<h2 id='chap19' class='c011'>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
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<div>OUT OF THE SKY</div>
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<p class='c014'>Sandy reached out to touch them as if he didn’t trust
the evidence of his eyes. “The one for the back. And
the two for the face—one for green ink, one for black.”
He shook his head amazedly. “And they were in that
box!” He felt the lead lining. “It’s as thin as paper,” he
said. “They must have made it that way to compensate
for the weight of the plates—to make both boxes weigh
about the same.” He looked up at Ken. “But they didn’t
quite do it—they were a few ounces out.”</p>
<p>“Dad brought the plates past customs not knowing
what he was doing.” Ken spoke slowly, piecing together
fragments of information. “They never thought
we’d find out—they never thought anybody would find
out.” He was rewrapping the plates and putting them
back into the box.</p>
<p>Sandy got to his feet quickly. “And maybe nobody
ever will, if we don’t get ourselves out of this mess.”</p>
<p>Ken lifted up the mattress on the lower bunk and
shoved the box under it out of sight. “We’ll need that
evidence,” he said, “and we don’t want Cal to throw it
overboard or something.”</p>
<p>Sandy dropped the plank back in place. “Let’s go,”
he said. “We’ll have to spell him for a while.”</p>
<p>The bargeman was still working away at the pump,
but his strokes were slower now and he was panting
with near exhaustion. He made way for the boys and
leaned up against the cabin, clutching at it to maintain
his balance as the barge heaved and swung.</p>
<p>“Stay there,” Sandy ordered, “where we can keep an
eye on you.”</p>
<p>Once again the seconds began to keep pace with the
pump handle and the stream of water spurted out of
the outlet pipe. Back on the deck the gasoline engine
throbbed reassuringly, its pump cascading a flood of
water over the side.</p>
<p>Ten minutes passed by—then ten more. Ken was
breathing heavily, his arms like lead once more.</p>
<p>“Drop out,” Sandy ordered. “Let him take over.”</p>
<p>“What about you?” Ken shifted to a position against
the wall and let the bargeman take hold of the pump
handle.</p>
<p>“You spell me in ten minutes.” Sandy’s jaw was
clenched grimly as he moved his powerful arms back
and forth.</p>
<p>The engine coughed and died.</p>
<p>“Needs gas!” Cal let go of the pump handle.</p>
<p>“Keep pumping,” Sandy said. “There is no more gas.
Whatever pumping is going to be done on this barge—we’re
going to do it.”</p>
<p>Cal looked at the water issuing from the outlet.
“We’ll never make it.” His voice was thin with fear.</p>
<p>A wave washed over them and drowned out the rest
of his words.</p>
<p>When they were free of water again Sandy went
back to work. “Save your breath,” he suggested.</p>
<p>Ten minutes later Ken replaced Sandy at the pump
and the exhausted redhead got what rest he could by
slumping against the cabin wall. Ten minutes after that
he took Cal’s place.</p>
<p>Round and round they went, fighting desperately
against time, trying to match their puny strength
against the ponderous walls of water that rolled down
on them and swept over the bulwark.</p>
<p>By eleven o’clock it was plain that they had been
losing ground rapidly. The barge was growing more
sluggish with each passing wave. Her portside was
noticeably down—it was becoming even more difficult
to maintain a footing on the slippery, sharply sloping
deck.</p>
<p>Ken hung on to the pump handle as water washed
over the side. “How long?” he asked through clenched
teeth.</p>
<p>Cal sputtered and coughed as the water receded. He
pointed a shaking finger to the cargo. “She’s shifting!”
he gasped. “We’ll turn over!” Panic drove him to the
bulwark. He poised there ready to jump.</p>
<p>Sandy grabbed him and pulled him back. “Don’t be
a fool! You wouldn’t last out there a minute.” He held
on to the man while he turned his head to shout to
Ken. “Go on inside and bring out the life belts—and a
length of line.” He thrust Cal toward the pump handle.
“Get moving. She’s not going quite yet.”</p>
<p>Ken was gone almost ten minutes. When he returned,
sliding along the tilted deck in a moment of comparative
quiet between two waves, he carried two life belts
and a coil of half-inch line. He had already fastened a
life belt around himself.</p>
<p>He handed a life belt to Sandy and took over the
pump while the redhead worked his way into the canvas
jacket. “Had to pick up something,” Ken said. He
poked at his life belt. “Got it fastened under here.”</p>
<p>Sandy took over Cal’s place. “Get into the jacket,”
he ordered.</p>
<p>“Hang on!” Ken cried. “A big one coming!”</p>
<p>The barge took long, agonizing seconds to rise from
under the weight of water. Over the noise of the wind
they could hear the rattle of stones as still more of the
cargo slipped toward the portside.</p>
<p>Sandy looked forward anxiously. He stopped pumping
and swiftly tied the three of them together with the
line, leaving twenty feet of slack between them.</p>
<p>“Look!” Ken cried. “Blue sky!”</p>
<p>High overhead a small patch had appeared in the
heavy overcast. As they watched, the wind spread the
clouds further and further apart and the patch of sky
grew larger.</p>
<p>“One patch of blue sky doesn’t mean the sea will
calm down,” Sandy said grimly. “It may take hours
more for that to happen—days even.”</p>
<p>As if to prove his words another comber swept over
them an instant later, to bury itself in the gravel and
add additional tons of water to the load the barge was
already carrying.</p>
<p>More gravel cascaded down toward the bulwark.
The portside seemed a scant three feet above water
while the starboard side reared menacingly in the air.</p>
<p>Sandy straightened up. “This isn’t accomplishing
much,” he said. “There’s no use kidding ourselves.”</p>
<p>“Abandon ship?” Ken asked.</p>
<p>“We’ll wait until the last possible moment,” Sandy
said. “We’ll climb up on the stone—way over on the
starboard side. When she goes down, she’ll roll to port.
That’s when we’ll jump to starboard. We have to clear
the barge when we hit the water or....”</p>
<p>There was no need for him to finish the sentence. In
silence, with Sandy in the lead, they climbed up onto
the pile of stone and made their way to the top.</p>
<p>Overhead the sky was clearing rapidly. The sun had
found a way through the last of the scudding gray
clouds. Even the wind was easing slightly. But the
waves were as high as they had ever been. From their
new vantage point the mammoth walls of onrushing
water seemed even larger.</p>
<p>Huddled on the rough stone, they watched the barge
tilt more and more as the minutes passed. The cold got
at them now that they were no longer straining at the
pump handle. Their hands were numb, their lips blue.
Only tightly clenched jaws could keep their teeth from
chattering.</p>
<p>The boys sat close together; Cal a few feet distant.
There was no conversation—there seemed to be nothing
to say.</p>
<p>More stone slid down, carrying them toward the
portside. They clawed their way back up. Cal got to
his feet.</p>
<p>“Get down!” Sandy shouted. “Nobody jumps until I
give the word. Then we all jump together.”</p>
<p>“She’s going over!” Cal swayed on unsteady feet.</p>
<p>Sandy hauled on the line until he had brought the
terrified man down to his knees. “Don’t—”</p>
<p>“Sandy!” Ken’s voice rang out above the noise of the
wind and the waves. “Do you hear it? A plane!”</p>
<p>“Where!” Sandy’s voice cracked in the middle of the
word and his head jerked upward.</p>
<p>Frantically they scanned the clear sky.</p>
<p>“There!” Ken shouted finally. Instinctively he began
to wave his arms wildly in the air. “They’ll see us, won’t
they? And send the Coast Guard?”</p>
<p>“We have to signal them—we need something big.”</p>
<p>Forgetting the rope that tied them together, Sandy
lunged down the pile of stone toward the cabin. Ken
and Cal were pulled down with him as he hurled himself
around the corner of the cabin.</p>
<p>Before they could get to their feet Sandy was back,
carrying a blanket from one of the bunks. He scrambled
up the pile of stone, hauling impatiently at the line and
waving the blanket even before Ken and Cal could
reach him.</p>
<p>“It looks like it’s coming closer!” Ken shouted.</p>
<p>The air-borne craft in the sky was dropping rapidly
now. Blinking their eyes against the glare of the sun,
they could see that it was a helicopter—a bare thousand
feet above the barge.</p>
<p>Approaching from windward, the helicopter continued
to lose altitude as it swung in a circling maneuver
until it was directly over the barge. Then it began
to descend in a straight line like an elevator in an invisible
shaft. When the machine was a scant thirty feet
above their heads a door in the underbelly opened and
something fell seaward to land on the pile of stone a
few feet from where they stood.</p>
<p>“It’s a ladder!” Ken shouted. “A rope ladder! Come
on!”</p>
<p>The ladder was swinging back and forth in the wind.
Sandy made a grab for it and caught at the twisting
rope. The helicopter continued to drop until it hovered
only fifteen feet above them.</p>
<p>Ken looked upward. His father’s face was peering
down at him from the aircraft.</p>
<p>“Dad!” Ken began to laugh, almost hysterical with
relief now that their long ordeal was over. “Don’t
bother to come aboard,” he shouted. “We were just
leaving, anyway.”</p>
<p>Beside him, one arm thrust between the ladder rungs,
the other around Ken’s shoulders, Sandy was laughing
too.</p>
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