"It's wrecking a seven-thousand-ton passenger-steamer in the night!"

mourned the general manager.

"It isn't! It's putting her into a safe cradle."

"But at this speed!"

"That chap in the pilot-house is no fool. He'll get his hint in time to

save her from real damage. You needn't worry!"

Fogg opened his traveling-bag and lifted out a strip of metal. He

handled it as gingerly as if it were a reptile, and he looked at it with

an air as if he feared it would bite him.

"That's the little joker," said Burkett. "About two points deviation by

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local attraction will do the business!"

"I'm tempted to throw it overboard and call it all off, Burkett. I have

put through a good many deals in my life in the big game, but this looks

almost too raw. I can't help it! I feel a hunch as if something was

going to miscue."

"I've got no more to say, governor."

"My crowd doesn't ask questions of me, but they expect results. If I

don't do it, I suppose I'll kick myself in the morning." He cocked up

his ear and listened to the bawling of the liner's great whistle. "But

it seems different in the night."

"You ain't leaving any tracks," encouraged Burkett. "And this being his

first run makes it more plausible. You're here all naturally, yourself.

It might seem rather queer if you made another trip. It's his first run

on her, I remind you. If he makes a slip-up it won't surprise the wise

guys-a mite."

"It seems to be all set--I've got to admit it. By gad, Burkett, I have

always put a thing through when I've started on it! That's why they

call in the little Fogg boy. I'd rather apologize to my conscience than

to--Well, never mind who he is." He tucked the strip of metal into his

inside coat pocket and buttoned the coat. "Blast it! nothing that's very

bad can happen in this calm sea--and that last life-boat drill went off

fine. Here goes!" declared Fogg, with desperate emphasis.

"That's the boy!" declared Burkett, encouraged to familiarity by their

association in mischief.

The general manager found the night black when he edged his way along

the wet deck to the pilot-house. The steamer's lights made blurred

patches in the fog. Now she seemed to have the sea to herself; there

were no answering whistles.

"I'm back again, Captain Mayo," he said, as he closed the door against

the night. "I hope I won't bother you folks here. I'll stay out from

underfoot." He sat down on a transom at the extreme rear of the house

and smoked his cigar with nervous vehemence.




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