“That’s c’rrect. And the ‘lectric light is burnin’ in the mill and in the town, an’ the saws are all goin’?”

“Yes.”

“By gracious, yes—you can hear ‘em! Don’t they scrunch the stuff, though!” He laughed a little. “Mr. Devlin an’ you and me hev been pretty smart, hevn’t we?”

Then a spasm caught him, and after a painful pause he called: “It’s the biggest thing in cables.... Stand close in the cage.... Feel her swing!—Safe, you bet, if he stands by the lever....”

His face lighted with the last gleam of living, and he said slowly: “I hev a pal—at Danger Mountain.”

[ [!-- H2 anchor --] ]

CHAPTER XV. IN THE TROUGH OF THE WINDS

The three days following the events recorded in the preceding chapter were notable to us all. Because my own affairs and experiences are of the least account, I shall record them first: they will at least throw a little light on the history of people who appeared previously in this tale, and disappeared suddenly when the ‘Fulvia’ reached London, to make room for others.

The day after Phil Boldrick’s death I received a letter from Hungerford, and also one from Belle Treherne. Hungerford had left the Occidental Company’s service, and had been fortunate enough to get the position of first officer on a line of steamers running between England and the West Indies. The letter was brusque, incisive, and forceful, and declared that, once he got his foot firmly planted in his new position, he would get married and be done with it. He said that Clovelly the novelist had given a little dinner at his chambers in Piccadilly, and that the guests were all our fellow-passengers by the ‘Fulvia’; among them Colonel Ryder, the bookmaker, Blackburn the Queenslander, and himself.

This is extracted from the letter: