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No answer.
"Have you got her?"
"N-no! I can't reach."
Josh Helston uttered a low whistle, and the skin of his forehead was full of wrinkles and puckers.
"Look out, then!" he shouted; "I'll make her sway. Look out and catch her as she comes to you."
He altered his position and began swinging the rope to and fro, so that as he looked down the void he could see that it struck first one side and then the other of the rocky hole; but there was no sudden tug from below, and he snouted down again:
"Haven't you got her, lad?"
"N-no," came up hoa.r.s.ely; "I can't reach."
Josh Helston wiped the perspiration from his forehead, and uttered the low whistle once again.
Then an idea struck him.
"Wait a bit, lad," he cried; "I'll make her come."
He began to haul the rope up again rapidly, fathom after fathom, till it began to come up wet; and soon after there was the end, which he took, and after looking round for a suitable piece he pounced upon a squarish piece of granite, which he secured to the rope by an ingenious. .h.i.tch or two, such as are used by fishermen to make fast a killick--the name they give to the stone they use for anchoring a lobster-pot, or the end of a fis.h.i.+ng-line in the sea.
This done he began to lower it rapidly down.
"Here's a stone!" he shouted; "say when she's level with where you are."
There was no answer, but there was the harsh grating noise made by the descending stone as it kept chipping up against the granite wall; and Will sat about two yards from the mouth of the gallery, dripping with cold perspiration, clinging almost convulsively to the rough wall against which he leaned, and waiting for the stone to be swung so low that Josh could give it a regular pendulum motion, and pretty well land it in the gallery.
It seemed darker than ever, and to Will it was as if some horrible sensation of dread was creeping up his limbs to his brain, unnerving him more and more. For he had been already somewhat unnerved, and, in a manner quite different to his usual habit, he had stepped quite close to the mouth of his prison, felt about with his left hand till he found a niche, into which he could partly insert his fingers. Then, leaning forward, he was able to get his head clear, turn it, and glance upwards towards the light.
It was so risky a thing to do that he shrank back directly with a shudder, and closed his eyes for a moment or two, seeming to realise for the first time the terrible danger of his venture.
He collected himself a little, though, and waited, seeing the rope at last very faintly, after hearing its descent and splash in the water at the bottom.
But though he could see it, as he said it was beyond his reach.
Then it seemed to disappear, and come into sight again like a dark thread or the shadow of a cord. Now it seemed near, now afar off, and after waiting a few moments he made a s.n.a.t.c.h at it. As he did so he felt the fingers of his left hand gliding from the wet slippery niche into which he had driven them, and but for a violent spasmodic jerk of his body he would have been plunged headlong down to the bottom of the shaft.
s.h.i.+vering like one in an ague he half threw himself upon the rock, and crept back from the entrance to the gallery, hardly able to answer the demands of his companion at the mouth above.
He forced himself, though, to answer, fighting all the time with the nervous dread that was growing upon him; and at last he knew, though he could hardly see it, that the great stone was being swung to and fro.
"Now, lad, can't you get it?" cried Josh; and once more the hoa.r.s.e reply "_No_," came up to him.
"Try now!" cried Josh; and the stone was agitated more and more, striking the sides of the shaft, sometimes swinging into the gallery a foot as it seemed, but Will was as if in a nightmare--he could not stir.
"Are you trying?" came down the shaft now in quite a sharp tone, to echo strangely from the sides.
"No," said Will faintly; and just then the stone struck against the opposite wall, the rope hung loose, and at the end of a moment or two there was once more the hollow sullen splash in the water at the bottom.
"Here! hullo there!" cried Josh; "what's up with you, lad?"
"I--I don't know!" cried Will hoa.r.s.ely. "I shall be better soon."
"Better!" shouted Josh. "What! aren't you all right?"
Will did not answer, but sat there chained, as it were, to his place.
Josh let fall the rope and stood upright, giving vent to a loud expiration of the breath, and then wiping the perspiration from his face.
He was thinking, and when Josh thought he closed his eyes tightly, as if he could think better in the dark. He was not quick of imagination, but when he had caught at an idea he was ready to act upon it.
The idea came pretty quickly now, and opening his eyes he looked sharply round, picked up a great stone, and drove the iron bar a little more tightly into the crevice of the rock.
Then he threw down the stone, stooped and tried the bar to find it perfectly fast, and once more stopped to think.
An idea came again, and he pulled off his black silk neckerchief, a very old weather-beaten affair, but tolerably strong, and kneeling down he bound it firmly round the bar above the rope, pa.s.sing it through the loop at last, and knotting it securely below, so that the rope should not be likely to slip off the smooth iron.
This done, Josh stood upright once more, gazing down into the black shaft.
"Phew!" he said, with a fresh expiration of the breath; "it's a gashly unked place, and the more you look the unkeder it gets, so here goes."
He went down on his hands and knees, took hold of the iron bar with one hand, then with the other, and shuffled his legs over the shaft, an act of daring ten times greater than that of Will, for he had no friend to leave who had strength of arm to drag him up.
He held on by both hands for a few moments, then by one, as he took fast hold of the rope with, his short deformed hand, and twisted one leg in the rope, pressing his foot against it to have an additional hold; and then, without the slightest hesitation he loosed his grasp of the iron bar, placed the free hand above the other, and began to slide slowly down.
If Josh Helston felt nervous he did not show it, but slid gently down, his hands being too h.o.r.n.y from constant handling of ropes to be injured by the friction; neither did the task on hand seem difficult, as he went down and down, swaying more and more as the length of rope between him and the iron bar increased, and gradually beginning to turn as the hard rope showed a disposition to unwind.
"He said she were strong enough to bear anything," he muttered; "and I hope she be, for p'r'aps she'll have to carry two."
How this was to happen did not seem very clear; but the idea was in Josh Helston's not over clear head that it might be so, and the fact was that it took all his powers of brain to originate the idea of going down to help his companion--he had not got so far as the question of how they were to get out. Even if he had thought of it, there was the rope, and he would have said, "If you can climb down you can climb up."
Down lower and lower, with the water dripping upon him here, spurting out from between two blocks of granite there; but Josh's mind was fixed upon one thing only, and that was to reach the spot where Will was waiting to be helped.
For some distance he descended in silence. Then he began to shout:
"Coming down," he said. "Look out!"
Will started and stared towards the mouth of the gallery, but he did not answer. He could not utter a word.
"Coming down!" shouted Josh again at the end of a few seconds. "Where are you, lad?"
There was no response for a few moments, and then, hoa.r.s.e and strange from many feet below, came up the word:
"Here!"
"Right!" shouted back Josh quietly enough; "and that's where I'll be soon. I wish I had one o' the boat's lanterns here all the same."