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An independent daughter

Amy Ella Blanchard

"An independent daughter" by Amy Ella Blanchard is a novel written in the late 19th century. It centers on Persis Holmes, a warm, capable college graduate who aims to live independently—balancing study, work, travel, and duty—while moving through friendships, family ties, and early romances. The tone is domestic and social, with lively scenes, humor, and a thoughtful tug-of-war between home-making and modern aspirations. The opening of An independent daughter follows Persis through her final college days: teasing dorm antics, a pact with friends Patty and Nettie to be “The Cheerful Three,” a prank with a pillow manikin, and a moonlit serenade answered by candy lowered from a window. A lively cooking-club supper shows the book’s blend of fun and competence, as Patty’s bread wins a prize and Mr. Danforth, a steady family friend, quietly impresses. Class Day brings Persis’s graduation, flowers from Mr. Dan and Basil Phillips, and a conversation with an admiral that frames the story’s theme—independence versus traditional home life. Lisa’s elegant June wedding follows, with Persis’s mixed joy and sadness, hints of suitors in the circle, and the first real friction with younger sister Mellicent, whose vanity and defensiveness trouble the family. After a quarrel, Persis seeks her grandmother’s counsel and secretly arranges a Narragansett trip for Mellicent and Grandma, while accepting Aunt Esther’s invitation for her own summer journey. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Sally in her fur coat

Eliza Orne White

"Sally in her fur coat" by Eliza Orne White is a children’s novel written in the early 20th century. The story follows orphaned twin kittens—sensitive, quick Sally and her confident brother Oxford Gray, Junior—as they find a home with kind humans and navigate small adventures indoors and out. Warm, humorous, and sprinkled with verse, it lingers on everyday wonders, friendship, and the comforts (and challenges) of domestic cat life. The opening of the story introduces the kittens’ plight and their rescue: after wandering hungry, they are spotted by a neighbor, brought to the gray house on the hill, and gently taken in by Elvira, Miss Harvey, and the initially reluctant Miss Winifred. Settling into their new home, they cause mishaps (a toppled candlestick, an alarming clock chime), receive treasured catnip mice, and witness a first snowstorm from cozy windows. A stray rival, Peter, spars with Oxford and later slips indoors during a blizzard, while a new marvel—the radio “loud speaker”—arrives to fascinate Sally. At New Year’s Sally resolves to “brace up” and catch a mouse; she finally does, only for Oxford to bat it away at the last moment. These early chapters paint a gentle, episodic portrait of kittenhood—household routines, seasonal changes, small triumphs and stumbles—culminating in the fresh tension of a neighbor’s dog named Spot. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Rocky Fork

Mary Hartwell Catherwood

"Rocky Fork" by Mary Hartwell Catherwood is a novel written in the late 19th century. Set among the hills and hollows of central Ohio, it follows spirited Melissa “Bluebell” Garde as she navigates schooldays, community customs, and the dangers and delights of a rural settlement with her little sister Rocco, their physician father, and visiting Aunt Melissa. Expect tender domestic moments, lively classroom scenes, industrial backdrops, and occasional frontier hazards, all filtered through a child’s keen eye. The opening of the novel follows Bluebell on her path to the log schoolhouse under kindly Mr. Pitzer, where a polished outsider, Mr. Runnels, sweeps in to launch a “geography school” with map-chanting that captivates the district. After a noon of trading treats and games, Bluebell rides with her father to the chapel meeting; the night turns urgent when a furnace worker is injured, and the pair brave the perilous Narrows on their sure-footed mare, Ballie. Next day a refined relative, Miss Melissa Calder, arrives with gifts (including a wax doll that briefly stirs Rocco’s jealousy), then visits the school, offers remarks, and joins the girls’ swing at noon. The section closes on a simmering quarrel over a prized thumb-paper and a heated spelling match as a storm gathers, sketching the community’s rhythms, childhood rivalries, and the mix of learning and danger that shape Bluebell’s world. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Skeeter Bill comes to town

W. C. (Wilbur C.) Tuttle

"Skeeter Bill comes to town by W. C. Tuttle" is a Western novelet written in the mid-20th century. The story centers on a lanky, straight-shooting cowhand who returns to a dusty cattle town and stirs up trouble for the real culprits behind a notorious bank robbery. It blends range feuds, saloon politics, and a clever unraveling of a frame-up. Skeeter Bill Sarg rides back to Yellow Butte to honor the twelfth birthday of his namesake, the son of his jailed friend Hooty Edwards—convicted for a bank job Skeeter doubts he committed. As Skeeter visits old allies like fiery rancher Fuzzy Davis and his stern wife, strange attacks begin: a dummy he rigs at a fenced spring is riddled at dawn, and later he’s ambushed outside Margie Edwards’ house, where outlaw Dutch Held is secretly shot dead by his own partner. At the packed inquest, Skeeter springs a trap with bold bluff and sharper shooting, exposing a ring led by cattleman Sam Keenan, aided by saloon front man Slim Lacey and deadly foreman Johnny Greer. Lacey confesses to drugging Hooty’s drinks to set him up while Keenan looted the bank and tried to pressure Margie. With the plot laid bare and Keenan finished, Hooty’s name is set to be cleared, Margie is granted the Tumbling K, and Skeeter quietly seals it all with a simple gift: “Happy Birthday” to the boy. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Little Button Rose

Louisa May Alcott

"Little Button Rose by Louisa May Alcott" is a children’s short story from the late 19th century. It centers on a tender, spirited girl who becomes a peacemaker, mending a neighborhood feud through kindness, courage, and tact. Rosamond—nicknamed Button-Rose—comes to stay with her cousins: gentle Miss Penelope, proud Miss Henrietta, and vain but charming Cicely. Next door lives Mr. Thomas Dover, a widower and former missionary, estranged from the cousins over a petty dispute about a garden gate, hens, and an old summer-house. With fearless warmth, Rosy befriends Mr. Dover (after her cousins’ cat is flung over the wall for killing his chicks), opens a secret “button-hole” gate, ferries cherries and flowers, and gently “missionaries” at home by reading to Miss Penny and winning over Cicely with an amber necklace and a kiss “for a blow.” When Rosy falls ill with scarlet fever, the household unites; Mr. Dover returns, helps guide her through the crisis, and her recovery seals the reconciliation. The story closes with pride and gratitude as the adults finally put aside their stubbornness, their peace earned by the little peacemaker’s love. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The mark of Cain

W. C. (Wilbur C.) Tuttle

"The mark of Cain by W. C. Tuttle" is a Western novelette written in the mid-20th century. It centers on a legendary gunman who tries to bring law and decency to a violent railroad boomtown, confronting a ruthless saloon boss and a past identity mystery marked—literally—by the “Mark of Cain.” The story follows Streak Malone, who accepts the marshal’s badge in Silver Butte and recruits outlaw Mack Shell as his deputy to face Zero Brant, the crooked kingpin behind the Silver Dollar Saloon. Streak kills imported gunfighter Dan Corteen, thwarts a masked shakedown of honest rival Jim Flack’s new Eureka Saloon, and fights through a drunken mob that wrecks the Eureka and sets it ablaze. In the chaos he rescues roulette dealer Clare Ames, who reveals Streak’s true identity as Keith Delmar and that the killer who framed his past bears an M-shaped scar—the “Mark of Cain.” Streak then confronts Brant in the Silver Dollar, recognizes the brand in Brant’s scarred brow, and battles him while knives and dynamite threats swirl. Brant flees, is thrown by Streak’s outlaw horse, and dies, ending his grip on the town. With order restored, Flack inherits the Silver Dollar, young cowboy Joe East reunites with singer Mazie, and Silver Butte turns from terror toward justice. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The orphan nieces : or, Duty and inclination

Lucy Ellen Guernsey

"The orphan nieces : or, Duty and inclination" by Lucy Ellen Guernsey is a novel written in the mid-19th century. The story follows Olive and Abby McHenry, orphaned sisters living with their uncle and aunt, as Olive pursues independence through teaching amid family tensions with her jealous cousin Charlotte and socially ambitious relatives. Blending school life, domestic trials, and early courtship, it weighs duty against inclination—especially when the charming yet idle William Forester enters their circle. Readers of moral domestic fiction and character-driven tales of young women seeking self-reliance will find its themes front and center. The opening of the novel centers on Olive’s school days at Mrs. Granger’s, where Charlotte’s barbs about dependence push Olive to consider teaching; encouraged by her friend Helen, she writes to her uncle and redoubles her studies, unexpectedly winning the top mathematics prize and weathering Charlotte’s public outburst. At home, her uncle supports her plan, her aunt initially opposes it but relents, and Olive and Charlotte move toward a fragile truce while Abby is groomed as a social favorite; Aunt Dimsden and Laura embody showy, status-driven values. During Olive’s final term, she practices teaching, reflects on motives for study, deflects shallow pity from idle classmates, and secures a promising position in Pennsylvania. Returning home, she senses Abby’s new volatility as William Forester pays marked attention; Laura hints at past proposals, Abby reacts emotionally, and Olive and Charlotte quietly worry about Abby’s entanglement while Charlotte, feeling aimless, considers setting herself a disciplined course of study. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Over the straits

Ernest Haycox

"Over the straits by Ernest Haycox" is a sea‑adventure short story written in the early 20th century. It follows a small Alaskan cannery tender battling a violent storm to rush a cargo of perishable red salmon to the cannery, highlighting duty, risk, and quiet courage at sea. The crew of the Star leaves Ketchikan at dusk despite gale warnings because their hold is full of valuable Sockeyes that will soon spoil. Narrator Hal takes the wheel beside skipper Bob as engineer Al minds the engines, with Ed, Milt, Charlie, and the old cook bracing for the blow. In the straits they fight towering seas, a screaming wind, and the fear of a loose mast stay; the rolling threatens to throw the heavy seine table overboard, and Ed’s attempt to lash it fails in the blackness. The engine coughs, the Morey Light can’t be found, and exhaustion grinds them as they nurse the boat through a night of blind troughs and hammering spray. At dawn they limp into Cannery Inlet, scrape pilings, and dock, their understatement and weary jokes masking the grit that carried them across. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Nora's twin sister

Nina Rhoades

Nora''s twin sister by Nina Rhoades is a children''s novel written in the early 20th century. It follows Nora O’Neil, a bright, poor West Side girl, and Kathleen Crawford, her wealthy counterpart on Fifth Avenue—identical twins separated in infancy without knowing it. A chance encounter leads to recognition, secrecy, and a daring exchange that tests loyalty and identity. The story foregrounds class contrasts, a mother’s steadfast love, and a girl’s imagination and integrity. The opening of the novel shows Nora spinning stories for measles-stricken neighbor children and hinting at a “twin sister” who seems imaginary but isn’t. We learn Nora lives with her widowed mother, a hardworking reporter, who secretly watches a Fifth Avenue mansion because Kathleen, the adopted twin, lives there. On a Sunday, a deaf cook mistakes Nora for Kathleen and ushers her into the Crawford home; the girls meet, and Nora reveals the truth, binding them in an instant, tender allegiance. Kathleen—lonely despite her luxury—later visits Nora’s mother in the studio, and the three share a rapturous reunion; to prolong it, the twins swap places for a night, with Nora “playing” Kathleen at the mansion, navigating stern Sarah, kind Selma, and dinner service, while earlier school scenes spotlight Nora’s ethics as she refuses to cheat on a composition. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Silence, and other stories

Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman

"Silence, and other stories" by Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman is a collection of short stories written in the late 19th century. The book gathers New England local-color tales that probe women’s inner lives under social and spiritual strain; the opening piece centers on Silence Hoit and her lover David Walcott amid a frontier raid and its aftermath. Expect historical settings, moral tension, and keen psychological realism. The opening of the collection follows Silence in wintry Deerfield as her forebodings are fulfilled by a French and Indian attack: households barricade doors, women melt pewter into bullets, Goodwife Sheldon and her child are found slain, and captives—among them David—are driven toward Canada. Left behind, Silence’s mind fixates on him, calling his name over the north meadow through months of rebuilding and rescue attempts; when David finally escapes home, she cannot recognize him until the ostracized Goody Crane contrives a moonlit sign that breaks her trance. The book then turns to “The Buckley Lady,” introducing Persis Buckley, a beautiful coastal girl whose family, after a visit from grand strangers, begins grooming her for gentility—freeing her from toil, dressing her finely, and teaching her polite accomplishments—while the household quietly sacrifices to elevate her. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The land beyond the mist

Ernest Haycox

"The land beyond the mist by Ernest Haycox" is a Western short story written in the early 20th century. It follows a rain-battered wagon train reaching Oregon City and turns on pioneer hardship, rough frontier justice, and the high-stakes scramble to claim fertile homestead land. The story centers on Tom Cameron, traveling with Old Man Follett and his daughter Susan through relentless Oregon rains. Tensions with the bully Hank Emory flare in camp, then sharpen when Cameron buys from scout Sam Warner the location of a hidden valley worth settling. After Emory coaxes the secret from a drunken Warner and races to seize the claim, Cameron uses fog and a ruse to draw the rivals away, then occupies the valley with the Folletts. In the ensuing standoff, Cameron kills Emory, the brothers withdraw, the sun briefly breaks through, and hope returns as Cameron and Susan reconcile and the families plan a double cabin to begin their new homestead. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Stubborn people

Ernest Haycox

"Stubborn people by Ernest Haycox" is a Western short story written in the early 20th century. The piece centers on homesteading life in Central Oregon, using a clash of pride and perseverance between two stubborn young people to explore grit, community, and reconciliation on the high desert. Bud, the big-hearted Burnt Creek storekeeper, watches over the scattered homesteaders, including Jim Hunter, a hard-driving settler still smarting from a quarrel with Mary, a city woman he once called a “butterfly.” Determined to force an apology, Mary arrives to claim a neighboring homestead and prove her mettle, refusing Jim’s help while Bud tries to broker peace. As rumors of the dangerous drifter “Bottle-nose” Henderson spread, Bud hatches a risky plan to scare Mary into accepting protection; Jim mistakes him for the outlaw and they brawl, only for the real Bottle-nose to break into Mary’s cabin. Jim bursts in, thrashes the intruder, and in the heat of fear and relief the couple drop their pride, trade apologies, and admit they belong together. Mary stays, Jim stays, and Bud hauls the captive away, quietly satisfied that stubborn hearts have found their home. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The blind bow-boy

Carl Van Vechten

The blind bow-boy by Carl Van Vechten is a novel written in the early 20th century. It follows Harold Prewett, a sheltered heir whose estranged father hires a scandal-tinged tutor to initiate him into “life” beyond college. Moving through Jazz Age New York—from salons to sideshows—the story contrasts the allure of a witty bohemian set led by Campaspe Lorillard with the fragile innocence of Alice Blake, promising a sharp, stylish comedy of manners about experience, desire, and self‑invention. The opening of the novel introduces Harold at a first, awkward meeting with his wealthy father, George Prewett, a cloak‑and‑suit magnate who blames college for misfitting him and vows to “unteach” his son by placing him under Paul Moody, a charming reprobate located via an advertisement seeking “good character but no moral sense.” George installs Harold in his own apartment with a worldly valet, Oliver Drains, and unlimited funds, instructing him to live as he pleases for a year. Flashbacks sketch Harold’s girl‑guarded Connecticut childhood with his eccentric Aunt Sadi and his isolated small‑college years, marked by the taunt “Cloaks and Suits.” In the city, Harold helps the tearful Alice Blake after a taxi accident and accompanies her to Jefferson Market court, where she insists on paying the truck driver’s fine with Harold’s money before retreating to her strict home. Finally, Paul’s circle—Campaspe, an incisive, feline hostess; Bunny, an avant‑garde composer; and John, a jovial broker—sweep Harold into cocktails, salon talk, and a whirlwind trip to Coney Island, where Campaspe voices a cool credo of worldly adaptability as the neon carnival becomes Harold’s first lesson in modern life. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

False face

Ernest Haycox

"False face by Ernest Haycox" is a Western short story written in the early 20th century. Set amid a rumor-fueled land rush in central Oregon, it centers on a storekeeper-turned-deputy who must quell campsite thefts, clear a wrongly accused cowboy, and expose the true thief. Sheriff Bart McKenzie drafts Dave Budd as deputy when a camp of hopeful homesteaders crowds his store and a brazen wallet theft stirs talk of lynching. A taciturn rider, Sam, pushes a search that “finds” the stolen wallet in the gear of fiery redheaded Bill, who had been courting a young woman also admired by Sam. Sensing a plant, Budd ties Bill lightly and lets him slip away, then baits a trap by leaving cash in a cigar box and waiting in the dark. Sam sneaks in to steal, shoots, and is shot dead by Budd, exposing him as the true culprit. Bill returns from the brush to point out Sam’s cache, the camp accepts the truth, and the innocent man is cleared. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Lady Betty's governess : or, The Corbet chronicles

Lucy Ellen Guernsey

Lady Betty''s Governess; or, The Corbet Chronicles by Lucy Ellen Guernsey is a historical novel written in the late 19th century. Set in the 1630s, it follows Margaret Merton, a rector’s daughter who becomes governess and companion to the delicate, hunchbacked Lady Betty Stanton, and frames domestic life, faith, and class with the looming tensions that lead toward England’s civil conflicts. The story blends tender caregiving and moral testing with encounters among clergy, gentry, and servants in a great Devonshire house. The opening of the novel presents a framed chronicle: an older Margaret Corbet addresses her daughters, recalling turbulent changes from Archbishop Laud to the king’s death and the Restoration. Then the narrative shifts to March 1637, where young Margaret Merton’s family, newly impoverished by her father’s death, prepares to leave their rectory; her brother Richard surrenders, for now, his hope of holy orders. A chance meeting with Bishop Joseph Hall brings gentle counsel, a reading list for Richard, and a solemn promise from Margaret to keep daily Scripture. After Felicia (the sharp-tongued aunt) departs with a wealthy relative and the bishop purchases the late rector’s library to aid the family, Margaret travels to Stanton Court. There she wins the confidence of frail, tempestuous Lady Betty by calming her morning fury and dressing her gently, clashes with austere Lady Jemima, and receives quiet support from Lady Stanton. As lessons and simple devotions begin, Margaret explores the village rectory, meets the ceremonious new chaplain, and hears of cousin Walter Corbet’s arrival—early signs of the social and spiritual crosscurrents that will shape her service. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Em's husband : A sequel to "Em"

Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte Southworth

"Em''s husband : A sequel to "Em" by Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte Southworth is a novel written in the late 19th century. It follows Em (Emolyn) Palmer and her close-knit family as they become caretakers of the isolated Wilderness Manor, where country splendor, murmurs of hauntings, and a revered blind preacher shape their days. Em’s encounters with a veiled “White Spirit” portrait and the honorable naval officer Ronald Bruce braid mystery with budding romance. Expect domestic warmth, moral shading, and touches of the supernatural set along river, forest, and mountain. The opening of the story traces Em’s first trip with old ’Sias to a river island, where a blind preacher delivers a stirring sermon on Faith, Love, and Works, and where a dazzling white mansion holds a portrait eerily like Em. Returning to the Wilderness, the family camps in the grand hall, meets the brisk estate agent Carmichael, and moves into the rough “Red Wing,” even as Em endures two nocturnal apparitions—one radiant, one menacing. As they air out the manor, Em finds another ancestral portrait—again her likeness—and the Palmers settle into a simpler, happy routine. Em learns to sail and row, revisits the island alone, and unexpectedly meets Ronald Bruce; their frank, tender talk hints at mutual feeling. He escorts her home, is warmly received, and stays the night, while his dilemma—sea career versus staying with his retired uncle at The Breezes—emerges, leaving Em thoughtful and silent. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Nicaragua : its people, scenery, monuments, resources, condition, and proposed canal

E. G. (Ephraim George) Squier

Nicaragua : its people, scenery, monuments, resources, condition, and proposed… by E. G. Squier is a historical travel account written in the mid-19th century. It surveys Nicaragua’s landscapes, people, antiquities, resources, and politics while arguing for the feasibility and importance of an interoceanic canal, mixing on-the-ground observation with history and diplomacy. The opening of the work follows the author’s cramped voyage on the brig Francis to San Juan de Nicaragua (Greytown), a tense bar crossing that nearly wrecks the ship, and his first close look at a palm-thatched port under British consular control. He sketches vivid street scenes—mixed races, cigar‑smoking women in naguas and guipils, hammocks in doorways, lagoons alive with alligators and snakes, and a comical equality among pigs, babies, dogs, and chickens—alongside visits with a courteous local host and the ailing British consul. A farcical clash erupts when two wan “policemen” try to enforce a new rule to pen free‑roaming livestock, winning the Americans local favor and a serenade; a side trip across the harbor shows squalid Mosquito Indian camps and turtle fishers. The narrative then turns descriptive: the port’s location and healthfulness, flimsy but adequate housing, pests like scorpions and chigoes, the pattern of trade and duties, and a sharp critique of Britain’s seizure of the port under the Mosquito pretext, all set against the looming canal project. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The man who saved New York

Ray Cummings

"The man who saved New York by Ray Cummings" is a science fiction short story written in the mid-20th century. Blending wartime adventure with speculative fantasy, it follows a man whose roaming ego can possess other beings, culminating in an extraordinary intervention that thwarts a Nazi attack on New York. The narrator’s friend Porky discovers he can slip his consciousness into strangers and control them, a power he nervously demonstrates by making an old woman direct traffic. Seeing a chance to help the war effort, the group schemes to have Porky possess a U-boat commander and sabotage enemy submarines. On a moonlit beach, as an air raid approaches, Porky instead slips into a colossal green sea giant that rises offshore and destroys several Nazi bombers, saving the city. Afterward, Porky and Lisbeth fall in love, and his strange ability vanishes, ending any hope of using it to end the war, even though it has already averted disaster for New York. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Ikuinen salaisuus : Rakkaus- ja jännityskertomuksia

Jack London

"Ikuinen salaisuus : Rakkaus- ja jännityskertomuksia" by Jack London is a collection of short stories written in the early 20th century. The volume blends romance, adventure, and psychological suspense, at times brushing against the supernatural. Its opening tale follows Lute and Chris, lovers in Northern California, whose bond is strained by a secret Chris refuses to reveal and a growing sense that unseen forces threaten them. Expect passionate conflicts, vivid landscapes, and swift, unsettling turns. The opening of the collection presents Lute demanding that Chris explain why he cannot marry her, even as he professes deep love and insists he must remain silent. Lute recounts how her guardians, Milred and Robert, shifted from warm approval to concern over years of delay, while she devoted herself entirely to Chris. During two rides, inexplicable accidents strike: Lute’s gentle mare suddenly turns murderous under Chris, and the next day his own horse topples backward off a steep bank, breaking its back as he narrowly survives. Back at camp, a psychograph séance with Milred, Robert, Mrs. Grantly, and Mr. Barton produces a chilling message warning Chris that two attempts on his life have already been made; when asked the sender’s identity, the device writes the name “Dick Curtis,” recognized as Lute’s deceased father, leaving the group shaken and the mystery deepening. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Lightning Express : or, The rival academies

Oliver Optic

"Lightning Express; or, The Rival Academies" by Oliver Optic is a juvenile adventure novel written in the late 19th century. It centers on a student-run railroad and an escalating rivalry between the Toppleton Institute and the Wimpleton Academy along Lake Ucayga. The story follows Wolf Penniman, a level-headed young engineer, alongside the imperious Tommy Toppleton and the reckless Waddie Wimpleton, as schoolboy politics, railroading, and military-style drills spark real-world tensions. Themes of leadership, pride, and moral duty frame the spirited contests between the two academies. The opening of the novel unfolds at a noisy stockholders’ meeting of the student-managed Lake Shore Railroad, where Tommy Toppleton’s heavy-handed presidency faces a revolt. After a procedural tussle, the boys adjourn to Grass Springs for an election and a celebratory supper; Tommy is humiliatingly voted out on the first ballot, restored on a second only because his rival, Skotchley, refuses the office. The students then choose the Horse Shoe island for their annual encampment—largely to needle their Wimpleton rivals—and prepare a rapid march. Wolf, urged by Major Toppleton to “keep the peace,” helps expedite transport, but at Grass Springs the Wimpleton flotilla blocks the channel. Tommy rashly orders a steamer to force passage; Wolf and the captain try to avoid harm, yet Waddie leads a bold boarding that seizes the forward deck, locks Company B below, and stops the engine. With the steamer captured and tempers high, Waddie tries to coerce Wolf into running the machinery, setting the stage for a dangerous standoff. (This is an automatically generated summary.)