Part 43 (1/2)

”No, no,” panted Madelaine. ”Louy--help me--they must not go.”

Her words were drowned in a tremendous cheer, for Van Heldre, without a word, had stepped into the lifeboat, followed by the two young men.

Example is said to be better than precept. It was so here, for, with a rush, twenty of the st.u.r.dy Hakemouth fishers made for the boat, and the crew was not only made up, but a dozen men begged Van Heldre and the two young men to come out and let others take their places.

”No,” said Leslie through his set teeth; ”not if I never see sh.o.r.e again, Henry Vine.”

”Is that brag to Hector over me, or British pluck?” said Harry.

”Don't know, my lad. Are you going ash.o.r.e?”

”Let's wait and see,” muttered Harry, as he tied on the life preserver handed to him.

”Harry, my boy!”

The young man looked up and saw his father on the harbour wall.

”Hallo! Father!” he said sadly.

”You are too young and weak. Let some strong man go.”

”I can pull an oar as well as most of them, father,” he shouted; and then to himself: ”And if I don't get back--well--I suppose I'm not much good.”

”Let him go,” said Uncle Luke, as he held back his brother. ”Hang the boy, he has stuff in him after all.”

A busy scene of confusion for a few minutes, and then once more a cheer arose, as the lifeboat, well-manned, parted the waters of the harbour, and the lanthorns forward and astern shone with a dull glare as that first great wave was reached, up which the boat glided, and then plunged down and disappeared.

One long hour of intense agony, but not for those in the boat. The energy called forth, the tremendous struggle, the excitement to which every spirit was wrought, kept off agony or fear. It was like being in the supreme moments of a battle-charge, when in the wild whirl there is no room for dread, and a man's spirit carries him through to the end.

The agony was on sh.o.r.e, where women clung together no longer weeping, but straining their eyes seaward for the dancing lights which dimly crept up each billow, and then disappeared, as if never to appear again.

”Madelaine!”

”Louise!”

All that was said as the two girls clasped each other and watched the dim lanthorns far at sea. ”Ah!”

Then a loud groan.

”I knowed it couldn't be long.”

Then another deep murmur, whose strange intensity had made it dominate the shrieks, roars, and thunder of the storm.

The light, which had been slowly waving up and down in the rigging of the brig, had disappeared, and it told to all the sad tale--that the mast had gone, and with it those who had been clinging in the top.

But the two dim lanthorns in the lifeboat went on and on, the thunder of the surf on the wreck guiding them. As the crew toiled away, the landsmen sufficiently accustomed to the use of the oar could pretty well hold their own, till, in utter despair and hopelessness, after hovering hours about the place where the wreck should have been, the lifeboat's head was laid for the harbour-lights; and after a fierce battle to avoid being driven beyond, the gallant little crew reached the shelter given by the long low point, but several had almost to be lifted to the wharf.

A few jagged and torn timbers, and a couple of bodies cast up among the rocks, a couple of miles to the east, were all the traces of Van Heldre's handsome brig, which had gone to pieces in the darkness before the lifeboat, on its second journey, was half way there.

CHAPTER NINETEEN.