predicament; but to my chagrin I discovered that both sending and receiving instruments had disappeared.

'There is only one place you can go,' von Schoenvorts sent word to me, 'and that is Kiel . You can't land anywhere else in these waters. If you wish, I will take you there, and I can promise that you will be treated well.'

'There is another place we can go,' I sent back my reply, 'and we will before we'll go to Germany . That place is hell.'

Chapter 3

Those were anxious days, during which I had but little opportunity to associate with Lys . I had given her the commander's room, Bradley and I taking that of the deck-officer, while Olson and two of our best men occupied the room ordinarily allotted to petty officers. I made Nobs' bed down in Lys ' room, for I knew she would feel less alone.

Nothing of much moment occurred for a while after we left British waters behind us. We ran steadily along upon the surface, making good time. The first two boats we sighted made off as fast as they could go; and the third, a huge freighter, fired on us, forcing us to submerge. It was after this that our troubles commenced. One of the Diesel engines broke down in the morning, and while we were working on it, the forward port diving-tank commenced to fill. I was on deck at the time and noted the gradual list. Guessing at once what was happening, I leaped for the hatch and slamming it closed above my head, dropped to the centrale. By this time the craft was going down by the head with a most unpleasant list to port, and I didn't wait to transmit orders to some one else but ran as fast as I could for the valve that let the sea into the forward port diving-tank. It was wide open. To close it and to have the pump started that would empty it were the work of but a minute; but we had had a close call.

I knew that the valve had never opened itself. Some one had opened it—some one who was willing to die himself if he might at the same time encompass the death of all of us.

After that I kept a guard pacing the length of the narrow craft. We worked upon the engine all that day and night and half the following day. Most of the time we drifted idly upon the surface, but toward noon we sighted smoke due west, and having found that only enemies inhabited the world for us, I ordered that the other engine be started so that we could move out of the path of the oncoming steamer. The moment the engine started to turn, however, there was a grinding sound of tortured steel, and when it had been stopped, we found that some one had placed a cold-chisel in one of the gears.

It was another two days before we were ready to limp along, half repaired. The night before the repairs were completed, the sentry came to my room and awoke me. He was rather an intelligent fellow of the English middle class, in whom I had much confidence.

'Well, Wilson ,' I asked. 'What's the matter now?'

He raised his finger to his lips and came closer to me. 'I think I've found out who's doin' the mischief,' he whispered, and nodded his head toward the girl's room. 'I seen her sneakin' from the crew's room just now,' he went on. 'She'd been in gassin' wit' the boche commander. Benson seen her in there las' night, too, but he never said nothin' till I goes on watch tonight. Benson's sorter slow in the head, an' he never puts two an' two together till some one else has made four out of it.'

If the man had come in and struck me suddenly in the face, I could have been no more surprised.

'Say nothing of this to anyone,' I ordered. 'Keep your eyes and ears open and report every suspicious thing you see or hear.'

The man saluted and left me; but for an hour or more I tossed, restless, upon my hard bunk in an agony of jealousy and fear. Finally I fell into a troubled sleep. It was daylight when I awoke. We were steaming along slowly upon the surface, my orders having been to proceed at half speed until we could take an observation and determine our position. The sky had been overcast all the previous day and all night; but as I stepped into the centrale that morning I was delighted to see that the sun was again shining. The spirits of the men seemed improved; everything seemed propitious. I forgot at once the cruel misgivings of the past night as I set to work to take my observations.

What a blow awaited me! The sextant and chronometer had both been broken beyond repair, and they had been broken just this very night. They had been broken upon the night that Lys had been seen talking with von Schoenvorts. I think that it was this last thought which hurt me the worst. I could look the other disaster in the face with equanimity; but the bald fact that Lys might be a traitor appalled me.

I called Bradley and Olson on deck and told them what had happened, but for the life of me I couldn't bring myself to repeat what Wilson had reported to me the previous night. In fact, as I had given the matter thought, it seemed incredible that the girl could have passed through my room, in which Bradley and I slept, and then carried on a conversation in the crew's room, in which Von Schoenvorts was kept, without having been seen by more than a single man.

Bradley shook his head. 'I can't make it out,' he said. 'One of those boches must be pretty clever to come it over us all like this; but they haven't harmed us as much as they think; there are still the extra instruments.'

It was my turn now to shake a doleful head. 'There are no extra instruments,' I told them. 'They too have disappeared as did the wireless apparatus.'

Both men looked at me in amazement. 'We still have the compass and the sun,' said Olson. 'They may be after getting the compass some night; but they's too many of us around in the daytime fer 'em to get the sun.'

It was then that one of the men stuck his head up through the hatchway and seeing me, asked permission to come on deck and get a breath of fresh air. I recognized him as Benson, the man who, Wilson had said, reported having seen Lys with von Schoenvorts two nights before. I motioned him on deck and then called him to one side, asking if he had seen anything out of the way or unusual during his trick on watch the night before. The fellow scratched his head a moment and said, 'No,' and then as though it was an afterthought, he told me that he had seen the girl in the crew's room about midnight talking with the German commander, but as there hadn't seemed to him to be any harm in that, he hadn't said anything about it. Telling him never to fail to report to me anything in the slightest out of the ordinary routine of the ship, I dismissed him.

Several of the other men now asked permission to come on deck, and soon all but those actually engaged in some necessary duty were standing around smoking and talking, all in the best of spirits. I took advantage of the absence of the men upon the deck to go below for my breakfast, which the cook was already preparing upon the electric stove. Lys , followed by Nobs, appeared as I entered the centrale. She met me with a pleasant 'Good morning!' which I am afraid I replied to in a tone that was rather constrained and surly.

'Will you breakfast with me?' I suddenly asked the girl, determined to commence a probe of my own along the lines which duty demanded.

She nodded a sweet acceptance of my invitation, and together we sat down at the little table of the officers' mess.

'You slept well last night?' I asked.

'All night,' she replied. 'I am a splendid sleeper.'

Her manner was so straightforward and honest that I could not bring myself to believe in her duplicity; yet— Thinking to surprise her into a betrayal of her guilt, I blurted out: 'The chronometer and sextant were both destroyed last night; there is a traitor among us.' But she never turned a hair by way of evidencing guilty knowledge of the catastrophe.

'Who could it have been?' she cried. 'The Germans would be crazy to do it, for their lives are as much at stake as ours.'

'Men are often glad to die for an ideal—an ideal of patriotism, perhaps,' I replied; 'and a willingness to martyr themselves includes a willingness to sacrifice others, even those who love them. Women are much the same, except that they will go even further than most men—they will sacrifice everything, even honor, for love.'

I watched her face carefully as I spoke, and I thought that I detected a very faint flush mounting her cheek. Seeing an opening and an advantage, I sought to follow it up.

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