登陆注册
19640600000064

第64章 CHAPTER XVI THE EBB TIDE(2)

Then he tried the door again, again gave it up, and sat down on the fish nets to think. Thinking was unsatisfactory and provoking. He gave that up, also, and, seeing a knothole in one of the boards in the landward side of his jail, knelt and applied his eye to the aperture. His only hope of freedom, apparently, lay in the arrival home of the lightkeeper. If Seth had arrived he could shout through that knothole and possibly be heard.

The knothole, however, commanded a view, not of the lighthouse buildings, but of the cove and the bungalow. The bungalow! Ruth Graham! Suddenly, and with a shock, flashed to his mind the thought that his imprisonment, if at all prolonged, was likely to be, not a joke, but the most serious catastrophe of his life.

For Ruth Graham was going to leave the bungalow and Eastboro that very day. He had begged to see her once more, and this day was his last chance. He had written her, pleading to see her and receive his answer. If he did not see her, if Seth did not return before long and he remained where he was, a prisoner and invisible, the last chance was gone. Ruth would believe he had repented of his declaration as embodied in the fateful note, and had fled from her.

She had intimated that he was a coward in not seeing his fiancee and telling her the truth. She did not like his writing that other girl and running away. Now she would believe the cowardice was inherent, because he had written her, also--and had run away. Horrible!

Through the knothole he sent a yell for rescue. Another and another. They were unheard--at least, no one emerged from the bungalow. He sprang to his feet and made another circle of the interior of the boathouse. Then he sank down upon the heap of nets and again tried to think. He must get out. He must--somehow!

The morning sunshine streamed through the little window and fell directly upon the pile of newspapers he had brought from the kitchen and thrown on the floor. His glance chanced to rest for an instant upon the topmost paper of the pile. It was a New York journal which devotes two of its inside pages to happenings in society. When he threw it down it had unfolded so that one of these pages lay uppermost. Absently, scarcely realizing that he was doing so, the substitute assistant read as follows:

"Engagement in High Life Announced. Another American Girl to Wed a Nobleman. Miss Ann Gardner Davidson to become the Baroness Hardacre."

With a shout he fell upon his knees, seized the paper and read on:

"Another contemplated matrimonial alliance between one of New York's fairest daughters and a scion of the English nobility was made public yesterday. Miss Ann Gardner Davidson, of this city, the breaking of whose engagement to Russell Agnew Brooks, son of George Agnew Brooks, the wealthy cotton broker, was the sensation of the early spring, is to marry Herbert Ainsworth-Ainsworth, Baron Hardacre, of Hardacre Towers, Surrey on Kent, England. It was said that the young lady broke off her former engagement with Young Brooks because of--"

The prisoner in the boathouse read no further. Ruth Graham had said to him the day before that, in her opinion, he had treated Ann Davidson unfairly. He should have gone to her and told her of his quarrel with his father. Although he did not care for Ann, she might care for him. Might care enough to wait and . . . Wait?

Why, she cared so little that, within a few months, she was ready to marry another man. And, if he owed her any debt of honor, no matter how farfetched and fantastic, it was canceled now. He was absolutely free. And he had been right all the time. He could prove it. He would show Ruth Graham that paper and . . .

His jaw set tight, and he rose from the heap of fish nets with the folded paper clinched like a club in his hand. He was going to get out of that boathouse if he had to butt a hole through its boards with his head.

Once more he climbed to the window and made an attempt to squeeze through. It was futile, of course, but this time it seemed to him that the sill and the plank to which it was attached gave a little.

He put the paper between his teeth, seized the sill with both hands, braced his feet against a beam below, and jerked with all his strength. Once--twice--three times! It was giving! It was pulling loose! He landed on his back upon the nets, sill and a foot of boarding in his hands. In exactly five seconds, the folded newspaper jammed in his trousers pocket, he swung through the opening and dropped to the narrow space between the building and the end of the wharf.

The space was a bare six inches wide. As he struck, his ankle turned under him, he staggered, tried wildly to regain his balance, and fell. As he fell he caught a glimpse of a blue-clad figure at the top of the bluff before the bungalow. Then he went under with a splash, and the eager tide had him in its grasp.

When he came to the surface and shook the water from his eyes, he was already some distance from the wharf. This, an indication of the force of the tide, should have caused him to realize his danger instantly. But it did not. His mind was intent upon the accomplishment of one thing, namely, the proving to Ruth Graham, by means of the item in the paper, that he was no longer under any possible obligation to the Davidson girl. Therefore, his sole feeling, as he came sputtering to the top of the water, was disgust at his own clumsiness. It was when he tried to turn and swim back to the wharf that he grasped the situation as it was. He could not swim against that tide.

There was no time to consider what was best to do. The breakers were only five hundred yards off, and if he wished to live he must keep out of their clutches. He began to swim diagonally across the current, putting all his strength into each stroke. But for every foot of progress toward the calmer water he was borne a yard toward the breakers.

同类推荐
  • 华严清凉国师礼赞文

    华严清凉国师礼赞文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 词源

    词源

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 洞玄灵宝二十四生图经

    洞玄灵宝二十四生图经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 伯牙琴

    伯牙琴

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • A Footnote to History

    A Footnote to History

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 武域刀神

    武域刀神

    一刀斩破天地,一镜看透世尘,众生弃我,我独道成!
  • 珠江,东方的觉醒

    珠江,东方的觉醒

    以珠江三角洲作为艺术焦点,按照历史时序,全景式地追溯中华民族100多年来的强国之梦和不懈探索的伟大历程。作品所叙写的,都是中国近、现代史上的重大事件,如戊戌变法、辛亥革命一直到改革开放和现代化建设。面对这样富于历史意蕴的大题材,要求作者有开阔的视野和历史眼光,要求作品配以大的结构框架来容纳和消化极其丰富的内容。而这一方面,正是作者所长。面对“百年鸟瞰,卅载观照”,作者以时间流程为经线,以人物活动为纬线,勾勒、交织出一幅中华民族舍死忘生、百折不挠地求生存求发展的百年历史画卷。
  • 逍遥神医

    逍遥神医

    一场突如其来的家族传承,林宇,这个因为晕血而被西医学院开除的普通学生,愤然而起。“闻香识女人”,“天下名医出林氏”。多年后,当他终于追寻到自己的家族,寻找到梦中那个中年人,恍然回首,已是功成名就。
  • 毒医俏王妃

    毒医俏王妃

    罗盈雪穿越了?什么!自己居然来到了古代,并且是历史上从来没记载的朝代!晕死!你让我重生怎么把我送到这种地方来了?还好,身份不错,当朝丞相的嫡女!什么?!爹不亲,娘不爱,庶妹庶弟都仗势欺人?!哦!原来是后妈!明白了!(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 争夺辣妈:萌宝宝VS腹黑爹

    争夺辣妈:萌宝宝VS腹黑爹

    “宝贝,我是你爹。”“爹是什么?能吃吗?”“爹就是你妈咪的男人。”“错,我才是我妈的男人。”五年前的错误,五年后的重逢。家有小男子汉,辣妈底气十足。想复合,先过宝宝这一关。女儿是老爸上辈子的情人,儿子就是老妈上辈子的情人。萌宝宝:“想抢走我的女人,没那么容易。”腹黑爹:“你妈是大人,不好玩,我送你一个妹妹陪你玩,怎么样?”萌宝宝:“成交。”腹黑爹:“你得先帮我把你妈拐到手,我才能变出妹妹哦。”
  • 精灵勇者3:神秘国度

    精灵勇者3:神秘国度

    应月姬公主邀请,夏焰一行人来到神秘国度,肩负起驱除黑暗力量、拯救神秘国度的重任。可是,出现在他们眼前的是……傲娇吃货月姬公主、面瘫真骑士、时刻担心毛被揪光的守护神兽银狐,被这样的组合邀请来拯救神秘国度,真的没问题吗?果然,一路上,波折连连,囧事一箩筐。梦想成为王子的韩启被迫穿上了蓬蓬的公主裙、两个吃货肖瑶和月姬公主抢食成仇、看似靠谱的真骑士也上演一出“真假美猴王”的好戏、就连身为团队核心的夏焰也是问题不断……深藏黑暗王国的付兰在恶魔的操纵下静静的等待着勇者们的到来。 敲开黑暗王国之门,这一次,精灵勇者们将再挑守护光明与希望之使命。
  • 嫡女谋之高门弃女

    嫡女谋之高门弃女

    她是王府嫡女——人前温柔端庄如仙子,人后残忍冷酷如厉鬼。他是别国质子——人前风流纨绔如废柴,人后黑心狡诈如野狐。一张圣旨,赐婚突降,王府嫡女赐婚别国质子,仙子配废柴!自此,一朵鲜花插在牛粪上的流言不胫而走。初次见面,他对她印象:“假,实在是太假!”她对他印象:“弱,实在是太弱!”定亲之后,他对她说:“虚伪,冷漠,残忍,但我喜欢!”她对他说:“黑心,阴险,狡诈,可我中意!”
  • 王俊凯之两个女孩的邂逅

    王俊凯之两个女孩的邂逅

    两个爱情故事,两个不同性格的女孩,遇到王俊凯,两个不同的结局……不管两个女孩性格,样貌等等上有多大区别,唯一相同的就是,她们都爱上了凯皇,感情都是她们的弱点,一个怕被抛弃,一个太痴情……让我们期待他们之间会发生什么。这本书为迷梦第二部小说,故事纯属虚构,希望大家能喜欢!
  • 气血战天

    气血战天

    手劈山河,指粉苍穹。林晔从小山村到大城镇,从小国到天下掌控天下,拳定乾坤。修本逆天,天,战吧~
  • 最初的你是我最后的爱

    最初的你是我最后的爱

    顾念以为她得到了世上最美的爱情,结果得到的却是无尽的报复与欺骗。时隔经年,当她再次遇见他,一个是手残的画家,带着一个不会说话的女儿,一个是富有的新贵,有个高雅美丽的青梅相伴。宋怀承以为自己对她恨之入骨,却不知道有一种心动,不曾表白,早已深入骨髓。“我将用一生重新来过,安静地守护着你,爱你,永远。”