b
turned round and came to a halt again.
"What is it?"
"Where 're ye bound, mate?"
"For the ferry."
"Then stop an' drink, for the boat left two minutes since an' won't be
back for another twenty."
Zeb hung on his heel for a couple of seconds. The sailor held out his
mug with the friendliest air, his head thrown back and the left corner
of his mouth screwed up into a smile.
"Thank 'ee," said Zeb, "I will; an' may the Lord judge 'atween us."
"There's many a way o' takin' a drink," the sailor said, staring at him;
"but split me if yours ain't the rummiest _I_'ve run across."
"Oh, man, man," Zeb answered, "I wasn' thinkin' o' _you!_"
Back by the cliff's edge the hollibubber had finished his day's work and
was shouldering his shovel to start for home, when he spied a dark
figure coming eastwards along the track; and, putting up a hand to ward
off the level rays of the sun, saw that it was the young man who had
passed him at noonday. So he set down the shovel again, and waited.
Young Zeb came along with his head down. When he noticed the
hollibubber standing in the path he started like a man caught in a
theft.
"My son, ye 've come to lift a weight off my heart. God forgi'e me
that, i' my shyness, I let 'ee go by wi'out a word for your trouble."
"All the country seems to know my affairs," Zeb answered with a scowl.
The hollibubber's grey eyes rested on him tenderly. He was desperately
shy, as he had confessed: but compassion overcame his shyness.
"Surely," said he, "all we be children o' one Father: an' surely we may
know each other's burdens; else, not knowin', how shall we bear 'em?"
"You'm too late, hollibubber."
Zeb stood still, looking out over the purple sea. The old man touched
his arm gently.
"How so?"
"I've a-sold my soul to hell."
"I don't care. You'm alive an' standin' here, an' I can save 'ee."
"Can 'ee so?" Zeb asked ironically.
"Man, I feel sure o't." His ugly earnest face became almost grand in
the flame of the sunset. "Turn aside, here, an' kneel down; I will
wrestle wi' the Lord for thee till comfort comes, if it take the long
night."
"You'm a strange chap. Can such things happen i' these days?"
"Kneel and try."
"No, no, no," Zeb flung out his hands. "It's too late, I tell 'ee.
No man's words will I hear but the words of Lamech--'I ha' slain a man
to my wounding, an' a young man to my hurt.' Let me go--'tis too late.
Let me go, I say--"
As
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