Wide Courses by James Brendan Connolly
page 48 of 272 (17%)
page 48 of 272 (17%)
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"Aye, lay to it, and we'll eat that turkey for Christmas yet," yells
Sam. "Lay to it, and we'll have more than the turkey." I says. "What's that we'll have, Alec?" hollers Sam. "Pull to the Aurora and see." I hollers back. It was blowing so hard we could hardly hear each other, and what with the chop we were driving the dory through we might well have been in swimming. We made the _Aurora_, and, looking back as I leaped over her rail, I could see Miller running back up the dock. "Hurry, fellows." I yells to them, "Miller's gone to head us off." As we drops onto the _Aurora's_ deck a head pops out of the fo'c's'le companion-way. He looked like he'd just come out of a fine sleep. "You," I yelled, "allay you--rauss--beat it," and rushed him to the dory we'd just come aboard in. He looks up at me in the most puzzled way. Two more heads popped up out of the companion-way. "And allay you two," yells Sam and Archie, and grabs 'em and heaves 'em into the dory, casts off her painter, and they drifts off like men in a trance. One minute they were sound asleep in their bunks and the next adrift and half-dressed in a dory in the middle of the harbor with a gale of wind roaring in their ears and a choppy sea wetting 'em down. "In with her chain-anchor slack," I calls, "and then up with her jibs," which they did. "And now her fores'l--up with her fores'l." Then we broke out her chain-anchor. I was to the wheel and knew the second the |
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