"That's a granite-lugger! See her go down, like a stone!" gasped Mate

Bangs. "My God! What do you suppose she has done to us forward?"

"Get there. Get there!" roared Captain Mayo. "Get there and report,

sir!"

But before the chief mate was half-way down the ladder on his way

the wailing voice of the lookout reported disaster. "Hole under the

water-line forward," he cried.

"There are men in the water back there, sir," said a quartermaster.

"We're making water fast in the forward compartment," came a voice

through the speaking-tube.

Already they in the pilot-house could hear the ululation of women in the

depths of the ship, and then the husky clamor of the many voices of men

drowned the shriller cries.

Captain Mayo had seen the survivors from the schooner struggling in the

water. But he rang for full speed ahead and ordered the quartermaster to

aim her into the north, knowing that land lay in that direction.

"Eight hundred lives on my shoulders and a hole in her," he told

himself, while all his world of hope and ambition seemed rocking to

ruin. "I can't wait to pick up those poor devils."

In a few minutes--in so few minutes that all his calculations as to his

location were upset--the Montana plowed herself to a shuddering halt

on a shoal, her bow lifting slightly. And when the engines were stopped

she rested there, sturdily upright, steady as an island. But in her

saloon the men and women who fought and screamed and cursed, beating to

and fro in windrows of humanity like waves in a cavern, were convinced

that the shuddering shock had signaled the doom of the vessel.

Half-dressed men, still dizzy with sleep, confused by dreams which

blended with the terrible reality, trampled the helpless underfoot,

seeking exit from the saloon.

The hideous uproar which announced panic was a loud call to the master

of the vessel. He understood what havoc might be wrought by the brutal

senselessness of the struggle. He ran from the pilot-house, stepping on

the feet of the general manager, who was stumbling about in bewildered

fashion.

"Call all the crew to stations and guard the exits," Captain Mayo

commanded the second mate.

On his precipitate way to the saloon the captain passed the room of the

wireless operator, and the tense crackle of the spark told him that the

SOS signal was winging its beseeching flight through the night.

Three men, half dressed, with life-preservers buckled on in hit-or-miss

fashion, met him on the deck, dodged his angry clutch, and leaped over

the rail into the sea, yelling with all the power of their lungs.




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