At the Black Rocks - BestLightNovel.com
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The boys laughed and tried to be jolly, but no one liked the situation.
It was a very picturesque scene,--the moonlight silvering the sea, the calmly-moving schooner and boat, that lighthouse like a tall, stately candlestick lifting its quiet light; but, for all that, there was the bar! Either the night-wind was growing very chilly, or the boys s.h.i.+vered for another reason.
"Don't worry, fellows," said d.i.c.k, putting as much courage as possible into his voice. "When this old thing hits, you see, we shan't drift right on to the bar, but our anchor will catch somewhere on this side.
That will hold us. I can swim, and I'll just drop into the sea and make for the light and get Toby Tolman's boat, and come and bring you off."
He then proceeded to hum "Reuben Ranzo;" but n.o.body liked to sing it, and d.i.c.k executed a solo for this unappreciative audience.
"How--how deep is the water inside the bar?" said chattering Jimmy Davis. He felt the cold night-air, and he shook as if he had an ague fit.
"Pretty deep," solemnly remarked Dab Richards.
The musical hum by the famous soloist, d.i.c.k Pray, ceased; only the breakers on the bar made their music.
d.i.c.k began to doubt seriously the advisability of dropping into that deep gulf reputed to be inside the bar. It was now not very far to the lighthouse, and the surf on the bar whitened in the moonlight and fell in a hushed, drowsy monotone. People by the sh.o.r.e may be hushed by this lullaby of the ocean, but to those boys there was nothing drowsy in its sound; it was very startling.
"I--I--I--" said Jimmy.
"What is it, Jimmy?" asked Dave.
Jimmy did feel like wis.h.i.+ng aloud that he could be at home, but he concluded to say nothing about it. Steadily did the _Relentless_ drift toward that snow-line in the dark sea.
"Almost there!" cried Dave.
"May strike any moment!" shouted Dab.
Yes, nearer, nearer, nearer, came the _Relentless_ to that foaming bar.
The boat had already arrived there, and Dave saw it resting quietly on its sandy bed. Did he notice a glistening strip of sand beyond the surf? He had heard some one in s.h.i.+pton say that at very low tide there was no water on portions of the bar. This fact set him to thinking about his possible action. It now seemed to him as if the distance between the stern of the vessel and the bar could not be more than a hundred feet. The bow of the vessel pointed up river. She was going "stern on." How would it strike--forcibly, easily?
[Ill.u.s.tration: "Nearer and nearer came the '_Relentless_' to that foaming bar." _Page 43_]]
"Ninety feet now!" thought Dave. "Will the shock upset her, pitch us out, or what?"
Sixty feet now!
"The bar looks sort of ugly!" remarked Johnny Richards.
Thirty feet now!
"Wish I was in bed!" thought Jimmy Davis.
Twenty feet now!
Had the schooner halted? The boys cl.u.s.tered in the bow and looked anxiously over to the bar.
"Boys, she holds, I do believe," said Dave.
"All right!" shouted d.i.c.k--"all right! The anchor holds!"
It did seem an innocent, all-right situation: just the quiet sea, the musically-rolling surf along the bar, the stately lighthouse at the left, and that schooner quietly halting in the harbour.
"Now, boys," exclaimed d.i.c.k, "we can--"
"I thought you were going to swim to the lighthouse?" observed Dab.
"Oh, that won't be necessary now," replied d.i.c.k. "We are just masters of the situation. The moment the tide turns we can weigh anchor and drift back again just as easy! Be in our old quarters by morning, and n.o.body know the difference. Old Sylvester himself might come down the river, and he would find everything all right. Ha! ha!"
d.i.c.k's confidence was contagious, and when he proposed "Haul the Bow-line," his companions sang with him, and sang with a will. How the notes echoed over the sea! Such a queer place to be singing in!
"Mr. Toby Tolman," said d.i.c.k, facing the lighthouse, "we propose to wake you up! Let him have a rouser. Give him 'Reuben Ranzo!'"
While they were administering a "rouser" to Mr. Toby Tolman, somebody at the stern was dropping into the sea. He had stripped himself for his swim, and now struck out boldly for the bar. Reaching its uncovered sands he ran along to the boat, lying on the channel side of the bar and not that of the lighthouse, leaped into the boat, and, shoving off, rowed round to the bow of the schooner. There was a pause in the singing, and d.i.c.k Pray was saying, "This place makes you think of mermen," when Dab Richards, looking over the vessel's side, said, "Ugh!
if there isn't one now!"
"Where--where?" asked Johnny.
"s.h.i.+p ahoy!" shouted Dave from the boat. "How many days out? Where you bound? Short of provisions?"
"Three cheers for this s.h.i.+pwrecked mariner just arrived!" cried Dab.
And the hurrahs went up triumphantly in the moonlight. Dave threw up to the boys the much-desired painter, and the runaway boat was securely fastened.
"There, Dave!" said d.i.c.k, as he welcomed on deck the merman: "I was just going after that thing myself, just thinking of jumping into the water, but you got ahead of me. Somehow, I hate to leave this old craft."
"I expect," said Dab Richards, a boy with short, stubby black hair and blue eyes, and lips that easily twisted in scorn, "we shall have such hard work to get d.i.c.k away from this concern that we shall have to bring a police-officer, arrest, and lug him off that way."
"Shouldn't wonder," replied d.i.c.k. "Couldn't be persuaded to abandon this dear old tub."
"Well, boys, I'm going to the lighthouse as soon as I'm dressed," said Dave.
There was a hubbub of inquiries and comments.
"What for?" asked d.i.c.k. "Ain't we all right?"
"I hope so; but I want to keep all right. I want to ask the light-keeper--"
"But all we have got to do is to pull up anchor when the tide comes, and drift back."
"Oh yes; we can drift back, but where? We can't steer the schooner. We don't know what currents may lay hold of her and take her where we don't want to go. There are some rocks with an ugly name."
"'Sharks' Fins!'" said Jimmy. "Booh!"
"What if we ran on to them?" said Dave. "We had better go and ask Toby Tolman's opinion. He may suggest something--tell us of some good way to get out of this sc.r.a.pe. He knows the harbour, the currents, the tides, and so on. Any way, it won't do any harm to speak to him. I won't bother anybody to go with me. Stay here and make yourselves comfortable; I will dress and shove off."
When Dave had dressed and returned, he found every boy in the boat.
d.i.c.k Pray was the first that had entered.
"Hullo!" shouted Dave. "All here, are you? That's good. The more the merrier."
"Dave, we loved you so much we couldn't leave you," a.s.serted d.i.c.k.