The Hilltop Boys on Lost Island - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel The Hilltop Boys on Lost Island Part 11 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
"That's it. Don't stay too long, and don't load yourself down with bags of gold. I'd rather not have it than have you take any risks."
"But you don't think there is any danger, Jack?" asked the younger boy, as they prepared to lower him.
"No, if I did I would not let you go."
The boy got down safely enough, and called to Jack and d.i.c.k when he had reached the bottom that he was all right, and then threw off the rope, which had been put around him under his arms.
He called to them from time to time, his voice growing fainter every time he called, and at last they could not hear him at all.
"I hope it is all right," murmured Jack when the boy had been gone a few minutes. "I thought it would be when I let him go, but now----"
"It is all right," said the captain. "He is a plucky little fellow, and there isn't anything that can happen to him. The rocks hold the vessel as tight as a vise and there is no chance of her slipping back into the water or anything of that sort."
"Well, I hope so, but somehow I begin to feel nervous, and wish that I had not let him go down."
"Young Smith is all right, Jack," said Percival rea.s.suringly. "He is not afraid of anything, and really I don't believe there is anything to be afraid of. There was not when we went down."
"No, but we are a couple of big boys, and he is only a midget. If anything happened to him I should never forgive--listen, and see if you can hear him coming."
"No, I cannot, but he has had hardly time to get there yet. Give him a chance. He will want to see all there is, boy-like. Let him have a good long look at the wonders of the place. He has never seen anything like it before, and never will again."
Jack was very anxious in spite of d.i.c.k's cheering words, and the minutes seemed like hours till at last, holding the rope in his hand he felt a tug at, and then heard:
"h.e.l.lo! Are you up there?"
"Yes!" shouted Jack. "Are you all right?"
"Sure I am. Wait till I get the rope under my arms. I've got a bag of the stuff, as I said I would, but I don't think----"
"You don't think what?" asked Jack, thinking that he detected something in the tone of the boy's voice that indicated danger of some sort.
"Nothing, wait till I get the rope fast."
"Very good. Take your time."
"All right," the boy called in a few moments. "I have got it. Haul away!"
They saw the light of the electric torch flas.h.i.+ng upon them, as the boy came nearer and nearer to them, and at last drew him out of the hole, Jack noticing that he seemed quite pale, and then suddenly noticing that he was wet up to his knees.
"h.e.l.lo! what is this, Jesse W., how do you happen to be so wet?" he asked.
"There was no water in----"
"Yes, some," answered the boy quietly. "It had worked in under the door or at the side somewhere. Maybe they had settled. Anyhow, I got the bag and here it----" and then the boy sank limp and helpless into Jack's arms and fainted away.
"By George! he was a plucky little fellow and no mistake!" exclaimed Jack.
"He said that he would get the bag and he did, and standing in water up to his knees, and not knowing at what time he might have the whole Caribbean sea tumbling in upon him. Get some water, d.i.c.k!"
The boy presently came around, however, and said faintly, but with a half laugh:
"I told you I'd bring it, didn't I, Jack? Well, I did, and I hope it will be enough to keep you at the Academy for the rest of the course. If it isn't, my father----"
"You are a brave young fellow, Jesse W., but you don't go back for another, I tell you that!"
"You bet he does not!" echoed Percival. "So the water had made its way in, had it? That's the last we will see of the place, then."
"Yes, it had come in somewhere, at the bottom, I guess. Still, it was not coming in all the time nor fast, and I wanted to see the place, and I had promised to fetch a bag of gold to Jack and----"
"And you wanted to keep your word even if you were drowned," sputtered Percival. "Much you could have kept it in that case. You are a young brick, J.W., but don't you do anything like that again."
"Well, I won't, if you say so, d.i.c.k," answered the little fellow.
"That's a brave little chap," said the captain. "He said he'd do a thing, and he did it. There's lots who wouldn't."
They returned to the boat, and the captain told Percival to row toward the reefs and as close to the stump of a mast as it was safe to go, as he wanted to observe the wreck again.
Nearing the wreck they noticed that the water was swirling and eddying very violently at a point where they judged the cabin to be, and the captain said, after looking at the boiling waters for a short time:
"The water is making its way in and will run forward as far as its level.
She'll break up with all that water in her, and I wouldn't be surprised to see her go any time."
In fact as they lay there watching the boiling waters over the sunken vessel, they saw them become more greatly agitated and Percival pulled away to a safer distance as the agitation increased.
Then of a sudden the stump of a mast sank into the water, there was a still greater agitation and a ma.s.s of broken timbers shot up into the air and then fell back, and went floating away on the tide.
"That's about the last of her," said Captain Storms, "or, at any rate, you won't go into the cabin again. You've made your last visit to the wreck, and if any one ever gets that money he'll have to dive for it. You can be thankful that you went there when you did."
"So I am," said Jack. "Come on, d.i.c.k, pull away from here."
CHAPTER X
A THRILLING ENCOUNTER
Returning to the yacht first for the captain to get aboard, Jack and Percival then took the boat and went to the outer bay on a little exploring trip of their own, the rest not caring to make any more explorations at that time.
The boys guided the boat along sh.o.r.e not too near the rocks, both keeping watch for any nook which might prove of interest or afford an opportunity for an adventure of any sort.
There was a short, keen-bladed hatchet to cut their way through the thicket if necessary when they went ash.o.r.e, and Percival had a rifle with which to shoot any game they might come across, both being placed on one of the forward thwarts.
Jack was provided with his pocket flashlight in case they went into dark places, and d.i.c.k had a revolver in his pocket, declaring that this might be of as much use as the torch in case they came to close quarters with an enemy, no matter of what sort.
As they were rowing at a lazy rate, keeping up a slow, even stroke, Jack, who was keeping a lookout on the sh.o.r.e and steering at the same time, suddenly said, looking toward a ma.s.s of rocks which they had just come abreast:
"There looks to be a sort of cave in there, d.i.c.k. At any rate, there is a hole which seems to run in to some little distance. Suppose we explore it and see how far we can go."
"I'm in for anything that you are, Jack," replied d.i.c.k.