<h2>CHAPTER LI<br/> <span class="f8">IN THE SEA FOG</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">For</span> a few minutes I was engaged in a wild struggle
to get away from the rocks, and not to be
forced back by the shoreward rush and sweep of
the waves. I was buffeted by them, and half-choked by
the boiling foam; but I kept blindly and desperately to
my task, and presently knew that I had only to deal with
the current and the natural rise and fall of the rollers.
Down on the water the air was full of noises, so that it
was hard to distinguish any individual sound; but the
fog lay less dense on the surface than above it, so that I
could see a little better around me.</p>
<p>On the sea there is always more or less light; even
in this time of midnight gloom, with moon and stars
hidden by the fog, and with none of that phosphorescence
which at times makes a luminous glow of its own over
the water, I could see things at an unexpected distance.
More than all, was I surprised as well as cheered to find
that I could distinguish the features of the land from the
sea, better than I could from land discern anything at sea.
When I looked back, the shore rose, a dark uneven line,
unbroken save where the Haven of Dunbuy running inland
made an angle against the sky. But beside me, the
great Rock of Dunbuy rose gigantic and black; it was like
a mountain towering over me. The tide was running down
so that when I had got out of the current running inland
behind the rock I was in comparatively calm water.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[434]</SPAN></span>
There was no downward current, but only a slow backwater,
which insensibly took me closer to the Rock. Keeping
in this shelter, I swam on and out; I saved myself as
much as I could, for I knew of the terrible demand on my
strength which lay before me. It must have been about
ten minutes, though it seemed infinitely longer, when I
began to emerge from the shelter of the Rock and to find
again the force of the outer current. The waves were
wilder here too; not so wild as just in shore before they
broke, but they were considerably larger in their rise and
fall. As I swam on, I looked back now and then, and saw
Dunbuy behind me towering upward, though not so
monstrously as when I had been under its lee. The
current was beginning already to bear me downwards; so
I changed my course, and got back to the sheltered water
again. Thus I crept round under the lee of the Rock,
till all at once I found myself in the angry race, where
the current beat on and off the cliff. It took me all my
strength and care to swim through this; when the force
of the current began to slacken, as I emerged from the
race, I found myself panting and breathless with the
exertion.</p>
<p>But when I looked around me from this point, where
the east opened to me, there was something which restored
all my courage and hope, though it did not still
the beating of my heart.</p>
<p>Close by, seemingly only a couple of hundred yards off
to the north east, lay a ship whose masts and spars
stood out against the sky. I could see her clearly, before
a coming belt of fog bore down on her.</p>
<p>The apprehension lest I should miss her in the fog
chilled me more than the sea water in which I was immersed;
for all possibilities of evil became fears to me,
now that the realisation of my vision was clear. I was
glad of the darkness; it was a guarantee against discovery.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[435]</SPAN></span>
I swam on quietly, and was rejoiced to find as I
drew close that I was on the port side of the ship; well I
remembered how in my vision the boat approached to
port, to the surprise of the men who were looking out
for it on the other side. I found the rope ladder easily
enough, and did not have much difficulty in getting a
foothold on it. Ascending cautiously, and watching every
inch of the way, I climbed the bulwark and hid behind a
water barrel close to the mast. From this security I
looked out, and saw the backs of several men ranged
along the starboard bulwark. They were intent on their
watching, and unsuspicious of my proximity; so I stole
out and glided as silently as I could into the cabin’s entrance.
It was not new to me; I had a sense of complete
security as to my knowledge. The eyes of Gormala’s soul
were keen!</p>
<p>In the cabin I recognised at once the smoky lamp and
the rude preparations for food. Thus emboldened, I
came to the door, behind which I knew Marjory lay. It
was locked and bolted, and the key was gone. I slid back
the bolt, but the lock baffled me. I was afraid to make
the slightest noise, lest I should court discovery; so I
passed on to the next cabin where was her jailer. He lay
just as, in the vision, I had seen him; the chronometer was
above him and the two heavy revolvers hung underneath
it. I slipped in quietly—there were not shoes to remove—and
reaching over so that the water would not drip from
my wet underclothing on his face, unhooked the two
weapons. I belted them round my waist with the strap
on which they hung. Then I looked round for the key,
but could see no sign of it. There was no time to lose,
and it was neither time nor place to stand on ceremony;
so I took the man by the throat with my left hand, the
dagger being in my right, and held with such a grip that
the blood seemed to leap into his face in a second. He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[436]</SPAN></span>
could utter no sound, but instinctively his hand went
back and up to where the revolvers had hung. I whispered
in a low tone:</p>
<p>“It’s no use. Give me the key. I don’t value your life
a pin!” He was well plucked, and he was manifestly
used to tight places. He did not attempt to speak or
parley; but whilst I had been whispering, his right hand
had got hold of a knife. It was a bowie, and he was dexterous
with it. With some kind of sharp wrench he threw
it open; there was a click as the back-spring worked.
If I had not had my dagger ready it would have been a
bad time for me. But I was prepared; whilst he was
making the movement to strike at me, I struck. The
keen point of the Spanish dagger went right through
the upturned wrist, and pinned his hand down to the
wooden edge of the bunk. Whilst, however, he had been
trying to strike with his right hand, his left had clutched
my left wrist. He tried now to loose my grasp from his
throat, whilst bending his chin down he made a furious
effort to tear at my hand with his teeth. Never in my life
did I more need my strength and weight. The man was
manifestly a fighter, trained in many a wild ‘rough-and-tumble’,
and his nerves were like iron. I feared to let
go the hilt of the dagger, lest in his violent struggling he
should tear his wrist away and so free his hand. Having,
however, got my right knee raised, I pressed down with it
his arm on the edge of the bunk and so freed my right
hand. He continued to struggle ferociously. I knew well
it was life and death, not only for me, but for Marjory.</p>
<p>It was his life or mine; and he had to pay the penalty
of his crime.</p>
<p>So intent was I on the struggle that I had not heard the
approach of the boat with his comrades. It was only
when I stood panting, with the limp throat between my
fingers which were white at the knuckles with the strain,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[437]</SPAN></span>
that the sound of voices and the tramp of feet on deck
reached my intelligence. Then indeed I knew there was
no time to lose. I searched the dead man’s pockets and
found a key, which I tried in the lock of Marjory’s cabin.
When I opened the door she started up; the hand in her
bosom was whipped out with a flash, and in an instant a
long steel bonnet pin was ready to drive into her breast.
My agonised whisper:</p>
<p>“Marjory, it is I!” only reached her mind in time
to hold her hand. She did not speak; but never can I forget
the look of joy that illumined her poor, pale face. I
put my finger on my lip, and held out my hand to her.
She rose, with the obedience of a child, and came with me.
I was just going out into the cabin, when I heard the
creak of a heavy footstep on the companion way. So I
motioned her back, and, drawing the dagger from my
belt, stood ready. I knew who it was that was coming;
yet I dared not use the pistols, save as a last resource.</p>
<p>I stood behind the door. The negro did not expect anyone,
or any obstacle; he came on unthinkingly, save for
whatever purpose of evil was in his mind. He was
armed, as were all the members of the blackmail gang.
In a belt across his shoulder, slung Kentucky fashion,
were two great seven shooters; and across his waist
behind was a great bowie knife, with handle ready to
grasp. Moreover, nigger-like, the handle of a razor rose
out of the breast pocket of his dark flannel shirt. He
did not, however, manifestly purpose using his weapons—at
present at any rate; there was not any sign of danger
or opposition in front of him. His comrades were busy
at present in embarking the treasure, and would be for
many an hour to come, in helping to work the ship clear
into safety. Every minute now the wind was rising, and
the waves swelling to such proportions that the anchored
ship rocked like a bell-buoy in a storm. In the cabin I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[438]</SPAN></span>
had to hold on, or I should have been shot from my place
into view. But the huge negro cared for none of these
things. He was callous to everything, and there was
such a wicked, devilish purpose in his look that my heart
hardened grimly in the antagonism of man to man. Nay
more, it was not a man that I loathed; I would have killed
this beast with less compunction than I would kill a rat or
a snake. Never in my life did I behold such a wicked
face. In feature and expression there was every trace
and potentiality of evil; and these superimposed on a
racial brutality which made my gorge rise. Well indeed
did I understand now the one terror which had in all her
troubles come to Marjory, and how these wretches had
used it to mould her to their ends. I knew now why,
sleeping or waking, she held that steel spike against her
heart. If—</p>
<p>The thought was too much for me. Even now, though
I was beside her, she was beset by her enemies. We were
both still practically prisoners on a hostile ship, and even
now this demon was intent on unspeakable wrong. I did
not pause; I did not shrink from the terrible task before
me. With a bound I was upon him, and I had struck at
his heart; struck so truly and so terrible a blow, that the
hilt of the dagger struck his ribs with a thud like the
blow of a cudgel. The blood seemed to leap out at me,
even as the blow fell. With spasmodic reaction he tumbled
forwards; fell without a sound, and so quickly that
had not I, fearing lest the noise of his falling might
betray me, caught him, he would have dropped like a
stricken bullock.</p>
<p>Never before did I understand the pleasure of killing a
man. Since then, it makes me shudder when I think of
how so potent a passion, or so keen a pleasure, can rest
latent in the heart of a righteous man. It may have been
that between the man and myself was all the antagonism<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[439]</SPAN></span>
that came from race, and fear, and wrongdoing; but the
act of his killing was to me a joy unspeakable. It will
rest with me as a wild pleasure till I die.</p>
<p>I took all the arms he had about him, two revolvers and
a knife; they would give me fourteen more shots were I
hard pressed. In any case they were safer, so far as
Marjory and I were concerned, in my hands than in those
of our enemies. I dragged the body of the negro into
the cabin with the other dead man; then I closed the door
on them, and when Marjory joined me, I locked the door
of her cabin and took away the key. In case of suspicion
this might give us a few minutes of extra time.</p>
<p>Marjory came with me up on deck; and as she caught
sight of the open sea there was an unspeakable gladness
on her face. We seized a favourable opportunity, when
no one was looking, for all on deck were busy hauling
up the treasure; and slipped behind the cask fastened to
the mast. There we breathed freely. We both felt that
should the worst come to the worst we could get away
before any one could touch us. One rush to the bulwarks
and over. They would never attempt to follow us, and
there was a chance of a swim to shore. I gave Marjory
a belt with two revolvers. As she strapped it on she felt
safer; I knew it by the way she drew herself up, and
threw back her shoulders.</p>
<p>When the last of the bags which held the treasure
came on board, the men who had come with it closed in
a ring around the mass as it lay on deck. They were all
armed; I could see that they did not trust the sailors, for
each moment some one’s hand would go back to his gun.
We heard one of them ask as he looked round: “What
has become of that damned nigger? He must take his
share of work!” Marjory was very brave and very
still; I could see that her nerve was coming back to her.
After a little whispered conversation, the newcomers<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[440]</SPAN></span>
began to carry the bags down to the cabin; it was slow
work, for two always stood guard above, and two remained
down below evidently on similar duty. Discovery
of the dead man must come soon, so Marjory and
I stole behind the foremast which was well away
from every one. She was first, and as she began to pass
behind she recoiled; she got the drop on some one in
front of her. There was a smothered ‘h-s-s-sh’ and she
lowered her weapon. Turning to me she said in a faint
whisper:</p>
<p>“It is the Spaniard; what is he doing here?” I whispered
back:</p>
<p>“Be good to him. He is a noble fellow, and has behaved
like a knight of old!” I pressed forward and took
his hand. “How did you get here?” I asked. His answer
was given in so faint a voice that I could see that
he was spent and tired, if not injured:</p>
<p>“I swam, too. When I saw their boat pull out of the
northern channel, I managed to scramble down part of
the cliff, and then jumped. Fortunately I was not injured.
It was a long, weary swim, and I thought I should
never be able to get through; but at last the current took
me and carried me to the ship. She was anchored with a
hawser, not a cable. I managed to climb up it; and when
I was on board I cut it nearly through.”</p>
<p>Even as he spoke there was a queer lurch of the ship
which lay stern forward, and a smothered ejaculation
from all the seamen.</p>
<p>The hawser had parted and we were drifting before
wind and tide. Then it was that I felt we should give
warning to the yacht and the battleship. I knew that they
were not far off; had I not seen them in my vision, which
had now been proven. Then it was also that the words
of the young American came back to me: “Give us a
light, if you have to fire the ship to get it.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[441]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>All this time, from the moment when I had set foot on
the whaler’s deck till this instant, events had moved with
inconceivable rapidity. There had been one silent, breathless
rush; during which two lives had been taken and
Marjory set free. Only a few minutes had elapsed in
all; and when I looked around under the altered conditions,
things seemed to be almost where they had been.
It was like the picture in one’s mind made by a lightning
flash; when the period of reception is less than the time
of the smallest action, and movement is lost in time. The
fog belt was thinning out, and there was in the night
air a faint suggestion that one might see, if there were
anything to be seen.</p>
<p>The great Rock of Dunbuy towered up; I could just
distinguish so much on the land side. Whilst I was looking,
there came a sudden light and then a whirr; high
overhead through the sea fog we could see faintly the
fiery trail of a rocket.</p>
<p>Instantly out at sea was an answer; a great ray of light
shot upwards, and we could see its reflection in the sky.
None of us said anything; but instinctively Marjory and
I clasped hands. Then the light ray seemed to fall downward
to the sea. But as it came down, the fog seemed
to grow thicker and thicker till the light was lost in its
density. There was stir of all on our ship. No loud word
was spoken, but whispered directions, given with smothered
curses, flew. Each man of the crew seemed to run
to his post, and with a screeching and straining the sails
rose. The vessel began to slip through the water with
added speed. Now, if ever, was our time to warn our
friends. The little rockets which I had brought had been
sodden with water and were useless, and besides we had
no way of getting a light. The only way of warning was
by sound, and the only sound to carry was a pistol shot.
For an instant I hesitated, for a shot meant a life if we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[442]</SPAN></span>
should be pushed to it. But it must be done; so signing
to the others I ran aft and when close to the mast fired my
revolver. Instantly around me was a chorus of curses.
I bent double and ran back, seeing through the darkness
vague forms rush to where I had been. The fog was
closing thicker around us; it seemed to boil over the bulwarks
as we passed along. We had either passed into
another belt of fog, or one was closing down upon us
with the wind. The sound of the pistol shot had evidently
reached the war ship. She was far off us, and the
sounds came faintly over the waste of stormy sea; but
there was no mistaking the cheer followed by commands.
These sounded faint and hoarsely; a few words were
spoken with a trumpet, and then came the shrill whistle of
the boatswain’s pipe.</p>
<p>On our own deck was rushing to and fro, and frenzied
labour everywhere. The first object was to get away
from the searchlight; they would seek presently, no doubt,
for who had fired the betraying shot. If I could have
known what to do, so as to stay our progress, there
would have been other shots; for now that we were moving
through the water, every second might take us further
from the shore and place us deeper in the toils of our
foes.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[443]</SPAN></span></p>
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