He hurried out on deck. His men were hoisting aboard the three dripping,

sputtering passengers who had run amuck.

"And those same men would look after a runaway horse and sneer that he

didn't have any brains," remarked Captain Mayo, disgustedly.

For the next half-hour he was a busy man. He investigated the

Montana's wound, first of all. He found her flooded forward--her nose

anchored into the sand with a rock-of-ages solidity.

His heart sank when he realized what her plight meant from the wrecking

and salvage viewpoint. In those shifting sands, winnowed constantly by

the rushing currents of the sound, digging her out might be a Gargantuan

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task, working her free a hopeless undertaking.

His tour of investigation showed him that except for her smashed bow

the steamer was intact. Her helplessness there in the sand was the more

pitiable on that account.

He had not begun to take account of stock of his own responsibility for

this disaster. The whirl of events had been too dizzying. As master of

the ship he would be held to account for her mishap. But to what extent

had he been negligent? He could not figure it out. He realized that

excitement plays strange pranks with a man's consciousness of linked

events or of the passage of time. He could not understand why the

steamer piled up so quickly after the collision. According to his ample

knowledge of the shoals, he had been on his true course and well off the

dangerous shallows.

His first mate met him amidship. "I sent off one of our life-boats, sir.

Told 'em to go back and hunt for the men we saw in the water. They found

two. Others seem to be gone."

"I'm glad you thought of it, Mr. Bangs. I ought to have attended to it,

myself."

"You had enough on your hands, sir, as it was. She was the Lucretia

M. Warren, with granite from Vinal-haven. That's what gave us such an

awful tunk."

"Who are the men?"

"Mate and a sailor. They've had some hot drinks, and are coming along

all right."

"We'll have a word with them, Mr. Bangs."

The survivors of the Warren were forward in the crew's quarters, and

they were still dazed. They had not recovered from their fright; they

were sullen.

"I'm sorry, men! Sailor to sailor, you know what I mean if I don't say

any more. It's bad business on both sides. But what were you doing in

the fairway?"

"We wa'n't in the fairway," protested a grizzled man, evidently the

mate. He was uneasy in his borrowed clothes--he had surrendered his own

garments to a pantryman who had volunteered to dry them.




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