EM EM : monthly magazine - 01.09.1941, Page 32

EM EM : monthly magazine - 01.09.1941, Page 32
32 Em Em --weu, wnat are you gomg xo'aq about it?” “I’m going to blow open thati safe and see what is in it—if any-! thing.” Hoffman chuckled. “I thought you’d be wanting to do something like that. Well, I’m all ready for you. I’ve had my chief gunner's mate fix you up a cartridge. Two pounds of guncotton, wired with a detonator. Had to rob one of our war heads to get it for you.” “Good. Let’s get under way.” Half an hour later I slid down the line to the foundered ship and paused there a moment to get my bearings. Not until then did I be- gin to realize that the job ahead of me was not going to be any pic- nic. The purser’s oífice, with its floating furniture, will be an ex- cellent place to foul my lines, and I was carrying four—my life line, my air line and the two wires that led respectively to my lamp and to the charge of guncotton secured in my belt. Sliding over the rail, I gained the passageway without difficulty. Here I switched on my light and the powerful glow illuminated the corridor for six or eight feet ahead. Walking on the bulkhead, for the deck was practicaily ver- tical, I gained the open door of the office. Several chairs, a desk and a couple of tables were floating in the water-filled room. Cautiously, so as to stir up as little as possi- ble the silt which had alreadý set- tled in the room, I pushed them out of the way. Shining my light downward, I made out the safe. It was in the far corner of the room, lying on its side of the starboard bulkhead. Catching hold of the door cas- ing, I pulled myself up and over it and slipped into the room. I paused as soon as I found a foot- ing and looked back over my lines. They seemed to be clear. Crouching low to avoid ':he fur- niture which floated above my head, I moved a cautious step at a time toward the safe. I reached it at last and lowering my lamp, examined it carefully. The door of the safe, by a lucky break, was uppermost. Removing the shot of guncotton from my belt, I bound it securely to the docr hancile. Then I closed my air valve and when the roar in my ears ceased I called: “On deck! Slack away on that wire to the charge. Let out a hundred feet or more so it will sink to the bottom. I don’t want to foul it when I start up.” “Ave. a.ve sir. The eantnin wants xo nnow ir everytnmg ls aii right.” “Everything is jake, tell him. I’li be up as soon as I get clear of this furniture.” I opened my air valve again and turned around. Making sure that my lines were clear, I started to- ward the doorway. At that in- stant my light went out and I found myself in utter darkness. I told the world, with no one in it able to hear me, just what I thought of underwater lamps that burned out at crucial moments. However, my position might have been worse. I had my bearings well in mind and that was 90 per cent of the battle. Throwing the lamp to one side, I tumed off my air. "On deck! Haul in the lamp cord. It’s no further use. Burned out on me. Haul it in smartly and get it out of my way.” Opening the valve without wait- ing for an answer, I started again toward the door. I had covered perhaps half the distance, feeling each step of the way, when above the roar of air in my ears I heard my name called. Again I closed the air valve to make conversa- tion possible. “What do you want?” I yelled. “Leslie! Leslie! Leslie!” “I’m getting you. What the devil do you want?” “Hoffman speaking, Ray. Did you cut your lamp cord?” “Cut my lamp cord? Certainly not. Why should I cut it?” “It’s been cut, Ray. The lamp didn’t come up when we hauled in the cord.” “It fouled on something,” I said shakily, conscious that my heart was beginning to pound. “The lamp broke off when you hauled in.” “It didn’t break off! It was cut, I tell you!” “But who the devil could—” I stopped speaking. In the dead jsilence that maintained when jthere was no rush of air in my tieart, I heard distinctly the slow jclump - clump - clump of leaded bhoes on the side of the ship above tny head. My skin began to creep jand I felt my heart sink into the þit of my stomach. “My God, Diek!” I shouted. “There's another diver down here!” - ' “Another diver! It's impossible. :Unless—” ; “You suggested it," I said swift- |ly. “I’m on my way. Do what you Jcan.” i I turned on the air and started )to get out of there. Thera was little doubt in mv jmma as to wnax naa xaKeri pnrcv. The Juarto had sent down her div- ier, probably on the side of the |gunboat away from the Whipple uo that his movements would be screened by the ship’s superstruc- ture. Captain Huertas was taking his own measures to prevent the recovery of the Alderbaron’s treas- ure. Disregarding the menaee of the floating furniture, ignoring the possibility of fouling my lines, I dove through the darkness toward the doorway, praying I had not lost my bearings. Chair legs knocked against my helmet. Again I struck something solid, probably the heavy desk, and slipped to my knees. I was up again in a hurry, hands outstretched, groping for the door frame. I found it at last, pulled myself over it and out into the passageway. The doorway was probably 10 feet from the open deck. I covered that 10 feet through the water as fast as the average man would cover it on land. Once outside, I jerked my hel- met back and looked up. Fifteen feet away and almost directly above me, hanging over the ship’s rail, I made out the gargoyle-like figure of another diver. In one hand he held a knife with which he was sawing away on my air hose. For an instant I was complete- ly petrified. Then angry blood be- gan to course through my veins. Reaching up, I grasped my air line and gave a sharp tug. The diver above, caught unawares, let go of the line and toppled off the rail al- most into my arms. I tried to leap to one side, well knowing what a single slash of that knife would do to a diver’s suit. Hampered as I was by the water, I could not get clear. The other man’s heavy shoe struck me on the shoulder, threw me off balance. Almost side by side, fighting for a handhold and tangled in our lines, we rolled down the slippery deck and into the soft ooze in which the Alder- baron lay partially buried. CHAPTER VIII I .ianded on my back in the mud. W hippirg my knife out of its sheath, I rolled over and struggled to my feet. I was in utter dark- ness, for the black ooze had been stirred up to such an extent that the water wás absolutely opaque. I might have been standing in a sea of ink.

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