Part 16 (2/2)

Mounted on the rock she scanned the surface, and after a time saw something bobbing up and down about a hundred yards out, and some way to the south of where she stood.

”There it is, I believe,” she cried. ”The sea is getting calmer now; shall I swim out for it?”

”You mustn't think of it,” said Elizabeth. ”I dare say the sea is full of sharks. I saw a fin yesterday when we were fis.h.i.+ng.”

”And you didn't tell me! I should love to see a real live shark.”

Elizabeth smiled inwardly at this.

”But we must get the oar somehow, Bess. One would be better than nothing. And quickly, too. See, the tide is running out fast. And if the oar gets into the current that flows past the reef, it is good-bye for ever.”

”I don't see how we can. We haven't a paddle of any kind. The boat-hook's no good. Wait, though; I wonder if we could get a branch of a tree. Stay here and keep the oar in sight while I run and look.”

She ran up the cliff-side, which was covered with vegetation. The small trees had withstood the storm better than the large ones. Some were cracked and broken, but others had merely bent to the blast, while the ground was strewn with the more ma.s.sive trunks, and with innumerable small branches and twigs. In a little while she came to a tree that had two boughs forming a fork, in shape like a boy's catapult. Catching hold of this, and straining upon it, Elizabeth managed to break it off; it had occurred to her that the fork might form the skeleton of a paddle. But time was too precious for her to attempt to make it by herself alone, so she ran with it to Mary.

”Quick, Mary,” she cried. ”Pull yourself together. We have found the boat, but the oars are gone, and one is floating out to sea. Help me to make a paddle, so that we can go after it. Get some creepers and some leaves as quickly as you can. I'll show you what I mean.”

There was no lack of material close at hand, and they were soon busily at work making a sort of criss-cross lattice-work upon the fork, which they notched at intervals with their knives, to give holding to the tendrils. Having rapidly made their framework, they laid the leaves on it, and bound these on with more creepers. Before they had finished it as Elizabeth would have liked, they heard Tommy's shrill voice calling--

”Quick, Bess, the oar's going out fast.”

Elizabeth jumped up, carrying the odd-looking paddle, which Tommy said was like a lacrosse stick. The oar was now out of sight, though Tommy could point to the spot where she saw it last. They launched the boat, and using the paddle as a stern-oar, Tommy employed all the skill she had gained by paddling the dinghy to and from the sh.o.r.e at Southampton.

The paddle was a very poor thing; it bent a good deal, and some of the tendrils became loose, and hung about it like the string of an old cricket bat. But there was no time to stop and repair it, or the oar, which they now saw clearly, would drift past the reef and utterly beyond reach.

Elizabeth began to grow a little anxious in case they should find themselves adrift by and by with nothing better than the makes.h.i.+ft paddle, which would certainly not last more than a very short time.

That would be a calamity indeed, for they might be carried far out to sea, and there was Mary alone on the island. But Tommy was working so energetically that the distance between the boat and the oar was fast lessening, and Elizabeth, raising herself in her seat, suddenly caught sight of the second oar not far beyond the first.

”Let me take your place, Tommy,” she said. ”You must be tired.”

”Not a bit. Besides, we'll lose time if we change, and perhaps upset.

Stay where you are, Bess; I'll get that oar in a minute, and then we'll soon have the other one.”

A few more strokes brought the boat within reach of the oar, and Elizabeth, bending over, drew it up. Then Tommy left the stern and both sat on the thwarts, pulling towards the second oar, which they overtook in a few seconds.

”We'll keep the paddle as a memento,” said Elizabeth. ”But look! What a terrible distance we are from the sh.o.r.e! Mary will be half frantic.”

”It's lucky that we are inside the reef,” said Tommy. ”Already I can feel the current quite strong. We shall have to pull hard to get out of it!”

By this time Tommy was rather tired, but she would not give in. It was a long pull back, and at first it seemed impossible to draw the boat out of the current that was rapidly bearing it northward. But having now two good oars, they succeeded presently in getting back into calmer water. Then, turning the boat's head southward, they rowed more gently along the sh.o.r.e, and at last reached their own little harbour, where Mary was awaiting them.

”I _am_ thankful you have got back safely,” she cried. ”When I saw you going so far I nearly went mad for fear you couldn't return.”

”We must take care it never happens again,” said Elizabeth. ”We'll drag the boat up much higher this time, and if we tie the painter to a rock, or to a tree if there's one near enough, we needn't be anxious, and we'll certainly keep the oars in the hut.”

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