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HOME > Classical Novels > The Cruise of the Dry Dock > CHAPTER X THE STRANGE END OF THE MINNIE B
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CHAPTER X THE STRANGE END OF THE MINNIE B
 At Gaskin's announcement, bedlam1 broke loose among the diners. They leaped to their feet and rushed headlong from the messroom.  
"Get th' buckets!" "Man th' boat!" "We'll niver get there in toime!" "Allons! Allons!" "W'y didn't we put a guard on 'er!" "Hurry! Hurry! Hurry!" "Yes, 'urry! 'urry!"
 
Out into the darkness to the forward pontoon rushed the howling mob. Some gave inarticulate cries, others bewailed their lost riches to the vast empty night.
 
A strange sight met their eyes. The spars and sails of the Minnie B stood out against the black heavens in a flickering2 brilliance3 that danced up through the rigging, but presently all saw it was a mere4 light shining from beneath.
 
"Th' fire's in th' hold!" cried Galton hoarsely5. "Did you men drop a match?"
 
"'Ow could they drop a match, wearin' nothin' but undershirts?" flared8 back another navvy.
 
"We could do no good in a small boat!" cried Galton.
 
'She's afire from stem to stern!"
 
"But smoke—w'ere's th' smoke?"
 
Then, quite surprisingly, the light wavered out, leaving the schooner9 in stony10 blackness. A vague blur11 of complementary color swam in Madden's eyes. A gasp12 went up from the watchers.
 
"Bhoys," faltered13 Hogan in an awed14 tone, "th' banshees ar-re dancin' to-night!"
 
"Banshees!" sneered15 Mulcher. "Th' deck's caved in—it'll break out again!"
 
"Th' engines must be ruint complately."
 
"Wot do ye make of it, Mister Madden?" asked Galton, bewildered. "Look—there it is again!"
 
Sure enough the mysterious light flamed up once more as suddenly as it disappeared. It flickered16 and wavered over hull17 and spars.
 
"It might possibly be a phosphorescent display," hazarded Leonard, completely mystified.
 
"Tropical seas grow very luminous18 when disturbed... a school of dolphins or sharks on the other side the schooner might——"
 
"This must be a reg'lar fire!" cried Mulcher. "Nothin' but a furnace in th' hold——"
 
"W'y don't hit smoke?"
 
"'Ow do I know?"
 
"Hit ain't a fire!"
 
"W'ot is hit?"
 
"Phosphescence, didn't you 'ear Mister Madden say!"
 
"Will hit sink 'er?"
 
Deschaillon gave a sharp laugh. "What sauvages!"
 
By this time it became clear to everyone that it was not a fire. As the weird19 illumination continued its fantastic gambols20, little points of light began moving about the deck.
 
Just then Caradoc's grave voice hazarded: "That must be an extraordinary display of St. Elmo's fire. I should say a storm was brewing21."
 
"Would St. Elmo's fire 'urt th' vessel22, sir?" asked a cockney.
 
"Not at all," replied the Englishman.
 
As Leonard stared a queer thought came into his head. He looked around at his companions. In the faint radiance from the mysterious schooner, he could make out their faces, pale blurs23 all fixed24 on the strange spectacle. He picked out the heavy form of Farnol Greer and moved over to his friend. Under the cover of excited talking and exclamations25, he asked in a low tone.
 
"There was somebody on that schooner this morning, Farnol?"
 
"Just what I was thinking, sir."
 
"He could have hidden from us. You thought he must be crazy—a crazy man would probably have secreted26 himself."
 
"I had it in mind, sir, the very thing."
 
"Now could he possibly make a light like this?"
 
Greer remained silent. The queer fellow never said anything when he had nothing to say.
 
"I'd like to go over and see," went on Leonard. "I want one man to row with me. We want to go light and fast."
 
"That's me, sir."
 
Greer moved instantly to the rope ladder where the dinghy was tied. Madden followed him. Caradoc was still explaining the theory of St. Elmo's fire to the listening men. Madden broke in on it.
 
"Fellows," he called, "Greer and I are going to row over there. We'll let you know what we find."
 
Amid warning protests the two climbed down the ladder for the small boat.
 
"I wouldn't do it, sir." "Leckricity's liable to strike you, sir." "There's a storm comin', sir, and you won't get back, like th' mate did." "You can see just as well from 'ere."
 
But the two clambered into the half-seen dinghy and pushed off. The moment they dipped oars6 into water, the mystery was partially27 explained. Every stroke they made created bright phosphorescent rings in the lifeless sea. Their blades drove through the water in a flame. The navvies cried out at this phenomenon. A sufficient disturbance
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