Part 46 (2/2)

There was a moment's pause.

”You in the boat and dory?”

”All ready, sir,” answered the seine-master.

”Ready, dory?”

”All ready.”

”Hard up, Dave! Steady a little. A little! Don't you know what a little is? Ready in the boat, there! Steady with that wheel! Now you've got her. You in the boat, there. Got that new-fangled net ready?”

”Ready,” cried the statistician shortly. Then Colin understood. The trip was for the purpose of testing out a new net devised by the Bureau and the Fisheries man was a net expert. No wonder he knew a boat!

”Stand by the boat. Ready, the dory! When I give the word! Hold on a bit with the painter! Now let her go! You in the dory there, show your lantern! All your own way now!”

Colin tugged at his oar. Never, in all his experience in rowing, had he tackled anything like an oar of that size, but he pulled for all he was worth, and a glow ran through him to feel that he was holding up his end. The light dory with two men aboard, came racing after them. It was nearly a half-mile pull before the seine-master cried:

”Over with the buoy!”

And the buoy was tossed overboard for the dory to pick up and hold to windward.

Then the silent Fisheries officer got busy. Without a word, he reached for the net. It was made of a lighter twine than customary, and not thickly tarred, having also different corks to the usual type, and sinkers all over the net. It looked like a fearfully complicated thing to handle and Roote was a small man, but that net went flying out as though tossed by a giant.

”You're a jim-dandy with the twine, all right,” said the seine-master admiringly. He turned to the rowers, ”Put your backs into it, boys,” he said; ”drive her for all you know how. We've got to give this new contraption a fair chance.”

”How much net out now, sir?” he asked the statistician in a few minutes.

”Quarter of a mile,” was the reply.

”Shall we close in then, eh?”

”You'd better.”

The seine-master, feeling that the school of mackerel had been inclosed, turned the seine-boat towards the dory and, under the powerful arms of the fishermen, the circle was soon completed. It was a perfect set.

The wind had been rising rapidly, and just as the seine-boat reached the dory a sharp rain squall struck. But the cry was, ”Purse up!” for until a seine is partly pursed up, there is no telling whether the fish are really in or not. For a moment, however, it was almost impossible to purse up, the wind and rain were beating so savagely.

”Pull!” said Roote, suiting the action to the word, and all hands joined him. The net was light, far lighter than the old fishermen's nets, and there was more than one audible comment to the effect that the net would break, and that it was too bad they hadn't one of the old-style nets around the school, but the pursing in continued, and the net showed no signs of breakage. Presently first one, then another, fish flashed above the water, and a minute later the s.h.i.+ne of the mackerel showed, and then the whole school, including thousands of fish, rose in a body to the surface, beating the water with their forked tails, and thres.h.i.+ng in mad confusion from side to side.

The seine-master turned to the Fisheries official with a good deal of concern.

”That's a big haul,” he said; ”will your net stand it?”

There was no hesitation in the reply.

”Yes,” he said.

”Then I'm willin' to admit,” said the seine-master, ”that you win. I'd never ha' believed that you could get as big a net as light as that an'

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