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 week before. The reasons for his dismissal need not concern us here. The important point is that he had been a "Jigger-jumper," as the members of a certain "benevolent association" of the firemen had been nicknamed; and Captain Keighley's crew was full of "Jiggers" who were eager to avenge their fellow "Jigger" for the loss of his uniform.

Captain Keighley, when he looked up to see Doherty above him, was standing on the cement roof of the Hudson's wheelhouse, beside a monitor nozzle that could drive a hole through a brick wall with a stream as stiff as a steel bar; and the fact that he stood in this place of command by virtue of his own cunning, in spite of intrigue in the fire-department and treachery in his own crew, did not show in the look that he lifted to his