Blow the Man Down - A Romance of the Coast - Page 235/334

The waves were lifting and dropping them in dizzying fashion. There was

suddenly a more violent tossing of the water.

"That's the old packet! She went under then!" Mayo explained. "Thank the

Lord we are out of her clutches! I was afraid we were stuck there."

"Is there any hope for us now?" she inquired.

"I don't know. If the boat stays afloat and the wind doesn't haul and

knock this sea crossways, if somebody sees us in the morning, if we

don't get rolled onto the coast in the breakers and--" He did not

finish.

"It seems that a lot of things can happen at sea," she suggested.

"That fact has been proved to me in the past few weeks."

"You mean in the past few hours, don't you?"

"Miss Marston, what has happened on that schooner is a part of the

business, and a sailor must take it as it comes along. I wish nothing

worse had happened to me than what's happening now."

She made no reply.

"But no matter about it," he said, curtly.

The two men, kneeling amidships, clutching a thwart and bailing with

their free hands, toiled away; even Bradish had wakened to the fact that

he was working for his own salvation.

In the obscurity the waves which rose ahead seemed like mountains topped

with snow. Hollows and hills of water swept past on their right and

left. But the crests of the waves were not breaking, and this fact meant

respite from immediate danger.

"I'm sorry it was all left to you to do," ventured the girl, breaking

a long silence. "I thought Ralph had more man in him," she added,

bitterly. "I feel that he ought to apologize to you for--for several

things."

He, on his part, did not reply to that. He was afraid that she intended

to draw him into argument or explanation. Just what he would be able to

say to her on that topic was not clear to him.

"It seems as if years had gone by instead of hours. It seems as if I

had lived half a life since I left home. It seems as if I had changed

my nature and had grown up to see things in a different light. It is all

very strange to me."

He did not know whether she were talking to herself or to him. He did

not offer comment.

There was a long period of silence. The sound of rushing waters filled,

that silence and made their conversation audible only to themselves when

they talked.