Five Months on a German Raider | Page 2

Frederic George Trayes
we were there, but there was no mention of the presence of
any suspicious craft in the adjacent waters.
It is generally understood that instructions to Captains in these times
are to suspect every vessel seen at sea, and to run away from all signs
of smoke (and some of us knew that on a previous occasion, some
months before, a vessel of the same line had seen smoke in this
neighbourhood, and had at once turned tail and made tracks for
Colombo, resuming her voyage when the smoke disappeared). The
officer on the bridge with his glass must have seen the smoke long
before I did, so my suspicions of a raider were gradually disarmed as
we did not alter our course a single point, but proceeded to meet the
stranger, whose course towards us formed a diagonal one with ours. If
nothing had happened she would have crossed our track slightly astern
of us.
But something did happen. More passengers were now awake,
discussing the nationality of the ship bearing down on us. Still no
alteration was made in our course, and we and she had made no sign of
recognition.

Surely everything was all right and there was nothing to fear. Even the
Japanese commander of the gun crew betrayed no anxiety on the matter,
but stood with the passengers on the deck watching the oncoming
stranger. Five bells had just gone when the vessel, then about seven
hundred yards away from us, took a sudden turn to port and ran up
signals and the German Imperial Navy flag. There was no longer any
doubt--the worst had happened. We had walked blindly into the open
arms of the enemy. The signals were to tell us to stop. We did not stop.
The raider fired two shots across our bows, and they fell into the sea
quite close to where most of the passengers were standing. Still we did
not stop. It was wicked to ignore these orders and warnings, as there
was no possible chance of escape from an armed vessel of any kind.
The attempt to escape had been left too late; it should have been made
immediately the smoke of the raider was seen. Most of the passengers
went to their cabins for life-belts and life-saving waistcoats, and at once
returned to the deck to watch the raider. As we were still steaming and
had not even yet obeyed the order to stop, the raider opened fire on us
in dead earnest, firing a broadside.
While the firing was going on, a seaplane appeared above the raider;
some assert that she dropped bombs in front of us, but personally I did
not see this.
The greatest alarm now prevailed on our ship, and passengers did not
know where to go to avoid the shells which we could hear and feel
striking the ship. My wife and I returned to our cabin to fetch an extra
pair of spectacles, our passports, and my pocketbook, and at the same
time picked up her jewel-case. The alley-way between the
companion-way and our cabin was by this time strewn with splinters of
wood and glass and wreckage; pieces of shell had been embedded in
the panelling and a large hole made in the funnel. This damage had
been done by a single shot aimed at the wireless room near the bridge.
We returned once more to the port deck, where most of the first-class
passengers had assembled waiting for orders--which never came. No
instructions came from the Captain or officers or crew; in fact, we
never saw any of the ship's officers until long after all the lifeboats

were afloat on the sea.
The ship had now stopped, and the firing had apparently ceased, but we
did not know whether it would recommence, and of course imagined
the Germans were firing to sink the ship. It was useless trying to escape
the shots, as we did not then know at what part of the ship the Germans
were firing, so there was only one thing for the passengers to do--to
leave the ship as rapidly as possible, as we all thought she was sinking.
Some of the passengers attempted to go on the bridge to get to the boat
deck and help lower the boats, as it seemed nothing was being done,
but we were ordered back by the Second Steward, who, apparently
alone among the ship's officers, kept his head throughout.
No. 1 boat was now being lowered on the port side; it was full of
Japanese and Asiatics. When it was flush with the deck the falls broke,
the boat capsized, and with all its occupants it was thrown into the sea.
One or two, we afterwards heard, were drowned. The passengers now
went over to the starboard side,
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