Dan Merrithew by Lawrence Perry
page 41 of 201 (20%)
page 41 of 201 (20%)
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hand over hand, in an effort to reach the mainmast. A faint cheer came
from the men in the main rigging, while two of the _Fledgling's_ crew cheered, and two bowed their heads in agony, and Dan sobbed aloud. "Look at him," cried Dan. "Oh, God!" "A sandy man cashin' in," muttered Mulhatton solemnly. Out, out worked the swaying form. But he had more than one hundred feet to go. Twenty-five feet--progress ceased. It hung there silent, that figure--it seemed almost an eternity. It hung as silent as a piece of sail and as fitfully swaying. Suddenly one hand relaxed and fell limp. It was as though something had sucked the breath from every onlooker. The hand was feebly raised in a futile clutch to regain the lost hold. It fell again. Still there was silence. A dark form cleaved the gloom and lay in a black huddle upon the lumber amidships, until a boarding wave kindly removed it and spurned it upon the beach as it would a drowned dog. Ten minutes later the foremast went and the life-savers, dashing into the surf, took out of the rigging a dead sea-cook. And still the tugs lay like vultures awaiting carrion. Both had come down to the wreck in the hope of getting a line over her and pulling her from the sands, for which there would have been ample reward. But it was too rough to approach her and she was too far gone to warrant salving, even were it possible. But there were men dying before their eyes and no one was lifting a hand. Dan was in a red-headed glare of emotion. He was too young to look upon such things calmly. He turned his eyes from the wreck to the _Sovereign_, just as her bow went up on |
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