The Rover Boys on the Great Lakes; Or, The Secret of the Island Cave
ut this is
at the wheel, helping Dick to make the Swallow keep her bow up to the waves, which rolled fiercely on every
," returned Dick. "Did Sa
es
of A
being smashed to bits. He is scared, I can tell you
for shore, Tom. I'm afraid myself that this
n in as bad a storm be
t some nasty ones, that do tremendous damage. Light up, will you
u can hold the
ut it's enough to pull a fellow's arm
t was unsteady, Tom made his way to the tiny cabin of the yacht
m," said the youngest Rover. "I
ing, it is gr
help on deck? I hate t
nd I are tending the wheel, and
ll from the stern," added the youngest Rover, who d
here-it's safer. If the yacht
and cracking sound had reached his ears, followed by a bump and a ja
Sam, as soon as he could speak.
h a lantern slung in the crook of his right elbow. Sam followed with another lante
p! h
he Swallow; a cry cut partly short by the piping gale. With his h
at is the
rther off than ever. Then Tom made a d
he wheel was vaca
are you!" he shoute
nothing more reached Tom's ears nor the hearing of his younger brot
came from both, and each looke
red with flying spray. The lanterns made a small semicircle of light
-preserver!" said Tom, and ran
he, after several unsuccessful attempts, caught the spokes of the w
mped if you do that. Ke
ife-preserver, attached to a hundred feet of small, but strong, rope. Onc
e shrieked. But if Dick
Sam. "We ought to do somethin
rockets. With trembling hands he set off first one and then another. The blaze was a short one, ye
t is going to pie
ou see
but I don't know who they were.
burst out Sam, and the tears
said?" came from
rboard," an
regret came from Aleck
nd the shock knocked him over," answ
cket, Sam-I don't kn
t, and some red fire as well. The red fire mad
ee nuffin,
Tom. "The raft
nd answered them. And now Sam noticed that the lifeline was drifting i
ony to Tom and Sam, and the warm-hearted
the youngest Rover. "Father will neve
swer. "Dick has been in a tight fix before. He'l
"Why, it's 'most as bad as dat dar hurricane we 'per
adily and soon turned into little short of a deluge. All were speedily soaked to the sk
ful that Sam would be lost overboard, To
re," he said. "If anythin
m. "If I were you, I'd tie myself to
although the waves still lashed angrily around the Swallow. With the first streak of
raft had disappeared completely, and all around them
breakfast of broiled fish and hot coffee, but, when summ
uthful," sighed Sam.
" said Tom. "Go ahead yourself a
ut youse had bettah drink sum ob dat coffee, or youse might cotch a chill." A
he said to his brother, and he proved to be right. It was a freighter known as the Captain R
wreck, with some men on i
e answer, from the captain of th
on our yacht was knocked overboard. We lit some red fire and
since he had a brother who was in the business of rafting lum
and it was too dark to see much," said Tom. Nevertheless he and Sam told w
the latter. "And if I see anything of you
are you
Cleveland first. Then I
fal
n the captain of the freight ste
quite close to the Swallow, and as she swung around those on
engers on board, and as Sam looke
an it be possib
possible, Sam
k! l
wh
er. Am I dreaming, or is that-h
you talki
on the steamer, just
h thought