"You are right, Captain Candage. That's why I almost hate to go out to

the Conomo. Those infernal ghouls of junkmen will be tearing her into

bits instead of trying to put the breath of life back into her."

The helpless steamer seemed more lonely than when they had visited her

before. The mosquito fleet that had surrounded her, hoping for some

stray pickings, had dispersed. A tug and a couple of lighters were stuck

against her icy sides, and, like leeches, were sucking from her what

they could. They were prosecuting their work industriously, for the

sea was calm in one of those lulls between storms, a wintry truce that

Atlantic coastwise toilers understand and depend on.

Mayo, his curiosity prompting him, determined to go on board one of the

lighters and discover to what extremes the junk jackals were proceeding.

Two of his dorymen ferried him after the schooner had been hove to near

the wreck.

"What's your business?" inquired a man who was bundled in a fur coat and

seemed to be bossing operations.

"Nothing much," confessed the young man from his dory, which was tossing

alongside the lighter. "I'm only a fisherman."

The swinging cranes of the lighters, winches purring, the little

lifting-engines puffing in breathless staccato, were hoisting and

dropping cargo--potatoes in sacks, and huge rolls of print paper. Mayo

was a bit astonished to note that they were not stripping the steamer;

not even her anchors and chains had been disturbed.

"Fend off!" commanded the boss.

Captain Dodge dropped one of the windows of his pilot-house and leaned

on his elbows, thrusting his head out. The tug Seba J. Ransom was

still on the job. She was tied up alongside the wreck, chafing her

fenders against the ice-sheathed hull.

"Hello, Captain Mayo!" he called, a welcoming grin splitting his

features. "Come aboard and have a cigar, and this time I'll keep the

conversation on fish-scales and gurry-butts."

The man in the fur coat glanced from one to the other, and was promptly

placated. "Oh, this is a friend of yours, is he, Captain Dodge?"

"You bet he is. He's been my boss before now."

"If that's the case make yourself at home anywhere. But you know what

some of these fellows alongcoast who call themselves fishermen will do

around a wreck when your back is turned!"

Mayo nodded amicably.

"Step on board," invited the boss.

"I'm all right here in the dory, and I'm out from underfoot, sir. We're

going along to the fishing-grounds in a jiffy. I'm only satisfying

a sailor's curiosity. Wondered what you intended to do with this

proposition."




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