[Dave Darrin’s Fourth Year at Annapolis by H. Irving Hancock]@TWC D-Link bookDave Darrin’s Fourth Year at Annapolis CHAPTER VIII 10/14
"Do you wish any more speed ?" "Not in Chesapeake Bay; navigating conditions are not favorable." "Very good, sir." Hal vanished below.
Never very talkative, Hal was content to stand by his engines in silence when there was no need of talking. From time to time, as the craft sped on down the bay, Lieutenant Benson glanced at the chronometer beside the deck wheel. "You don't have the ship's bell struck on this craft, sir ?" inquired Midshipman Darrin. "Only when at anchor or in dock," replied Lieutenant Jack Benson. "A submarine's natural mission is one of stealth, and it wouldn't do to go about with a clanging of gongs.
Now, let me have the wheel, Mr.Darrin.
You gentlemen go to the conning tower and stand so that you can hear what goes on below." While the three midshipmen stood as directed the speed of the "Dodger" slackened. Then, after a space of a full minute, the submarine returned to her former twenty-knot speed. "Did you hear any clanging or jangling of a signal bell or gong when the speeds were changed ?" questioned Lieutenant Benson. "No, sir," Darrin answered. "That was because no bells were sounded," explained Benson.
"From deck or conning tower signals can be sent that make no noise. On a dark night, or in a fog, we could manoeuvre, perhaps, within a stone's throw of an enemy's battleship, and the only sound that might betray our presence would be our wash as we moved along. Take the wheel, Mr.Farley." Then, after giving Farley a few directions as to the course to follow, Lieutenant Benson added: "Take command of the deck, Mr.Farley." "Humph!" muttered Dan.
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