THE SEA-COW’S LULLABY. It was an anxious moment, or rather succession of moments, for those in the Wondership. Luckily there was but little air stirring, and that little was blowing from a direction which brought the big craft down over the floating boy. Jack watched his opportunity like a mousing cat. As the grapnel in which he was standing, holding with one hand to the rope, swung above Dick, he leaned out and with a swift, sure grasp drew the lad up. They saw him disengage the life-jacket from the unconscious young reporter and envelop his own body in it. This done, he deliberately secured Dick to the grapnel by looping the rope around the boy’s body and fastening it with one of the forked ends. “But what about you?” cried Tom in an agony of distress. “I’ll get along till you lower the rope again. Haul up now and be quick!” There was nothing to be done but to obey the gritty lad’s order. Inch by inch they hauled on the rope till at last Dick could be reached and pulled on board. No time was then lost in lowering the rope to Jack. It was not any too soon. Attracted no doubt by the furious flurry of the battle between the whale and the sword-fish, several fish with triangular fins were to be seen cruising about in the vicinity. “Sharks!” cried Captain Sprowl; but it hardly needed his warning cry to apprise the boys of the nature of this new peril. Fortunately, Jack kept his head and made a prodigious splashing in the water whenever a By the time the sharks had rallied from their temporary alarm Jack was being hoisted upward, and within a few minutes was once more on board. Congratulations on his daring act were loud and hearty and, as may be imagined, when Dick came to himself his thanks were not rendered the less sincere by the knowledge that the plucky young inventor had risked his life to save him. When all was in readiness the engine was set in motion once more, and the machine shot ahead still on a due westerly course. Before long there It was Tom who first proclaimed it for what it was: “Land ho!” he sung out in nautical fashion, and a ringing cheer was the response. “What part of the country is it, I wonder?” exclaimed Jack. “I hope we will land near a town or settlement of some sort.” Captain Sprowl looked dubious. “Hard telling what we’ll strike,” he said, “but we’d best be prepared not to find any hotels or tably de hoteys around, unless the ‘gators and sea-cows have started one since I was on this coast last.” “Ever here before?” asked Dick, who by this time had fully recovered. “Shipwrecked off this coast in the Mary Anne McKim of Baltimore in ‘86,” was the brief reply. As they drew nearer to land they saw that the On closer view, however, they saw that the country was undulating and hilly. A long line of dense forest rose, seemingly, directly from the water. It stretched north and south as far as the eye could reach. It was, in fact, the great primeval forest that clothes this part of South America from the seacoast to the foothills of the Andes, two thousand miles to the west. “Just as I thought,” grunted Captain Sprowl, laying aside the binoculars with which he had been scrutinizing the coast; “it’s a limber-go-shiftless sort of a place; but at any rate it’s better than nothing. It’s dry land, anyhow.” They all concurred in this view. It was something to look forward to after their buffeting at the hands of the ocean,—this prospect of setting As the Wondership winged its way closer to the coast, Jack began to look about for a place to land. At first sight there was none visible. The massive dark crowns of shady mangoes, the towering forms of the palms and certain stately dome-like and somber trees, shot up everywhere above the surrounding forest, which grew as densely as weeds in a neglected pasture. On a white strip of beach the surf hurled itself thunderously, spuming and foaming up to the very roots of the trees. “Doesn’t look very promising for a landing,” remarked Tom, gazing about quite as anxiously as Jack for a landing place. “I should say not,” was the reply of the boy at the steering wheel. “Maybe the woods will open out more when we get over them,” rejoined Tom. “I hope so.” “Can’t we land on the beach?” asked Mr. Chadwick. “Not a chance,” rejoined Jack. “I wouldn’t dare to come down on that tiny strip of sand. A slight miscalculation would put us in the surf. The ship would be ruined and we might be drowned.” “Well, as the poet said, ‘all as goes up must come down,’” remarked the captain sententiously, “so I s’pose we’ll find some place to drop.” “No bird ever flew so high it didn’t have to light,” put in Dick whimsically, whereat they all had a laugh. “Well, at all events, it looks as if we were destined to have the place to ourselves,” remarked Mr. Chadwick. “I wouldn’t be too sure,” responded Captain Sprowl, pessimistically. For some reason or other the old mariner did not look entirely at ease. He scanned the tree-grown coast anxiously with his binoculars. They were just about over the crashing surf when above its roar a most peculiar sound fell upon their ears. It came swelling over the woods and was startlingly like the cry of someone shouting out in agony. “What in the name of time is that?” cried Tom, turning a rather alarmed face on the others. “Indians!” shouted Dick. “We’d better steer clear of here.” “Idt vos somevuns in pain,” declared the German savant nervously. Again came the cry. A long shuddering wail that fairly made their flesh creep. They no longer tried to disguise their alarm, but exchanged disquieted looks. “It is someone suffering pain,” declared Mr. Chadwick. “Better look to your rifles, boys.” But Captain Sprowl held up his hand to command silence. The grizzled old sailor listened in All at once it came once more,—a moaning, long-drawn sigh this time. It was like the cry of a suffering sinner on his death-bed. “It’s an awful sound!” shuddered Tom nervously. “Awful, but blamed human,” put in Captain Sprowl with a sigh of relief, like a gust of wind. |