March 4. All day with Murad's men setting wire entanglements

under water; two Turkish destroyers patrolling the entrance to the

bay, and cavalry patrols on the heights to warn away the curious.

March 6. Forts Alamout and Shah Abbas are being reconstructed

from the new plans. Wired areas under water and along the coves

and shoals are being plotted. Murad Bey is unusually polite and

effusive, conversing with me in German and French. A spidery man

and very dangerous.

March 7. A strange and tragic affair last night. The heat being

severe, I left my tent about midnight and went down to the dock

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where my little sailboat lay, with the object of cooling myself on

the water. There was a hot land breeze; I sailed out into the bay

and cruised north along the coves which I have wired. As I rounded

a little rocky point I was surprised to see in the moonlight, very

near, a steam yacht at anchor, carrying no lights. The longer I

looked at her the more certain I became that I was gazing at the

Imperial yacht. I had no idea what the yacht might be doing here;

I ran my sailboat close under the overhanging rocks and anchored.

Then I saw a small boat in the moonlight, pulling from the yacht

toward shore, where the crescent cove had already been thoroughly

staked and the bottom closely covered with barbed wire as far as

the edge of the deep channel which curves in here like a

scimitar.

It must have been that the people in the boat miscalculated the

location of the channel, for they were well over the sunken barbed

wire when they lifted and threw overboard what they had come there

to get rid of--two dark bulks that splashed.

I watched the boat pull back to the Imperial yacht. A little later

the yacht weighed anchor and steamed northward, burning no lights.

Only the red reflection tingeing the smoke from her stacks was

visible. I watched her until she was lost in the moonlight,

thinking all the while of those weighted sacks so often dropped

overboard along the Bosporus and off Seraglio Point from that same

Imperial yacht.

When the steamer had disappeared, I got out my sweeps and rowed

for the place where the dark objects had been dropped overboard. I

knew that they must be resting somewhere on the closely

criss-crossed mesh of wires just below the surface of the water;

but I probed for an hour before I located anything. Another hour

passed in trying to hook into the object with the little

three-fluked grapnel which I used as an anchor. I got hold of

something finally; a heavy chest of olive wood bound with metal;

but I had to rig a tackle before I could hoist it aboard.




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