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PAGE 7

The Mark On The Door
by [?]

“But I didn’t stop to admire ’em. I give one look around. Nobody was in sight. Then I ran down the pier and jumped aboard. Almost the first thing I put my hand on was what I was looking for–the bilge-pump. ‘Twas a small affair, that you could lug around in one hand, but mighty handy for keeping a boat of that kind dry.

“I fitted one end of my hose to the lower end of that pump and wrapped rubber tape around the j’int till she sucked when I tried her over the side. Then I turned on the cocks in the gasoline pipes fore and aft, and noticed that the carbureter feed cup was chock full. Then I was ready for business.

“I went for’ard, climbing over the little low cabin that was just big enough for a man to crawl into, till I reached the brass cap in the deck over the gasoline-tank. Then I unscrewed the cap, run my hose down into the tank, and commenced to pump good fourteen-cents- a-gallon gasoline overboard to beat the cars. ‘Twas a thirty- gallon tank, and full up. I begun to think I’d never get her empty, but I did, finally. I pumped her dry. Then I screwed the cap on again and went home, taking Allie’s bilge-pump with me, for I couldn’t stop to unship the hose. The tide was coming in fast.

“At nine o’clock that night I was in my skiff, rowing off to where my power-boat laid in deep water back of the bar. When I reached her I made the skiff fast astern, lit a lantern, which I put in a locker under a thwart, and set still in the pitch-dark, smoking and waiting.

“‘Twas a long, wearisome wait. There was a no’thwest wind coming up, and the waves were running pretty choppy on the bar. All I could think of was that gasoline. Was there enough in the pipes and the feed cup on that launch to carry her out to where I was? Or was there too much, and would she make the yacht, after all?

“It got to be eleven o’clock. Tide was full at twelve. I was a pretty good candidate for the crazy house by this time. I’d listened till my ear-drums felt slack, like they needed reefing. And then at last I heard her coming–CHUFF-chuff! CHUFF-chuff! CHUFF-chuff!

“And HOW she did come! She walked up abreast of me, went past me, a hundred yards or so off. Thinks I: ‘It’s all up. He’s going to make it.’

“And then, all at once, the ‘chuff-chuff-ing’ stopped. Started up and stopped again. I gave a hurrah, in my mind, pulled the skiff up alongside and jumped into her, taking the lantern with me, under my coat. Then I set the light between my feet, picked up the oars and started rowing.

“I rowed quiet as I could, but he heard me ‘fore I got to him. I heard a scrambling noise off ahead, and then a shaky voice hollers: ‘Hello! who’s that?’

“‘It’s me,’ says I, rowing harder’n ever. ‘Who are you? What’s the row?’

“There was more scrambling and a slam, like a door shutting. In another two minutes I was alongside the launch and held up my lantern. Allie was there, fussing with his engine. And he was all alone.

“Alone he was, I say, fur’s a body could see, but he was mighty shaky and frightened. Also, ‘side of him, on the cushions, was a girl’s jacket, and I thought I’d seen that jacket afore.

“‘Hello!’ says I. ‘Is that you, Mr. Davidson? Thought you’d gone to Boston?’

“‘Changed my mind,’ he says. ‘Got any gasoline?’

“‘What you doing off here this time of night?’ I says.