Part 5 (2/2)
One evening after work was over Harry and Jacob walked together up the Cheap, and took their place among a crowd listening to a preacher at Paul's Cross. He was evidently a popular character, and a large number of grave men, of the straitest Puritan appearance, were gathered round him.
”I wish we could play some trick with these somber-looking knaves,”
Jacob whispered.
”Yes,” Harry said; ”I would give much to be able to do so; but at the present moment I scarcely wish to draw attention upon myself.”
”Let us get out of this, then,” Jacob said, ”if there is no fun to be had. I am sick of these long-winded orations.”
They turned to go, and as they made their way through the crowd, Harry trod upon the toe of a small man in a high steeple hat and black coat.
”I beg your pardon,” Harry said, as there burst from the lips of the little man an exclamation which was somewhat less decorous than would have been expected from a personage so gravely clad. The little man stared Harry in the face, and uttered another exclamation, this time of surprise. Harry, to his dismay, saw that the man with whom he had come in contact was the preacher whom he had left gagged on the guardroom bed at Westminster.
”A traitor! A spy!” shouted the preacher, at the top of his voice, seizing Harry by the doublet. The latter shook himself free just as Jacob, jumping in the air, brought his hand down with all his force on the top of the steeple hat, wedging it over the eyes of the little man.
Before any further effort could be made to seize them, the two lads dived through the crowd, and dashed down a lane leading toward the river.
This sudden interruption to the service caused considerable excitement, and the little preacher, on being extricated from his hat, furiously proclaimed that the lad he had seized, dressed as an apprentice, was a malignant, who had bean taken prisoner at Brentford, and who had foully ill-treated him in a cell in the guardroom at Finsbury. Instantly a number of men set off in pursuit.
”What had we best do, Jacob?” Harry said, as he heard the clattering of feet behind them.
”We had best jump into a boat,” Jacob said, ”and row for it. It is dark now, and we shall soon be out of their sight.”
At the bottom of the lane were some stairs, and at these a number of boats. As it was late in the evening, and the night a foul one, the watermen, not antic.i.p.ating fares, had left, and the boys, leaping into a boat, put out the sculls, and rowed into the stream, just as their pursuers were heard coming down the lane.
”Which way shall we go?” Harry said.
”We had better shoot the bridge,” Jacob replied. ”Canst row well?”
”Yes,” Harry said; ”I have practiced at Abingdon with an oar.”
”Then take the sculls,” Jacob said, ”and I will steer. It is a risky matter going through the bridge, I tell you, at half tide. Sit steady, whatever you do. Here they come in pursuit, Roger. Bend to the sculls,”
and in a couple of minutes they reached the bridge.
”Steady, steady,” shouted Jacob, as the boat shot a fall, some eight feet in depth, with the rapidity of an arrow. For a moment it was tossed and whirled about in the seething waves below, and then, thanks to Jacob's presence of mind and Harry's obedience to his orders, it emerged safely into the smooth water below the bridge. Harry now gave up one of the sculls to Jacob, and the two boys rowed hard down the stream.
”Will they follow, think you?” Harry said.
”I don't think,” Jacob laughed, ”that any of those black-coated gentry will care for shooting the bridge. They will run down below, and take boat there; and as there are sure to be hands waiting to carry fares out to the s.h.i.+ps in the pool, they will gain fast upon us when ones they are under way.”
The wind was blowing briskly with them, and the tide running strong, and at a great pace they pa.s.sed the s.h.i.+ps lying at anchor.
”There is the Tower,” Jacob said; ”with whose inside we may chance to make acquaintance, if we are caught, Look,” he said, ”there is a boat behind us, rowed by four oars! I fear that it is our pursuers.”
”Had we not better land, and take our chance?” Harry said.
”We might have done so at first,” Jacob said; ”it is too late now. We must row for it. Look,” he continued, ”there is a bark coming along after the boat. She has got her sails up already, and the wind is bringing her along grandly. She sails faster than they row, and if she comes up to us before they overtake us, it may be that the captain will take us in tow. These sea-dogs are always kindly.”
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