<h4>CHAPTER X.</h4>
<h4>KER KARRAJE.</h4>
<p>The cell in which I reside is about a hundred paces from the habitation of
the Count d’Artigas, which is one of the end ones of this row of the Beehive. If
I am not to share it with Thomas Roch, I presume the latter’s cell is not far
off, for in order that Warder Gaydon may continue to care for the ex-patient of
Healthful House, their respective apartments will have to be contiguous.
However, I suppose I shall soon be enlightened on this point.</p>
<p>Captain Spade and Engineer Serko reside separately in proximity to D’Artigas’
mansion.</p>
<p>Mansion? Yes, why not dignify it with the title since this habitation has
been arranged with a certain art? Skillful hands have carved an ornamental
façade in the rock. A large door affords access to it. Colored glass windows in
wooden frames let into the limestone walls admit the light. The interior
comprises several chambers, a dining-room and a drawing-room lighted by a
stained-glass window, the whole being perfectly ventilated. The furniture is of
various styles and shapes and of French, English and American make. The kitchen,
larder, etc., are in adjoining cells in rear of the Beehive.</p>
<p>In the afternoon, just as I issue from my cell with the firm intention of
“obtaining an audience” of the Count d’Artigas, I catch sight of him coming
along the shore of the lagoon towards the hive. Either he does not see me, or
wishes to avoid me, for he quickens his steps and I am unable to catch him.</p>
<p>“Well, he will have to receive me, anyhow!” I mutter to myself.</p>
<p>I hurry up to the door through which he has just disappeared and which has
closed behind him.</p>
<p>It is guarded by a gigantic, dark-skinned Malay, who orders me away in no
amiable tone of voice.</p>
<p>I decline to comply with his injunction, and repeat to him twice the
following request in my very best English:</p>
<p>“Tell the Count d’Artigas that I desire to be received immediately.”</p>
<p>I might just as well have addressed myself to the surrounding rock. This
savage, no doubt, does not understand a word of English, for he scowls at me and
orders me away again with a menacing cry.</p>
<p>I have a good mind to attempt to force the door and shout so that the Count
d’Artigas cannot fail to hear me, but in all probability I shall only succeed in
rousing the wrath of the Malay, who appears to be endowed with herculean
strength. I therefore judge discretion to be the better part of valor, and put
off the explanation that is owing to me—and which, sooner or later, I will
have—to a more propitious occasion.</p>
<p>I meander off in front of the Beehive towards the east, and my thoughts
revert to Thomas Roch. I am surprised that I have not seen him yet. Can he be in
the throes of a fresh paroxysm?</p>
<p>This hypothesis is hardly admissible, for if the Count d’Artigas is to be
believed, he would in this event have summoned me to attend to the inventor.</p>
<p>A little farther on I encounter Engineer Serko.</p>
<p>With his inviting manner and usual good-humor this ironical individual smiles
when he perceives me, and does not seek to avoid me. If he knew I was a
colleague, an engineer—providing he himself really is one—perhaps he might
receive me with more cordiality than I have yet encountered, but I am not going
to be such a fool as to tell him who and what I am.</p>
<p>He stops, with laughing eyes and mocking mouth, and accompanies a “Good day,
how do you do?” with a gracious gesture of salutation.</p>
<p>I respond coldly to his politeness—a fact which he affects not to notice.</p>
<p>“May Saint Jonathan protect you, Mr. Gaydon!” he continues in his clear,
ringing voice. “You are not, I presume, disposed to regret the fortunate
circumstance by which you were permitted to visit this surpassingly marvellous
cavern—and it really is one of the finest, although the least known on this
spheroid.”</p>
<p>This word of a scientific language used in conversation with a simple
hospital attendant surprises me, I admit, and I merely reply:</p>
<p>“I should have no reason to complain, Mr. Serko, if, after having had the
pleasure of visiting this cavern, I were at liberty to quit it.”</p>
<p>“What! Already thinking of leaving us, Mr. Gaydon,—of returning to your
dismal pavilion at Healthful House? Why, you have scarcely had time to explore
our magnificent domain, or to admire the incomparable beauty with which nature
has endowed it.”</p>
<p>“What I have seen suffices,” I answer; “and should you perchance be talking
seriously I will assure you seriously that I do not want to see any more of
it.”</p>
<p>“Come, now, Mr. Gaydon, permit me to point out that you have not yet had the
opportunity of appreciating the advantages of an existence passed in such
unrivalled surroundings. It is a quiet life, exempt from care, with an assured
future, material conditions such as are not to be met with anywhere, an even
climate and no more to fear from the tempests which desolate the coasts in this
part of the Atlantic than from the cold of winter, or the heat of summer. This
temperate and salubrious atmosphere is scarcely affected by changes of season.
Here we have no need to apprehend the wrath of either Pluto or Neptune.”</p>
<p>“Sir,” I reply, “it is impossible that this climate can suit you, that you
can appreciate living in this grotto of——”</p>
<p>I was on the point of pronouncing the name of Back Cup. Fortunately I
restrained myself in time. What would happen if they suspected that I am aware
of the name of their island, and, consequently, of its position at the extremity
of the Bermuda group?</p>
<p>“However,” I continue, “if this climate does not suit me, I have, I presume,
the right to make a change.”</p>
<p>“The right, of course.”</p>
<p>“I understand from your remark that I shall be furnished with the means of
returning to America when I want to go?”</p>
<p>“I have no reason for opposing your desires, Mr. Gaydon,” Engineer Serko
replies, “and I regard your presumption as a very natural one. Observe, however,
that we live here in a noble and superb independence, that we acknowledge the
authority of no foreign power, that we are subject to no outside authority, that
we are the colonists of no state, either of the old or new world. This is worth
consideration by whomsoever has a sense of pride and independence. Besides, what
memories are evoked in a cultivated mind by these grottoes which seem to have
been chiselled by the hands of the gods and in which they were wont to render
their oracles by the mouth of Trophonius.”</p>
<p>Decidedly, Engineer Serko is fond of citing mythology! Trophonius after Pluto
and Neptune? Does he imagine that Warder Gaydon ever heard of Trophonius? It is
clear this mocker continues to mock, and I have to exercise the greatest
patience in order not to reply in the same tone.</p>
<p>“A moment ago,” I continue shortly, “I wanted to enter yon habitation, which,
if I mistake not, is that of the Count d’Artigas, but I was prevented.”</p>
<p>“By whom, Mr. Gaydon?”</p>
<p>“By a man in the Count’s employ.”</p>
<p>“He probably had received strict orders about it.”</p>
<p>“Possibly, yet whether he likes it or not, Count d’Artigas will have to see
me and listen to me.”</p>
<p>“Maybe it would be difficult, and even impossible to get him to do so,” says
Engineer Serko with a smile.</p>
<p>“Why so?”</p>
<p>“Because there is no such person as Count d’Artigas here.”</p>
<p>“You are jesting, I presume; I have just seen him.”</p>
<p>“It was not the Count d’Artigas whom you saw, Mr. Gaydon.”</p>
<p>“Who was it then, may I ask?”</p>
<p>“The pirate Ker Karraje.”</p>
<p>This name was thrown at me in a hard tone of voice, and Engineer Serko walked
off before I had presence of mind enough to detain him.</p>
<p>The pirate Ker Karraje!</p>
<p>Yes, this name is a revelation to me. I know it well, and what memories it
evokes! It by itself explains what has hitherto been inexplicable to me. I now
know into whose hands I have fallen.</p>
<p>With what I already knew, with what I have learned since my arrival in Back
Cup from Engineer Serko, this is what I am able to tell about the past and
present of Ker Karraje:</p>
<p>Eight or nine years ago, the West Pacific was infested by pirates who acted
with the greatest audacity. A band of criminals of various origins, composed of
escaped convicts, military and naval deserters, etc., operated with incredible
audacity under the orders of a redoubtable chief. The nucleus of the band had
been formed by men pertaining to the scum of Europe who had been attracted to
New South Wales, in Australia, by the discovery of gold there. Among these
gold-diggers, were Captain Spade and Engineer Serko, two outcasts, whom a
certain community of ideas and character soon bound together in close
friendship.</p>
<p>These intelligent, well educated, resolute men would most assuredly have
succeeded in any career. But being without conscience or scruples, and
determined to get rich at no matter what cost, deriving from gambling and
speculation what they might have earned by patient and steady work, they engaged
in all sorts of impossible adventures. One day they were rich, the next day
poor, like most of the questionable individuals who had hurried to the
gold-fields in search of fortune.</p>
<p>Among the diggers in New South Wales was a man of incomparable audacity, one
of those men who stick at nothing—not even at crime—and whose influence upon bad
and violent natures is irresistible.</p>
<p>That man’s name was Ker Karraje.</p>
<p>The origin or nationality or antecedents of this pirate were never
established by the investigations ordered in regard to him. He eluded all
pursuit, and his name—or at least the name he gave himself—was known all over
the world, and inspired horror and terror everywhere, as being that of a
legendary personage, a bogey, invisible and unseizable.</p>
<p>I have now reason to believe that Ker Karraje is a Malay. However, it is of
little consequence, after all. What is certain is that he was with reason
regarded as a formidable and dangerous villain who had many crimes, committed in
distant seas, to answer for.</p>
<p>After spending a few years on the Australian goldfields, where he made the
acquaintance of Engineer Serko and Captain Spade, Ker Karraje managed to seize a
ship in the port of Melbourne, in the province of Victoria. He was joined by
about thirty rascals whose number was speedily tripled. In that part of the
Pacific Ocean where piracy is still carried on with great facility, and I may
say, profit, tho number of ships pillaged, crews massacred, and raids committed
in certain western islands which the colonists were unable to defend, cannot be
estimated.</p>
<p>Although the whereabouts of Ker Karraje’s vessel, commanded by Captain Spade,
was several times made known to the authorities, all attempts to capture it
proved futile. The marauder would disappear among the innumerable islands of
which he knew every cove and creek, and it was impossible to come across
him.</p>
<p>He maintained a perfect reign of terror. England, France, Germany, Russia and
America vainly dispatched warships in pursuit of the phantom vessel which
disappeared, no one knew whither, after robberies and murders that could not be
prevented or punished had been committed by her crew.</p>
<p>One day this series of crimes came to an end, and no more was heard of Ker
Karraje. Had he abandoned the Pacific for other seas? Would this pirate break
out in a fresh place? It was argued that notwithstanding what they must have
spent in orgies and debauchery the pirate and his companions must still have an
enormous amount of wealth hidden in some place known only to themselves, and
that they were enjoying their ill-gotten gains.</p>
<p>Where had the band hidden themselves since they had ceased their
depredations? This was a question which everybody asked and none was able to
answer. All attempts to run them to earth were vain. Terror and uneasiness
having ceased with the danger, Ker Karraje’s exploits soon began to be
forgotten, even in the West Pacific.</p>
<p>This is what had happened—and what will never be known unless I succeed in
escaping from Back Cup:</p>
<p>These wretches were, as a matter of fact, possessed of great wealth when they
abandoned the Southern Seas. Having destroyed their ship they dispersed in
different directions after having arranged to meet on the American
continent.</p>
<p>Engineer Serko, who was well versed in his profession, and was a clever
mechanic to boot, and who had made a special study of submarine craft, proposed
to Ker Karraje that they should construct one of these boats in order to
continue their criminal exploits with greater secrecy and effectiveness.</p>
<p>Ker Karraje at once saw the practical nature of the proposition, and as they
had no lack of money the idea was soon carried out.</p>
<p>While the so-called Count d’Artigas ordered the construction of the schooner
<i>Ebba</i> at the shipyards of Gotteborg, in Sweden, he gave to the Cramps of
Philadelphia, in America, the plans of a submarine boat whose construction
excited no suspicion. Besides, as will be seen, it soon disappeared and was
never heard of again.</p>
<p>The boat was constructed from a model and under the personal supervision of
Engineer Serko, and fitted with all the known appliances of nautical science.
The screw was worked with electric piles of recent invention which imparted
enormous propulsive power to the motor.</p>
<p>It goes without saying that no one imagined that Count d’Artigas was none
other than Ker Karraje, the former pirate of the Pacific, and that Engineer
Serko was the most formidable and resolute of his accomplices. The former was
regarded as a foreigner of noble birth and great fortune, who for several months
had been frequenting the ports of the United States, the <i>Ebba</i> having been
launched long before the tug was ready.</p>
<p>Work upon the latter occupied fully eighteen months, and when the boat was
finished it excited the admiration of all those interested in these engines of
submarine navigation. By its external form, its interior arrangements, its
air-supply system, the rapidity with which it could be immersed, the facility
with which it could be handled and controlled, and its extraordinary speed, it
was conceded to be far superior to the <i>Goubet,</i> the <i>Gymnote</i>, the
<i>Zede</i>, and other similar boats which had made great strides towards
perfection.</p>
<p>After several extremely successful experiments a public test was given in the
open sea, four miles off Charleston, in presence of several American and foreign
warships, merchant vessels, and pleasure boats invited for the occasion.</p>
<p>Of course the <i>Ebba</i> was among them, with the Count d’Artigas, Engineer
Serko, and Captain Spade on board, and the old crew as well, save half a dozen
men who manned the submarine machine, which was worked by a mechanical engineer
named Gibson, a bold and very clever Englishman.</p>
<p>The programme of this definite experiment comprised various evolutions on the
surface of the water, which were to be followed by an immersion to last several
hours, the boat being ordered not to rise again until a certain buoy stationed
many miles out at sea had been attained.</p>
<p>At the appointed time the lid was closed and the boat at first manoeuvred on
the surface. Her speed and the ease with which she turned and twisted were
loudly praised by all the technical spectators.</p>
<p>Then at a signal given on board the <i>Ebba</i> the tug sank slowly out of
sight, and several vessels started for the buoy where she was to reappear.</p>
<p>Three hours went by, but there was no sign of the boat.</p>
<p>No one could suppose that in accordance with instructions received from the
Count d’Artigas and Engineer Serko this submarine machine, which was destined to
act as the invisible tug of the schooner, would not emerge till it had gone
several miles beyond the rendezvous. Therefore, with the exception of those who
were in the secret, no one entertained any doubt that the boat and all inside
her had perished as the result of an accident either to her metallic covering or
machinery.</p>
<p>On board the <i>Ebba</i> consternation was admirably simulated. On board the
other vessels it was real. Drags were used and divers sent down along the course
the boat was supposed to have taken, but it could not be found, and it was
agreed that it had been swallowed up in the depths of the Atlantic.</p>
<p>Two days later the Count d’Artigas put to sea again, and in forty-eight hours
came up with the tug at the place appointed.</p>
<p>This is how Ker Karraje became possessed of the admirable vessel which was to
perform the double function of towing the schooner and attacking ships. With
this terrible engine of destruction, whose very existence was ignored, the Count
d’Artigas was able to recommence his career of piracy with security and
impunity.</p>
<p>These details I have learned from Engineer Serko, who is very proud of his
handiwork,—and also very positive that the prisoner of Back Cup will never be
able to disclose the secret.</p>
<p>It will easily be realized how powerful was the offensive weapon Ker Karraje
now possessed. During the night the tug would rush at a merchant vessel, and
bore a hole in her with its powerful ram. At the same time the schooner which
could not possibly have excited any suspicion, would run alongside and her horde
of cutthroats would pour on to the doomed vessel’s deck and massacre the
helpless crew, after which they would hurriedly transfer that part of the cargo
that was worth taking to the <i>Ebba</i>. Thus it happened that ship after ship
was added to the long list of those that never reached port and were classed as
having gone down with all on board.</p>
<p>For a year after the odious comedy in the bay of Charleston Ker Karraje
operated in the Atlantic, and his wealth increased to enormous proportions. The
merchandise for which he had no use was disposed of in distant markets in
exchange for gold and silver. But what was sadly needed was a place where the
profits could be safely hidden pending the time when they were to be finally
divided.</p>
<p>Chance came to their aid. While exploring the bottom of the sea in the
neighborhood of the Bermudas, Engineer Serko and Driver Gibson discovered at the
base of Back Cup island the tunnel which led to the interior of the mountain.
Would it have been possible for Ker Karraje to have found a more admirable
refuge than this, absolutely safe as it was from any possible chance of
discovery? Thus it came to pass that one of the islands of the Archipelago of
Bermuda, erstwhile the haunt of buccaneers, became the lair of another gang a
good deal more to be dreaded.</p>
<p>This retreat having been definitely adopted, Count d’Artigas and his
companions set about getting their place in order. Engineer Serko installed an
electric power house, without having recourse to machines whose construction
abroad might have aroused suspicion, simply employing piles that could be easily
mounted and required but metal plates and chemical substances that the
<i>Ebba</i> procured during her visits to the American coast.</p>
<p>What happened on the night of the 19th inst. can easily be divined. If the
three-masted merchantman which lay becalmed was not visible at break of day it
was because she had been scuttled by the tug, boarded by the cut-throat band on
the <i>Ebba</i>, and sunk with all on board after being pillaged. The bales and
things that I had seen on the schooner were a part of her cargo, and all unknown
to me the gallant ship was lying at the bottom of the broad Atlantic!</p>
<p>How will this adventure end? Shall I ever be able to escape from Back Cup,
denounce the false Count d’Artigas and rid the seas of Ker Karraje’s
pirates?</p>
<p>And if Ker Karraje is terrible as it is, how much more so will he become if
he ever obtains possession of Roch’s fulgurator! His power will be increased a
hundred-fold? If he were able to employ this new engine of destruction no
merchantman could resist him, no warship escape total destruction.</p>
<p>I remain for some time absorbed and oppressed by the reflections with which
the revelation of Ker Karraje’s name inspires me. All that I have ever heard
about this famous pirate recurs to me—his existence when he skimmed the Southern
Seas, the useless expeditions organized by the maritime powers to hunt him down.
The unaccountable loss of so many vessels in the Atlantic during the past few
years is attributable to him. He had merely changed the scene of his exploits.
It was supposed that he had been got rid of, whereas he is continuing his
piratical practices in the most frequented ocean on the globe, by means of the
tug which is believed to be lying at the bottom of Charleston Bay.</p>
<p>“Now,” I say to myself, “I know his real name and that of his lair—Ker
Karraje and Back Cup;” and I surmise that if Engineer Serko has let me into the
secret he must have been authorized to do so. Am I not meant to understand from
this that I must give up all hope of ever recovering my liberty?</p>
<p>Engineer Serko had manifestly remarked the impression created upon me by this
revelation. I remember that on leaving me he went towards Ker Karraje’s
habitation, no doubt with the intention of apprising him of what had passed.</p>
<p>After a rather long walk around the lagoon I am about to return to my cell,
when I hear footsteps behind me. I turn and find myself face to face with the
Count d’Artigas, who is accompanied by Captain Spade. He glances at me sharply,
and in a burst of irritation that I cannot suppress, I exclaim:</p>
<p>“You are keeping me here, sir, against all right. If it was to wait upon
Thomas Roch that you carried me off from Healthful House, I refuse to attend to
him, and insist upon being sent back.”</p>
<p>The pirate chief makes a gesture, but does not reply.</p>
<p>Then my temper gets the better of me altogether.</p>
<p>“Answer me, Count d’Artigas—or rather, for I know who you are—answer me, Ker
Karraje!” I shout.</p>
<p>“The Count d’Artigas is Ker Karraje,” he coolly replies, “just as Warder
Gaydon is Engineer Simon Hart; and Ker Karraje will never restore to liberty
Engineer Simon Hart, who knows his secrets.”</p>
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