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The Wigwag Message
by
The words were stopped by a blow of the mate’s fist, and the speaker fell to the deck. Then a hoarse growl of horror and rage came from his companion; and Captain Bacon turned, to see him dancing around the first officer with the skill and agility of a professional boxer, planting vicious blows on his hairy face and neck.
“Stop this,” roared the captain, as his right hand sought the pocket of his coat. “Stop it, I say. Mr. Hansen,” he called down the skylight, “on deck, here.”
The huge mate was getting the worst of the unexpected battle, and Captain Bacon approached cautiously. His right hand had come out of his pocket, armed with large brass knuckles; but before he could use them his dazed and astonished first officer went down under the rain of blows. It was then, while the victor waited for him to rise, that the brass knuckles impacted on his head, and he, too, went down, to lie quiet where he fell. The other young man had arisen by this time, somewhat shocked and unsteady in movement, and was coming bravely toward the captain; but before he could reach him his arms were pinioned from behind by Mr. Hansen, who had run up the poop steps.
“What is dis, onnyway?” he asked. “Mudiny, I dink?”
“Let go,” said the other, furiously. “You shall suffer for this, you scoundrels. Let go of my arms.” He struggled wildly; but Mr. Hansen was strong.
Mr. Knapp had regained his feet and a few of his faculties. His conqueror was senseless on the deck, but this other mutineer was still active in rebellion. So, while the approving captain looked on in brass-knuckled dignity, he sprang forward and struck, with strength born of his rage and humiliation, again and again at the man helpless in the arms of Mr. Hansen, until his battered head sank supinely backward, and he struggled no more. Then Mr. Hansen dropped him.
“Lay aft, here, a couple o’ hands,” thundered the captain from the break of the poop, and two awe-struck men obeyed him. The whole crew had watched the fracas from forward, and the man at the wheel had looked unspeakable things; but no hand or voice had been raised in protest. One at a time they carried the unconscious men to the forecastle; then the crew mustered aft at another thundering summons, and listened to a forceful speech by Captain Bacon, delivered in quick, incisive epigrams, to the effect that if a man aboard his ship–whether he believed himself shipped or shanghaied, a sailor, a priest, a policeman, or a dry-nurse–showed the slightest hesitation at obeying orders, or the slightest resentment at what was said to him, he would be punished with fists, brass knuckles, belaying-pins, or handspikes,–the officers were here for that purpose,–and if he persisted, he would be shot like a mad dog. They could go forward.
They went, and while the watch on deck, under the supervision of the second mate, finished coiling down the tow-line, the watch below finished their breakfast, and when the stricken ones had recovered consciousness, advised them, unsympathetically, to submit and make the best of it until the ship reached Hong-Kong, where they could all “jump her” and get better berths.
“For if ye don’t,” concluded an Irishman, “I take it ye’ll die, an’ take sam wan of us wid ye; fur this is an American ship, where the mates are hired fur the bigness o’ their fists an’ the hardness o’ their hearts. Look pleasant, now, the pair o’ ye; an’ wan o’ ye take this hash-kid back to the galley.”
The larger of the two victims sprang to his feet. He was stained and disfigured from the effects of the brass knuckles, and he looked anything but “pleasant.”
“Say, Irish,” he said angrily, “do you know who you ‘re talkin’ to? Looks as though you don’t. I’m used to all sorts of guff from all sorts of men, but Mr. Breen here—-“