Part 4 (2/2)

At this moment they were pa.s.sing a beautiful white yacht.

”That's the Comte de Bauge's _Castor_,” cried one of the four boys.

”She's on her way to Dieppe.”

Two ladies and two gentlemen were lunching under an awning, Isabel bowed her head so as to hide her face.

This thoughtless movement displeased her; for, a moment later, she said (and all the words which they exchanged during these few minutes were to remain engraved on their memories):

”Simon, you really believe, don't you, that I was ent.i.tled to leave home?”

”Why,” he exclaimed, in surprise, ”don't we love each other?”

”Yes, we love each other,” she murmured. ”And then there's the life which I was leading with a woman whose one delight was to insult my mother. . . .”

She said no more. Simon had laid his hand on hers and nothing could rea.s.sure her more effectually than the fondness of that pressure.

The four boys, who had disappeared again, came running back:

”You can see the company's mail-boat that left Dieppe at the same time that we left Newhaven. She's called the _Pays de Caux_. We shall pa.s.s her in a quarter of an hour. So you see, mama, there's no danger.”

”Yes, but it's afterwards, when we get closer to Dieppe.”

”Why?” objected her husband. ”The other boat hasn't signalled anything extraordinary. The danger is altering its position, moving farther away. . . .”

The mother made no reply. Her face retained the same piteous expression. The little girl at her knee was still silently crying.

The captain pa.s.sed Simon and saluted.

And a few more minutes elapsed.

Simon was whispering words of love which Isabel did not catch very distinctly. The little girl's constant tears were causing her some distress.

Shortly after, a gust of wind made the waves leap higher. Here and there streaks of white, seething foam appeared. There was nothing remarkable in this, as the wind was gaining in force and las.h.i.+ng the crests of the waves. But why did these foaming billows appear only in one part and that precisely the part which they were about to cross?

The father and mother had risen to their feet. Other pa.s.sengers were leaning over the rails. The captain was seen running up the p.o.o.p-steps.

And it came suddenly, in a moment.

Before Isabel and Simon, sitting self-absorbed, had the least idea of what was happening, a frightful clamour, made up of a thousand shrieks, rose from all parts of the boat, from port and starboard, from stem to stern, even from below; from every side, as though the minds of all had been obsessed by the possibility of disaster, as though all eyes, from the moment of departure, had been watching for the slightest premonitory sign.

A monstrous sight. Three hundred yards ahead, as though in the centre of a target at which the bows of the vessel were aimed, a hideous fountain had burst from the surface of the sea, bombarding the sky with ma.s.ses of rock, blocks of lava and flying ma.s.ses of spray, which fell back into a circle of foaming breakers and yawning whirlpools.

And a wind of hurricane force gyrated above this chaos, bellowing like a bull.

Suddenly silence fell upon the paralysed crowd, the deathly silence that precedes an inevitable catastrophe. Then, yonder, a rattle of thunder that rent the air. Then the voice of the captain at his post, roaring out his orders, trying to shout down the monster's myriad voices.

For a moment there seemed some hope of salvation. The vessel put forth so great an effort that she appeared to be gliding along a tangent away from the infernal circle into which she was on the point of being drawn. But it was a vain hope! The circle seemed to be increasing in size. Its outer waves were approaching. A ma.s.s of rock crushed one of the funnels.

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