[A Gunner Aboard the """"Yankee"""" by Russell Doubleday]@TWC D-Link book
A Gunner Aboard the """"Yankee""""

CHAPTER VII
12/15

Was he quick-tempered, selfish, uncompanionable, it was quite as evident, and he had few friends.
Sterling and unsuspected qualities were brought out in many of the men.
Every man felt that we must and would stand together, and with a will do our work, be it peaceful or warlike.
Where were we bound?
Were we to join the Havana blockading fleet?
Were we destined for despatch and scout duty?
Or were we to take part in actual conflict?
It was while we were settling these questions to our own satisfaction on the morning of June 2d, that a hail came from the lookout at the masthead forward.
"Land O!" he shouted, waving his cap.

"Hurray! it's Cuba!" The navigator, whose rightful surname had been converted by the facetious Naval Reserves into "Cutlets," for reasons of their own, lost no time in rebuking the too enthusiastic lookout.
"Aloft, there, you measly lubber! What in thunder do you mean?
Have you sighted land ?" "Ye-es, sir-r," quavered the lookout.
"Then why don't you say so without adding any conjectures of your own ?" commented the irascible Lieutenant "Cutlets," severely.
The rest of the crew were too deeply interested in the vague streak of color on the horizon to pay any attention to the "wigging" of the man at the masthead.

We knew that the dun-hued streak rising from the blue shadows of the ocean was Cuba, and we could think or talk of nothing else.
Somewhere beyond that towering mountain was Santiago, the port in which the flea-like squadron of Admiral Cervera was bottled up, and there was a deadly fear in our hearts that the wily Spaniard would sally forth to battle before we could join our fleet.
We pictured to ourselves the gray mountain massed high about the narrow entrance of Santiago Bay, the picturesque Morro Castle, squatting like a grim giant above the strait, and outside, tossing and bobbing upon the swell of a restless sea, the mighty semicircle of drab ships waiting, yearning for the outcoming of the Dons.

We of the "Yankee," I repeat, were in an agony of dread that we would arrive too late.
Cape Maysi, the scene of many an adventurous filibustering expedition, was passed at high noon, and at eight bells in the evening the anchor was dropped off Mole St.Nicholas, a convenient port in the island of Hayti.

As we steamed into the harbor we passed close to the auxiliary cruiser "St.Louis." The anchor was scarcely on the bottom when the gig was called away.


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