Part 14 (1/2)
The gas had long since disappeared from the s.h.i.+p. By sun-down, Craig knew the whole story.
About two hundred men, caught in the lower parts of the s.h.i.+p by the attack and protected from the full effects of the gas by doors, were reviving. Most of them were too deathly sick to be of any immediate use.
Mrs. Miller and her baby had been found hidden in the hospital bay, safe but sick.
Captain Higgins had not been found.
Margy Sharp had not been found.
One man had been dragged, trembling, from the lowest hold where he had taken refuge--Voronoff.
On the main deck, Craig held a conference with Michaelson and Guru. The answers to the questions he asked left him with a grim look on his face.
He called the sailors together.
”I have been talking to Guru,” he said. ”Guru tells me that the city of the Ogrum is not far from here. He says we can reach it tonight, if we go by land, and if we use the big logs that float--by which he means our power boats--we can reach it by midnight.”
He paused and looked expectantly at the sailors. A little stir ran through them. They instantly grasped what he was driving at.
”Moreover,” he continued, ”Guru tells me that the city is usually unguarded, that the Ogrum do not bother to post sentries.”
Craig watched the men closely. There was hard, bitter resentment on their faces. They had seen their comrades carted away like so many sticks of wood to some unguessed fate. All they wanted was a chance to rescue their friends, or failing in that, to avenge them.
Craig wasted few words. ”I am going to the city of the Ogrum,” he said.
”All of you who want to go with me, step forward.”
The fierce shout that answered him told him all he wanted to know. The blue-jackets were with him. Only one man failed to step forward. It was Voronoff. Craig eyed him.
”What about you, Voronoff?” he said.
”Don't be a d.a.m.ned fool!” Voronoff spat out the words. ”We don't have a chance.”
”No?”
”No! The Ogrum have planes and gas and everything else. If we jump them, they'll mow us down.”
”What would you recommend that we do?” Craig asked. His voice was soft and there was a worried expression on his face. He looked like a man who is faced with a tough problem and is weighing all the possibilities before deciding what to do.
”There is only one thing to do,” Voronoff snapped. ”Get to h.e.l.l away from here as fast as we can. Hide in the jungle. Maybe the Ogrum don't know there are any of us left alive. If we jump them, they'll know we're alive and they'll clean us out.”
”Hmmm,” Craig said thoughtfully. ”You've probably got something there.
But what about the men the Ogrum have captured?”
Voronoff shrugged indifferently. ”They're done for,” he said. ”We can't help what happens to them.”
A low growl came from the ma.s.s of sailors as Voronoff spoke.