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o." George wheeled her round. She was fagged out with two long gallops after hounds that day, but for the moment sheer terror made her lively enough. "Ride, then! Call up the coast-guard. By the flare she must be somewhere off the creek here. Ride!" A clatter of hoofs answered him as the mare pounded up the lane. CHAPTER XXV. THE WRECK OF THE "SAMARITAN." Taffy stood for a moment listening. He judged the wreck to be somewhere on the near side of the light-house, between it and the mouth of the creek; that was, if she had already struck. If not, the gale and the set of the tide together would be sweeping her eastward, perhaps right across the mouth of the creek. And if he could discover this his course would be to run back, intercept the coast-guard, and send him around by the upper bridge. He waited for a second signal to guide him--a flare or a rocket: but none came. The beach lay in the lew of the weather, deep in the hills' hollow and trebly land-locked by the windings of the creek, but above him the sky kept its screaming as though the bare ridges of the headland were being shelled by artillery. He resolved to keep along the lower slopes and search his way down to the creek's mouth, when he would have sight of any signal shown along the coast for a mile or two to the east and north-east. The night was now as black as a wolf's throat, but he knew every path and fence. So he scrambled up the low cliff and began to run, following the line of stunted oaks and tamarisks which fenced it, and on the ridges--where the blown hail took him in the face--crouching and scuttling like a crab sideways, moving his legs only from the knees down. In this way he had covered half a mile and more when his right foot plunged in a rabbit hole and he was pitched headlong into the tamarisks below. Their boughs bent under his weight, but they were tough, and he caught at them, and just saved himself from rolling over into the black water. He picked himself up and began to rub his twisted ankle. And at that instant, in a lull between two gusts, his ear caught the sound of splashing, yet a sound so unlike the lapping of the driven tide that he peered over and down between the tamarisk boughs. "Hullo there!" "Hullo!" a voice answered. "Is that someone alive? Here, mate--for Christ's sake!" "Hold on! Whereabouts are you?" "Down in this here cruel water." The words ended in a shuddering cough.
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