After London eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 294 pages of information about After London.

After London eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 294 pages of information about After London.

Felix doubled from the firs, and made towards the far-distant camp; but he was faced by three more gipsies.  He turned again and made for the steep hill he had descended.  With all his strength he raced up it; his lightness of foot carried him in advance, and he reached the summit a hundred yards ahead; but he knew he must be overtaken presently, unless he could hit upon some stratagem.  In the instant that he paused to breathe on the summit a thought struck him.  Like the wind he raced along the ridge, making for the great Sweet Water, the same path he had followed in the morning.  Once on the ridge the five pursuers shouted; they knew they should have him now there were no more hills to breast.  It was not so easy as they imagined.

Felix was in splendid training; he kept his lead, and even drew a little on them.  Still he knew in time he must succumb, just as the stag, though swifter of foot, ultimately succumbs to the hounds.  They would track him till they had him.  If only he could gain enough to have time to string and bend his bow!  But with all his efforts he could not get away more than the hundred yards, and that was not far enough.  It could be traversed in ten seconds, they would have him before he could string it and fit an arrow.  If only he had been fresh as in the morning!  But he had had a long walk during the day and not much food.  He knew that his burst of speed must soon slacken, but he had a stratagem yet.

Keeping along the ridge till he reached the place where the lake narrowed to the river, suddenly he rushed down the hill towards the water.  The edge was encumbered with brushwood and fallen trees; he scrambled over and through anyhow; he tore a path through the bushes and plunged in.  But his jacket caught in a branch; he had his knife out and cut off the shred of cloth.  Then with the bow and knife in one hand he struck out for the opposite shore.  His hope was that the gipsies, being horsemen, and passing all their lives on their horses, might not know how to swim.  His conjecture was right; they stopped on the brink, and yelled their loudest.  When he had passed the middle of the slow stream their rage rose to a shriek, startling a heron far down the water.

Felix reached the opposite shore in safety, but the bow-string was now wet and useless.  He struck off at once straight across the grass-lands, past the oaks he had admired, past the green knoll where in imagination he had built his castle and brought Aurora, through the brook, which he found was larger than it appeared at a distance, and required two or three strokes to cross.  A few more paces and the forest sheltered him.  Under the trees he rested, and considered what course to pursue.  The gipsies would expect him to endeavour to regain his friends, and would watch to cut off his return.  Felix determined to make, instead, for another camp farther east, and to get even there by a detour.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
After London from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.