Part 14 (1/2)
[Ill.u.s.tration: WRECKS! AND THE ICE BETWEEN!
Steamer ash.o.r.e near St. Joseph, Mich., under conditions all but impossible for life-saving, yet not a soul was lost.
Courtesy of U.S. Bureau of Lighthouses.]
”What's mush-ice?” interrupted Eric.
”Mush-ice,” said the old keeper, ”is a mixture of frozen spray, an' ice, an' bits o' drift, an' everythin' that kin freeze or be friz over, pilin' up on the beach. It's floatin', ye understan', an', as a rule, 'bout two or three foot thick. Owin' to the movin' o' the water, it don't never freeze right solid, but the surf on the beach breaks it into bits anywheres from the size of 'n apple to a keg. An' it joggles up 'n'
down, 'n' the pieces grin' agin each other. It's jest a seesawin' edge o' misery on a frozen beach.”
”That's as bad as Alaska!” exclaimed the boy.
”It's a plumb sight worse,” the other answered. ”I ain't never been no further north 'n Thunder Cape, jest by Nipigon. An' what's more, I ain't goin'! But even up there, the ice freezes solid 'n' you kin do somethin'
with it. Mush-ice never gits solid, but like some sort o' savage critter born o' the winter, champs its jaws of ice, waitin' for its prey.”
”How do you like that, Eric?” asked his father. ”That's some of the 'fun' you're always talking about.”
”Can't scare me, Dad,” replied Eric with a laugh. ”I'm game.”
”Ye'll need all yer gameness,” put in the old life-saver. ”Wait till ye hear the end o' the yarn! As I was sayin', it was in November. The fust big storm o' the winter broke sudden. I never see nothin' come on so quick. It bust right out of a snow-squall, 'n' the gla.s.s hadn' given no warnin'. We wa'n't expectin' trouble an' it was all we c'd do to save the boats. Ye couldn't stand up agin it, an' what wasn't snow an' sleet, was spray.
”All mornin' the gale blew, an' in the middle o' the afternoon the breakwater went to bits. The keepers o' the light at the end o' the breakwater lighted the lantern, 'n' you take my word for it, they were takin' their lives in their hands in doin' it. Jest half 'n hour later, the whole shebang, light, lighthouse, 'n' the end o' the breakwater, went flyin' down to leeward in a heap o' metal 'n splinters.
”Jest about that time, some folks down Chocolay way, lookin' out to sea, took a notion they saw what looked like white ghosts o' s.h.i.+ps 'way out on the bar. She was jest blowin' tiger cats with the claws out!
'Twa'n't a day for no Atlantic greyhound to be out, much less a small boat. But I tell ye, boy, when there's lives to be saved, there's allers some Americans 'round that's goin' to have a try at it. Over the ice 'n'
through the gale, eight men helpin', the fishermen o' Chocolay carried a yawl an' life-lines to the point o' the beach nearest the wreck. Four men clumb into her.”
”Without cork-jackets or anything?” asked Eric.
”Without nothin' but a Michigan man's s.p.u.n.k. Well, siree, those four men clumb into that yawl, an' a bunch of others jumped into the mush-ice an'
toted her 'way out to clear water. With a yell, the fisherman put her nose inter the gale an' pulled. But it wa'n't no use. No yawl what was ever made could have faced that sea. The spray friz in the air as it come, an' the men were pelted with pieces of jagged ice, mighty near as big 's a bob-cherry. Afore they was ten feet away from the mush, a sea come over 'n' half filled the boat. It wa'n't no use much ter bail, for it friz as soon's it struck. They hadn't s.h.i.+pped more'n four seas when the weight of ice on the boat begun to sink her.”
”Fresh water, of course,” said Eric. ”It would freeze quickly. I hadn't thought of that.”
”In spite o' the ice,” continued the veteran of seventy Lake winters, ”two o' the men were for goin' on, but the oldest man o' the crowd made 'em turn back. He was only jest in time, for as the yawl got back to the edge o' the mush she went down.”
”Sank?”
”Jest like as if she was made o' lead.”
”And the men?” asked the boy eagerly.
”They was all right. I told you it was nigh the beach. The crowd got to the yawl 'n' pulled her up on sh.o.r.e. They burned a flare to let 'em know aboard the wrecks that they was bein' helped an' to hold out a hope o'
rescue, but there wasn't no answer. Only once in a great while could any one on sh.o.r.e see those ghosts o' s.h.i.+ps 'way out on the bar. An' every time the snow settled down, it was guessin' if they'd be there next time it cleared away, or not.
”Seein' that there was nothin' doin' with the yawl, the crowd reckoned on callin' us in to the deal. We was the nearest life-savin' station to Chocolay bar, an' we was over a hundred miles away.”
”A hundred miles!”
”All o' that an' more. We was on s.h.i.+p Island, six miles from Houghton.
As I was sayin', seein' that nothin' could be done from their end, Cap'n John Frink, master of a tug, hiked off to the telegraph office at Marquette, 'n' called up Houghton. That's a hundred 'n' ten miles off, by rail. He told 'em o' the wrecks 'n' said he thought as we could get 'em off if we could come right down. The wires were down between Houghton 'n' s.h.i.+p Islan' and there wa'n't no way o' lettin' us know. The operators sent word all over, to try an' get a message to us, an' mighty soon nigh everybody on the peninsula knowed that we'd been sent for.