nd here with Love will we abide. Wake, beloved, wake
and tell me you would have it so!"
But, save for her breathing, and despite all my pleading and caresses,
she lay like one dead. So I brought water and bathed her face and
throat and wrists, yet all to no purpose, so that fear grew to agony.
How if she die thus? (thinks I) Why then I can die likewise. But
again, how if she wake, and finding the ship gone, despise me and, in
place of her lover, look on me as her gaoler? For a long while I
crouched there, my head bowed on my fists, since well I knew that
England might shelter me nevermore. And yet to part with her that was
become my very life--
As I knelt thus, in an agony of indecision, was sudden tumult of
knocking upon the door and the sound of fierce voices:
"Come forth, murderer! Open to us, rogue--open!"
But still I knelt there heeding only the hurry of my thoughts:
"How if the ship sail without us? How if she wake and know me for her
gaoler? How might I endure loneliness? How part with her that was
become my life? Belike she might not hate me--"
"Open, murderer, open!" roared the voices.
"A murderer! How if she believe this? Better loneliness and death
than to read horror of me in her every look!"
And now beyond the door was silence, and then I heard Adam hailing me:
"Oho, shipmate--unbar! Tide's on the turn and we must aboard. And
trust me, Martin, for your comrade as will see justice done ye. So
come, Martin, you and my lady and let's aboard!"
"Aye, aye, Adam!" quoth I, "Better die o' solitude than live with a
breaking heart. So cheerily it is, Adam!"
Then rising, I took my dear lady in my arms, and holding her against my
heart, I kissed her hair, her closed eyes, her pale, unresponsive lips,
and bearing her to the door, contrived to open it and stepped forth of
the cave. And here I found Adam, pistol in hand, with divers of his
fellows and the three gentlemen who scowled amain, yet, eyeing Adam's
weapon, did no more than clench their fists and mutter of gibbets and
the like.
"Look you, Adam," says I, "my lady is stunned of a fall, but 'twill be
no great matter once we come aboard--let us go."
"Why then, Lord love you, Martin--hasten!" says he, "For tide's falling
and it's all we shall do to clear the reef."
Reaching Deliverance Sands I saw the boat already launched and manned
and, wading into the water, laid my lady in the stern sheets.
"Come!" cried Adam, reach
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