The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales.

The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales.

The plan (I say) was a promising one.  It miscarried only after we had righted the boat and were dragging it across the strip of shingle between the meadow bank and the water’s edge.  A quick-eared sentry caught the sound and challenged at two gunshots’ distance.  I had the boat’s nose afloat as I heard his feet stumbling over the uneven foreshore:  but the paddles and even the bottom-boards were lying on the beach behind us.  There was no help for it.  Margery stepped on board swiftly and silently, and I pushed well out into the stream, following until the water rose to my middle and so standing while the fellow challenged again.  For a minute we kept mute as mice.  The footsteps hesitated and came to a halt by the water’s edge a full twenty yards below, and I guessed that the fog had blurred for him the distance as well as the direction of the sound.  Very quietly I heaved myself over the stern and into the boat, which swung broadside to the current and so was borne up and beyond danger from him.  But the mischief was, we were drifting up the main channel which ended in the Lostwithiel marshes and must pretty certainly lead us into the enemy’s hands, unless before striking the moors below the town we could by some means push across to the farther bank.  We leaned over, dipped our arms in the water, and with the least possible noise began to paddle.  Even in the darkness the tall banks were familiar, and between skill and good fortune we came to shore on the left bank below a coppice and just within sight of the town lights.  Between us and them lay a broad marsh-land through which the river wound, and along the edge of which, under the trees skirting this shore, we started at a timorous run, pulling up now and again to listen.

So we had come abreast of the town without challenge, when the sky almost on a sudden grew lighter, and we saw the church spire glimmering and the weather-cock above it, and knew that the moon had risen over the woodland in the shadow of which we crouched.  And with that Margery glanced back and plucked at my arm.

The moor we had skirted was full of horsemen, drawn up in rank and motionless.  They loomed through the river fog like giants—­rank behind rank, each man stiff and upright and silent in his saddle—­as it were a vale full of mounted ghosts awaiting the dreadful trumpet, and in my terror I forgot to tremble at the nearness of our escape (for we had all but blundered into them).  But while I stared, and the wreaths of fog hid and again disclosed them, I heard Margery’s whisper—­

“They are escaping to-night.  It can only be by the bridge and across Boconnoc downs.  If we can win to Mark and warn him!”

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Project Gutenberg
The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.