A Set of Six eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 311 pages of information about A Set of Six.

A Set of Six eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 311 pages of information about A Set of Six.

“But we must believe the signal was seen, for the galley from Ile Royale came over in an astonishingly short time.  The woman kept right on till the light of her lantern flashed upon the officer in command and the bayonets of the soldiers in the boat.  Then she sat down and began to cry.

“She didn’t need me any more.  I did not budge.  Some soldiers were only in their shirt-sleeves, others without boots, just as the call to arms had found them.  They passed by my bush at the double.  The galley had been sent away for more; and the woman sat all alone crying at the end of the pier, with the lantern standing on the ground near her.

“Then suddenly I saw in the light at the end of the pier the red pantaloons of two more men.  I was overcome with astonishment.  They, too, started off at a run.  Their tunics flapped unbuttoned and they were bare-headed.  One of them panted out to the other, ’Straight on, straight on!’

“Where on earth did they spring from, I wondered.  Slowly I walked down the short pier.  I saw the woman’s form shaken by sobs and heard her moaning more and more distinctly, ’Oh, my man! my poor man! my poor man!’ I stole on quietly.  She could neither hear nor see anything.  She had thrown her apron over her head and was rocking herself to and fro in her grief.  But I remarked a small boat fastened to the end of the pier.

“Those two men—­they looked like sous-officiers—­must have come in it, after being too late, I suppose, for the galley.  It is incredible that they should have thus broken the regulations from a sense of duty.  And it was a stupid thing to do.  I could not believe my eyes in the very moment I was stepping into that boat.

“I pulled along the shore slowly.  A black cloud hung over the Iles de Salut.  I heard firing, shouts.  Another hunt had begun—­the convict-hunt.  The oars were too long to pull comfortably.  I managed them with difficulty, though the boat herself was light.  But when I got round to the other side of the island the squall broke in rain and wind.  I was unable to make head against it.  I let the boat drift ashore and secured her.

“I knew the spot.  There was a tumbledown old hovel standing near the water.  Cowering in there I heard through the noises of the wind and the falling downpour some people tearing through the bushes.  They came out on the strand.  Soldiers perhaps.  A flash of lightning threw everything near me into violent relief.  Two convicts!

“And directly an amazed voice exclaimed.  ‘It’s a miracle!’ It was the voice of Simon, otherwise Biscuit.

“And another voice growled, ‘What’s a miracle?’

“‘Why, there’s a boat lying here!’

“‘You must be mad, Simon!  But there is, after all. . . .  A boat.’

“They seemed awed into complete silence.  The other man was Mafile.  He spoke again, cautiously.

“‘It is fastened up.  There must be somebody here.’

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Project Gutenberg
A Set of Six from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.