The Rescue eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 505 pages of information about The Rescue.

The Rescue eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 505 pages of information about The Rescue.

And she slept.  She could sleep!  He looked down at her as he would have looked at the slumbering ignorance of a child, but the life within him had the fierce beat of supreme moments.  Near by, the eddies sighed along the reefs, the water soughed amongst the stones, clung round the rocks with tragic murmurs that resembled promises, good-byes, or prayers.  From the unfathomable distances of the night came the booming of the swell assaulting the seaward face of the Shallows.  He felt the woman’s nearness with such intensity that he heard nothing. . . .  Then suddenly he thought of death.

“Wake up!” he shouted in her ear, swinging round in his seat.  Mrs. Travers gasped; a splash of water flicked her over the eyes and she felt the separate drops run down her cheeks, she tasted them on her lips, tepid and bitter like tears.  A swishing undulation tossed the boat on high followed by another and still another; and then the boat with the breeze abeam glided through still water, laying over at a steady angle.

“Clear of the reef now,” remarked Lingard in a tone of relief.

“Were we in any danger?” asked Mrs. Travers in a whisper.

“Well, the breeze dropped and we drifted in very close to the rocks,” he answered.  “I had to rouse you.  It wouldn’t have done for you to wake up suddenly struggling in the water.”

So she had slept!  It seemed to her incredible that she should have closed her eyes in this small boat, with the knowledge of their desperate errand, on so disturbed a sea.  The man by her side leaned forward, extended his arm, and the boat going off before the wind went on faster on an even keel.  A motionless black bank resting on the sea stretched infinitely right in their way in ominous stillness.  She called Lingard’s attention to it.  “Look at this awful cloud.”

“This cloud is the coast and in a moment we shall be entering the creek,” he said, quietly.  Mrs. Travers stared at it.  Was it land—­land!  It seemed to her even less palpable than a cloud, a mere sinister immobility above the unrest of the sea, nursing in its depth the unrest of men who, to her mind, were no more real than fantastic shadows.

V

What struck Mrs. Travers most, directly she set eyes on him, was the other-world aspect of Jorgenson.  He had been buried out of sight so long that his tall, gaunt body, his unhurried, mechanical movements, his set face and his eyes with an empty gaze suggested an invincible indifference to all the possible surprises of the earth.  That appearance of a resuscitated man who seemed to be commanded by a conjuring spell strolled along the decks of what was even to Mrs. Travers’ eyes the mere corpse of a ship and turned on her a pair of deep-sunk, expressionless eyes with an almost unearthly detachment.  Mrs. Travers had never been looked at before with that strange and pregnant abstraction.  Yet she didn’t dislike Jorgenson.  In the

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Project Gutenberg
The Rescue from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.