“Get that hand back in the air! And you— throw that gun over! Now yours!”
The men discarded their pistols. Frost lined them up and backed them towards the hatch. “Unbatten it!” he commanded.
They did.
“Pile in!”
“What?”
“Pile in!”
“But, we’ll—”
“In there!”
The wounded man called Hans was the last one down. The others aided him. They disappeared below the top, and Frost wrestled the hatch and battened it down as if heading for the open sea. Then he retrieved his pistol and moved to the wheelhouse. The man who lay on deck had been shot through the mouth, and evidently was a first officer. Frost noticed the wheel was chained, so he dragged the body against the skylights and went to the foredeck where he had glimpsed the first sailor.
He had pitched forward on his face, his gun at his feet. Before Frost stooped to inspect him, he kicked the gun across the deck into the water. Then he tugged the man over, saw he, too, was dead, and came back to the after companion. The night now had come on full. The stars were gleaming and a pale moon glowed off the starboard.
Frost went down the steps slowly. He walked along the passage and heard sounds of music, struggling to free itself of the confinement and get into the air. He could sense the struggle. He paused at the cabin door and listened. An electric gramaphone. Someone evidently was unworried. He rapped on the door.
It opened and he thrust his foot inside. He pried it open with his leg and entered, his gun drawn.
He faced a woman—and gasped.
“You!”
“You!”
His companion of La Estrellita!
Here—in full panoply, arrayed like a queen; against a background of luxury. For a moment he was nonplussed. A lot had happened. This was the crowning blow. He gradually recovered, and thought about the awkward picture he presented there with his pistol drawn.
“Miss Stevens,” he coughed, embarrassed. “Er—”
“How do you do, Captain?” she said. “Sit down.” Frost did so. “Do you find it helps the effect when you visit a young lady with drawn revolver?”
Frost grinned. “Well, I hardly expected to find you like this. I thought—”
“Yes,” she beamed; “they are good to me, aren’t they?”
She nonchalantly moved across the cabin to a wall telephone. He thought that rather an odd thing for a prisoner to do—telephone. That simple act brought the pieces of the puzzle together with a click. Frost had just been told there were two women on board. One he expected to find a prisoner—Helen Stevens. But this woman was no prisoner—
Catherine!
With pent-up fury he leaped from his chair and was beside her before she could get an answer. He snatched the telephone out of her hand and replaced it. He faced her, flushing with anger.
“Get away!” he said. “And I hope it won’t be necessary for me to kill you!”
She lifted her face in a half sneer. “Well,” she said, moving in a swagger, “how long do you think you can get away with this high-handed stuff?”
“Don’t make me laugh,” Frost said.
There was the sound of a knock on a door in another wall than that by which he had entered.
“Who’s in there?” he demanded.
“Find out for yourself,” she snapped.
“I will,” he said. He observed her with something not unlike admiration. “So you’re Catherine, eh?” He was a little taken aback. Disappointed. Once he had had an adventure with her. Men do not easily forget such things. Now it all came back in a rush … her indifference to the danger in La Estrellita … the tapping of her fingers on the glass was a signal….
He glared: “You tried to trap me, didn’t you? Tried to get me killed?”
She laughed. “Why not? You bumped off the only man I ever loved, and for that I’m going to get you, Frost. What a pity those saps didn’t kill you that night in Algadon!”
“Yes,” he mused; “what a pity! You know— you’re a damned attractive woman to be mixed up with a rotten gang like this.”
“I’m going to stay mixed. You can’t bluff me, Frost. I don’t scare worth a damn.”
“Maybe you don’t. Oh, by the way; I neglected to tell you I locked three of your thugs in the hold. Also,” this casually, “I had to bump off a couple of’em. Now who’s the woman in the other room?”
“Nobody. That is—”
“Get that door open, or I’ll tear it down!”
She got up sullenly and unlocked the narrow door. Through it another woman stumbled, her hair disheveled, her clothes wrinkled, her face worried. She saw Frost and stopped short.
“It’s all right,” Frost said reassuringly, “I’m a policeman. Who are you?”
“I’m—”
“Don’t you talk!” came the swift interruption. “This bum means no good.” She tried to reach the woman’s side, but Frost intervened.
“Never mind her,” he said. “I’m Frost of the Rangers.”
“Oh! Frost!” she murmured the words. “I’m Helen Stevens. I’ve been a prisoner for a week.”
“Huh! Are you a newspaper woman?”
“Yes.”
Frost grinned broadly, spread his legs and said: “Well, sit down, ladies, and get comfortable. This ought to be good.”
Then it was that Frost observed both women were about the same height and build, and that the genuine Helen Stevens wore a brown ensemble similar to the one worn by his companion that night in La Estrellita. He began to see the light.
“A week ago,” said Helen Stevens, “I was kidnaped in Jamestown, drugged and brought here. I don’t know why. I never had an enemy in my life.”
“There’s no puzzle there,” Frost said. “This jane here is the ex-sweetheart of an ex-racketeer who was allied with the Black Ship gang and bumped off by Hell’s Stepsons. She wanted revenge on me; the way to get that was remove you and assume your identity.” He smiled appreciatively. “That right, Mrs. Singleton?”
“You go to hell!”
“So,” mused Helen Stevens, slightly more at ease, “you’re Captain Frost. I was on my way to see you—had a letter from the Adjutant-General. It was stolen with my luggage!”
“I got it,” Frost grinned. “You’ll learn after a while that this is a high-powered gang you’re dealing with.”
Helen Stevens was surveying the broad figure of Jerry Frost, remembering tales of his prowess in the skies of France and in the jungles of Latin America—El Beneficio they called him then— surveying him in frank admiration.
“I think,” Frost said, “it would be wise to get going. This boat has got a date I’d rather not keep. First, I’m afraid we’ll have to tie up the hellcat.”
The hellcat got to her feet, her eyes burning with passionate hatred, and leaped at Frost. She landed in his lap and they both went over backwards with the chair. His pistol rattled on the hardwood floor.
“Get that gun!” he yelled, a moment before she clawed at his face. She interposed a few choice oaths, and hammered Frost about the ears with her fists. They squirmed on the floor inelegantly until he managed to get a hammer-lock on her arm. She swore and cried out in pain.
“Pipe down and I’ll let you go!” Frost said. “Otherwise I’ll break it off.” His eyes fell on the silk cord knotted around port hole draperies and he said to Helen Stevens, “Get that cord.”
She untied it and brought it to him. Frost slipped it around the woman’s wrists and tied her hands behind her. Then he took off his belt and strapped it tightly around her ankles. To complete the job he took out his handkerchief and crammed it in her mouth.
“Now,” he said; “I need a bandage.”
Helen Stevens did not hesitate. She lifted her dress, revealed a sheeny knee and a silk petticoat. She ripped it, jerked off a strip and handed it to Frost.