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ventured to delay. He groped his way from cabin to cabin, kicking on doors and bellowing the skipper's orders. An hour and a half later, twenty men of Chance Along were clustered at the edge of the broken cliff overlooking the beach of Nolan's Cove and the rock-scarred sea beyond. But they could see nothing of beach or tide. The fog clung around them like black and sodden curtains. Here and there a lantern made an orange blur against the black. Some of the men held coils of rope with light grappling-irons spliced to the free ends. Others had home-made boat-hooks, the poles of which were fully ten feet long. They heard the dull boom of a gun to seaward. "She bes closer in!" exclaimed Pat Lynch. "Aye, closer in nor when I first heared her. She bain't so far to the south'ard, neither." "Sure, then, the tide bes a-pullin' on her an' will drag her in, lads," remarked an old man, with a white beard that reached half-way down his breast. "What d'ye make o' her, Barney Keen?" asked the skipper of the old man. "Well, skipper, I'll tell 'e what I makes o' her. 'Twas afore yer day, lad--aye, as much as t'irty year ago--arter just sich weather as this, an' this time o' year, a grand big ship altogether went all abroad on these here rocks. Aye, skipper, a grand ship. Nought come ashore but a junk o' her hull an' a cask o' brandy, an' one o' her boats wid the name on all complete. The _Manchester City_ she was, from Liverpool. We figgered as how she was heading for the gulf--for Quebec, like as not. So I makes it, skipper, as how this here vessel may be bound for Quebec, too." Black Dennis Nolan took a lantern from another man, and led the way down the broken slope to the beach. The gear was passed down and piled at the edge of the tide. Dry wood--the fragments of ships long since broken on the outer rocks--was gathered from where it had been stranded high by many spring tides, and heaped on a wide, flat rock half-way up the slope. Another heap of splintered planks and wave-worn timbers was constructed on the level of the beach, close to the water--all this by the skipper's orders. The sea hammered and sobbed among the rocks, and splintered the new ice along the land-wash. "If she comes ashore we'll be needin' more nor candle-light to work wid," remarked the skipper. Again the dull boom of a gun drifted in through the fog. "Aye, lads, she bes a-drawin' in to us," said old Barney Keen, with a note of intense sat
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