"I"m going to swim to that sloop!"
CHAPTER XXIII.
THE MYSTERY OF THE FISHING-SLOOP.
"Stay with the raft," Merriwell again commanded.
"But I want to go with you! You will need help!"
"Perhaps I may have to return to the raft. I can"t find it if you leave it."
"We can get on that vessel. And perhaps, if you go alone, you will be killed."
Merriwell was as anxious and almost as much excited, but he kept his head.
"Don"t you see that the sloop is moving on the new tack. She may be going faster than I can swim. Stay on the raft!"
As he gave this last command, he slipped out of his heavy, soaked outer coat, quickly removed his shoes, and, pushing these articles to Hodge, let himself into the sea, and began to swim toward the dingy fishing-sloop. Hodge did not again shout, for he saw that Merriwell"s plan was to swim to the sloop, climb aboard of it, and by a sudden attack overwhelm the men.
"He"s crazy!" Hodge grated. "They will see him, and they will simply knock him back into the sea. They act as if they were lunatics--or drunk! Why don"t they look this way?"
It was indeed singular, but neither of the men seemed to have noticed the raft or heard the cries that came from it. Merriwell was a splendid swimmer, and in spite of his chilled condition and his hampering clothing, he moved through the water almost like a fish.
"Of course I couldn"t have kept up with him!" Bart grumbled. "But I could have done my best. He can"t overpower both of those men alone."
He held tightly to the shoes and the coat, and looked longingly after the swimmer, turning his eyes often to the sloop, that now, under the influence of a light breeze, was going along in a surprising fashion.
"And how did Inza come to be aboard of that sloop?"
Bart had not time to think of this before, but now the answer came quickly enough. Inza"s clothing had clung to her, as she rushed on the deck, showing that her skirts were weighted with water. No doubt, she, too, had been hurled into the sea by the collision of the steamer with the barge, and this fishing-boat had in some manner picked her up.
"It"s very queer, though, the way that fellow acted! She was afraid of him. But she is below, and he is now on deck. Likely enough he has her shut up in the cabin."
He beheld Merriwell lift himself slightly out of the water and send out a ringing call. But the men on deck did not stir. And the sloop sailed on.
"The scoundrels!" Bart hissed, through his white teeth. "I should like to knock their heads together. They refuse to hear him. They are carrying Inza away, and they do not intend that any one shall come aboard. And this within the very shadows of New York City!"
The sloop heeled over under the breeze and increased her speed.
Merriwell was palpably losing ground. Bart heard him call again and again, with the same result, and then Bart also lifted his voice.
The result was the same. The sloop moved straight on. At last he saw Merriwell turn about and swim again toward the raft, when it became evident that he could not overtake the sloop.
"That is enough to kill Merry!" he thought sympathizingly. "And Inza saw us, too! I wonder what she thinks?"
Slowly and with seeming weariness Merriwell came back toward the raft.
Bart lifted himself as high as he could to mark the spot where the raft lay tossing. When lifted on the crest of a wave, Merriwell came plainly in sight; but when either Frank or the raft slipped down the gla.s.sy surface of those big, green rollers, he seemed to sink into the sea.
"I"m afraid he is going to have a hard pull! He must be tired out."
He shook his fist at the sloop. It was growing smaller and smaller. A haze was again creeping over the sea.
"My G.o.d! What if the fog should settle down again and keep Merry from finding the raft?"
Bart shuddered at the thought. But Merriwell was so strong a swimmer that Bart"s hopes rose again almost immediately. There were indications that the fog was once more descending, but Merriwell was now swimming straight toward the raft with a bold, firm stroke, and with considerable speed.
"Right here, old man!" Bart encouragingly called.
"I"m coming!" Merriwell shouted, and his tones did not show exhausting fatigue.
Then he swam up to the raft, and Bart helped him to climb upon it.
"What was the matter with those scoundrels?"
"Deaf!"
"What?"
"Deaf as posts, both of them!" Merriwell explained, resting on the boards and panting from his exertions. "They didn"t look this way simply because they didn"t hear us. I"m sure of that, from the way they acted.
I began to think so when I told you to hang to the raft. I believed that if I could overtake the sloop, and could climb aboard and make myself known, or knock them down, as my intention was, I could then release Inza and sail the sloop over here and get you. But I couldn"t swim fast enough."
"You went through the water like a fish!"
"But the sloop went faster. If that breeze hadn"t sprung up, I think I could have made it."
"And what are they doing with Inza?"
"I don"t know. But I"m glad of one thing. She isn"t dead."
"Deaf!" muttered Bart. "Deaf as posts! Well, that does make the thing a bit clearer."
The reaction from the tremendous exertions which Merriwell had put forth made itself felt now. The excitement having pa.s.sed, he felt almost exhausted. He climbed up as high as he could on the boards, and Bart, who was terribly benumbed and chilled from long exposure to the cold water, held him thus while he rested.
"It was too much for you, old man!" he said consolingly.
"I had to try it!" was Merriwell"s answer.
"The fog is shutting down again," said Bart.
"But it won"t stay down. The sea looked red out toward the west. I think it will clear away to-night."
He was in no mood to say more. And the raft drifted on, while the gray fog settled round them, and its chill and gloominess seemed to go to their very hearts.
But as Merriwell had predicted, the fog lifted again, and at the end of another hour of an experience as terrible as either had ever been called to undergo, the gray bank again swung up toward the sky. The sun was sinking redly into the sea, and night was at hand--and what night might mean in their weakened and chilled condition, adrift on the great ocean toward which they seemed to be so resistlessly borne, they dared not think.