Motor Boat Boys Down the Danube - BestLightNovel.com
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Jack instantly cut off the power and then started to reverse the engine so that their headway might be reduced to next to nothing.
"Steady, Jack; we're going to come alongside a pontoon that seems to be partly filled with water!" said Josh in a stage whisper.
He leaned still further over the bow, as though bent upon reaching out to fend off from the object that was floating like a derelict upon the bosom of the great river.
"I've got it all right, fellows," Josh continued saying; "and would you believe it, there's a wounded man in the same! Guess he'd have gone down in less'n ten minutes only for our coming along."
"What's that you say, Josh?" asked Buster eagerly, "a wounded man! How do you know but what he's dead?"
"Because he's sitting up here," came the prompt reply.
Jack knew what that meant. They could not leave a poor fellow badly injured to go down with the leaking pontoon.
"We've got to get him aboard here, that's flat!" said George, as though voicing what was pa.s.sing through the mind of each of his chums just then.
Jack left the wheel and, pa.s.sing along the side of the boat, leaned over. Yes, there was a man in the sinking pontoon. He did not appear to know whether they would turn out to be friends or foes; but his situation was desperate, and upon seeing several heads appear in view he commenced saying something in a weak voice.
"That's Magyar, of course," remarked George; "but the trouble is none of us can translate a word of the same. However, that doesn't make any difference. Shall we help him over the side, Jack?"
"Three of us can do the business, easy enough," responded the other.
When the Austrian engineer realized that they meant him to leave his wretched float and clamber into the motorboat, he lost no time in starting to obey; though his actions quickly told them he must be very weak, either through loss of blood or from the shock of his wound.
Once he was deposited in the cabin, Jack sent Josh again to the lookout, and himself started the engine. The man had sunk upon the cus.h.i.+oned seat as though quite content to take things as he found them. He heard these unknown parties speaking in what he must have known was English, and was no doubt much astonished. Just the main thing with him was being rescued from the fate that had been threatening him with a watery grave.
"Jack, he's pretty badly hurt, I reckon," suggested George soon afterward.
"Well, something ought to be done for him, that's certain," the skipper started to say. "Do you think you could manage it, George? I don't want to give up the wheel, and Josh is really needed forward there."
George did not hesitate long. He guessed that it might be anything but a pleasant task, but then George had learned long ago not to shrink because things were not always delightful.
"I'm willing to do the best I can, Jack," he said quickly.
"I knew you would, George, and there's not one of us can dress a wound better than you, once you set your mind to the job. Get Buster to help you, George."
"Sure I will," spoke up the stout chum, "though I'm not clever at handling sick people, and always s.h.i.+ver at sight of blood. But you'll need some kind of light to work by, won't you, George?"
"Wait," said Jack. "You remember I've got that little vest pocket electric torch. I've been saving it because I'm afraid the battery will soon run out. But this is just the time to make use of it."
He thereupon handed Buster the article in question, a small nickeled affair not over three inches in length. When the b.u.t.ton was pressed there came a shaft of light that was fairly strong.
"Just the ticket, Jack," announced George, who was removing his coat with a business-like air that quite tickled Buster, who thought George already seemed to take on a professional look.
They could now see that the man taken from the sinking pontoon was a young Austrian soldier. He had no marks on his uniform to prove him anything save a private, but that made no difference to the boys. They had seen how those engineering corps men had taken their lives in their hands in order to bridge the Danube so that the artillery might be transported across to the other bank, and had also watched them going down by scores when that furious fire burst out from the hidden Serbian trenches. On this account they must honor him as a brave man.
He knew what George was about to do. Perhaps, after all, taking off his coat was the sign that made his intentions clear to one who could not understand English very well.
Buster shut his teeth hard when the light focussed on the man showed that one of his arms was b.l.o.o.d.y. Still he did not quail, for Buster could do a thing once he put his mind to it.
George set to work. The Austrian soldier understood that he was to help as well as he could, and between them they managed to get the water-soaked coat off. Then the sleeve of his s.h.i.+rt was carefully rolled up, disclosing the wound.
It was enough to make one with a stouter heart than Buster shudder, for the cut was severe, and had bled a great deal. From his pack George took some linen bandages, without which his mother would not have let him leave home. He had other appliances in the bargain, among which was surgeon's adhesive plaster, with which to keep the ends of bandages in place.
First of all George proceeded to wash the wound, Buster getting him some water from the river in a tin basin they carried. After that he applied the soothing salve that was intended to purify and take away some of the pain that would be sure to follow on the morrow.
Jack glanced in every little while, and saw that George was getting on splendidly, having tied a tourniquet above the wound in order to stop the bleeding. He was now engaged in winding a bandage tightly around the arm in a most professional way.
The man appeared to be very grateful. He said something once in a while, but as none of them could understand a word of Magyar they had to guess at its meaning. Actions speak louder than mere words, however, so they knew that the patient appreciated their efforts in his behalf, and that he was trying to tell them as much.
Finally, to the great relief of Buster, the job was done, and the man had his coat on again, though that left sleeve hung empty at his side.
"And I want to say, George," remarked Buster, as he shut off the light and handed the little pocket torch back to the owner, "that you did the job up as neat as wax. If ever I have the misfortune to get jabbed by a bullet I want to engage you as the chief surgeon right now. I'd feel myself in good hands, all right."
Of course, this pleased George very much. It was not so very often that he did anything to call for such fulsome praise; but he knew Buster meant every word he uttered, because Buster was candid and sincere.
"I'm beginning to wonder what will strike us next," George went on to say. "We are sure neutral in this world war, because one day we hold out a helping hand to a couple of young Serbs in trouble, and right afterwards pick a wounded Austrian out of a sinking pontoon and look after his hurts."
"Well, that's the way it goes," a.s.serted Buster, with a philosophical air. "You never can tell what will happen, and especially when there's a silly old war on. We may run across others who are clinging to fragments of that bridge until we gather up a boatload."
"Then there'd be nothing else for us to do but run over to the Austrian side of the river and land the whole bunch," George told him.
Josh meanwhile had kept a good lookout. Several times he sighted other pontoons and floating planks, but as they did not happen to be in the direct way of the motorboat he had not given the warning whistle to cause Jack to stop.
He had watched in every case to ascertain whether there happened to be occupants to these boats, but discovered none. If men had floated away on them when the Serbian gun smashed the bridge, they must either have made their way to the sh.o.r.e and been taken off by search parties or else gone down into the depths.
By degrees, however, these reminders of the dreadful tragedy became fewer and fewer until Josh failed to discover any more of them. From this he decided that, owing to the increased momentum attained for the motorboat by the use of its engine, they had by this time distanced all drifting snags. Still he clung to his post until another ten minutes had elapsed, when he came back to where Jack sat.
"We've got beyond all the floaters, Jack," he remarked, "and anyway my eyes begin to feel the strain. So I thought I'd just drop in and find out what your plan of campaign might be."
"Do you mean for to-night?" asked the pilot at the wheel.
"Sure thing, Jack. We're moving right now at a healthy pace, but how long do you mean to keep the same up, I'd like to know?"
Jack took a look aloft. He found that the same conditions prevailed there, with the heavens covered with clouds so that the moon was entirely shrouded from view.
"If things continued like that up there," he a.s.sured Josh, "I'd feel like keeping on the move the whole night long. We'll have to hide somewhere in the daytime so as to keep from getting into trouble; and perhaps to-morrow night we can cover the balance of the distance separating us from the Iron Gate."
"But how will you be able to stand it?" demanded Josh, indignantly.
"Oh, I can make up for lost sleep to-morrow, you know; there'll be really nothing else to do the whole day long but sleep. And if I find myself getting too dopey for any use, why, I can call on George or you to take hold. It's all right, Josh, and please don't waste any pity on me. I'm only too glad to be able to cover half that hundred miles before dawn comes on."
Josh knew better than to dispute Jack when his mind was made up.
Besides, that arrangement just suited his own ideas.
George had been listening to this talk, also Buster.
"I don't call it fair for you to take all the burden on your shoulders, Jack," expostulated the former; "especially when the rest of us are willing to do our part."
"Oh, so far as that goes, George," he was told, "you're all under orders, you know; but if I get tired I promise to call on you for help."