Page:Tales from the Fjeld.djvu/249

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The Skipper and Old Nick
227

fancy, and that very day the time was up, and he might look any moment that Old Nick would come and fetch him.

Well, the skipper came up on deck out of the cabin and looked at the weather; then he called for the carpenter and some others of the crew, and said they must go down into the hold and hew two holes in the ship's bottom, and when they had done that they were to lift the pumps out of their beds and drive them down tight into the holes they had made, so that the sea might rise high up into the pumps.

The crew wondered at all this, and thought it a funny bit of work, but they did as the skipper ordered; they hewed holes in the ship's bottom and drove the pumps in so tight that never a drop of water could come to the cargo, but up in the pump itself the North Sea stood seven feet high.

They had only just thrown the chips overboard after their piece of work when Old Nick came on