I hurled myself across
the dyke, and escaping out of the very clutches of my foes threw
myself into the stream.
At any other time I should have thought that water foul and
filthy, but now it was as welcome as the most crystal stream to the
parched traveller. It was a highway of safety!
My pursuers rushed after me. Had only one of them held the rope
it would have been all up with me, for he could have entangled me
before I had time to swim a stroke; but the many hands holding it
embarrassed and delayed them, and when the rope struck the water I
heard the splash well behind me. A few minutes' hard swimming took
me across the stream. Refreshed with the immersion and encouraged
by the escape, I climbed the dyke in comparative gaiety of
spirits.
From the top I looked back. Through the darkness I saw my
assailants scattering up and down along the dyke. The pursuit was
evidently not ended, and again I had to choose my course. Beyond
the dyke where I stood was a wild, swampy space very similar to
that which I had crossed. I determined to shun such a place, and
thought for a moment whether I would take up or down the dyke. I
thought I heard a sound-the muffled sound of oars, so I listened,
and then shouted.
No response; but the sound ceased. My enemies had evidently got
a boat of some kind. As they were on the up side of me I took the
down path and began to run. As I passed to the left of where I had
entered the water I heard several splashes, soft and stealthy, like
the sound a rat makes as he plunges into the stream, but vastly
greater; and as I looked I saw the dark sheen of the water broken
by the ripples of several advancing heads. Some of my enemies were
swimming the stream also.
And now behind me, up the stream, the silence was broken by the
quick rattle and creak of oars; my enemies were in hot pursuit. I
put my best leg foremost and ran on. After a break of a couple of
minutes I looked back, and by a gleam of light through the ragged
clouds I saw several dark forms climbing the bank behind me. The
wind had now begun to rise, and the water beside me was ruffled and
beginning to break in tiny waves on the bank. I had to keep my eyes
pretty well on the ground before me, lest I should stumble, for I
knew that to stumble was death. After a few minutes I looked back
behind me. On the dyke were only a few dark figures, but crossing
the waste, swampy ground were many more. What new danger this
portended I did not know-could only guess. Then as I ran it seemed
to me that my track kept ever sloping away to the right. I looked
up ahead and saw that the river was much wider than before, and
that the dyke on which I stood fell quite away, and beyond it was
another stream on whose near bank I saw some of the dark forms now
across the marsh. I was on an island of some kind.
My situation was now indeed terrible, for my enemies had hemmed
me in on every side. Behind came the quickening roll of the oars,
as though my pursuers knew that the end was close. Around me on
every side was desolation; there was not a roof or light, as far as
I could see. Far off to the right rose some dark mass, but what it
was I knew not. For a moment I paused to think what I should do,
not for more, for my pursuers were drawing closer. Then my mind was
made up. I slipped down the bank and took to the water.
1 comment