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When Mr. Ellsworth had taken him in hand, he had told him a few things known to scouts: that it was cowardly to throw stones; that it was contemptible to strike a person in the back or below the waist; that fighting was bad enough, but that if fights must be fought they should be fought in the open. That a boy should never, _never_ strike a girl....
And what kind of fighting was this? thought Tom. Was it not exactly like the boy who sneaks behind a fence and throws stones?
"That ain't fighting," he repeated.
Methodically he went upstairs. His immediate superior was "Butch," but his ultimate superior was Mr. Cressy, the steward; and to him he now went.
"I got somethin' to tell you, Mr. Cressy," he said hurriedly. "I made a mistake and went into the wrong room, and there's a bomb there. It was set for nine o'clock. I fixed it so's it can't go off."
"What?" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the steward.
"I fixed it so it can't go off," Tom repeated dully. "If I'd waited till I told you, it might 'a' gone off by mistake."
His manner was so entirely free from excitement that for a moment the steward could only stare at him.
"There ain't any danger now," said Tom.
The steward whistled to himself thoughtfully.
"Go down there and wait till I come, and don't say anything about this to anybody," said he.
Tom went down, feeling quite important; he was being drawn head and shoulders into the war now. Once the thought occurred to him that perhaps he would be suspected of something. For he thought he knew now how easily people did "get misjudged." But that seemed absurd, and he dismissed the thought of it--just as he had dismissed the thought of Roscoe Bent's really doing anything wrong or cowardly.
But still a vague feeling of uneasiness held him....
CHAPTER XVIII
SHERLOCK n.o.bODY HOLMES
In a few minutes the steward came down with the captain and the first officer and a man in civilian's clothes, who carried a cigar in the corner of his mouth and who Tom thought must be of the Secret Service.
Tom stood greatly in awe of the captain, who seemed the very type of exalted dignity. But a cat may look at a king, and he stared at that autocrat, resolved to answer manfully whatever questions were asked him.
"Confirms your suspicions, eh?" said the captain to the man in plain clothes, after a gingerly inspection of the ominous piece of stove pipe.
"Hmmm," said the other man; "yes; no doubt of it. Wish I'd taken him up last trip when he sent that message. We'll have a job finding him now."
"I don't see how he could have got ash.o.r.e since nine o'clock last night," said the first officer.
"Well, he did, anyway," said the Secret Service man; "they're getting by every day, and they will until we have martial law along the waterfront. You see, this is where he had to come through to his locker," he added, looking about.
The captain gave a brief order to the first officer to have the vessel searched at once for more bombs. The officer hurried away and presently came back again. The Secret Service man was intently examining the floor, the jamb around the door, and the casing of the port-hole. The captain, too, scrutinized the place, as if he hoped it might yield some valuable information; and Tom, feeling very awkward, stood silently watching them.
"Here you are," said the Secret Service man, indicating a brown stain on the door jamb.
The other three men stepped over to the spot, but Tom, who did not dare to join them, stood just where he was, looking uncouth and out of place in the ill-fitting white duck jacket and blue peaked service cap which had been given him.
"There you are, Captain," said the Secret Service man; "see that finger-mark? The skin lines aren't as clear, see? That's from constant pressure. That's the finger he uses to press his wireless key."
"Hmm," said the captain.
"I've had my eye on that young operator for the last two trips," said the plain-clothes man; "he's undoubtedly the fellow who sent that code message that tipped Ekler off and posted him about the _Republic's_ sailing, I never liked his name--Hinnerman. We might have known he wouldn't show up for this trip."
"He was a hold-over on board," said the first officer, "and didn't come in for the government quiz. They should have all been thrown out.--Think the other operator's all right?" he added.
"Oh, yes; he's got two brothers in military service," said the captain conclusively.
"See, here's another finger-mark--thumb. And here's a couple more," said the plain-clothes man, indicating several less distinguishable marks around the port-hole.
No one paid any attention to Tom. He watched the four men as they examined the little signs which they thought verified their conclusion that the missing wireless operator had placed the bomb.
"You see, he knew this room wouldn't be used, probably not entered this trip," said the Secret Service man.
"It was a lucky mistake this boy made," said the first officer, glancing not unkindly at Tom.
"Mmmm," said the captain.
Tom did not know whether to take this for praise or not. He stood, silent but very thoughtful. None of his four superiors took the trouble to acknowledge his act, nor even to address him, and he had to piece together as best he could, from their conversation, the reasons for their long-standing suspicions of the missing operator's disloyalty.
Never in all his life had Tom felt his own insignificance as he did now.
The Secret Service man was very self-confident and very convincing. His conclusions, in view of past suspicions, seemed natural enough, and Tom could not help envying and admiring him from his obscure corner.
"I'll send a wireless right away," said the captain, as the four moved toward the door.
For a few seconds Tom struggled to master his timidity. He felt just as he had felt when he talked to Margaret Ellison and when he had faced Roscoe Bent's father. These uniformed officials were as beings from another world to poor Tom, and the Secret Service man seemed a marvel of sagacity and subtle power.
As they reached the door, he spoke, his voice shaking a little, but in the slow, almost expressionless way which was characteristic of him.
"If you'd wait a minute, I got something to say," he said.
"Yes, sir," said the first officer not unpleasantly. The captain paused impatiently. The Secret Service man smiled a little. Indeed, there was plenty to smile at (for the captain, too, if that dignitary would have so condescended) for Tom's sleeves, which were ridiculously long, were clutched in his two hands as if to keep them from running away and the peak of his cap was almost over his ear instead of being where it belonged.
"I heard this morning," said Tom, "that the other operator--the one that isn't here--that he used to be a scout. I'm a scout, and so I know what kind of fellers scouts are. They ain't traitors or anything like that.
Something happened to me lately, so I know how easy it is to get misjudged. If he was a scout, then he wasn't a German, even if he might have had a German name, 'cause Germans stay by themselves and don't join in, kind of...."
The captain made a move as if to go.
"But that ain't what I wanted to say," said Tom.
The captain paused.
There was something about Tom's blunt, plain-speech and slow manner which amused the first officer, and he listened with rather more patience, than the others.
"There was a man tried to get off the ship last night," said Tom.
"He----"