"
"Yes. I yelled to the bucket brigade that they'd better use the water
on this, instead of throwing it against the sides of the barn, where
it wasn't doing any good. So they did, and they kept a good deal of
the fire down, so's you'd have a good place to land in."
"I owe that to you, Vincent."
"And I owe my wet blanket to you, so we're even. But let's get on dry
ground."
The cow-yard, with the natural wetness that always existed there, to
which had been added many gallons of fluid from the bucket brigade,
was now a miniature swamp.
The boys, followed by an admiring throng, made their way to the front
of the barn. All work at attempting to save it had now ceased. Nothing
more could be done, and, as all the cattle and horses had been saved,
as well as some of the wagons and machinery, it might be said that all
that was possible had been accomplished.
"Got to let her burn now," said the constable. "How'd it start, Mr.
Stimson?"
"Tramps must have sot it, I guess. Fust I knowed I woke up, an' see
th' blaze. Then I sent my boy Tom out to yell."
"Yes, I heard him," replied the constable. "He yelled good and proper.
I got right after the bucket brigade.
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