The Veiled Lady and Other Men and Women eBook

Francis Hopkinson Smith
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 240 pages of information about The Veiled Lady and Other Men and Women.

The Veiled Lady and Other Men and Women eBook

Francis Hopkinson Smith
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 240 pages of information about The Veiled Lady and Other Men and Women.

“I knew then that the fire had just begun to take hold; that thump might have been a cask of rum or it might have been a box of nitro-glycerine.  Whatever it was, there was no time to waste in stoppin’ the blaze before it reached the rest of the cargo.

“Captain Bogart had felt the shock and now came runnin’ down the deck with the dog at his heels.  He knew I’d take care of the fire and he hadn’t left the bridge, but the way she shook and heaved under the explosion was another thing.

“By this time the passengers were huddled together on the upper deck, frightened to death, as they always are, the women the coolest in the crowd.  All except two little old women, sisters, who lived out of Rio and who had been with us before.  Fire was one of the things that scared them to death, and they certainly were scared.  They hung to the rail, their arms around each other—­the two together didn’t weigh a hundred and fifty pounds; always reminded me of two shiverin’ little monkeys, these two old women, although maybe it ain’t nice for me to say it—­and looked down over the rail into the sea, and said they never could go down the ladder, and did all the things badly scared women do, short of pitching themselves overboard, which sometimes occurs.  The captain stopped and talked to ’em—­told ’em there was no danger—­his ears open all the time for another let-go, and the dog nosed round and put out his paw as if to make good what the captain had promised.

“The water was goin’ in now pretty lively—­all the pumps at work—­the light stuff bein’ heaved overboard as fast as it came out.  By dark we’d got the fire under so that we had steam where before we’d had smoke and flame.  The passengers had quieted down and some of ’em had gone back to their staterooms to get their things together, and everything was going quiet and peaceable—­this was about nine o’clock—­when there came another half-smothered explosion and the stokers began crawlin’ up like rats.  Then the chief engineer stumbled out—­no hat nor coat, his head all blood where a flying bolt had gashed him.  Some of her bilge plates was loose, he said, and the water half up to the fire-boxes.  Next a column of flame came pouring out of her companionway, which crisped up four of our boats and drove everybody for’ard.  We knew then it was all up with us.

“The captain now sent every man to the boats—­ those that would float—­and we began to get the passengers and crew together—­about sixty, all told.  That’s pretty nasty business at any time.  They’re like a flock of sheep, huddlin’ together, some wantin’ to stay and some crazy to go; or they are shiverin’ with fright and ready to knife each other—­anything to get ahead or back or wherever they think it is safest.  This time most of ’em had got on to the explosives; they knew something was up, either with the boilers or the cargo, and every one of them expected to be blown up any minute.

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Project Gutenberg
The Veiled Lady and Other Men and Women from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.