The Land That Time Forgot


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Both men looked at me in amazement. "We still have the compass and the sun,"  
said Olson. "They may be after getting the compass some night; but they's too  
many of us around in the daytime fer 'em to get the sun."  
It was then that one of the men stuck his head up through the hatchway and  
seeing me, asked permission to come on deck and get a breath of fresh air. I  
recognized him as Benson, the man who, Wilson had said, reported having seen  
Lys with von Schoenvorts two nights before. I motioned him on deck and then  
called him to one side, asking if he had seen anything out of the way or unusual  
during his trick on watch the night before. The fellow scratched his head a  
moment and said, "No," and then as though it was an afterthought, he told me  
that he had seen the girl in the crew's room about midnight talking with the  
German commander, but as there hadn't seemed to him to be any harm in that,  
he hadn't said anything about it. Telling him never to fail to report to me  
anything in the slightest out of the ordinary routine of the ship, I dismissed him.  
Several of the other men now asked permission to come on deck, and soon all but  
those actually engaged in some necessary duty were standing around smoking  
and talking, all in the best of spirits. I took advantage of the absence of the men  
upon the deck to go below for my breakfast, which the cook was already  
preparing upon the electric stove. Lys, followed by Nobs, appeared as I entered  
the centrale. She met me with a pleasant "Good morning!" which I am afraid I  
replied to in a tone that was rather constrained and surly.  
"
Will you breakfast with me?" I suddenly asked the girl, determined to commence  
a probe of my own along the lines which duty demanded.  
She nodded a sweet acceptance of my invitation, and together we sat down at the  
little table of the officers' mess.  
"You slept well last night?" I asked.  
"All night," she replied. "I am a splendid sleeper."  
Her manner was so straightforward and honest that I could not bring myself to  
believe in her duplicity; yet--Thinking to surprise her into a betrayal of her guilt, I  
blurted out: "The chronometer and sextant were both destroyed last night; there  
is a traitor among us." But she never turned a hair by way of evidencing guilty  
knowledge of the catastrophe.  
"
Who could it have been?" she cried. "The Germans would be crazy to do it, for  
their lives are as much at stake as ours."  
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