well, sir, it looks black indeed.  If it is true
then the rebel leader Gonzales is not the guilty
party.  But what is the object in taking the child?"

"Having possession of the Consul's daughter
and knowing the Consul has a large amount of cash,
the object is altogether too plain to admit of error in
arriving at a conclusion;--hostage and ransom
money, Mr. Ogden!  It is Choiniski's idea, and
Comstock's help in the matter will make the venture
a success.  I was cruising in the Mediterranean
when the missionary, Miss Stone, was abducted in
Turkey.  The bandits of the Balkans and of
Turkey resort often to this method of procuring
funds.  Joe Choiniski was born in Krajik, a small
village hidden away in the wildest part of the
Albanian Mountains.  To him this is no horrible
thing, as it is to us."

For a while there was silence in the little cabin.
Then the Captain continued:

"By morning I think we may have some news.
I have no fears for the child's life.  She is too
valuable alive.  Her abductors want money and will
find a way to have a message reach her father
demanding payment.  But nothing can be done to-night."

"One more thing, Captain.  I have stated these
facts about the young marine, not because I am
convinced of his guilt, but because every point having
bearing on the case should be weighed.  Now, if he
is not guilty or implicated, what has become of him?
Corporal Dorlan wanted permission to go up the
road to where the attack took place and look over
the ground.  He feels that young Comstock may
be lying there in the road and unable to return.  He
is staunch in his belief in the boy, and if you have
no objection I would like to send him on the errand.
It could do no harm."

"Is there anyone ashore who can read signals?"

"Almost all the marines are good signalmen, and
Trumpeter Cabell is an expert.  He can read any
kind of a message not in code."

"Very well, send the order, and have Dorlan
report by signal immediately upon his return.  But
he is not to go off the trail nor further than the
point mentioned.  You say he has a flash-light, and
it should be easy to discover traces in the dirt of the
roadway."

Trumpeter Cabell felt the importance of his
position when, a little later, he began spelling out
the message, from the string of red and white lights,
sent by Ardois[#] from the *Denver*.  Corporal Dorlan
took down each letter carefully, for he wanted
to make no mistake in his instructions.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] "Ardois" lights are used for night signalling in the Navy.

.. vspace:: 2

"It's about time they was doin' somethin'
regardin' that lad," he mumbled as he wet the stubby
pencil in order to write more legibly.  "Now,
young feller, ye wigwag to the ship, when they
throw the light on this balcony and can see yer, that
I want 'em to keep that fool search-light away from
this place.  Every time they shine it over here it
puts the whole lot of us in plain view to git shot up
by any Spig in the neighborhood.  Tell 'em you
will signal with a lantern, and we don't want their
bloomin' old light around here."

With this parting word the corporal started out
on his reconnaissance along the road where the
Fräulein had met with her adventure.

There was no moon, and soon the trail turned
back from the bay.  Here the darkness of the
tropical night hung heavily about the little party.
The old soldier took no chances in his work, and
formed his three-man patrol in accordance with the
rules of warfare.

One man marched about fifty yards ahead, the
other the same distance in rear of Dorlan.  This
formation lessened the danger of a surprise, and
increased the chances of at least one member of the
patrol's escape, if attacked.  Dorlan had brought
his small flash-light with which to search the ground
for clues of any import.

"I know that lad ain't mixed up with that rascal
Joe Choiniski," mused Dorlan as he walked, "no
matter what the First Lieutenant believes.  It's
more'n likely he's the very one what knocked out
them two fellers what tackled the Dootch girl,
and--ah!  Here we are!" he exclaimed.

With a low peculiar whistle he halted his men
and began a systematic search of the tracks in the
dusty path.

"Here's where the Dootch girl fainted, and
here's where the shoe marks show the scrimmage
took place.  These tracks were made by government
issue shoes and were worn by a marine.  The
imprint of the strap of the leggin' is plain as the
nose on yer face.  Them's Dick Comstock's tracks;
and it's as I says,--he's gone after them greasers
for sure.  Hello, what's this?  The grass and
bushes all bendin'.  Ah, ye dirty Dago ye.  I've got
ye.  Come back here, Smithers, and help untie
these two fellers.  We'll take 'em back and see
what they've got to say for themselves.  And I
guess that's about all I can do this night, accordin'
to me orders."

And back over the trail to the consulate went the
patrol to deliver their two prisoners and make their
report.  But if the natives knew anything, they
refused to talk, and the whereabouts of little Soledad
and Drummer Comstock still remained an unsolved
mystery.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`DICK MAKES THE ACQUAINTANCE OF COLUMBUS`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XIV


.. class:: center medium

   DICK MAKES THE ACQUAINTANCE OF COLUMBUS

.. vspace:: 2

Lieutenant Commander Ogden's surmise as to
the manner in which Joe Choiniski jumped ship was
correct, but as to the theft of the revolvers, which he
was inclined to fasten on Drummer Comstock, was not.

Just before the noon hour Choiniski, happening
by the armory and finding the door ajar, entered,
confiscated the weapons and ammunition and with
them tucked inside his dungaree jumper left the
place, snapping the lock after him; he was unseen
by any of his shipmates.

Since the *Denver's* arrival off Sanchez, he had
been bargaining with the bum-boatmen to secrete
him and take him ashore in one of their boats, but
they would not risk the chance of discovery without
payment, and having lost all his money by sentence
of the court-martial, Choiniski was without funds,
nor could he borrow any sum sufficient to tempt
their cupidity.  That noon, however, when he
promised a Colt's forty-five together with cartridges
in payment, the bargain was consummated.

Choiniski had visited the Samana Bay ports
previously while attached to his former ship, and on
one occasion he met the man Gonzales, a
Spanish-negro stevedore in the employ of the German
concern owning the one and only wharf.  Gonzales
was now in command of the rebel forces holding the
roads leading into the town, and Joe felt sure his
information regarding the large sum of money in the
consulate would be a certain means of securing for
him an established position with the rebel chief.
His familiarity with the language and his
experience, not only in the Navy but with the armed
forces in the Balkans a few years before, was
enough to make him at least second in command if
he worked his wires properly in dealing with the rebels.

Within an hour after reaching the shore he was
talking with Gonzales.

"And how much money do you say Señor Perez
has in his house?" asked the general.

"Many thousands of dollars.  I do not know the
exact amount, but enough to keep us both comfortably
for many years," answered Choiniski.

"How do you propose getting it?"

"It should be easy," said Joe.  "To-night we
will go to his house and demand it.  The Consul will
answer our summons.  We shall prevent him from
sending any message or signal to the ship.  If he
does not give us the money and if we cannot find it
on searching the house, we will take his daughter as
a hostage.  It is said he loves her more than
anything else.  Having her in our possession he will
pay up promptly."

"Your idea is good, Señor.  Now I must get my
brother, Alfredo, to assist us.  I do not trust these
men with me on such work.  They would want too
much for their share.  My brother is in command
of an outpost on the Camino Real not far from the
consulate.  I will go to him at once.  In the
meantime, Señor, await my return.  Adios!"

And off went the chief to consult with his brother,
commanding a half dozen picked men in hiding on
the road along which Soledad and the Fräulein,
who was a stranger and who did not understand the
danger, were even then strolling.

Gonzales had no intention of permitting anyone
but himself to reap the benefit of the news
confided to him by the deserter from the Yankee ship.
Least of all did he intend that Choiniski should be a
gainer thereby.  The plan was excellent, but the
sailor would never see a peso of that wealth stored
in the house of Señor Perez.

Before leaving camp Gonzales gave orders to
disarm the sailor and hold him a prisoner.

"We do not need his help," said he, after having
outlined the plan to his brother.  "How do I know
that it is not all a clever scheme to catch me!
Perhaps it is a spy who has come among us."

"Hush!  Hermano mio!" said Alfredo, and he
gazed up the road intently.  "Ah!  We are
indeed fortunate, for here comes the Señorita Soledad
and her duenna, along the trail.  Good luck is with
us!  You will take the niña, while Juan Mendoza
and I secure the woman.  We will carry her into
the hills with us and at nightfall set her free.  She
will be unable to find her way back until morning.
You and the rest of my men will carry the child to
camp and leave her.  To-night we will make our
attempt to get the money after the Yankee sailors
sleep.  Then, before they can do anything, we have
the money and are gone."

This was agreed to and it was with great satisfaction
that Alfredo, a little later, saw his brother,
Fernando, disappear in the bush carrying the child
and followed by his erstwhile soldiers.  But the
duenna was putting up such a desperate struggle
that he was glad indeed Juan was there to aid him.

As the rascal pinned Fräulein's arms behind her,
his black eyes sparkled with happy anticipation of
the prosperous days of joyous living about to be
his.  He grew careless in his efforts to hold the
governess, and in the one instant her mouth was
freed she had called loudly for help.  But this made
little difference.  No one dared to leave the town
these days with General Gonzales' band of
insurrectos holding the roads, and----

Then came the crashing blow of a hard fist on his
jaw and for a time he knew nothing more.  As for
Juan, though taken by surprise and thrown heavily
to the path, he was quick to attack on his own
account, but with the result that has been told.

When Juan recovered his senses darkness had
fallen.  His chief, Alfredo, was endeavoring to
untie the cords which bound him, but to no avail.
They turned on their sides, and back to back,
worked at the knots, each trying to assist the other.
Then their quick ears heard footfalls of someone
approaching from the town, and fearful of discovery
they rolled over and over in the grass and shrubs,
away from the trail, only to be discovered
eventually by Dorlan and his men and marched back to
the consulate as prisoners.

Corporal Dorlan's request regarding the searchlight
had been observed and the consulate was in
darkness when the reconnoitering party returned.
It was then decided to hold the prisoners until
morning before turning them over to the military
authorities and by the time the final message to that
effect was exchanged with the ship, "taps" had
sounded over the quiet waters, and the crew settled
down to a night's rest.  However, many discussions
were being carried on in an undertone
regarding the circumstances connected with Dick
Comstock's absence and Joe Choiniski's "jumping
ship."  In spite of Sergeant Douglass' warning
another orderly had violated his confidential
position and the news was common property throughout
the cruiser.  Most of Dick's ultimate friends
were indignant at hearing the story, but the
majority were inclined to regard his actions as
suspicious and proclaimed him guilty.

How fortunate it was that the object of all this
commotion was unaware of the nature of these
rumors flying among his shipmates, for had he
known of them his brain would not have been so
free to grapple with the task he had set out to accomplish.

Soon after turning from the trail he was following
at a discreet distance the six men carrying off
little Soledad.

How should he go about getting the child?  He
must take no chances, because to do so might mean
his own capture and but add to the child's troubles;
so he carefully trailed along behind her abductors,
waiting for some circumstance which would assist
him in solving his problem.

That the men did not intend to wait for their
two accomplices was evident, for they proceeded
through the forest without a backward glance.  All
the time Dick was drawing nearer to them, but as
he was forced to make his way warily, and often off
the poor trail, he was seriously handicapped.

Finally the men with the child emerged from the
woods into a clearing in which was situated the
barrio[#] where Gonzales made his headquarters.  A
dozen or more houses and shacks along either side
of the road afforded shelter for his troops, about one
hundred in number.  A few native women, and
dirty, half-naked children could be seen, while the
barking of several mangy canines filled the air.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Barrio--Small collection of houses.

.. vspace:: 2

Beyond the houses on the far side of the road
were a few scraggly bushes, and a thick grove of
cocoanut trees filled the space to the shore of the
Bay.  Here some native boats were drawn up on
the beach out of sight of the water, and in the grove
small groups of rebel soldiers were engaged in
various pursuits.

Perforce, Dick was obliged to stop on the edge
of the woods and watch General Gonzales and his
small band cross the clearing and enter the largest
house on the far side of the road.  Dick crouched
down in a thick bed of ferns and studied the
situation, keeping close tab on the incidents taking place
before him and waiting for the darkness which
would soon fall.  That the rebels were carefully
guarding the road was evidenced by the little
groups of men, to be observed about one hundred
yards from either end of the barrio, who halted all
persons approaching.

Near Dick's refuge was a well which supplied the
drinking water for the community, and frequent
visits to this well were made by men, women and
children.

It was nearly dusk when a small native boy came
bounding out of the quarters of General Gonzales,
and the General himself appeared in the dimly
lighted doorway.  That he had been chastising the
urchin was evident from the way the boy rubbed
his shoulders and from his loud lamentations as he
stood at a safe distance and observed the rebel
leader.

"Here you rascal, you!  Be quiet, or I will beat
you more.  Go and bring me some fresh water at
once, or you will be sorry your namesake ever
discovered this island," and with the words Gonzales
threw a battered pail at the boy.

"Come now, hurry, you imp of Satan;" with
that the General entered the house and closed the door.

Painfully the boy picked up the pail and
approached the well.  Dick could hear his sobs as he
drew near.  Arriving at the well he made no
attempt to draw the water but stood looking back in
the direction of the house.  Finally he shook his
small hand in a gesture which Dick's knowledge of
West Indian customs told him implied contempt
and insult, and from the boy's rapid speech Dick
heard enough to convince him that here was a
possible ally, could he but win the native lad's confidence.

With a sibilant hiss Dick attracted the boy's
attention, but though he looked about him in some
fear he was unable to discover who called.

"Quien habla?"[#] he questioned, still looking
about him.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Who speaks?

.. vspace:: 2

"Un amigo: un Americano,"[#] answered Dick,
and then before the boy had time to make an
outcry he spoke again.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] A friend, an American.

.. vspace:: 2

"Do you want to make plenty of money, muchacho?"[#]


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Spanish for boy.

.. vspace:: 2

The boy had now located Dick's hiding-place and
he approached warily.

"How can I make plenty of money?" he questioned
in a dubious tone.

"If you will help me, I will see that you get it,
and also I will see that the big man is punished for
beating you."

The boy was by this time squatting down on his
haunches within a few feet of Dick and even in the
dusk, Dick could see the eyes flash with anger at the
mention of the past incident.

"But what can you, an American, do against
General Gonzales, and all his soldiers?  Everyone
here fears him!  Even my father grovels at his
feet, and my mother must do as he says.  He will
kill my father and my mother and me some day, I
fear, when he becomes angered.  He is a big chief.
I am afraid to do aught against him."

"There will be no danger if you do as I will
suggest and----"

At that moment the door of the General's house
was thrown open, and again the figure of the chief
was framed in the lighted doorway.

"Columbus!  Columbus!  Come here at once!"
roared the harsh voice across the clearing.

"I must go, or he will send the soldiers for me.
But I will return," said the lad, rising, and quickly
filling the pail he ran back across the clearing.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE ESCAPE FROM THE BARRIO`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XV


.. class:: center medium

   THE ESCAPE FROM THE BARRIO

.. vspace:: 2

In an incredibly short time Columbus was back,
and this time he nursed a large bruise on the side of
his head where the General's cane had fallen with
no light force.

"If my father were able to fight he would kill
that nigger," exclaimed the excited lad.  "But my
father was crippled in the last revolution.  That
general, he makes our house his own.  He makes
my mother to cook for him and to wash for him.
We could not leave my father when the rebels
occupied the barrio.  We had to stay to look out for
him.  They eat our food and kill our pigs and
chickens, and never pay.  They----"

"Is your name Columbus?" inquired Dick in
order to cut short the boy's tale of trials and tribulations.

"Si, Señor."

"Well, Columbus, here are two brand new Americano
pesos for you, and there will be many more if
you do as I tell you," and Dick passed over the
silver coins.

"What must I do?"

"First of all tell me how many soldiers are in the
barrio."

"Over one hundred, Señor."

"How far is it from here to Sanchez?"

"By the shore road it is nearly three kilometers.
The shore road passes through the barrio," said the lad.

"Is the road guarded by more soldiers than the
group of men I could see before dark on the
outskirts of the town?"

"Oh, yes, Señor, they patrol the entire road every
night.  The big light from the ship does not
frighten them."

"Can you see the ship from the beach back of
your house, Columbus?"

"No, a point of land prevents that, but it is not
far by boat,--a little over a kilometer."

"Who is in your house with the General?"

"The five soldiers who came with him this
afternoon, my mother and father and a little girl the
general stole from her people.  I do not know her
name.  She weeps all the time, but makes no noise.
He has told her he will kill her if she tries to run
away."

"Columbus, I want to get the little girl out of
that house and return her to her father and her
mother.  If you help me they will pay you well."

"It is impossible, Señor.  I overheard the
General making plans to go to Sanchez and attack the
house of her father to-night, and he gave his men
orders to guard the child carefully.  There are to
be men both inside and outside the house all the time."

"Would your father and mother help us?"

"No, Señor, they could not afford to.  They
would fear to go contrary to General Gonzales'
orders."

"At what hour does the General start for the town?"

"Very soon, for he expects to be there by ten
o'clock, Señor."

"Are there any small boats on the beach?"

"Oh, yes, and the best canoe there is my own."

"Providing I get the little girl out of the house,
will you go in the canoe with me to the American
ship?"

"No, Señor, I am afraid; but I will place paddles
in my canoe and I will do what else I can to assist
you.  My canoe is the last one on the beach nearest
the town."

"Describe your house, Columbus.  Where are
the windows and doors?"

"That reminds me, Señor--after all, I can help
you.  If you approach our casa from the rear you
will find a little cocina[#] which opens into the middle
room.  My father and mother occupy the room on
the right as you enter from the cocina.  My room
was on the left, but it is now the General's, and the
little girl is lying in there now, weeping.  Long
ago I loosened a board at the side near the cocina
so that it will slide back, and I used it to go out
when my parents believed me asleep.  I will tell
the child about you and the hole and she can escape
that way.  First I will put my paddles in the canoe,
and then you can take her in it to your ship.  Keep
close to the shore until you are around the point,
then go direct to the vessel.  There are no shoals to
fear.  The only thing to be careful about is passing
through the cocoanut grove.  Avoid the hut, for
soldiers are guarding a prisoner there also."


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Cocina--Kitchen.

.. vspace:: 2

"Another prisoner?  A native?" questioned Dick.

"No, he is a sailor who ran away from your ship
and came here shortly after noon to-day, and he
told the General about the money and the little girl.
But the General had him imprisoned, for he
distrusts him and he had the sailor's pistol and
ammunition seized."

"Did you hear the name of the sailor, Columbus?"

"Yes, Señor, his name is José.  He is a dark
man and very dirty, and wears peculiar blue
clothes."

"Joe Choiniski, or I miss my guess!" exclaimed
Dick as he looked towards the lights flickering
through the grove on the far side of the road.

"Can you get me some meat, Columbus?" Dick
asked, after a brief pause.

"Has the Señor hunger?"

"No, I don't wish it for myself, but there are
many dogs in the barrio, and when they discover
me they will betray me to the soldiers if I come near
the houses.  With the meat I could quiet them."

"Never fear, amigo mio; all the meat in this
village would not be enough to satisfy the appetite of
the dogs in the barrio nor keep them quiet.  They
are ever barking and fighting at night, so the
soldiers would not think it strange, especially in the
early part of the evening.  If that is all, Señor, I
will go, for the General may miss me.  What time
shall I tell the niña to be ready for you?"

"Tell her to wait for three knocks on the wall of
her room from the side of the cocina, after the
General leaves the house.  Then she must slide back
the board and I will be waiting for her in the cocina.
Make her understand I am her friend and will take
her back to her people.  And, Columbus, here is all
the money I have with me, but I will see that you
are rewarded later on, if you carry out our plan,"
and Dick pressed all his remaining currency into
the hands of the boy crouching by his side.

"Thank you, Señor, but I cannot take this
money.  I am a common peon and my people are
poor, but they would not wish me to accept money
to help a little girl in distress," and Columbus
bravely handed back the bills to Dick, though his
fingers were itching to keep them.

He made his little speech with such an air of
pride, however, that Dick did not insist and with a
low whispered, "adios, amigo mio," the brown boy
was swallowed up a moment later in the shadows
and darkness.

Impatiently Dick waited in his refuge for the
departure of General Gonzales on his proposed
expedition.  Finally becoming tired of such long
inactivity he arose and boldly stepped out into and
across the clearing.  Dick reasoned that in the
darkness of the night should he pass anyone inside
the camp he would not be recognized nor suspected.
He pulled his khaki shirt outside his trousers so as
to appear more in keeping with the native soldiers'
costume should he happen to meet anyone.

With rapid strides he was soon in the vicinity of
the houses lining the near side of the road.  The
barking of a dog at his approach caused him a little
nervousness, but he kept on, remembering what
Columbus had told him.  Another dog came
sniffing and growling at his heels.  He paused long
enough to kick the canine and it scampered away
with shrill yelps of pain and fright.

The following moments were the most thrilling
of Dick's life.  Turning, after delivering the kick
which sent the cur scampering off in the darkness,
he almost ran into a man.

"Get out of my way, you spawn," said a voice
which he recognized as none other than that of
General Gonzales.  "Why are you on this side of the
road, anyway, when I told you to guard my
quarters?  Go over there where you belong, and let the
dogs bark as much as they please, but attend to
your duties, or it will fare badly with you in the
morning.  Obey me, pronto!" and the rebel chief
shoved Dick out into the wide street.

How grateful Dick was that no answers were
required of him, otherwise he might have been
discovered.  He did not know now whether or not
Gonzales was following after him, and he feared to
turn and look.  He could hear no footfalls.  Now
directly in front of him and not fifteen feet distant
was the house where Soledad was held a prisoner.
According to Columbus, and this was already
verified by the remark of Gonzales, there was a sentry
guarding the house, and somewhere in the shadows
ahead that native soldier was walking.  What if
he was waiting to attack Dick on his nearer
approach?  Perhaps he had heard the chief talking to
Dick on the opposite side of the road and was
watching his movements with catlike eyes.  Dick's ears
detected no sound as he drew nearer the house.  Now
he was within a few feet of the walls.  The next
moment he dodged around the corner of the building,
and just in the nick of time, for, as he did so,
the front door was thrown open and the light from
the interior streamed into the street.  Flattening
himself against the wall Dick peered around
cautiously.  Before the door stood Gonzales, while
emerging from it were five men, presumably those
who had accompanied their leader from the outpost
on Camino Real.

"Everything is ready," announced the General.
"Come, let us go.  The others have already
started, and we must not delay."  The party moved
off down the road in the direction of Sanchez, and
once again quiet reigned in the immediate vicinity.
Dick now knew the time for action had arrived.
Forgetting for the moment that he had to deal with
the sentinel who was supposed to be here on duty
he was about to step out in the direction of the
cocina when he observed the dim moving figure of
a soldier coming from the rear of the house.

Slowly the soldier sauntered towards Dick until
he arrived so near that the boy could have
touched him.  Here the man stopped.  Dick's
heart thumped so violently from the suspense that
it almost seemed the soldier could not fail to hear
it.  The noise pounded in his own ears like the
striking of a bass drum.  It was so dark that he
could not see what the sentry was doing.  Perhaps
the eyes of the native, more accustomed to
darkness than Dick's own, were even then fastened
on him and enjoying his discomfort, perhaps----

A rattling noise assailed Dick's ears.  It was the
sound made by safety matches shaken in a
partially empty box.  The sentry had seen him, but
now was going to strike a light in order to discover
his identity.

The match scraped along the box, but made no
spark.  At the second attempt the yellowish flame
flared up.  In its light the dark brown face of the
soldier stood out boldly in the Stygian darkness.
A white papered cigarette was between the
fellow's lips and his dark eyes were bent solely on the
flame, seeing nothing else.  The flame wavered,
then there was the sound of a dull blow, the light
disappeared and the sentinel sank to the ground.
Once again Dick Comstock's hard fist had found a
victim, and once again he was binding and gagging
a rebel soldier.

Dick used his own regulation belt to make fast
his victim's arms, while the soldier's belt sufficed to
secure his legs.  Pulling the native's shirt over his
head Dick stuffed part of it in his mouth and
bound it there with a handkerchief.  In the
darkness it was difficult work, but he did the best he
could, and after dragging the soldier to one side
and under a bush, the drummer boy began to feel
his way towards the cocina at the rear.  A dim
light, shining through the cracked walls of the
center room, saved him from stumbling into a
collection of pots and pans in the small lean-to, which
Columbus had dignified by the name of kitchen.
Creeping cautiously to the wall of the building
under the lean-to, the lad rapped the boards three
times, giving the signal agreed upon.  Then he
waited breathlessly for some response.  Finally he
heard the scraping of one board on another.  The
noise came from near the floor where he was waiting.
Then he saw the white figure of little Soledad
squirm through the opening.  Quietly he assisted
her to her feet and without a word, hand in hand,
the two stole from the house and out into the grove
in the direction of the bay.

They had gone about fifty feet when another
figure suddenly confronted them, and again Dick's
heart seemed to jump to his throat while his right
hand sought the pistol hanging at his side.

"Silence, Señor, it is Columbus.  I have come to
help you find the canoe.  Follow me, carefully, for
we are near the house where the sailor is
imprisoned," and on the little party went like flitting
shadows through the grove.

Soon came the soft rustle of waves on the shore,
and emerging from under the dense overhead foliage
of the palms, objects were more distinguishable.
They found the canoe, and in it the paddles
which the faithful native boy had previously placed
there.  Dick took his place in the stern, the little girl
tremblingly, but with no hesitation, sat in the
bottom.  Then with a whispered "buenas noches,"[#]
Columbus shoved the frail craft from the sands out
into the waters of the great bay, and with a happy
heart Dick sent the canoe on its way with long
powerful strokes.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Buenas noches--Good-night.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE ATTACK ON THE CONSULATE`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XVI


.. class:: center medium

   THE ATTACK ON THE CONSULATE

.. vspace:: 2

Corporal Dorlan on making the rounds of his
little force shortly after taps noticed the Ardois
lights from the *Denver* were flashing regularly.
Not being an adept signalman he sought Trumpeter
Cabell, who was trying to snatch a little sleep on the
back piazza of the consulate, and shook him into
wakefulness.

"Come, me lad, shake a leg, for the ship is callin'
of us, and I want ye to read the message."

"Be with you in a jiffy," said Henry, going to
get the lantern, which he had already put to good
use in the earlier part of the evening.

Soon he was acknowledging the call, and the
message Corporal Dorlan noted down as Henry
called off the letters caused the veteran many a
chuckle of satisfaction.  It was a long message,
and immediately it was finished Dorlan and Henry
shook hands over it in great glee.

"I knew that lad would turn the trick, and come
out on top," remarked the older man as he entered
the house in search of Señor Perez.

In the center of the building was a room, which,
because of past revolutions, the Consul had
prepared against the chance of stray bullets.  It was
but a makeshift affair, but it had served its purpose
on many occasions, and during times of danger the
family always occupied it.  Around the walls of
this compartment rows of iron-wood railroad ties
were placed from the floor to ceiling and these
tough native timbers could be counted upon to stop
the leaden bullets used in the guns with which the
opposing factions were generally armed.  Corporal
Dorlan's knock at the door of the "strong room,"
as it was called, was immediately answered by the
Consul.

"'Tis the 'best of news I have for ye, sir," he said,
and his face shone with delight.  "Yer little
daughter is safe and sound aboard the *Denver*.  It seems
that our drummer boy, Dick Comstock, followed
them rascals what stole her, and he's just now got
her away from 'em and is back on the ship.  After
ye give yer wife the good news I've got somethin'
important to tell ye, and the quicker the sooner,
sir."  With that the thoughtful fellow closed the
door and impatiently awaited the Consul's reappearance.

Soon the little man came out and, running up to
Dorlan, he embraced the marine in true European
fashion by kissing him on both cheeks, much to the
old fellow's embarrassment.

"Your good tidings have made me the happiest
man in the world, whereas, but a short time since,
I was the most miserable," said the Consul, and he
again threatened Dorlan with another exhibition of
his enthusiasm, but this time the marine evaded it.

"That's all right, yer honor, but we can't be
talkin' of that now.  There's other doin's afoot this
night, and with yer help we can do a neat stroke of
work to cap the climax of this day's excitement."

Thereupon he outlined his plan, and an understanding
having been reached Señor Perez returned
to his wife, while Dorlan made mysterious visits to
each member of his little force.  He then distributed
them to his satisfaction about the house and
grounds.  All the lights were extinguished except
a low-burning lamp in the spacious hallway, and
then he sat down to wait behind the closed front
door, much as a cat sits before the mouse hole she
knows will soon be the scene of some lively action.

Since the end of the message from the ship not a
light other than the usual anchor lights could be
discerned by the closest observer on the shore.  Nor
could activity of any kind be noted, but as a matter
of fact khaki-clad marines were even then silently
embarking in one of the cutters and under muffled
oars were pulling towards the landing pier.  And
from the opposite side of the ship three boat-loads
of bluejackets were as silently doing the same
thing--but, pulling in the opposite direction, en
route to a little barrio less than three kilometers
down the coast.

General Fernando Gonzales at the head of his
picket force of thirty men halted on the beach road
and looked out over the waters at the ship.  He
heard the beautiful notes of the bugle sounding the
soldiers and sailors good-night, and he saw the
lights, which had been flickering at the masthead for
so long, cease punctuating the darkness.  With
their cessation he felt reasonably certain that the
crew had a feeling of security, and that they felt
that everything ashore must be going well, for the
big search-light was not shining as on previous
nights.  He did not understand the meaning of the
red and white lights, nor know that they were just
finishing a message regarding his whereabouts at
that very moment.  Such signals were unknown in
the armies of San Domingo.

Already the people of Sanchez were closing their
doors and windows; soon the streets would be
deserted.  Leaving his men concealed, General
Gonzales ventured forth in the direction of the
consulate for a little preliminary scouting.  It was
high time his brother and Juan Mendoza were at
the rendezvous, but their non-arrival caused him no
great uneasiness.  The street before the Consul's
home was also deserted, and he approached the
place boldly.  As he passed the gate the lights in
the house were turned out,--the family of Señor
Perez had retired.  A few yards beyond the last
few members of the Club were closing the door and
leaving for their homes.  He decided to wait no
longer.  Calling his men, he soon stationed them in
the hedge and shrubbery surrounding the consulate,
then with his chosen half dozen villains he
approached the front entrance and mounting the
broad piazza he knocked loudly.  Finally the door
opened a few inches and the face of Señor Perez
appeared.

"Who are you, and what do you want at this
hour of the night?" said the Consul in a voice he
tried hard to control.

"I wish to talk with you, Señor, on a matter of
great importance to us both.  Let me in."

"Who are you?" again came in inquiry, though
the father knew well that this was the man who had
caused him so much heartache that day.

"I am General Fernando Gonzales, and if you
do not admit me without further talk I will shoot
you," and a long-barreled revolver was shoved
ominously through the opening into the face of the
consul, who fell back into the dimly lighted hall.
In a moment the General and six followers rushed
in, well pleased over the success of their operations
thus far.

Was it a sudden draft of wind which closed the
door so softly behind them?  Gonzales never had
time nor thought to inquire, for suddenly the large
room became a blaze of light, and he found himself
staring into the leveled muzzles of six gun barrels
in the hands of Dorlan's men.

"Hands up, ye spalpeens!" called out the voice
of the Corporal, and though not a man there
understood his words they did understand the menace in
the voice, and in a twinkling there were fourteen
dirty brown and black hands held tremblingly aloft.

.. _`"HANDS UP!"`:

.. figure:: images/img-254.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: "HANDS UP!"

   "HANDS UP!"

"Take them guns and knives, and throw them in
the corner, me lad," now ordered Dorlan, and
Henry began to disarm the rebels.  It was then
that the leader Gonzales, knowing what would be
his fate if he were turned over to the government
troops, made a break for liberty.

Although he put up his hands with the rest he
still held in his right hand the revolver he had
carried on entering.  Now with a wild yell the negro
half-breed fired one shot into the air, another in the
general direction of the Consul, and as he dashed
for a window near by he fired the remaining four
shots at the marines lined up across the hall.  On
reaching the window he unhesitatingly jumped
through the flimsy lattice work which guarded it,
and was running across the lawn before the house.

The sudden attack of the negro so surprised most
of the marines, who were not looking for any active
resistance after the men had thrown up their hands,
that there was an appreciable moment of inactivity
which held back their fire.  But not so with Henry,
for with the first shot of the rebel chief, the
trumpeter had pulled his automatic from the holster, and
as Gonzales jumped through the window he fired
two shots.

One of those bullets found a resting place in the
fleshy part of the native's leg.  The impetus of
Gonzales' rush carried him on, but now he stumbled
and called upon his followers hidden in the bushes
to come to his assistance.  Again he stumbled, this
time falling headlong into a flower bed.  As he
attempted to rise, a figure in khaki rose in front of
him; there was the flash of a clubbed rifle, then the
weapon descended with crushing force on the
general's skull, and he sank to the ground.  The days
of General Fernando Gonzales as a rebel chief were
ended.

From all sides came a fusillade of shots.  The
bullets tore their way through wooden walls or
spattered on the tin roof of the building, but harmed
no one.  From the fort on the hill came the sound
of high pitched bugles sounding the alarm, while
flashes of light and the sound of guns showed the
government troops were as usual wasting
ammunition by firing at nothing in particular and
everything in general.

Then a red star shot up from the main road a
little to the west of the consulate; there came a rush
of heavy shoes on the macadam, a rattle of accoutrements,
and First Sergeant Douglass at the head of
the remainder of the *Denver's* guard charged down
the road.  Again the search-light of the ship
flooded the shore and then, without waiting to see
what had befallen their leader, the rebels took to
their heels and fled.

It was daylight before the excitement in the town
subsided, but by then it was known that the hold of
the rebels over the inhabitants was effectually
broken.  The General was dead, his brother, his
lieutenant, Juan Mendoza, and the six others were
turned over to the custody of the Federal troops.
As for those rebels in camp at the barrio, they too
had been dispersed, for when the landing party of
sailors, guided by Dick, reached the shore near the
barrio and demanded the surrender of the deserter
Choiniski they fled incontinently, fearing an attack
from the Americanos, which they did not relish.

When a search of the barrio and the hut in the
grove was made it was found that Joe had either
taken the opportunity to escape or the rebels had
taken him with them into the hills, for the place was
deserted.  The only persons remaining behind were
the native boy Columbus, his crippled father and
his mother.  On learning how well the urchin had
assisted Dick, and how the rebels had treated the
poor peons, a very substantial purse was collected
by the kind-hearted men and presented to the lad's
mother, and the landing party was then towed back
to the ship.

It was Dick Comstock's privilege to escort little
Soledad ashore at an hour shortly after sunrise, and
though Señor Perez was too much overcome to
thank the rescuer of his favorite, Dick felt fully
rewarded just to witness that joyful reunion.

Reports now began coming in from all points
that the revolution was toppling, and soon those who
were still under arms were pleading to be allowed
to surrender and go to their homes and former
occupations.  Orders also came for the *Denver* to
leave Sanchez and proceed on a surveying trip near
the border line dividing San Domingo and Haiti,
and incidentally to watch for some smuggling
reported to be carried on extensively in that vicinity.

The day of departure arrived.  In the afternoon
a shore boat came alongside carrying Señor Perez,
his wife, children and the governess.  Captain
Bentley met the party at the gangway, and after
a few words he gave orders that the crew be
assembled aft.  When all had gathered there in the
shade of the awnings, Captain Bentley stepped
forward and called for Richard Comstock of the
United States Marine Corps to come to the mast.
Then in behalf of the Consul, his family and the
governess, the Captain presented the drummer boy
with a beautiful gold wrist watch, appropriately
engraved, which the grateful donors had ordered
by cable from New York City and which the Clyde
Liner had but that morning delivered.

Dick felt that he should make some reply, but for
the life of him he was unable to utter a single word.
Suddenly there was a patter of light feet on the
white deck and to his relief Soledad rushed forward.
As he bent to take the child's hand, she threw her
arms around his neck and kissed him squarely on
the lips.  The look of amazement now on Dick's
face was so great that the entire assembly roared
with laughter, and Chief Master-at-Arms Fitch,
regulations to the contrary notwithstanding, called
out:

"Three cheers for our Drummer Boy and the
girls he rescued."

They were given with a will, for now there was
no longer doubt as to the loyalty, faithfulness or
bravery of Richard Comstock.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A MAP-MAKING EXPEDITION`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XVII


.. class:: center medium

   A MAP-MAKING EXPEDITION

.. vspace:: 2

"I consider that we are the two luckiest youngsters
in the service, Dick.  What do you think about it?"

Henry looked about him at the surrounding
country, a combination of river scenery, swamp
land, tropical jungle and lush savannahs, with an
appraising eye.

The two boys stood on the rickety landing near
the Captain of the Port's house at the mouth of the
Estero Balsa, a branch body of water communicating
with Manzanillo Bay, where the *Denver* was
anchored, and where certain members of her officers
and crew were engaged in making a chart of the
coast line, river deltas and numerous lagoons.

It was interesting work for those so engaged, and
each day the various boats of the ship started at an
early hour taking lines of soundings from one point
to another, measuring angles, plotting positions,
sketching in prominent features, or locating reefs
and shoals.  At night they combined their data,
and with compass and rule worked over the smooth
copy of the chart which would be sent to the
Department at Washington when complete and
eventually supplied to each ship of the Navy cruising in
these waters.

Having received permission from the Navigating
Officer, Dick often accompanied the chart makers
on their expeditions, and, always eager to learn, he
proved himself a valuable helper with compass or
sextant, in taking angles, both vertical and
horizontal, and working them out.

Also at night the *Denver's* boats were engaged in
other and more exciting work.  Owing to various
causes there was a systematic smuggling going on
between the two island republics.  Small sailing
vessels and motor launches were suspected of
carrying contraband merchandise back and forth across
the Bay at night, and organized bands of smugglers
made the passage of the Massacre River from its
mouth up to and beyond the San Domingan town
of Dajabon, on its eastern bank, and the Haitian
village of Ouanaminthe, directly opposite.  The
customs officers were doing their best, but they were
too few in number to cope with the situation.  In
consequence money was being lost to both
governments.  The United States was administering the
customs affairs of San Domingo, and the Navy had
to be called in at times to aid in putting a stop to
this illegal traffic.

The presence of the *Denver* had its salutary
effect, and the smuggling by day in the boats had
practically ceased, but at night activity was
resumed.  Consequently the ship's boats, which
during the day were engaged in the aforesaid work of
surveying, became at night a fleet of armed patrols
with certain definite sectors to cover.  Many
exciting chases resulted in the overhauling, arrest, and,
occasionally, resistance and escape of the venturesome
smugglers.

The marines were often detailed for this night
work in the patrol boats, and they enjoyed it, for
there was always a chance of a lively little "scrap,"
and that is what marines enlist for--scrapping.

All articles coming across the border were
supposed to be entered at Dajabon, and after customs
dues were adjusted the goods were sent to other
points along the only really passable road which led
through Copey, a town at the headwaters of the
Estero Balsa, thence to Monte Cristi or towns and
cities of La Vega Real.

Somewhere in the dense jungle between Dajabon
and the office of the Captain of the Port, where
the two boys were now engaged in conversation,
were trails unknown to the general public, and
these trails the smugglers used for their purposes.
As charts made by naval officers usually show but
little of the interior terrain it was not the intention
of Captain Bentley to include any roads on the map
his officers were engaged in compiling.  However,
if Dick and Henry succeeded in getting information
of value it was decided that their work should
be incorporated with the rest.  Both boys had
studied surveying while at school, and early on the
cruise they had secured a volume on Military
Topography and spent many hours in acquiring a
thorough knowledge of what was needed in a military
map.  First Sergeant Douglass, seeing how they
desired to get ahead and only too glad to give them
something to keep them out of mischief (for musics
are generally conceded by all hands to be mischievous),
allowed them to have a cavalry sketching case
from his storeroom, and with this they became quite
expert in making position-sketches and road-maps.

In response to Henry's question, Dick finally replied:

"Yes, I think we are lucky, but it's not going to
be an easy task, Hank."

"Right you are, Dickie.  This country is all
swamps and jungle, with few trails really leading
anywhere.  I believe it is going to be a difficult
proposition to cover the entire area between this
place, Copey and Dajabon, in time to be back and
meet the steamer in three days."

"Let's not count up the obstacles, though, Hank.
We will meet them as they come in the best way
we can.  We are handicapped by being obliged to
do the work secretly.  Captain Bentley impressed
that upon me.  You know, since we were so lucky in
the Culebra and Sanchez affairs he has come to
regard us as older than we are and capable of a man's
work, and with a man's reasoning powers and
discretion.  I'm not so sure of it myself; but it
certainly is up to us to make good now that the
opportunity has come our way."

"Tell me just how we happened to get here,
Dick.  I've been so busy getting things together
since you sprung the surprise this morning that I've
not had time to question you."

"Well, it was this way!  Last night I was out
in the steamer on patrol work.  Mr. Gardiner was
in command.  About midnight one of the lookouts
thought he spotted a motor boat moving in from the
west.  We gave chase, but as often happens it was
a false alarm and the lookout was conjuring things
from being so anxious to see something.

"Well, after it quieted down, Mr. Gardiner
began talking about the chart, and how it would aid
the ships to be stationed here later on in searching
out smugglers.  Then he said it was too bad the
trails between the coast line, Dajabon and Copey
couldn't be sketched in on the map, particularly as
one of the ship's boats was to get the data of the
Massacre River the following day.  With that, and
all the trails in between, the map would be of much
greater value, he thought.  The trouble was, they
didn't have enough officers to do the additional
work and get through in time, for we are expecting
orders to leave here most any day now."

"I reckon you didn't let that opening get by you,
Dick," Henry remarked.

"You just bet I didn't.  I said that I thought
you and I could do it if the Captain would allow us,
and told him how much we'd like to try it."

"What did he say?"

"Well, he said, 'Maybe you could,' and he
mentioned that First Sergeant Douglass had shown him
one of the road maps we made together, last winter
while at Culebra, and then the subject was dropped.
But this morning Top told me the skipper wished to
see me in the cabin at once, and when I reported
Mr. Gardiner was in there, and the Captain told
me what was wanted, and that I might go ashore
and try my luck.  He said I should have to go on
what was ostensibly a hunting trip, and that I
should probably get into trouble with the
authorities if they discovered what I was up to."

"Did you ask if I might come along?"

"Of course!  I told him we had worked together
on road sketches and showed him that one we made
of the road from Playa Brava to the old naval
station.  He seemed satisfied with the work, but then
he began to doubt if it were wise to let two kids such
as we are go on such an errand."

"He surely put enough restrictions on us," said Henry.

"Oh, not so many, Hank, and they are all wise
provisions."

"But why is it necessary that we should return
each night to this place?  Why can't we stay where
we happen to be when night comes, then continue
our work next day right where we left off?"

"The Old Man wants to be sure we are all right.
Each night I will make up a report and send it in to
him, and also all our data up to that time, by the
boat making the trip here on the high tide.  Then,
too, they are nearly through their work anyway,
and orders for us to move on are daily expected.
The next reason is, that by making our headquarters
here we won't have to move our camping outfit
or our rations, and this place is centrally located, so
that each day we can cover new territory."

"I hadn't thought about all those things," said
Henry thoughtfully, "but I reckon the Old Man is
right, after all."

"Well, now that you are satisfied, let's get our
gear up to the palatial hut assigned for our use by
Señor el Capitan del Puerto, fix things shipshape,
and make our plans for to-morrow."

This was done, and in the vacant, earthen-floored
shack they unstrapped their cots, arranged their
bedding, hung mosquito bunk-nets, and after
building a fire, cooked their evening meal.  It seemed
to the two boys as though fried hen-fruit, baked
spuds, crisped bacon, ship's punk and steaming
java,[#] never tasted so delicious.  Nor did the coffee
make any difference to such healthy bodies and
minds, when a little later they crawled under their
white nets and blue-gray blankets, and went to sleep.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Sailor and marine slang for fried eggs,
   baked potatoes, crisped
   bacon, ship's bread and steaming coffee.

.. vspace:: 2

Though advised against doing so by the native
owner, they left both doors to their domicile wide
open to admit the night breezes.  In most tropical
countries, the natives, of the poorer classes
especially, close every door and window at night, so as
to prevent the slightest breath of fresh air from
striking them, and it is for this reason, undoubtedly,
that during times of epidemic, the fatality among
the natives in semi-civilized places is so great.

Sometime before dawn the boys were awakened
by the sound of agonizing cries and the rush of
many feet across the hard-packed floor of their hut.
Almost at the same instant they sat up, and reached
for their automatics.  Then they listened, but all
was silent, except for the creaking of night insects
or the gentle stirring of the palm leaves on their
thatched roof.  Inside the room was inky darkness,
nor was the light outside much brighter.

"Did you hear that, Hank?" questioned Dick,
softly, not quite daring to make any further move
until he knew where his companion might be and
until he understood a little more of the situation.

"I reckon I heard it right enough, Dick; but
what was it?"

"I haven't any idea.  I heard a yell and someone
running and suddenly found myself awake and sitting up."

"Same here, Dick, but I thought it was you chasing
something or someone.  It looks a little funny,
doesn't it?"

"Keep quiet a minute, Hank; I believe they are
still in here.  I hear someone moving."

Silence followed the caution while they listened
intently.  Then came a deep-drawn sigh from the
center of the hut, and the sound as of a heavy body
being dragged across the floor.

"Who's there?" challenged Dick.  "If you
move again I'll fire."

Once again absolute silence, which was finally
broken by a series of sharp staccato taps.  Dick
immediately recognized the private call Henry and
he used in their practise at telegraphy and sound
signalling.  His companion was rapping on a
match-box with some kind of an instrument.  If
the person or persons in the room understood
English then any conversation would inform them of
the action to be taken against them.  Dick grinned
delightedly to himself at Henry's quick way to
secret and safe coöperation.  As the light sounds
shuttled back and forth it was evident to what a
state of expertness these two young marines had
drilled themselves.

"Look out, I will turn on my flash-light.  Be
ready to shoot.  Do you understand?" came
Henry's message.

"It is dangerous.  Let me do it, and you shoot,"
cautioned Dick.

"No!  You are the better shot.  I think he is
near the door, and if I flash the light you can get
him better than I can.  Stand by right after I
sound 'preparatory.'  Stand by!"

The safety catch on Dick's automatic hardly
made a sound as he pushed it down with his thumb
and peered into the darkness near the door.  The
weapon was already loaded, so that but a slight
pressure on the trigger would bring its deafening
response.  Breathlessly he waited.  The next
moment came the rattle of the match-box as once again
Henry struck it with sharp emphasis:

One rap--two short raps--one rap--one rap!

Then the room was lit by the electric torch from
Henry's side of the hut.  There was a wild rush of
many feet, loud squeals filled the air, and out of the
open doorway raced and scrambled an enormous
razor-back pig with a litter of squealing, frantic
piggies at her heels.

The sudden transition from the serious to the
comical was so great that both Dick and Henry
burst into a roar of hysterical laughter, and both
made a solemn pact never to relate this part of their
adventures to a living soul.  After this, sleep being
out of the question and the gray dawn already
lightening the eastern horizon, they prepared their
morning meal and made ready for an early start.

From previous tests each of the boys knew the
exact stretch of ground covered in one of his strides[#]
and Dick's stride being sixty inches, even though
he was a six-footer, and five feet being a most
convenient multiple, it was to be his duty to keep
account of the distances between observation points
or stations.  For this purpose he carried an
instrument used in checking off the number of coal bags
hoisted on board during coaling ship, and with each
step taken with his left foot he recorded it by
pressing on the lever with his thumb.  The tally was so
small it could be carried unobserved in the palm of
the hand.  Besides the tally Dick carried a small
pocket note-book, conveniently ruled, in which he
entered his data and from which, on their return,
they would be able to make a very comprehensive
sketch of their travels.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] A pace is the distance between footsteps;
   a stride the distance
   between the spot where one foot
   strikes the ground and the next
   succeeding fall of the same foot;
   a stride is therefore the equivalent of two paces.

.. vspace:: 2

Henry was provided with a small prismatic
compass by means of which he read the angles from
each selected point to the next station.  With these
simple instruments they could accomplish their
work and arouse no suspicion, at least in the minds
of any ordinary native with whom they were liable
to come in contact.

There was but one trail for them to follow from
their point of departure, and it led to the town of
Copey.  To follow this trail the first day and plot
in the cross trails between it and the Massacre River
on the following days was their intention, and as the
sun rose in a soft pink cloud of color, with shotguns
under their arms, game bags over their shoulders,
and the heavy Colt's forty-fives strapped to their
right thighs, the young surveyors started out on
their quest with an eagerness born of youth and
enthusiasm.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`MEXICAN PETE AGAIN`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XVIII


.. class:: center medium

   MEXICAN PETE AGAIN

.. vspace:: 2

The method followed by the two marines was
very simple.  Having selected a landmark some
distance ahead of them on the trail, Henry, with
the sight-leaves of his compass raised, would look
through them towards the point and read the
azimuth or angular direction with respect to the north
and south line, or meridian.  This angle was called
the bearing of the point or station.

Starting at the Captain of the Port's house they
named their point of departure "A," and sighted
upon a distant tree, calling it station "B."  A
line drawn from "A" to "B" would form an angle
with another line passing through station "A" and
the north pole.  This angle was read off in degrees
on the compass-card from north going around in
the same direction as the hands of a clock, and there
would be two methods of recording it.  They could
state the whole angle as read from the compass,
which would then be the true azimuth of station
"B," or they could note the true bearing of the line
A-B.  The true bearing of a line is that angle less
than ninety degrees which the line makes with the
true meridian.  The boys decided to use the true
azimuth in their data.

Dick, having made the entry in his book, started
marching towards "B," pressing on his tally
register with every fall of his left foot.  Reaching
"B," the number of his strides were entered, a new
sight taken, and the march resumed.

Where trails crossed or joined the route, their
bearing was jotted down.  Features of the country
to one hundred yards either side of the trail were
kept under observation; houses, corrals, streams,
bridges and their nature, cultivated fields,
swampland, all were noted carefully.

It was several hours before they met a native,
though there was every appearance of the way
being well travelled.  At noon they halted in the
shade of a clump of bamboo and ate their luncheon.
There was nothing about them to indicate they were
members of a famous military organization, because
they had been supplied before leaving the ship with
some "cit" clothes.  Their canteens of water were
carried in the game-bags, for good soldiers never
drink water found in strange countries until it has
first been boiled, and there was no time for work of
that nature while engaged in their present task.

Overhead the sky was a brilliant azure.  The
sparkling beams of the noonday sun danced gaily
with the shadows cast by the leafy foliage and a soft
breeze whispered through the feathery leaves and
hanging moss.  Little lizards darted about in quest
of insects, butterflies floated by on downy wing and
the hum of bees seeking honey-laden blossoms
added a drowsy note to the lazy hour.

"When should we reach Copey, Dick?" asked
Henry, with an undisguised yawn.

"In about an hour, I guess.  We have been going
slowly, but it won't take long on the return trip.
From now on we must be extremely careful.  The
country in front of us is more populated, and the
trails joining this one are more numerous."

"Hullo--here are some people coming along the
road," said Henry, sitting up; "sounds like a
goodly party."

Soon after a considerable company came riding
by, consisting of about twenty mounted men and
boys, driving before them a number of burros and
horses.  Most of the party passed without noticing
the two marines, but at the rear of the cavalcade
was one man who permitted nothing to escape his
roving eyes.  Spying Dick and Henry, he rode up
and inquired in Spanish as to their business.

"Buenos dias, amigos!  I see you are hunting!
What luck have you had?"

"Very poor luck," Dick replied, looking up at
his interrogator but without deigning to rise.
"And what did you hope to shoot along this trail,
my friend?" inquired the native, looking
searchingly at Dick.

"'Most anything--we heard that the ground
doves were plentiful, but it has not proven so to-day."

"Where do you come from, stranger?" the
horseman now asked.  "I know you are Americans,
but I have never seen you around this part of
the country before, and I know every foreigner
from Monte Cristi to the border."

"We are just passing through," said Dick,
evading a direct answer.

"Ah!  Then, of course, you are bound for Copey.
I regret I cannot be there to offer you the hospitality
of my home, humble though it is.  I am Señor
Don Antonio Lugo y Suarrez, alcalde[#] of the town,
and if you are to remain in this neighborhood for
any length of time, it will----"


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Alcalde--Mayor.

.. vspace:: 2

"Thank you, Señor, but we are to be here but a
short time, otherwise----" and Dick, now having
risen, waved his hand in a gesture that was meant to
indicate his regret.

"Nevertheless, I shall hope for the pleasure,
Señors, and now I must hurry along to my friends.
Adios, amigos!" and with a low bow, the alcalde put
spurs to his steed and disappeared up the trail.

"That fellow is a slick one, Hank.  He talks too
much, and he's too suave to suit me.  As for his
expressions of regret and regard--it's all tommy-rot."

"He surely kept his eyes busy during his visit,"
drawled Henry.

"Well, there was nothing to satisfy his curiosity,"
said Dick, looking around to see if he was correct
in his statement.  "By jinks, Hank, if he put
two and two together he might have cause to
suspect.  You know I didn't give him any satisfaction
as to who we were, but as alcalde, he naturally would
have heard of the *Denver* being busy around
Manzanillo Bay, and so it's easy to connect us with the
ship.  But if he wanted proof of what we were
doing, there is the evidence."

Henry immediately sat up to look where Dick
pointed.  On a small tree near by were hanging the
two canteens of water with the black letters "U.S.M.C."
stenciled on their sides, while on the ground
beneath, the flap to one of the hunting-bags had
fallen open, and there lay note-book, pencil, tally
register, compass, and a rough sketch of the locality
around the Bay, which Dick had brought along as a
possible aid in their work.

"If Señor Don Antonio and-all-the-rest-of-his-name,
was half as wise as he looked he knows pretty
well, right now, what we are up to," added Dick
grimly.  "I wonder what his next move will be!"

The sound of a horse galloping along the trail
came to them and then like a streak, horse and rider
dashed by and along the way they were about to
travel.  The rider was spurring and beating his
steed as he bent low in the saddle.  If he saw the
boys, he at least gave no sign.

"That fellow reminds me of something or someone,"
mused Dick, watching horse and rider disappear
in a cloud of dust.

"The way he's beating his animal makes me
think of the Mexican you horsewhipped in Culebra
last winter," said Henry.

"By jinks, Hank, that's who he is, and no
mistake.  He was riding along with that outfit a while
ago, and now the alcalde has sent him back on an
errand.  I'd bet an old hat that it won't help us any
either; also I hope Mexican Pete doesn't see us, for
we can hardly hope he won't remember us.  And if
he does, the jig is up."

"I've got an idea, too.  If that is Mexican Pete,
then he's in cahoots with the alcalde, and they are
starting out on a smuggling expedition, and the
alcalde is sending back word to prevent us from any
possibility of getting information of it."

"That's more than likely correct, Hank, and we
shall have an interesting report to send in to the
Captain to-night.  Well, we'd better be getting
along, for I've a feeling the more we can accomplish
to-day the better it will be in the end.  If that
outfit is a band of smugglers then it's up to us to
discover their trail and see where it leads.  It will be
easy to find it, and we shall have accomplished our
mission if we find even one of their routes."

"Let us go after them right now," suggested Henry.

"If we go back now, of course we can pick up
their trail easily enough, but they have taken the
precaution to send back word regarding us, and
they surely have left some people to watch us if we
attempt to follow them.  On the other hand, we
may never get another such favorable opportunity
to finish up the road map to Copey, and as it will be
a valuable addition to the chart for future reference,
I guess we'd do well to complete it."

"Vamos,[#] then," said Henry, rising and starting off.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Vamos--Let us go.

.. vspace:: 2

They worked more rapidly now, taking every
precaution against arousing suspicion.  The houses
beside the road were more frequent, and often they
had to guess at the azimuths from one station to
another when curious natives were watching them.
The pacing of the distances, though, was not
interfered with, and they hoped to be able to check up
questionable data on their return.  Fortunately it
was the siesta hour, and few men or women were
abroad.  Even the streets of the town, when they
arrived, were fairly deserted.

The road on which they entered Copey continued
through the town until it crossed the broad highway
which lay between Dajabon and Monte Cristi.
Arriving at this point and accosting a native
lounger as to where they could procure refreshments,
they found themselves surrounded with surprising
rapidity, and the attitude of the men in the
group was anything but friendly.

"There is a good cantina there on the corner,
Señor," replied one of the men in answer to Dick's
question.

"Thank you," said Dick, starting for the store;
"and perhaps you will join us?" he added, believing
it better to appear sociable even though he did
not feel so.

The native accepted with alacrity.  Inside the
little building it was cool and dim and they ordered,
at the proprietor's suggestion, "huevos fritos, pan
tierno y mantequilla, y cafe con leche."[#]


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Eggs fried, fresh bread and butter,
   and coffee with milk.

.. vspace:: 2

During the preparation of the repast, Dick and
Henry, taking their weapons with them, repaired to
the yard in the rear of the cantina, where a small
brown girl brought them fresh water, soap and
towels.  Dick, having finished his ablutions first,
gave the diminutive maid a silver coin, over which
her little fist closed greedily, and the next moment
she was displaying it to her mother, who stood in
the doorway of the cocina, and who smiled pleasantly
at the donor.

"Your child is very pretty, Señora," said Dick.

"The Señor Americano is very kind to say so,"
replied the woman in her soft voice.

"And how do you know I am an American?" asked Dick.

"Hush!" almost whispered the woman, glancing
cautiously back into the cantina.  "Listen to me,
Señor, your lives are in danger here.  It is said you
are spies sent here by the Americans, and everyone
in the town knew of you before your arrival.  You
must never attempt to go to Dajabon.  The alcalde
here is very powerful, and his orders are law.  The
feeling is very bitter against all Americans.  Some
of your officers were stoned yesterday in Monte
Cristi.  Be careful!  I can say no more!"

"And why do you tell us this, Señora?" asked Dick.

"Because I like the Americans.  An American
surgeon saved my child's life when she was ill last
year.  You, too, were kind to her.  Hurry and
finish your meal and leave at once.  Watch out for
trouble, as they will follow your movements.  Do
not let them suspect that you know anything.  Be
careful--here comes my husband," and the woman
hurriedly occupied herself with some household
duties.

"Everything is prepared, gentlemen, and awaiting
your pleasure," announced the owner of the
cantina, and the boys followed him to their places at
the table where their guest still awaited them.

During the meal conversation was confined to the
subject of hunting, and it was noticeable how their
guest and host agreed that it was a bad season for
doves, that the birds never were numerous in the
locality, and discouraged any further attempts at
enjoying sport of that nature anywhere except
along the coast, where snipe of all kinds abounded.

Many times the proprietor left them for the
purpose of supplying numerous thirsty individuals who
seemed to flock to his little bar, and all his
customers seemed mightily interested in scrutinizing
the party seated at the marble-topped table.
Finally, after paying their bill, the boys bid
good-bye to their host and, still accompanied by the
native who had partaken of their bounty, they began
their return trip over the road by which they had
entered the town.

On reaching the outskirts of the village their
self-appointed escort volunteered the information that
if his friends were returning to the Captain of the
Port's house at Estero Balsa he would be glad to
serve them by showing them a short cut which was
very easy to travel, but with many expressions of
good-will they declined and, with relief, they saw
the native turn back over the trail to town.

"Phew!  But I'm glad that Spig has gone!  I've
been nearly bursting to talk over what that woman
told us," said Henry.  "Do you believe they are
up to anything?"

"Did you see any of those men coming into the
cantina while we were eating?" asked Dick, as
he loosened the flap covering his automatic in the
holster, and turned it back so that he could easily
draw the pistol in case of need.

"No; my back was towards the door, and I
thought it best not to appear too curious."

"If you'd seen them you'd not feel very easy
over the matter, Hank, for one of them was none
other than Mexican Pete; and he recognized us, too.
He came sauntering in, and I noticed him start
when he saw me sitting there.  He didn't know I
was looking at him; and later he kept his back
turned all the time, but was giving us the once-over
in the looking-glass behind the bar.  I saw him at
the head of a detachment of mounted men leaving
town about fifteen minutes before we left."

"Do you reckon they expected us to take the
short route and hoped to catch us on some blind
trail?" asked Henry.

"Possibly.  You see the country along the road
is fairly open on either side, and a considerable body
of men would have some difficulty in surprising us.
But they can easily pick us off if they are good
shots."

"I see you've unlimbered, and I reckon I'll do
the same," said Henry, looking at Dick's pistol;
"also I'm going to change my load in this pump-gun
from bird to buck shot."

"Mine has been loaded with buck since we started
this morning," said Dick.  "If ever I had taken a
crack at a wild pigeon and one of those slugs hit,
there wouldn't have been enough feathers or bird
left to satisfy the appetite of an Argentine ant."

The boys kept up a pretty rapid pace, and it was
not long before they had left behind their noonday
resting place and now were keeping careful watch
of the trail in order to discover where the alcalde
and his troop had turned from it.  The marks of
the horses on the road had not been disturbed, and
about five miles from Copey the tracks plainly
turned off to the left up a trail through the dense
woods.  It was certain that here was at least one
clue to their credit which would be of value to the
customs officials.

"Why did you hurry on by, Dick?  We might
have gone up that trail for a way.  We've plenty
of time."

"Yes, and we might never have come down it
and returned to the ship with our information,
Hank.  That is why I told you not to stop nor act
as if you'd noticed anything unusual.  I saw something
I didn't like when I squinted up that beautiful
sylvan dell, and I believe we'd better do some
tall hustling from now on."

"What did you see?"

"Well, it looked like a full-sized native jumping
behind a tree.  I believe they thought we might
turn up that way, and were waiting for us.  As it
is, I'll feel a whole lot better when I can get around
that turn ahead of us.  I've an idea there is a gun
pointing between my shoulder-blades this minute,
and it doesn't feel a bit comfortable."

Unconsciously Henry turned his head to look
back over the road; then with a shout of caution he
started forward on the run.

"Beat it, Dick; Mexican Pete and his gang are
after us!"

With the words came a scattering volley, and the
yells of the natives in their rear, the sound of the
leaden bullets tearing through the leaves and
shrubs, helped the boys onward in their flight.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A BRAVE ACT AND A CLEVER RUSE`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XIX


.. class:: center medium

   A BRAVE ACT AND A CLEVER RUSE

.. vspace:: 2

As the two marines dashed around the bend in
the road they found before them an open plain with
small clumps of low-lying shrubs here and there on
its sun-baked, level surface.  Three hundred yards
to their right a thatched hut of mud stood at the
edge of the mangroves which bordered the plain.
Apparently deserted, it offered the only real shelter
in sight, and this was shelter from observation only,
in all probability, for its walls would offer little
resistance to the shots of their enemies.

"Make for the shack, Hank," called Dick, and
together they dashed across the firm ground.
Before they reached their haven the bullets were again
zip-zipping about them.  Dick, in the lead, was
within a few yards of the hut when he was arrested
by a cry of distress from Henry.  Turning, he saw
his chum on his hands and knees about twenty yards
in the rear, while from the direction of the bend an
exultant yelling told him the natives were aware
that one of the party was injured.  Instantly Dick
doubled on his tracks and was soon at Henry's side.

"Did they get you, Hank?" he inquired anxiously.

"Yes, in the right leg," answered the plucky boy,
with a smile.  "It knocked me down.  Doesn't
hurt much, but I can't seem to use my leg."

"I'll fix you all right," said Dick cheerily,
though he felt far from happy, and bending while
Henry sat up, he easily picked up his companion in
the way he had been taught to use in carrying
wounded men off the field.  He took Henry's left
leg under his own left arm, and made the injured
boy bend over his left shoulder.  Then, grasping
Henry's left wrist with his right hand, Dick was up
and again running towards the hut.  The shooting
kept up while Dick was bending over his chum, but
when the natives saw him carrying away the fallen
boy they redoubled their fire and their yells
increased in proportion.  Fortunately they were
poor marksmen, and Dick reached the shack
without further mishap.  Here he deposited Henry on
the dirt floor and reaching in his hunting-bag he
brought forth a first-aid package.  The wound was
bleeding freely, and without hesitation Dick
ripped the right trousers' leg from the knee
downward with his knife (the same one he had taken
from Gonzales at Sanchez) and then with an expert
hand he bound the wound up firmly.

"I feel O.K. now, old chap, and you'd better
squint outside and see what those rapscallions are
up to."

"They've quit shooting and there is no one in
sight," said Dick, who crawled to the empty
doorway and looked out across the flats towards the
bend.

.. _`Map Showing Position of Hut in Which Boys Took Refuge`:

.. figure:: images/img-286.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: Map Showing Position of Hut in Which Boys Took Refuge

   Map Showing Position of Hut in Which Boys Took Refuge

"Do you reckon they've decided to let us alone?"

"I don't know, Henry, but I'll know in a minute.
I'm going out after our shotguns.  We're pretty
poor soldiers to leave our weapons lying all around
the country," and Dick's grin was meant to convey
the idea that the task he was about to undertake was
not of much importance nor danger.

"Don't try it, Dick.  Perhaps they are only
waiting for us to show ourselves and then when we
do they hope to pot us."

But Dick had rushed out of the doorway before
Henry finished speaking.  He zigzagged his way
across the open space to about fifty yards, the point
where he had rescued Henry, and with his reappearance
another fusillade began.  As Dick reached
the spot he saw the two guns lying within a few feet
of each other, and between them and the enemy was
a small clump of green bush.

Back in the doorway Henry now sat watching
with bated breath.  He saw Dick stop in his mad
rush, then he saw him throw up his hands in a wild
gesture of despair and fall to the ground.  That his
brave friend was in great agony was evident to the
helpless watcher.  He saw Dick roll over and over,
his arms and legs seeming to thresh the air.  Finally
the movements ceased and Dick lay stretched out
like a log on the scorching hot plain.  The tears
rolled unheeded down Henry's cheeks, and then,
hearing the loud victorious shouts of the natives as
they streamed out from behind the shelter of the
woods near the bend, and on across the plain, his
lips pressed together and his eyes grew cold and
stern, for the brain behind was dominated by but
one thought, the desire to avenge his comrade.

With grim determination he placed all the spare
magazines for his pistol within easy reach and drew
his heavy Colt's from the holster.  Not a man
should ever reach Dick's body if the steady hand
and cool nerve of Henry Cabell could prevent.

On came the natives, and Mexican Pete was
leading them.  Even as they came they continued
firing at the hut and in the direction of the still body
lying behind the little bush where it had rolled in
the last struggles.  Henry, unheeding the pain in
his leg, rolled into the doorway on his stomach and,
resting both elbows on the floor, he squinted over
the sights and took careful aim at the Mexican.
He meant to make every shot count, and so he
waited until the leader should be within seventy-five
yards of him.  So intense was he on judging the
precise moment to open fire that he saw nothing but
this one man whom he covered with his pistol.

As he looked he saw the Mexican throw up his
arms, whirl about and run back towards cover.
What caused this?  Henry lowered his pistol, and
now saw the rest of the gang wildly scattering,
leaving two of their number lying on the plain.  The
next moment Henry was rubbing his eyes to see if
he were awake.  The body lying in the shelter of
the bush had come to life.  Dick Comstock was
working his shotguns with lightning rapidity, and
clouds of dust flew up from the plain as the
buckshot sprayed about among the fleeing men.  As the
last one was lost in the distant cover Dick ceased his
fire and came running, with both guns in his hands,
for the hut.

"Say, boy, but didn't I fool 'em?" he joyfully
shouted as he sprang through the doorway.  "Did
you see me get 'em, Hank?"

"Old boy, I thought they had gotten you.  I
reckon I was pretty much all in too, Dick, when I
saw you go down, and I was just about to open up
when you began on them.  It was sure a good trick
you played, but, Dick, be careful to let me know
about it the next time or I'll die of heart failure.
Did they get you at all?"

"Not once; but one of their darn slugs took off
my cap, right enough, and right then the thought
flashed through my mind to play the trick.  Whew!
It's some hot out there, and, Hank, do you still see
those two chaps that fell?  I wonder if they're hurt,
or--or----  Gee!  I feel kind of squeamish, now
that it's over," and Dick sat down rather suddenly
with his back against the wall.

"No, they are not dead, Dick, for one of them
jumped up and limped off when your fire stopped,
and the other is yelling for help right now.
Besides, they deserve no better fate, and our death
would have meant nothing to them in the way of
regret, at least."

"I feel better, after what you've said, but for a
moment the thought of killing a man was making
me sort of sick at my stomach.  I didn't feel that
way when I was shooting at 'em, though," and Dick
took a deep breath of relief, then rising he looked
out at the scene of recent conflict.  Out in the
middle of the plain the wounded native still called for
help, but if his comrades were within hearing they
made no attempt to render any assistance.

"I reckon those buckshot sort of stung a bit,"
snickered Henry; but his snicker ended in a little
painful gasp that he tried in vain to control.

"I've got to get you out of here, Hank, and in a
hurry.  There is no telling what they'll do next,
and they'll be back as soon as the first fright wears
off.  I believe that path back of the hut will take us
to a creek which flows into the Estero Balsa and
which the officers plotted in on the chart last week
when I was with them.  Anyhow, it's worth trying.
If you feel well enough suppose you keep an eye
out on the plain while I reconnoiter in the rear."

"Good; I feel fine, Dick, so go along, and I'll
keep them off, don't worry."

In ten minutes Dick returned with the news that
his surmise was correct, and as luck would have it,
a small boat with two men was even then coming
up the narrow creek.  Taking Henry on his shoulder
once more, Dick carried him to the bank of the
creek, arriving there as the boatmen reached a point
opposite.  At his hail the boat was soon nosing the
bank, and the natives inquired what was wanted.

"My comrade just met with an accident, and I
wish to take him to the Captain of the Port's house;
will you row us there?"

The two fishermen at first demurred, but Dick
settled the matter by taking hold of the gunwale
and at the same time drawing his pistol.  It was no
time to parley; in a moment they saw the force of
his remarks.  Henry was placed carefully in the
bottom of the boat, and soon they were speeding
down-stream.

Once during the passage the two boys looked at
each other and winked knowingly, for from far
upstream came the sound of numerous shots.

"Seems to be a lot of hunting in this country,"
said Dick aloud.

"Oh, yes, Señor, the doves are very plentiful this
year," said one of the rowers.

Crossing the waters of the Estero, they drew up
alongside the wharf, where they had landed less
than twenty-four hours previously.  One of the
ship's boats was there, and the coxswain in charge
hailed them.

"Hurry aboard, you leathernecks.  I've all the
stuff from your camp.  The ship's under sailin'
orders fer Nicaragua, where there's a hot little
revolution goin' on.  What's that, one of you hurt?
Well, they shouldn't let boys carry guns anyway;
they're all the time a-shootin' of themselves.
Steady, lads!  Handle him with care, and make a
soft place fer him in the cockpit with them cushions.
Shove off, for'rd!  Full speed ahead!  Say good-bye
to this heck of an island, fellers; we're off this
time, for sure!"





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`"TO THE DITCH AT PANAMA"`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XX


.. class:: center medium

   "TO THE DITCH AT PANAMA"

.. vspace:: 2

"There goes the good old *Denver*, Mike.  I
guess she'll reach the fighting grounds before
we do."

"Don't let that be for worryin' of ye, Dick, me
lad," responded Corporal Dorlan.  "We'll be
havin' a bellyful of it, I'm thinkin', if all signs is
correct.  Nevertheless, she was one of the foinest
little crafts I've ever served on, and they was a
grand lot of Navy officers on her, too; but I'm glad
to git back to the Corps again.  I'm a marine,
Dick, through and through, and though I get along
with them Navy men well enough, I like to serve
with me own kind best of all."

The old veteran and young drummer were standing
on the wharf at Cristobal, at the Atlantic end
of the ten-mile stretch of land across the Isthmus of
Panama known as the Canal Zone, which by treaty
with the Panamanian Government had come under
perpetual control of the United States.  Fading
away in the dim distance was the ship which for
many months had been Dick's official home.  Diverted
from her original orders, she had put in at
Cristobal long enough to land all her marines, with
the exception of Henry Cabell, who was still under
the surgeon's care; and now she was bound for
Bluefields, on the Mosquito Coast of Nicaragua.
In order to fill existing vacancies in a regiment of
marines hurrying to the scene of action on board
the Naval Transport *Dixie*, which ship was just
appearing above the distant horizon, the guard of the
*Denver* had been unceremoniously "dumped on the
beach," as the men put it.

There was no question that the revolution in
progress, most active on the Pacific coast of
Nicaragua, was a lively one.  Marines were being
assembled from all available points, even reducing the
guard at Camp Elliott to a mere skeleton detachment.
These men from the Zone were the first to
leave for Nicaragua, and the army men stationed
there had watched them depart with feelings of envy.

"Blame it all!  Those marines are always getting
into something.  I'll bet I take on with that
outfit the next time I sign up," more than one
regular army "file" had been heard to say.

And that first lot of "soldiers of the sea" had
already met with opposition.  Even now they
were somewhere between Corinto and the capital
city, Managua.  If they found the rails torn up,
they repaired them; bridges burned, they built new
ones temporarily.  They were threatened with
annihilation if they interfered, yet they continued with
a dauntless, young and able leader at their head,
relieving the fears of the foreigners in the interior
and keeping the single line of railroad back to their
base in fairly good order.  Only this very audacity
could assure the success of their undertaking, and
also a possible misunderstanding on the part of
Federals and Rebels as to which side "these
interfering Yankees" were really there to help, though
it was the bearers of the red rosettes who actively
opposed their progress.  American financial
interests were jeopardized, and underlying all the
fuss and furor were greater stakes than the general
public realized.

Perhaps Drummer Richard Comstock and
Trumpeter Cabell, in a talk before they separated
that morning, were closer to the real reason for this
strong force being despatched than were even the
best informed officers of the expedition.

"I reckon a certain conversation you all overheard
in Washington a year ago is bearing fruit,"
suggested Henry, looking up from his bunk in the
sick bay where Dick had gone to visit him.

"It looks that way," Dick had replied.

"Well, if you run across a certain German and
a three-fingered Limey,[#] Dick, you'll do well to
keep an eye open.  I sure wish I could go with you
all, but we'll get together again before long; so
good-bye, old boy, and good luck," and Henry
turned to the wall to cover the emotion this
separation caused him.  Thus they had parted.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] "Limey"--British maritime regulations require the captain to
   issue regular rations of lime-juice as a preventative for scurvy.
   British ships and sailors are therefore known as "Lime-juicers," or
   in sailor slang, "Limeys."

.. vspace:: 2

Steadily the transport grew upon the vision of
those awaiting her arrival.  Finally, when she came
alongside her berth, the place became a seething
ant-hill of activity.  Tons and tons of rations,
tents, munitions, wireless outfits, buckets, clothing,
field ranges, medical supplies, field artillery, and
the thousand other things necessary for extensive
operations were sent up out of the ship's holds and
packed on freight cars, and soon trains of men and
supplies were slowly creeping from under the
railroad sheds, out past Monkey Hill, on and on, with
ever-increasing speed, towards the Pacific terminus
at Balboa.

Much to Dick's pleasure and Corporal Dorlan's
satisfaction they found themselves detailed for duty
with a company commanded by an old acquaintance,
Captain Kenneth Henderson, formerly in
charge of the Marine Detachment of the U.S.S. *Nantucket*.

"Well, Sergeant Dorlan, I'm glad to have you
back under my command," said the Captain as he
shook hands; "report to the First Sergeant at once,
and tell him I said you are in charge of the working
detail loading the cars."  Then he turned to Dick.
"Where have I seen you before, music?  Your
face looks familiar, but I can't place you."

"I met the Captain on the *Nantucket*, sir, if the
Captain remembers the day we were upset by a
motor boat and Dorlan rescued Tommy Turner."

"Now I know!  You are Drummer Comstock.
Your friend's uncle asked me to keep an eye on you
in case I ran across you.  How is it that you are a
drummer?  I understood you enlisted to get a
commission."

"I hope to have my rank changed before long,
sir, but at the time I enlisted they were taking only
musics into the Corps."

"Does this young man know anything?  Can we
make a corporal out of him?" asked Captain
Henderson, turning to Dorlan, who still stood at
attention near by.

"Indeed he's a broth of a lad, sir, and knows
more'n most of the corporals right now, but if the
Captain will excuse me, I wanted to explain before
goin' to the First Sergeant that I'm only a corporal
meself, sir.  Ye may disremember I was reduced in
rank over a year ago."

"I remember it very well, Dorlan; but from
to-day on you are again a sergeant.  So get busy with
that work of loading.  As for you, music, I'll make
you my orderly for the present.  Go aboard, find
my mess boy, Jackson, and get my luggage on that
train.  It is already packed.  Then present my
respects to the Colonel, and tell him my company is
ready to move any time he sends me word."

Thus it was Dick found himself on board the first
troop train to cross the Isthmus.  He was well
repaid now for the hours he had devoted to his
graduation essay.  At that time he had gone deeply into
the subject and since then, while cruising in the
West Indies, many times his previous reading and
study had been of great help.  The history of the
Panama Canal was a favorite subject, and now he
verified his book knowledge by actual experience.
The sight of the vast area already flooded as a
result of the nearly completed dam at Gatun, the
names of Frijoles, Bas Obispo, Camp Elliott,
Cucaracha, Pedro Miguel and Miraflores brought
back to his mind afresh the disappointments of the
French and the difficulties overcome by his country.
At one place on the road a dirt train held them up
for a short space of time, and from the car window
he caught glimpses of the mighty Bucyrus steam
shovels scooping up tons of earth and rock in their
capacious maws with almost human intelligence.
The new line they travelled passed to the east of
Gold Hill, back of which was Culebra Cut, where
the slipping, unstable earth caused so much delay,
disappointment and expense by its dangerous
slides.  Every where were scenes of activity!
Hundreds of cars and engines, empty trains, trains filled
with excavated earth, trains of freight, passenger
trains, workmen's trains, thousands of men, negroes
from the South and the West Indies, Spaniards,
Englishmen, Frenchmen, Chinese, Latin-Americans,
full blooded Central American Indians, Hindoos
from the Far East, all busy, all hustling, even
in this tropic zone.  They passed through little
villages and settlements, each a reminder of the fabled
"Spotless Town," with their excellent roads, splendid
drainage, immaculate, screened buildings, stores,
boarding-houses, hotels, public buildings and
residences, all under the supervision of the
Government.  How proud the young drummer was to be
a part of this big republic which did things on such
a wonderful scale; that he served this country which
flung to the breeze the Stars and Stripes: that he
was even then on his way to help a misguided
people, who, under the far-sighted provision of that
Doctrine of President Monroe, now needed a helping
hand to guide their ship of state over treacherous
waters: that he was Richard Comstock,
United States Marine.

All too soon the passage of that narrow neck of
land was completed, and the train pulled in under
the sheds of the Balboa wharves.  Again the hustle
and bustle, for close behind followed freight trains
and more troops, and the work of unloading the cars
and filling up waiting lighters was begun.

Men's hands, unaccustomed to the rough work,
blistered and went raw, their backs ached, their
muscles grew stiff and strained, the perspiration
soaked their khaki clothing a dark brown color, but
cheerfully they stuck to their task.  And truly it
was Herculean, for after being placed aboard the
lighters the stores were towed alongside a great
gray battleship lying far out in the harbor, where
they again had to be transferred aboard and stored away.

The companies worked in two-hour shifts, one
battalion being detailed at each of the transfer
points.  They arrived at Cristobal at noon, and a
little after midnight the work ashore had been
completed.  Captain Henderson's company was one of
those detailed for work on the Balboa wharves, and
shortly before ten o'clock he started in a motor car
for the city of Panama, taking his newly appointed
orderly with him.  About the time the relief shift
was to go on they returned, laden down with
sandwiches of all kinds and several big freezers of
ice-cream with which to regale officers and men.  The
cooks in the meantime had made gallons of hot
coffee, and when mess-call sounded, never was food
and drink more welcome than to those dirty, grimy,
sweat-laden marines, who, seated on box or barrel,
gun carriage or packing case, in the glare of many
cargo lights, munched and drank to repletion.
Then "carry on" was sounded, and with cheerful
shouts and renewed vigor they tackled their task.

By six o'clock the next morning the big ship
slowly swung her bows out towards the ocean of
Balboa, the mighty Pacific, and laid her course for
Corinto, Nicaragua's principal seaport on the west
coast.

Then it was that Dick Comstock realized he was
tired--good and tired, but there could be no rest
for the weary.  Every man must first know to
which boat he was assigned in case of "abandon
ship," what he was supposed to do in case of fire,
where he was to berth; then there were roll calls and
cleaning ship and stowing away the stores on deck,
and it was dark once more before the willing
workers finally found the time and the place to
catch a little sleep.  But it was all worth while
when the Colonel Commanding sent around to each
company his official word of praise: "No body of
men could better their record, and he doubted if
any could equal it," so read the memorandum.
And Dick, curled up in an unoccupied corner on
deck, fell asleep, while ringing in his ears was that
well-known stanza of the Marines' Hymn which a
group of still energetic Leathernecks were softly
singing somewhere up near the bridge:

   |   "From the pest hole of Cavite
   |   To the ditch at Panama,
   |   They're always very needy
   |   Of marines, that's what we are,
   |   We're the watch dogs of a pile of coal
   |   Or we build a magazine,
   |   Though our duties are so numerous,
   |   Who would not be a Marine?"





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE MARINES HAVE LANDED`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XXI


.. class:: center medium

   THE MARINES HAVE LANDED

.. vspace:: 2

"That's a fine-looking engine," said Dick, three
days later, as he gazed, with a derisive laugh, at the
locomotive backing onto the wharf at Corinto to
couple up with a train of laden flat cars ready to
start on the precarious journey to support the
battalion of marines somewhere along the line, but just
where no one rightly knew.

And indeed it was an engine of a type quite new
to most of the marines perched on every available
sticking-place amid the boxes, barrels and bales
with which the train was laden.  A care-free, jovial
lot of huskies they were, taking this back-breaking
work as a mere matter of course.  They were
marines, so it was their just due to be chased from one
corner of the world to the other; and if it had not
been so, they would have said disgustedly that they
"might as well be in the Army."  The world
moved and the marines moved with it; they
themselves were sometimes inclined to think they
moved it.

"The only place I ever saw an engine of that
type was on those blue three-cent stamps the United
States put out for the centennial celebration many
years ago," remarked a junior officer, seated near
Dick on the floor of the car, with his feet swinging
idly over the side.

"You are not much of a philatelist, Mr. Mercer,"
said Captain Henderson, who happened by, "or
you would have known of other postage stamps with
an engraving of the wood-burning type of engine
on their face.  This country we are now in uses a
series of them over on the Mosquito Coast, and
Honduras has another series.  But I see we are
about to start.  Pass the word to fix bayonets: no
rifles to be loaded without command.  Each man
must understand this affair is being handled with
kid gloves, and they must not precipitate things by
any hasty action on their part.  Remember, too,
that we are here to keep order, and unless interfered
with we will go about our business quietly.  To us,
at the present time, all Nicaraguans are our friends
until they prove otherwise.  Treat both parties
alike until you get orders to the contrary.  Those
men wearing red rosettes and ribbons are 'agin the
government'; they are rebels; so be careful of your
every act."

The engine with its enormous bell-topped stack
by now had bumped into position and with a jerk
and wrench and creaking of wheels the journey was
begun.

All along the route could be seen small bands of
men.  Some carried rifles, but the majority were
armed with long knives, called machetes.  Many
sported uniforms, but most were attired in ordinary
clothing, the little red badges identifying them with
the insurgent forces.

Hour after hour they clattered and bumped
along the fearful road-bed.  Forward!  Bump,
stop!  Bump, ahead!  Stop!  Little by little, mile
after mile, they progressed.  Here the rails were
slippery, and with shovel in hand the men jumped off
the cars and covered them with dirt so that the
wheezy engine could once more proceed.  At a
town named Quezalgaque, just as darkness fell, the
engine ran out of water.  A bucket line was formed
down the steep river embankment at this spot and
under the glare of flaming torches the men worked
filling the boiler till the Navy Machinist in charge
of the engine stated the gauge was "full up."  Then
forward once more with the cheers of the
detachment of Uncle Sam's sailors, stationed here
to guard the bridge, ringing in their ears.

The night was so black that it was difficult to see
one's hand before one's face and when, after about
five miles more of bumping and thumping had been
covered, the train again halted, word passed from
the head of the train for no one under any
circumstances to leave the cars.  There seemed to be a
mysterious something in the air, as of a dense crowd
of humanity pressing in from all sides, yet there
was no sound, other than the puffing of the
wood-burner at the head of the train.

"Wonder what makes this place so spooky
like?" whispered Dick to Dorlan, who sat beside
him filling his old corn-cob pipe preparatory to
lighting up; "I have a feeling that if I put my
hand out I'd touch some human being; and yet I
can't see a thing in this blackness."

Dorlan did not reply, but the light from his
match made a small glare in the surrounding night.
Small as it was the men in his immediate vicinity
were startled at what it disclosed.  A sea of faces,
a forest of armed men, crowded up to the very edge
of the track on all sides.

"Whew!  Did you see them?" whispered a man
near Dick.  "Every beggar in sight has a gun, and
here we are right in the middle of 'em, and we didn't
know it."

There was a restless movement on the part of the
marines.  Those who had been drowsing awakened,
to grip more firmly the rifle which, since darkness,
no longer held the knife-like bayonet.  One man
quietly opened the bolt of his rifle and nervously
fingered a clip of cartridges in his belt.

"Easy, men!" came the caution down the length
of the train, and the slight flutter of nerves calmed
to steadiness.  But the tension was there, and only
the excellent discipline held them in check, for these
rebels were too close for comfort.  Then followed
the slow ringing of the locomotive's bell, brakes
were released and the train moved on, crossed a
high trestle bridge, and again halted.

"Pile out, everybody!  Throw our company
stores off the cars at once and stow them alongside
the track.  Get some lanterns working, men.  On
the jump, now!" and Captain Henderson strode
along the embankment shining his flash-light and
encouraging his men to do good work.

Lights flickered along the train.  Stores were
tossed off in quick order, camp sites selected, police
parties immediately prepared latrines, and the
guard was posted.  Then, the immediate requirements
being attended to, the men rolled up in their
blankets on the hard earth to get such sleep as they
could.

"Who were all those hombres[#] surrounding us
before we crossed the big bridge, Sergeant?" asked
Dick, pulling his knapsack into a more comfortable
position beneath his head.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Hombres--Men.

.. vspace:: 2

"They was the chief army of the rebels in these
parts," replied Dorlan.  "When we stopped back
there we were right in the middle of the biggest
town in Nicaragua, and the one where all the
trouble starts.  The people of Leon are always ready
to revolute with the hope of makin' it the capital
instead of Managua, and bein' on the only railroad
from the capital city to the seaport, Corinto, they're
in a foine place to control things.  The nearest
Federal troops are at a place called La Paz, about
twenty-three kilometers from here."

"How long is a kilometer, Sergeant?" questioned
one of the men.

"It's about five-eighths of a mile, so La Paz
would be about fourteen miles south of here.  From
there on the Federal troops hold the railroad to the
southern outskirts of Managua, and as this line goes
on to Granada, I figure it's up to us to do considerable
of work yet, for they say that we'll never get
through the rebel lines beyond the capital without
a fight.  However, so far things seem to be goin'
pretty slick."

"Do you know how many troops there are in
Leon, Sergeant?"

"About two or three thousand, so they say,
and they didn't want us to pass through there
to-night, but finally consented.  The Adjutant
told me the leaders were pretty ugly about it,
but as you see they finally gave in, and here we are."

"Now we are here what are we going to do?"
inquired Dick.

"This battalion's goin' to camp right here and
watch these fellers in Leon; the rest of them
behind us will go on through when they come up and
help the outfit that's ahead.  All the telegraph and
telephone lines are down between here and La Paz
Centro.  The rebs have cut 'em, and we can't get
word of what's goin' on up ahead; but we'll know
by to-morrow night.  Now, quit yer askin' of
questions.  It's three o'clock in the mornin', and
reveille's set for five A.M.  Ye always want to get
all the sleep ye can on campaign, for ye can't never
tell what's a-goin' to be happenin' the next minute.
Good-night, boys," and Sergeant Dorlan rolled
over, his snores soon announcing he had followed
his own excellent advice, but it was a long time
before Dick's eyes closed in slumber, and it seemed
as though the notes of reveille awakened him even
before he had succeeded in getting the time-quoted
"forty winks."

   |   "I can't get 'em up!  I can't get 'em up!
   |   I can't get 'em up in the morning!
   |   I can't get 'em up!  I can't get 'em up!
   |   I can't get 'em up at all!
   |   The private's worse than the corporal,
   |   The corporal's worse than the sergeant,
   |   The sergeant's worse than the Captain,
   |   And the Captain's worst of all."
   |

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

.. _`Dick's Map of Camp Pendleton`:

.. figure:: images/img-310.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: Dick's Map of Camp Pendleton

   Dick's Map of Camp Pendleton

.. class:: center

   DICK'S MAP OF CAMP PENDLETON

.. class:: small

   The map was made by Dick, and is a fairly good one, though many
   necessary things have been omitted.  The Railroad from Granada to
   Corinno through Leon goes south to north.  Captain Henderson's
   company was in the woods at S.W. corner of map.
   The outpost near bridge
   was to prevent damage to structure.

.. class:: small

   The camp was named after Colonel Joseph H. Pendleton, U.S.M.C.,
   who commanded all the marines on this expedition, but the camp itself
   was commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Charles G. Long, U.S.M.C.
   One battalion of marines,
   a battalion of sailors from the U.S.S. *Colorado*,
   Quartermaster Depot, Navy Medical Unit, and Wireless Outfit, were
   encamped in the enclosed area and occupied about two-thirds of the space.
   This camp was made on September 11-12, 1912.

.. class:: small

   The map shows no contours, but a gentle slope, and from E to W gave
   excellent drainage, and Leon, a mile distant, was in full view.  The
   single dotted lines are trails.  The double dotted lines are unfenced
   roads and the rectangles are generally houses, except in camp, where
   they represent tents.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

"Come on, ye lazy bones, roll out of yer
hammicks," called Dorlan cheerily, "and if ye foller
that path down by the shack acrost the road ye'll
reach the river and a good place to wash, only don't
go too far down-stream, as there's a bunch o'
buzzards cleanin' up some dead men, and the sight ain't
extry fine on an empty stummick."

It was not long before Dick had finished his
ablutions, and as he had avoided the buzzard's feast he
felt quite capable of doing justice to the breakfast
the mess cooks prepared.

The day was spent in fixing up the camp, preparing
it for defense, reconnaissance work, and sorting
stores.  That the rebel general felt kindly towards
the Americans might have been implied from the
fact that he sent two beeves to the Colonel
Commanding, with his compliments, but these were
returned with expressions of thanks, as the Colonel
did not feel he could accept the gift.  Many parties
of rebel soldiers passed the camp during the day
and curiously watched the soldiers from the great
Northern Republic at their varied occupations.
Other days followed, some filled with flurries of
excitement, some slow and monotonous.  The rest of
the regiment passed on towards the capital and a
battalion of sailors came to augment the force, and
for the time they were ashore, absorbed the Marine
Corps spirit, "hook, line and dipsey."

One day a rebel "armored" train came puffing
along from Leon, where they kept it carefully
locked up in the station shed, and proceeded towards
La Paz, with red flags streaming and a poor edition
of Joan d'Arc astride the cow-catcher brandishing
a big machete and cheering on the deluded soldiers.

"Viva Luis Mena!  Viva Leon!"[#] they shouted
to the marines, and waving their guns wildly,
passed on.


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] "Hurrah for Louis Mena!  Hurrah for Leon!"--Mena was the
   rebel candidate for presidential honors and after the battle of
   Coyotepe he was taken under guard by the marines to Corinto and
   deported.

.. vspace:: 2

"They are off for a fight," hazarded the
onlookers, but it was only a foraging party out for
wood and fresh beef which they confiscated as they
found it.  One of the flat cars was arranged with
sand bags, and over the parapet thus formed a
Hotchkiss machine-gun menacingly stuck its baleful
snout.  This rebel train was an eye-sore to the
American officers; for as long as General Rivas,
who commanded at Leon, had this train and
locomotive locked up in the station, so long it was sure
to be a menace.  The marines were in Nicaragua
primarily to keep open the railroad, which was
American-owned, and orders now came from the
Admiral commanding the forces afloat and ashore
to demand the surrender of the train.  This Rivas
refused, feeling confident that the few Yankees
encamped across the river were neither strong enough
nor brave enough to attempt to force him, and
should they do so then it was quite certain they were
no longer impartial.  One Sunday morning in
September, to his astonishment, three trains filled with
marines and sailors pulled into the sidings at Leon.
The attitude of the officers and men on this train
was such that Rivas considered surrender the better
part of valor, though at one time it looked as though
his enraged men would precipitate a bloody
struggle.  Anyway, the train was taken out from
its shed; the rebels were permitted to remove their
gun, and amid the curses and execrations of the
multitude gathered at the station, it was towed back
to the American camp.

As for Richard Comstock, he found the life
exciting and full of adventure.  Following his
application, he had had his rank changed to that of a
private, and accompanied Sergeant Dorlan, who
had been appointed special messenger to carry
despatches, up and down the line.  The situation
was getting more critical every day.  Then came
orders to send all the field artillery from Leon to
Managua, and on the train that took them went
Dorlan and Dick, bearing special despatches to the
Admiral who had gone on to the capital city for a
conference.  The rebels near the Leon camp looked
gloomily upon this move.  A few days before a
train bearing marines, on passing through Masaya,
a city south of Managua, had been fired upon, some
men being killed and wounded on both sides.

Now it was apparent that the Yankees were
going to assist the Federal troops.  What would be
the outcome?  Would they attempt to attack the
rebels at Barrancas and Coyotepe?  If they did
they could never take those positions.  No troops
had ever yet wrested those strongholds from the
soldiers defending them.  It had never been done
in the history of the republic and its many wars.
Secretly General Rivas despatched bodies of
mounted men to augment the rebels in the vicinity
of the threatened points.

When the artillery train stopped for watering
the engine at La Paz, hundreds of Federal troops
met it with a band at their head and cheering vociferously:

"Viva los Americanos!  Viva los Federales!"
they shouted till their throats were hoarse.

"Let's get off and buy some fruit, Sergeant,"
said Dick, who was riding on the engine with his
companion.

"You go along, Dick, but hurry back, as I heard
the engineer say we'll be pullin' out o' here in a
jiffy."

Climbing down from his seat, Dick elbowed his
way through the crowd till he came to a fruit stand
at the far side of the station platform.  After
selecting some oranges and mangoes he was
hurrying back when the broad shoulders, red neck and
blond, bristly hair of a foreigner standing at the
edge of the crowd drew his attention.  Beside him
was a tall man whose tanned face could not hide
the fact that he too was a stranger from another
land.  Under the brim of the taller man's hat was
a white spot of hair over and behind one ear, and
the left hand, as he raised it, showed half the middle
finger missing.

"The German and the Englishman!"

Dick almost said the words aloud in his
excitement over the discovery.  Both men were
watching the crowd in front of them with great interest,
and conversing in rather loud tones in order to make
themselves heard above the din made by the
enthusiastic soldiers cheering the train.  Unobserved,
Dick stopped directly behind them.

"Just our blooming bad luck to have them go
through during daylight, after we have been waiting
for this very move for several days," said the
Englishman in a drawling voice.

"I never expected they would make the move by
day, or I should have made better arrangements.
If it were dark, as we expected it would be, we
could pull off the same kind of game we worked in
Masaya when Butler's Battalion went through
there.  I had to do that trick against General
Zeladon's wishes.  If he had consented to let me work
it as I wished that train-load of marines never
would have lived to get through as they did.  I had
to make it appear an unpremeditated affair, and as
a result not half the people joined in the fight.  A
single defeat of these Yankees to the credit of the
rebels, and the whole country would have joined us,
Mena would have been president without a doubt,
and our plans would be well under way towards
consummation."

"You made a mistake, though, Mein Herr.  You
should never have made it appear that the rebels
began the shooting.  Our policy is to lead these
Americans to believe that the Federal troops are
against their interference."

"Bah!  You don't know what you are talking
about," said the German in the same arrogant way
of speaking that Dick remembered so well.

"Well, don't let us get ratty over it; you know,
old top, we have other things to think about.  Now
if we might delay this train in some way it would
still be possible to work the game here."

"No chance at all!  Not a chance!" exclaimed
the big man impatiently, "but it would have been a
fine opportunity to turn the tables had it only been
dark.  Our men here would have been enough to
make them believe the whole outfit of Federals were
shooting them up, and in the excitement the
marines would have returned the fire, and the fight
would have become general."

"Will the other trick work?" the Englishman
now asked.  "Will those papers implicating
Chamorra come into the Americans' hands in a
perfectly natural way?"

"Yes, and it is our last hope, outside of actual
defeat of this Yankee rabble by the rebels, and I
believe that is a possibility.  These men are nothing
but play soldiers.  What do they know about war?
And as for taking Coyotepe away from Zeladon
and his men, bah! they can never do it!  They
will have to declare war first, and get down their
miserable army.  That will delay them long enough
for us to defeat the Federals, and Mena and his men
will be in supreme power.  Hello, the train is off.
Donder und Blitzen!  How I wish it were night!"
and the speaker stamped in wrath upon the gravel
of the roadway.

So interested was Dick in the conversation of
these two men which for a second time had been
overheard by him that he had failed to note the train
was moving away.  To his consternation he saw
now that he could not catch it because of the crowd
between him and the last car, which was passing as
he looked over the sea of heads.  Running to the
telegraph office where, owing to many previous
visits with Dorlan, he was well known, he dictated
a wire to be sent on to Nagarote, the next stopping
place along the line, explaining briefly that he had
missed the train.  Then he turned to the operator,
and before the man knew what was happening had
divested that surprised individual of his coat.

"Quick, Frederico, loan me your coat and hat,"
he said.  "Take charge of my canteen and haversack
till I return.  Oh, yes, I'll borrow your necktie
too," he added, stripping it off the neck of the
open-mouthed native, and after pulling off his leggins
and putting on the things he had commandeered, he
sped out through the doorway in pursuit of the two
men whose rapid strides were even then carrying
them towards the center of the town.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`DICK IS LEFT BEHIND`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XXII


.. class:: center medium

   DICK IS LEFT BEHIND

.. vspace:: 2

As Dick ran from the telegraph office and looked
about him in search of the two foreigners, he saw
them disappearing around a street corner a few
hundred yards away, but when he arrived at the
same spot they were nowhere in sight.  He dashed
up the long street scouring each crossing for a sight
of them, but in vain.  The town was practically
deserted.  Most of the smaller houses were open
and vacant.  The stores and larger dwellings were
closed and locked.  The inhabitants had vacated
when the Federal forces occupied the town some
weeks before.  La Paz was in too great a danger
of changing hands again to make it comfortable as
a place of habitation.

Small patrols of Federal soldiers sauntered
about, but the majority had returned to the
entrenchments which surrounded the town on all
sides.  Even women and children were noticeable
by their absence, for the families of the
Latin-American soldiers as a rule accompany their
fighting men into the field, living with them on the
firing line.  Often the women themselves join in
the fray, armed with machetes, and are most savage
and blood-thirsty opponents.

Failing to discover the whereabouts of the German
and the Englishman, Dick was at first at a loss
as to his next step.  Then he recalled having met
at the station a few days before Colonel Solorzano
Diaz, nephew to the president of Nicaragua,, and
second officer in command at La Paz.  Undoubtedly
this officer could give him information of the
two he sought, as it was improbable they could be
inside the Federal lines and not be known to him.

"Is Colonel Diaz in La Paz?" asked Dick of a
group of soldiers standing on a corner.

"Yes, Señor, he is at his headquarters."

"Take me to him at once!  I have important
news for him!" demanded Dick.

The young soldier who had answered his query
now volunteered to act as guide, and after a ten
minutes' walk they came to the Colonel's tent,
erected near a battery of field guns.  The smart,
military-looking orderly on duty there halted them
and after inquiring their business, he ushered them
into the Colonel's presence.

"You say you are an American and have
important news for me?" asked the handsome young
Colonel, immaculately attired in a splendidly fitting
uniform.

"I have, Colonel, and will be glad to tell you
what I know if I may see you alone."

"First, explain how you come to be within our
lines.  Your arrival has never been reported to me, señor."

"I met the Colonel three days ago when I
delivered a letter from the Commanding Officer at
Camp Pendleton.  I am a marine, Señor."

"Why are you dressed as you are, if such is the
case?" and the officer looked Dick over with
suspicion in his eyes.

Briefly Dick gave his explanation, but before
Diaz would consent to hear the rest of his
disclosures the orderly was directed to telephone
Frederico at the station to verify the statements.

Colonel Diaz was a graduate of an excellent
military school in the United States, and his command
was remarkable for training and discipline, and
though Dick fussed over the delay, he nevertheless
admired the native officer for his caution.

Dick now saw that he had erred in not telegraphing
to have the train held at Nagarote until he could
explain by wire to the marine officer in command all
the facts in order to permit that officer to govern his
future movements to better advantage.  While
thinking of this, Colonel Diaz entered the tent,
having gone out in order to talk to Frederico in person.

"You are Private Comstock, guard for Sergeant
Dorlan, special messenger for the American
forces?" he stated in a questioning manner.

"I am."

"I will hear what you have to say.  Step outside,
orderly, and take the guard who brought this
man here with you."  Then turning to Dick, he
said in a most agreeable tone, "Be seated, Señor,
and proceed."

Dick now told of his two meetings with the
German and Englishman, and of the conversation
he had so fortunately overheard on each occasion.

"Do you mean to say, Señor, that these two
gentlemen, Señors Schumann and Heffingwell, are the
men you heard engaged thus?" asked Diaz in
amazement.

"If those are the names of the German and the
Englishman I have described, yes," answered Dick
positively.

The black eyes of the officer flashed ominously,
and a deep flush mantled the smooth olive complexion.

"They will pay dearly for this, Señor.  Those
two men have had many concessions from my uncle,
the president, in the past.  They have been in
Nicaragua for some years, and now I understand
why they were ever busy in travelling about on
various pleas.  Sometimes it was to investigate the
mines, at others to visit the coffee plantations of
Diriamba or the rubber industry of the midlands.
But this is not action!  Orderly," and the clear
voice rang with decision, "find out at once if Señors
Schumann and Heffingwell have passed the outposts;
if not they are to be brought here immediately."

During the time they waited for the report
Colonel Diaz paced up and down the tent in deep
thought, puffing great clouds of smoke from his
cigarette.

"The Captain commanding the outposts, sir,
states the two foreigners and escort of fifteen
cavalrymen crossed the southern outpost fully ten
minutes ago.  Their passes were in due form and
signed by yourself, sir."

"Yes, I gave them permission to leave at any
time that suited their convenience, and provided an
escort for their protection--the same men who
accompanied them in here two days ago with a pass
through our lines from General Pollito."

"Probably rebels in federal uniform," suggested
Dick, "and the ones they depended upon to start
the fracas at the station had the train arrived after
nightfall."

"Yes, uniforms these days consist of little more
than a ribbon to be changed as it suits the fancy or
the convenience, but the question is, what should be
done in the matter?  It is evident they can do
nothing to harm the train.  The road, which nearly
parallels the track from here to Managua, is in no
shape for fast going.  I inspected these men the
day they arrived here.  Their horses were worn out
and poor at best.  Even the lay-up they have
enjoyed would not put them in condition.  I will
acknowledge there have been times a man on a
good horse could leave here and arrive at the capital
ahead of the train, but never unless it was held up
by carelessness on the part of the native engineers.
Nearing Managua the train has to descend some
tortuous grades in the hills and the wagon road is
more direct and gives the horseman the advantage
during the last few kilometers."

"What do you propose to do, Colonel?" asked
Dick.  "Could you not send your men out after
them and bring them back?"

"I cannot spare the men.  We are too few here
already, and at any moment we are expecting an
attack.  Also I have no absolute proof of their
perfidy which would justify me in taking such
drastic measures.  They are under the protection
of my superiors, and though I believe your story,
unfortunately I am not the only one who would
need to be convinced.  The best that I can do is to
telegraph my suspicions to all points and have them
watched carefully from now on."

A scraping on the canvas at the front of the tent
attracted Colonel Diaz's attention.

"Come in," he called, and then as his orderly
appeared he added, "What is it you wish?"

"A telephone message from the station states
that the telegraph wires between here and Nagarote
have been cut, sir," reported the soldier, and at a
nod from his superior he withdrew.

"They are at it again," said Diaz quietly; "no
sooner do we send out and repair it than the line is
cut at another point."

For a few seconds the officer and the young
marine sat lost in thought.  That some disaster
threatened the train bearing the battery of field
guns and the marines had become a conviction in
Dick's mind.  He could not forget the Englishman's
question, "Will the trick work?" and the
German's reply in the affirmative.  Dick felt sure
that this "trick" was to occur before Managua was
reached, and this being so, what could be done to
prevent it?  Could it be prevented?  It was
certain that he could not count on help from Colonel
Diaz, and now, adding to the difficulty, the wires
were down.

Glancing through the tent opening Dick saw
beneath a tree, held by a uniformed orderly, two
spirited horses, saddled and bridled.  The sight at
once suggested action to the mind of the worried
boy.  Anything was better than this inactivity.
Furthermore, Dick knew that if he stayed on here
at La Paz he should never witness the stirring
events which were bound to follow the arrival of the
artillery at Managua.  Here was a means of going
forward and joining his companions.  Possibly too
he might learn something of advantage by following
the route taken by Schumann and his band.  It
was worth trying.

"Colonel Diaz, may I borrow horses from you
and a guide?  I wish to proceed to Managua at once."

"Do you ride--ride well, I mean?"

.. _`"DO YOU RIDE?"`:

.. figure:: images/img-326.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: "DO YOU RIDE?"

   "DO YOU RIDE?"

"Yes," replied Dick.

"It is sixty-three kilometers by rail, and about
fifty-eight by road to Managua, señor.  It is
possible even to cut that distance with a man who is
thoroughly acquainted with the country.  A good
horseman, well mounted, should reach there before dark."

"May I have the horses and a guide, Colonel?"
and this time Dick looked enviously at the horses
outside.  Following the glance Diaz now espied the
impatiently waiting animals.

"Ah!  And did you mean my horses?  Well,
Señor, they are the only two horses in this camp
capable of making the journey," and he said it with
a pardonable touch of pride.  "Those are not
native ponies.  They are thoroughbreds.  I love
them as a father would his sons, and----" he hesitated.

"I will give them good care," said Dick, who, to
tell the truth, had no idea that the Colonel would
entrust two such animals in his keeping when he
had asked for horses, but now he thought possibly
this would be the outcome of his request, and
thought he understood why Diaz made his involuntary pause.

"That is not the only consideration, Señor
Comstock.  Those two horses are almost as well known
as their master.  You would be in constant danger
of attack along the way, and seeing you, an
American Marine, riding my horse, every rebel you
encountered would do his best to stop you.  They
would not hesitate to shoot in case they could not
capture you otherwise.  Besides, those whom you
seek are between you and your destination and they
would surely hold you up.  No, the chances are
against you ten to one."

"Were they a thousand to one, Colonel, I would
wish to make the attempt."

A smile of understanding lit the face of the
officer and, rising, he gripped Dick's hand with
warmth.

"I understand!  It is the call of duty--of
patriotism--and for you my heart holds naught but
admiration, and my hand withholds nothing.  You
may take my horses, Señor, and may the good God
who watches over brave men watch over you on
your ride to the assistance of your fellow countrymen."

Colonel Diaz now called the orderly who brought
the horses to the tent door, and turning again to
Dick, he said:

"Tomas is an old servant in my household, Señor.
He will accompany you and be under your orders.
This paper will pass you through any of the
Federal lines.  Again, Señor, I wish you luck.  Adios!"

Less than five minutes later Dick, mounted on
the powerful black horse and followed by Tomas
Casanave, a full-blooded Indian, was swinging
along beside the railroad on a path which his guide
informed him would save nearly a kilometer at the
start.

At the first pond of water they came to, Dick
ordered a halt.  Dismounting and ordering Tomas
to do likewise, he gathered up a quantity of mud
and began smearing it over the velvety coat of the
animal he rode, over his clothes and shoes, even
putting some on his face.

"And why does the Señor do this?" asked
Tomas, looking on in amazement at the proceeding.

"The Colonel told me his horses are known from
here to Managua by every rebel along the line, but
they are well known because they are always so well
groomed, for one thing."

"I care for the Colonel's horses, Señor," said
Tomas, simply, but with much pride in his voice.

"By spreading this mud over the horses,"
continued Dick, "it may help deceive persons whom
we meet.  Now, Tomas, turn those saddle cloths,
smear mud on the trappings and harness, and tie
your coat in a roll back of your saddle.  Also hide
your carbine and its boot where you will be able to
find it on your return, and last, but by no means
least, remove that blue band from your sombrero."

Tomas followed Dick's advice, and by the time
he had finished no one would suspect either of them
of belonging to any military organization.  In fact
the Tramps' Union, if there be one, would have disowned them.

"In case we are held up you are to answer all
questions.  I will tie this handkerchief about my
neck, and you may state I am ill and we are
hurrying to Managua to consult a doctor about my
throat, which pains me and prevents me from
speaking.  Now, Tomas, we have lost time enough.
You take the lead and I will follow.  Save every
minute, but also remember these horses must carry
us to the end of the journey."

Springing into the saddle they instantly broke
into the long lope which was to be their gait for
the coming hours.

When told of the task before him by Colonel
Diaz, Tomas had been anything but pleased at the
prospect.  He knew the danger of running the
gauntlet of rebel bands infesting the country
between La Paz and the capital city, and he was filled
with apprehension.  Dick's preparations won his
admiration, and the boy's knowledge of Spanish
was another agreeable surprise.  He began to
believe they might win through, rebels or not.

That the foreigners, who had a half hour's start,
were following the same road, was soon discovered
by the Indian.  Accustomed to reading signs of the
trail he interpreted them for Dick's benefit.  Once
he dismounted just before crossing a small stream
which trailed across the road and carefully
examined the ground on the far side near the water's
edge.

"They passed here less than ten minutes ago,
Señor," he said as he remounted and splashed across
the brook.  "I can tell this by the water which
dripped from their horses, and the degree of
moisture still remaining."

On they went to the accompaniment of the thud
of the well-shod hoofs, the creak of leather, the
jangle of bit and spur.  Tomas was still watching
the road, when without apparent reason he stopped.

"What is the trouble?" asked Dick, reining in
the black charger on arriving abreast of his
companion, but before answering the native looked
about him cautiously.

"I have lost their trail, Señor.  They have left
the road."

"Which way did they turn, Tomas?"

"I cannot tell without going back, but I believe
to the right."

"Is there any cross trail or road?"

"No, and there is no reason that I know for
them to leave the road."

"Why do you suppose they have done so?"

"Quien sabe?"[#] answered Tomas, giving his
shoulders a shrug which carried as much meaning as
his words.  "Possibly they are in hiding and
watching us to ascertain if they are being followed.
If so, it would not be wise to retrace our steps in
case it is your desire to learn what became of them.
But now that we are evidently beyond them, I think
we are fortunate, and would suggest we proceed at
once on our way.  So far we have been unusually
lucky, having met with no rebels."


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Quien sabe--Who knows?

.. vspace:: 2

That there was wisdom in the Indian's words
could not be denied, but Dick felt a distinct sense
of disappointment as he looked about him in the
vain hope of seeing something of those they had
been following so closely.  About a half mile to the
west an almost bare hill stuck its summit high into
the glaring blue sky.  Its slopes were cone shaped
and fringed with a short stubby growth.  In spite
of disappointment, it was impossible to see the
beautiful symmetry of the hill without admiring it,
and as Dick watched, a cloud of smoke burst forth
from its apex.  Knowing the volcanic nature of the
country he was nevertheless surprised at the sight,
as Mount Momotombo, rising from the waters of
Lake Managua, was the only active volcano in this
immediate neighborhood.

"Is that small hill an active volcano, Tomas?"
he asked.

The native looked long and searchingly at the
smoking hilltop.  At first his face expressed fear
and amazement, followed in turn by a look of
question, and then of understanding.

"No, no, Señor, it is not a volcano.  It is a signal.
Someone is sending smoke signals."

"Smoke signals?  What do they mean?"

"They may mean anything.  It is a method
used by my people long ago and often resorted to
by the natives of Nicaragua.  If you notice the
smoke is interrupted; sometimes long columns,
sometimes short clouds or puffs."

"Are you able to read the message?"

"No! one has to know the code, Señor."

"If I had field glasses, it would be possible to see
who is sending the message," said Dick, straining
his eyes to discover if he could detect any
movement on the hill.

"There are binoculars in the saddle-bags belonging
to Colonel Diaz," exclaimed the native.

Dick placed his hand in the bag, which in the
haste of departure from La Paz had not been
removed, and brought forth a powerful pair of
prismatic glasses.  Adjusting them to his eyes, the
cone-like hill appeared to be almost within reach of
his hand.  On the hilltop, more or less screened by
the scrubby growth, were a number of men standing
about a fire which gave forth a thick volume of
smoke.  Two of the men were moving a blanket
back and forth over the fire, which caused the smoke
to rise in irregular clouds.  Half-way down the hill
he saw about twenty horses with a few mounted
men tending them.

Again he searched the hill.  He was convinced
these men made up the band whose trail they had
followed from La Paz, and if he could discover the
two foreigners his suspicions would be verified.  As
he watched he saw a man pointing to the southward.
The others now turned their heads to look, and then
from the shade of a boulder, he clearly saw both
Schumann and Heffingwell arise and reaching for
their binoculars, focus on the distant point.

"It is our party, Tomas," said Dick; "they are
all looking to the south and evidently pleased at
what they see there."

"That indicates their signal is answered," replied Tomas.

"It must be so, Tomas, for they are scattering
their fire, and some are trailing down the hill.  All
have left now, except the two foreigners.  They are
apparently reading a paper between them, though
I cannot quite make out what it is.  Yes, it was a
paper, for the German rolled it up and threw it on
the ground near the rock on which they had been sitting."

"The message or the code, Señor," stated Tomas;
"if we had it----"

"We shall have it, for I am going to get it.  It
is too good an opportunity to let pass, and even
though it were nothing, I should not feel I had done
my best if I left here without it."

"We are in plain view from the hill, Señor.  If
we remain here longer we may be detected."

"Never fear, they won't get us, but we must take
to cover until they pass, and then secure the paper."

"As the Señor wishes; but having let them
precede us again we may have difficulty in passing
them in turn and reaching Managua in safety."

"We must take the chance," replied Dick, with
no thought of wavering, and after replacing the
glasses he led the way deep into a rough tangle of
high trees and dense undergrowth at the roadside.
Here they awaited impatiently the reappearance of
the horsemen.

Soon the clatter of hoofs and the shouts of men
greeted their ears, and they came galloping up the road.

"Seem to be in a big hurry, all of a sudden,"
mused Dick as he peeped through the green
branches at their approach.

With the completion of his thought the blood in
his veins seemed to congeal, for the black horse
which he rode, hearing the oncoming troop, pricked
his ears, and then before Dick had time to grab the
quivering nostrils to prevent it a loud ear-splitting
neigh filled the silent wood with its tell-tale message.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`DICK MAKES A FLYING LEAP`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XXIII


.. class:: center medium

   DICK MAKES A FLYING LEAP

.. vspace:: 2

Too late the boy's firm fingers closed upon the
nose of the black horse, and fearing a repetition of
the alarm Dick pinched for dear life, meanwhile
peering apprehensively through the surrounding
mass of green foliage.  To his mystification the
road was clear of any living soul.

Turning anxiously to question the Indian, he
caught him in the midst of choking back an amused
chuckle.  Not understanding the situation, and
believing the guide was suffering from a stroke of
apoplexy, Dick began to pound him vigorously on
the back.

"Bastante, bastante![#]  I am not choking,"
exclaimed Tomas as soon as he was able to stop his fit
of laughter.  "Pardon me, my friend; I expected
your horse to send out his challenge, but I knew
those in the road would never hear it.  They were
too noisy themselves.  In consequence, I could not
refrain from a little enjoyment at your expense."


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Bastante--Spanish for "enough."

.. vspace:: 2

"You mean to say they did not hear at all this
black fog-horn-fourteen-inch-double-barreled-siren-and-brass-band
all rolled into one?  Why!  It was
enough to awaken the dead.  Boy! but it sure made
me sweat," and Dick wiped the beads of
perspiration from his forehead.

"They heard nothing, Señor, and at the rate they
were going they are well on their way by now."

"Then, Tomas, let us make haste to get that
paper," and without further words they turned
their horses' heads in the direction of the cone-like
hill.  On arriving at the point where those before
them had left their horses Dick, dismounting and
leaving Tomas in charge, climbed the remaining
distance alone.

At the top of the hill he saw the dying remnants
of the scattered fire, and then with a glad cry he
sprang forward to pick up a crumpled ball of paper
lying dangerously close to a glowing ember.

Seating himself he smoothed out the sheets.
Upon one was a rude sketch in ink; the other was
filled with writing in Spanish.  Feverishly he
translated it aloud.

.. vspace:: 2

"Señor: Everything is prepared, and when I
see your smoke signals I will know the exact hour
to spring my surprise.  The rock is in position to
roll on the track at the curve marked X, where the
arrow points.  Crushed beneath it, as if accidentally
by his own carelessness, will be the body of a
Federalista, a close friend of the President.  In his
pockets will be found the papers proving
conclusively that the Federals planned to wreck the
American train.  Even the money paid for the work will
be in the dead man's pocket, untouched.  If the
train arrives at the spot in the night, our scheme
cannot fail.  If by day, and it should be discovered
in time to prevent a bad accident, the proof will be
there anyway, and the northern meddlers must then
believe Diaz and his adherents are implicated.
Viva el Republic!  Viva Mena!

.. class:: left

"CANDIDO.

"P.S.  My men have driven away those peons
who fill the tender with fuel at the wood pile south
of Mateare, and that will cause more delay."

.. vspace:: 2

Having finished the letter, Dick studied the map,
but it was so inaccurate and he was so little
acquainted with the country that he gleaned no real
information from it.  He believed that the curves
depicted represented the tortuous stretch of rail a
few kilometers north of Managua.  There the road
turned and twisted through a group of hills, and in
many places the sides of the cuts were lined with
rocks of great size and weight.  Often these had
been loosed in the past, either by natural causes or
otherwise, and, falling into the right of way, caused
many serious accidents.  Perhaps Tomas would be
able to recognize the spot, and Dick ran down the
hill to question the waiting soldier.

"Here, Tomas, read this aloud to me," he demanded,
thrusting the letter into the guide's hands.
The reading proved that Dick's opportunities for
learning the Spanish tongue had been used to good
advantage.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

.. _`Map Showing Position of Rock and Track`:

.. figure:: images/img-339.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: Map Showing Position of Rock and Track

   Map Showing Position of Rock and Track

.. class:: small

   NOTE:--1. This map is very inaccurate, but nevertheless is
   clear enough to designate the position of the rock and track.

.. class:: small

   2.  The meaning of the Spanish words is as follows: Lago de
   Managua=*Lake of Managua*.  Ferrocarril=*railroad*.  Aqui--*here*.
   Montes=*mountains*.  Camino=*road*.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 2

"I know the exact place, Señor," said Tomas, and
his features reflected Dick's own excitement.  "It
is one hour's hard riding from here, and Señor,
look!  There is the train pulling away from the
filling station now.  You may know it to be so
because of the trail of black smoke.  We can never
reach the spot before the train.  We are too late,
and soon it will be dark and we cannot then ride as fast."

"We must make the trial," said Dick, mounting
his restive steed.  "Come, lead the way.  Do not
spare the horses now," and with the Indian in
advance they were soon clattering down the hill at
breakneck speed.  On reaching the road the Indian,
bending low in the saddle, for the first time touched
his horse with the spur, and the splendid animal
responded to the unaccustomed punishment as if
shot from a catapult.

Side by side the two sped along the roadway towards
their distant goal.  Again the rails and track
ran parallel and Tomas, taking advantage of his
knowledge of short cuts, turned from the highway
and led the chase along the narrow trail beside the
tracks, never once stopping the fearful speed of his
mount.

Suddenly from behind them came the long wailing
whistle of a locomotive.  Glancing over his
shoulder Dick saw a few hundred yards behind a
fast approaching train.  This could not be the troop
train, he was sure.  Once more he heard the whistle
warning him to get clear of the track.

"Tomas," he called, but the Indian gave no sign
of having heard his cry.

Another look behind showed the train rushing on
with no slackening of speed.  Still Tomas
continued in his mad flight.  Dick tried to swerve his
horse from the trail beside the track, fearing that
when the train overtook them the animal might
become frightened and dash against the side of the
train; but now the black horse was infected with the
fighting spirit, and so long as the bay horse in the
lead was ahead just so long would he keep up the
heart-breaking run.  Dick could feel the powerful
muscles beneath him working with the smoothness
of well-oiled machinery, and in spite of the
enormous strides with which they covered the ground, he
hardly rose from his saddle, so perfect was the action.

Then to Dick came a new thought.  Unless the
train ahead was delayed he never could hope to
reach the danger point in time to warn the troops.
He knew his attempt was futile, so why continue!
This train now thundering along so close behind
might catch up with and stop the artillery train.
But how could he let those on board know of the
danger?  To attempt to flag the train was useless
now.  Had he thought of it before it might have
been possible, but it was not very likely, under the
most favorable conditions, that they would stop on
the signal of two lone and unrecognized horsemen
alongside the track.  Should he attempt to
interfere with its progress, the chances were that the
train guard--men from his own corps, possibly his
own company, would shoot him as a suspiciously
acting native: "shoot first and inquire after," was a
fundamental principle in these treacherous revolutionists.

His mind, naturally active in summing up situations
in their true light in times of stress, and quick
to formulate his plans, saw only one way left open
to him.  He must board the moving train.  He
must make the leap from his saddle in some way,
grasp hand-guard, brake, door, window or sash, and
hang there until those on the train could pull him
to safety.

Even as he made his resolve the engine, foot by
foot, was gliding ahead of him.  From the cab
window the engineer, a sailor from one of the ships of
the Navy, watched with deepest interest what he
believed was a vain race between two "loco Spigs"[#]
and the train, and turning to his grimy fireman he
ordered him to keep up the steam pressure at all
costs and "Durn the expense."


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] Loco--Spanish for "foolish."

.. vspace:: 2

That the horses could keep up their terrific speed
for any length of time was out of the question.
The Indian's horse appeared to have taken matters
in his own hands and was running away, though
Tomas was now doing his best to hold in the excited
brute.

Now the tender and the first car had passed
Dick.  Another quick glance from the corner of
his eye and he saw there were but three more cars
in the train, and when his eye returned to the narrow
trail he saw it gradually drawing away from the
rails.  Unless it returned beside the track within
the next few rods his last opportunity would be gone.

On the train every window was filled with
excited faces watching this uneven race between
God-made and man-made power, but they tried to
encourage the riders with shouts and yells and much
waving of hats and hands.  Dick heard and saw the
"rooters," but beneath his cap there was no change
of expression; his face was white and stern with a
bulldog tenacity of purpose.

Now the second car had drawn past him, and the
middle of the third car drew opposite the straining
horse.  Would the trail never get nearer?  Must
he in a last desperate endeavor pull with all his
might on the left rein and cross the rough ground
in order to bring the laboring animal against the
side of the cars?  If he did it meant almost certain
destruction.

Now the fourth car appeared, nosing forward on
his flank, yet he dared not take his eye from the
trail.  Must he leave it and make the dash across
the rough uneven space?  He would wait just a
few strides more.  Then once again he found the
narrow path converging towards the tracks.  Already
Tomas was racing beside the car, ten feet in
advance.  Would the black horse be equal to the
effort?  With a wild yell the boy dug the spurs into
the flanks of the steed, and with a gasp of surprise
the horse bounded forward as never before.  For
a second the painted side of the clattering coach was
like a dull smear on Dick's blurred vision--then he
leaned far out in his saddle to his left, his clutching
fingers slid along the beveled edges of the car's
wooden frame, they gripped the iron hand-rail at
the rear end of the platform, the next moment he
was pulled from his saddle, his feet struck the steps
and with a last, final effort he fell breathless on the
floor, held in safety by the strong hands of two
astonished train guards.

"Well, I'll be jiggered, if it ain't Dick
Comstock," exclaimed Private Jones, late of the
*Denver's* guard.  "I ain't seen you since we separated
at Colon.  Say, Dick, what in the dickens are you
doing here, and where did you come from?  I sure
am some glad to see you."

"Wait a minute; let him get his breath before
you take it all away again by making him answer
your questions," said the other marine, assisting
Dick to his feet, and looking at this sudden arrival
with unfeigned admiration.  "My word, Bo, but
you beat any movie picture hero I ever seen.  By
the way, your friend back there doesn't seem to
know what's become of you."

"I'm thinking he must believe the Angel
Gabriel come along and took you up in his chariot,"
said Jones, whose knowledge of Biblical characters
and their history was fragmentary.

Far down the track Tomas could be seen
halted in the middle of the rails scratching his
head while he gazed after the train in evident perplexity.

"I guess he'll figure it out.  He's a wise old
Indian," said Dick; then the reason for his being on
the train struck him with its full significance, and,
"Who's in charge of the train?" he asked.

"Why, Dick, our old friend, Sergeant Bruckner.
He's up forward on the engine.  Why?  What's up?"

But Dick did not stop to answer.  Roughly
pushing his way through the crowd of natives
gathered at the end of the car to see what manner of
man it was who rode hair-breadth races with
railroad trains, he ran through the remaining coaches
to the front end of the train, climbed over the
tender, now nearly empty of wood, and finding the
sergeant, he told him what he had done and what
there was still to do.

"You say the artillery train left the vood station
about tventy minutes ago?" asked Bruckner,
reverting to his v-habit in his excitement.

"Yes, and they will necessarily have to go
slowly.  It is getting dark, and I believe we can
catch them before too late."

"But ve also have to stop and refill with vood,
and as ve von't find any men there to do the vork
for us, it's going to be a very slow business."

"Slow?  Why, if necessary, we'll make every
passenger on this train lend a hand, willingly or
otherwise," said Dick.

"Well, here we are," called the engineer who,
though keeping his eye on the rails ahead, was an
eager listener.  "Come, all hands, get everyone on
the job, and I'll lend a hand myself."

Never was wood hustled into a tender of the
Ferrocarril de Nicaragua so fast as it was that
October evening, and when the fireman finally
announced that he had sufficient, the ear-splitting
whistle had barely died away before the old wood
burner was surging on into the gathering darkness,
her headlight streaming on the lines of shining rails
ahead, making them appear like two bars of yellow
gold stretching on into infinity.

"If there are any ties out, fishplates gone or
spikes driven between the rails this night we're
goners," said the fireman to Dick as the two worked,
throwing log after log into the capacious maw of
the engine, where the draft seemed quickly to turn
them into a mass of dark red cinders which streamed
out of the great stack and left a glowing trail
as of a comet's tail following them through the night.

"I've been with old man Strong, the engineer,
every trip he's made, and I never seen him light out
like this.  I almost believe we're making forty-five
miles, and mebbe more than that, especially on the
down grades.  Wow!  Man dear, but he took that
curve on two wheels, and it's a wonder we stayed on
the track when he struck the reverse.  What's his
idea of pullin' the whistle every two seconds, anyhow?"

"He's started sounding the 'S.O.S.' calls,"
said Dick, "hoping the train ahead will hear us and
wait to see what's up."

"How many miles have we got left to catch 'em?"

"I don't know," answered Dick, as for a moment
he ceased his labors, and holding to the rail at the
side of the cab peered ahead along the parallel lines
of light; "it can't be much more, for we are in the
hills now, and on the down grade.  If we are to do
any good at all it must be soon."

The next moment there was a long weird shriek
of the whistle, then the grinding of brake-shoes on
the wheels as the signal for the train guards to man
the wheel brakes followed in staccato blasts.
Groaning, straining, shaking, screeching, bumping
and thumping, the train slackened its speed, crawled
for a few yards, and then with one last resounding
rattle it stopped, and there, but a few short yards
ahead, waiting to discover the reason for the wild
signals for help they had picked up, stood the officers
and men of the artillery train, safe and unharmed.

Owing to a "hot-box" they had been forced to
stop and repair at a station called Brasiles.  While
there they discovered that the lines of wire either
side of the station had been cut and later, hearing
the wild whistling of the engine in their rear as they
proceeded cautiously on their way, and believing
rightly that the signal was meant for them, it was
decided best to await the arrival of the news before
going further.

It was Richard Comstock who, a little later from
the seat above the cow-catcher of the leading train,
gave a shout of satisfaction.  Rounding the last
abrupt curve in the hills before descending to the
straight road-bed of the plain, he espied a great
mass of rock thrown directly across the rails.  Had
the train been other than creeping along through
the cuts and defiles a serious accident would have
followed undoubtedly.

Slowly the train drew up to the dangerous
obstacle, and then, true to the contents of the letter
which Dick had delivered into the hands of the
Marine Officer in charge, they found crushed
beneath the mass of rock the body of a man in whose
pockets was the letter and the money, which, if the
truth had not been known, might have changed the
pages of Nicaragua's history.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE SITUATION WELL IN HAND`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XXIV


.. class:: center medium

   THE SITUATION WELL IN HAND

.. vspace:: 2

Zoom!  Whiz-z-z, and then a distant bursting
cloud of cottony white smoke high in the blue sky
over the hill called Coyotepe.  Soon the waiting
ear heard the sharp explosion of that seemingly soft
fluffy cotton-ball, which in reality carried death in
its wake, for with the bursting came hundreds of
tiny bits of steel and bullets seeking out the enemy
behind their entrenchments.  And through the day
and the night following the sound of the field guns
prepared the way for the attacking marines, sailors
and Federal troops the next morning.

At the first break of day two battalions of United
States Marines began their advance.  In reserve, a
battalion of sailors, as yet untried in land warfare,
fretted and fussed at their position behind the
actual firing line, and some even rolled in the yellow
mud till their white suits were the color of marine
khaki and then, rifle in hand, sneaked away from
their command and joined their brothers in arms.
As for the Nicaraguans, supposed to attack but not
relishing the job, they delayed and delayed, only
too happy to let Colonel Pendleton and his
command assume the task of attempting to drive
Zeladon and his insurrectos from Coyotepe and
Barrancas.  Deep down in their hearts they felt
that what no Nicaraguan army had yet accomplished
could never be carried to a successful issue
by these few pale-faced Americans from the North.

No!  It seemed that those who held these two
hills which commanded the road and railroad, north
and south, could never be driven from them.  Yet,
little by little, step by step, up the rocky, slippery
slopes, struggled the thin brown lines of marines.
On through briar and bush; over jagged cliff or
bullet-strewn open space; on and ever on.  Through
prepared traps of barbed wire; cutting, slashing,
firing, sweating, swearing, always upward, till
finally in one mad, glad, glorious, soul-stirring,
blood-thrilling rush, they mounted the earthworks
on the hilltop's crest, in spite of rocks, in spite of
cannon, in spite of rifle, in spite of machine-gun
fire, and there at bayonet's point engaged in
hand-to-hand conflict with enraged men and wild
Amazonian women who wielded bloody machetes
with fanatical frenzy.

With those who shared in the glory of that
conquest was Richard Comstock, his breath coming in
short, labored gasps; the rifle he held, taken from a
fallen comrade far down the slope, still burning hot,
and the knife-like blade of the bayonet shining
brightly in the early morning sunlight.

And the marines accomplished this supposedly
impossible task in less than forty minutes from the
beginning of their advance.  Is it any wonder that
the natives of the countries where the fighters visit
and uphold the glory of the stars and stripes, honor
and respect them, individually and collectively?

After the pursuit of the fleeing rebels the Federal
troops, encouraged by the unbelievable success
of their allies, attacked, took and sacked the town of
Masaya in true native style, which always involves
useless destruction and uncalled-for brutality.

The "handwriting on the wall" was now unmistakable
and when later in the day some of the
victorious troops and the battery of field guns were
entrained and started for Leon, the rebels in that city
gave up all hope of ever putting their candidate
into office.

Carrying despatches on the first train north went
Sergeant Dorlan and his guard, Dick Comstock,
and in those despatches was a very complimentary
letter to Dick's immediate commanding officer
which told of his timely warning and the manner of
its accomplishment.

Barrancas and Coyotepe were taken on October
fourth, and on the sixth long lines of marines and
sailors were seen leaving Camp Pendleton.  That
the rebels had agreed to surrender and lay down
their arms without a fight was very much doubted,
and Lieutenant Colonel Long, who had charge of
the coming occupation, was going to enter the town
in force and take no chances of a possible ambush.

Immediately after reveille the first troops had
quietly reënforced the company already on duty at
the railroad station.  This was done without
incident, and then on three sides of the city the forces
began their advance.  The rebel troops, knowing
that their leaders, Generals Rivas and Osorio, had
fled, had spent the night in drinking and debauchery.
As the main column debauched into the principal
street and the excited, inflamed wearers of the
red cockades saw the stars and stripes of the United
States flaunting in the breeze, they resorted to their
usual street fighting tactics.

Street by street the marines advanced.  Every
inch of the way was disputed and the bullets whizzed
and cracked, sang and stung; taking their tally of
wounded and dead.

"Dick, me lad, I'd give me old pipe, I would, to
be able to be on ahead with the advance instead of
here with the colors, much as I love 'em," announced
Dorlan as he stood in the shelter of an overhanging
roof and watched the windows of a pretentious
building on his right.

Reaching a street corner or alley a little later it
was found that the natives had resorted to their
brutal, inhuman tactics in dealing even with civilized
troops.  A sailor, stripped of his clothing and
mutilated, was lying in the roadway.  Perhaps he
had lost his section and wandering here trying to
locate it, was set upon by the cruel natives.

"Ah! a sight like that makes the very blood in me
bile," said Mike, shaking his fist in the direction of
the dodging opponents far up the street; "if I
knew the feller what did that to the poor flatfoot,[#]
I'd be a brute meself and tear him to pieces with me
bare hands."


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left small

   [#] "Flatfoot"--Marine Corps slang for a sailor.

.. vspace:: 2

"Look out, Dorlan," yelled Dick, and falling flat
on the rough cobble stones in the middle of the
street he emptied a clip of cartridges into a doorway
which that moment was flung open, and from which
a half dozen rifle barrels were pointing from behind
a rough barricade.  But he did not stop the volley
of shots which followed, and the heavy leaden slugs
splashed, pattered, and flattened all about the little
color guard.  They rained against the walls of the
buildings on either hand, gouging out great chunks
of mortar and plaster to a depth of several inches,
and one bullet, partly spent, struck Dick in the
shoulder, penetrated to the bone and lodged there.

"I guess I'm hit, old pal," he said weakly to
Mike, after they had silenced the fighters behind
the barricade and had gone on for a couple of
blocks.  "I thought it was only a scratch, but the
blood's running down my back, and----" but just
then it seemed as though a great thunder-storm was
descending upon the city; the sky grew black and
the darkness came so swiftly that he could not see
where to step, and with a sob he fell into the arms of
his faithful friend.

.. vspace:: 2

"After all, it is not much more than a scratch; it
is lack of sleep and nourishment during the last few
days," said the surgeon, handing Dick a piece of
lead he had recently removed from the boy's wound,
"but I have recommended that you be sent back to
Corinto, where you can receive proper attention on
board ship."

"But is the fighting all over?" asked Dick weakly.

"Surest thing you know, my boy, for 'the
marines have landed and have the situation well in
hand,' as the papers always say," answered the
surgeon smiling.

"Thanks for the Navy's bringing us here," added
Dick with a wan smile, and then he dropped off
into a much needed peaceful sleep.

.. vspace:: 2

Two days later as he lay on his white bunk in
the sick bay of the U.S.S. *Buffalo*, steaming
southward to Panama, and the wonderful hospital at
Ancon, a letter was handed him.  On opening it he
found a document appointing him a corporal in the
United States Marine Corps.  Also enclosed was a
very complimentary letter from the Commanding
Officer of Marines ashore, thanking him for his
excellent work during the exciting days of the
campaign, and at the end he read with satisfaction that,
owing to his information, a certain German and his
accomplice had been arrested by the Government
authorities and were on their way to the coast,
where they were to be deported, and forbidden ever
to return.

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