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.

“I spoke to them from within the hovel:  ‘I am here.’

“They came in then, and soon gave me to understand that the boat was theirs, not mine.  ‘There are two of us,’ said Mafile, ’against you alone.’

“I got out into the open to keep clear of them for fear of getting a treacherous blow on the head.  I could have shot them both where they stood.  But I said nothing.  I kept down the laughter rising in my throat.  I made myself very humble and begged to be allowed to go.  They consulted in low tones about my fate, while with my hand on the revolver in the bosom of my blouse I had their lives in my power.  I let them live.  I meant them to pull that boat.  I represented to them with abject humility that I understood the management of a boat, and that, being three to pull, we could get a rest in turns.  That decided them at last.  It was time.  A little more and I would have gone into screaming fits at the drollness of it.”

At this point his excitement broke out.  He jumped off the bench and gesticulated.  The great shadows of his arms darting over roof and walls made the shed appear too small to contain his agitation.

“I deny nothing,” he burst out.  “I was elated, monsieur.  I tasted a sort of felicity.  But I kept very quiet.  I took my turns at pulling all through the night.  We made for the open sea, putting our trust in a passing ship.  It was a foolhardy action.  I persuaded them to it.  When the sun rose the immensity of water was calm, and the Iles de Salut appeared only like dark specks from the top of each swell.  I was steering then.  Mafile, who was pulling bow, let out an oath and said, ‘We must rest.’

“The time to laugh had come at last.  And I took my fill of it, I can tell you.  I held my sides and rolled in my seat, they had such startled faces.  ‘What’s got into him, the animal?’ cries Mafile.

“And Simon, who was nearest to me, says over his shoulder to him, ’Devil take me if I don’t think he’s gone mad!’

“Then I produced the revolver.  Aha!  In a moment they both got the stoniest eyes you can imagine.  Ha, ha!  They were frightened.  But they pulled.  Oh, yes, they pulled all day, sometimes looking wild and sometimes looking faint.  I lost nothing of it because I had to keep my eyes on them all the time, or else—­crack!—­they would have been on top of me in a second.  I rested my revolver hand on my knee all ready and steered with the other.  Their faces began to blister.  Sky and sea seemed on fire round us and the sea steamed in the sun.  The boat made a sizzling sound as she went through the water.  Sometimes Mafile foamed at the mouth and sometimes he groaned.  But he pulled.  He dared not stop.  His eyes became blood-shot all over, and he had bitten his lower lip to pieces.  Simon was as hoarse as a crow.

“‘Comrade—­’ he begins.

“‘There are no comrades here.  I am your patron.’

“‘Patron, then,’ he says, ‘in the name of humanity let us rest.’

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