e rigged with less danger and, perhaps,
with a better chance of bringing the ship's company safely ashore.
"'Tis a woeful pickle of water," Washy Gallup shrieked in Louise's ear.
"And the wind a-risin'. 'Tis only allowed by law to shoot a sartain
charge o' powder in the pottery little gun. Beyond that, is like to
burst her. But mebbe they can make it. Cap'n Jim Trainor knows his
work; and 'tis cut out for him this day."
Gradually the seriousness of the situation began to affect all the
lighter-minded spectators. Louise saw the group of moving picture
actors at one side. The men dropped their cigarettes and strained
forward as they watched the schooner drive in to certain destruction.
It was like a play. The schooner, rearing on each succeeding wave,
drew nearer and nearer. A hawser parted and they saw her bows swing
viciously shoreward, the jib-boom thrusting itself seemingly into the
very sky as she topped a huge breaker.
The crew had to slip the cable of the second anchor. The foremast came
crashing down before she struck. Then, with a grinding thud those on
the shore could not hear, but could keenly sense, the fated craft
rebounded on the reef.
A gasping cry--the intake of a chorused breath--arose from the throng
of spectators. The fishermen and sailors recoiled from the cart and
left an open space in which the life-saving crew could handle their
gear.
Cap'n Trainor, the grizzled veteran of the crew, had already loaded the
gun and now aimed it. The shot to which was attached the line was
slipped into the muzzle.
"Back!" the old man ordered, and waved his hand. Then he pulled the
lanyard.
The line fled out of the box with a speed that made it smoke. But the
shot fell short.
"'Tis too much wind, skipper," squealed Washy Gallup. "You be
a-shootin' into the wind's eye. An' she's risin' ev'ry minute."
His only answer was a black look from Cap'n Trainor. The latter loaded
the gun again, and yet again. The last time he waited for every one to
get well back before he fired the cannon. When she went off she did
not burst as they half expected--she turned a double back somersault.
"'Tis no use, boys!" the captain roared at them, smiting his hands
together. "We must try the boat. But that's a hell's broth out there,
and no two ways about it."
The stranded schooner, all but hidden at times in the smother of flying
spume and jumping waves, hung halfway across the reef. They could s
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