The Ocean Wireless Boys and the Lost Liner. Goldfrap John Henry

The Ocean Wireless Boys and the Lost Liner - Goldfrap John Henry


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floating through space on the wings of the storm.

      He appeared to have no weight. Like a thistle bloom he thought that he might be blown where the winds wished. Conquering this feeling, it was succeeded by a leaden one. He was too heavy to move. His feet felt enormous, and heavy as a deep-sea diver’s weighted boots. His head was balloon-like and appeared to sway crazily on his shoulders.

      But he still descended. Step by step, painfully, semi-consciously, the brain-sick, nauseated boy clung to the ratlines. On his grip depended his life, and this, in a dim, stupid sort of way, he realized.

      If he could only reach the cross-trees! Here he could rest in comparative security for a while.

      He must reach them, he must! He wasn’t going to die like this. A furious fighting spirit came over him. His head suddenly cleared; the deadly nausea left him; his limbs grew light.

      Jack shouted aloud and came swiftly down. He called out defiantly at the storm. He raved, he yelled in wild delirium.

      All at once he felt the cross-trees under his feet. With a last loud cry of triumph he sank down on the projecting steel pieces that formed, at any rate, a resting place.

      Then came another wild swing of the ship, and a vicious gust.

      Jack felt himself flung from the cross-trees and out into the dark void of the storm.

      Down, down, down he went, straight as a stone toward the dark, black, raging vortex through which the ship was fighting.

      He felt rather than heard a despairing cry; but did not know whether it had come from his lips or not.

      Then a rushing dark cloud enveloped him, and with a fearful roaring in his ears, Jack’s senses swam out to sea.

      “The light has disappeared, Metcalf. Do you think the poor lad is lost?”

      Far below on the bridge, Captain McDonald, oil-skinned like his officer, peered upward.

      “The good Lord alone knows, sir,” was the fervent reply. “It was a madcap thing to do. I should never have let him go.”

      “It’s done now,” muttered the captain. “Though, had you consulted me, I should have forbidden it. That boy is the bravest of the brave.”

      “He is, sir. You may well say that. A seasoned sailorman might have hesitated to go aloft to-night.”

      “I wish to heaven I knew what had become of him and if he is safe, yet I wouldn’t order another man up there in this inferno.”

      There was a voice behind him.

      “Vouldt you accepdt idt a volunteer, sir?”

      “You, Schultz?” exclaimed the captain, turning around to the old quartermaster who was just going off his trick of duty at the wheel. “Why, man, you’d be taking your life in your hands.”

      “I’ve been up der masts of sheeps off der Horn on vorse nights dan dees,” was the calm reply. “Ledt me go, sir.”

      “You go at your own responsibility, then,” was the reply. “I ought not to let you up at all, and yet that boy – go ahead, then.”

      The old German quartermaster saluted and was gone.

      From the bridge they saw him for a moment, in the gleam of light from a porthole, crossing the wet deck.

      He clambered into the shrouds and then began climbing upward along the perilous path Jack had already traveled.

      “Pray Heaven we have not two deaths to our account to-night, Metcalf,” said the captain earnestly to his first officer.

      “Amen to that, sir,” was the reply.

      And then there was nothing but the shriek of the wind and the beat of the waves, while the two officers gazed piercingly upward into the darkness where they knew not what tragedies might be taking place.

      CHAPTER VIII – SAFE ONCE MORE

      Suddenly Captain McDonald had an inspiration.

      “Metcalf!” he cried, above the storm.

      “Sir!” was the alert response of the Tropic Queen’s chief officer.

      “Order the searchlight turned on that mast!”

      One of the two quartermasters, struggling with the bucking, kicking wheel, was ordered to get the apparatus ready and focus it on the foremast.

      The canvas hood was taken off the big light and then a switch snapped, sputtering bluely. A radiant spear of light pierced the night. It hovered vaguely for a few instants and then settled on the foremast.

      It revealed a thrilling scene. Schultz had clasped in his arms the unconscious form of Jack Ready. For the young wireless man, when he collapsed, had been caught by a stay and held in position on the cross-trees.

      Slowly, and with infinite caution, the old quartermaster began to descend the shrouds. It was a nerve-racking task to those looking on. Jack was not a light-weight, and the descent of his rescuer, clasping the boy with one arm while he held on with all his strength, was painfully slow.

      But at last they reached the deck in safety, and Captain McDonald was there in person to meet them. He wrung Schultz’s hand in a tight grip as the old seaman stood pantingly before him.

      “That was as brave a bit of work as I’ve seen done since I’ve been going to sea, Schultz,” he exclaimed. “I’ll see to it that the company gives you recognition. But now let us take this lad to my cabin. He’s opening his eyes and the doctor can give him something that will soon set him on his feet again.”

      And so it proved. Half an hour after Jack had been laid on a lounge in the skipper’s cabin and restoratives had been administered by Dr. Flynn, he was feeling almost as hale and hearty as ever, although his terrible ordeal when he was flung back and forth pendulum-wise had left him with a racking headache.

      The captain showered congratulations on him, but reminded him that never again must he risk his life in such a perilous way.

      “The job could have waited till daylight, anyhow,” he said.

      “I beg your pardon, sir,” said Jack, firmly but respectfully, “it could not. You know that I was in communication with a ship – the yacht Endymion– when the insulation wore away and my ‘juice’ began to leak?”

      “No, I knew no such thing,” said the captain.

      “Mr. Metcalf knew of it, sir.”

      “In all the excitement caused by your exploit, young man, he must have forgotten to tell me.”

      “That was probably the reason, sir. But the Endymion– ” The captain broke in as if struck by some sudden thought.

      “Jove, lad, the Endymion, you say?”

      “Yes, sir, do you know her?”

      “I know of her. She bears no good reputation. Once she was chartered to the Haytian government and was used as a war ship; then she was in the smuggling trade along the coast. The last I heard of her she was laid up in the marine Basin at Ulmer Park. Her history has been one of troubles. Do you feel strong enough to go back to your key?”

      “Yes, sir,” exclaimed Jack eagerly. “Young Smalley, my assistant, is too seasick to work to-night. I’ll take the trick right through.”

      “Good for you, my boy. I’ll see that you are no sufferer by it. By the way, did the Endymion have any message? Was she in trouble?”

      “No, sir, but they wished to give some sort of a radio to a Mr. James Jarrold, one of the first-class passengers.”

      The captain tapped his foot musingly on the polished wood floor of his cabin.

      “Odd,” he mused, “I wonder what possible communication they could have to make to him. Is Jarrold a heavy-set man with a blue, square jaw and bristly, black hair?”

      “Yes, sir, that is the man to the dot.”

      “I have noticed him at dinner. He sits at


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