"Steady now," cried the ex-sailor. "You pull; I will stand and steer."
Their boat was roughly grazed several times, but glided through without serious injury.
"Now or never!" cried the oarsman; "we"re sinking."
Alice hid her face on her father"s breast. Life had grown strangely sweet during the brief time since, at Hemstead"s voice, hope had revived; and it seemed a bitter thing to perish almost within the grasp of rescuing hands.
"Oh! come!" groaned the father. "Great G.o.d! this is hard."
With a despairing cry she heard the water rush and gurgle around her, and closed her eyes, not expecting to open them again in this world. But strong hands grasped and lifted her drenched, helpless form tenderly into the boat.
With mingled hope and fear she looked up, and by the lantern"s light recognized Frank Hemstead.
"My father," she gasped.
"Safe, my darling, thank G.o.d," said Mr. Martell, taking her into his arms; "and they have pulled our stout oarsman in, too. So we are all safe."
"Well, I hope so," said the ex-sailor, with a little depressive dubiousness. "We shipped a sight o" water comin" out. There"s a deal of ice runnin", and so chopped up one can skerce see it.
I must be skipper and all, mind, if we are to come safe out. Here, Mr. Hemstead, you bale; and you, too, messmate, if yer hain"t shipped too much water yerself. I"ll sit well up towards the bow, where I can see and pull around the ice. Besides, with this cargo, we"ve got to cross the waves kind o" easy and keerful, or they"ll swamp us."
Thus in this instance the ex-sailor appeared a special providence, and gradually took them out of the ice-strewn tide in the centre of the river to smoother, clearer water nearer the sh.o.r.e. Soon after, drenched and half-frozen, they reached Mrs. Marchmont"s boat-house.
Miss Martell"s powers of endurance were nearly exhausted; and when the lantern, held aloft, revealed Harcourt"s pale face,--when she knew that it was his arms that received her in her helplessness, and she heard him murmur, "I now believe there"s a merciful G.o.d, and thank Him,"--in the strong reaction of feeling she became unconscious.
CHAPTER XXVII.
THE MEETING AND GREETING.
Mr. Martell"s garments were frozen upon him, and he was so stiff and numb with cold that with difficulty he made his way up the bank with the support of De Forrest and the gallant coachman, who had suddenly blossomed out into a hero. Harcourt and Hemstead formed with their hands what is termed a "chair," and bore the apparently lifeless form of Miss Martell swiftly towards Mrs. Marchmont"s residence. The poor oarsman was so glad to be on solid ground once more that he was able to hobble along at a good pace by himself.
The wind again played mad pranks with Lottie"s hair as she at last stood impatiently on the piazza, and then dashed off through the snow to meet them.
"O, thank G.o.d, you are safely back. But Miss Martell--she is not--she is not--"
"Don"t suggest such a thing," groaned Harcourt. "Of course she has only fainted."
Hemstead could not speak, even to Lottie. With white face and set teeth he sought to keep up to the end. The effort he was now putting forth was less that of muscle than sheer force of will. As with Miss Martell, he, too, was reacting from the tremendous strain that the last hour had brought. He trembled with almost mortal weakness as he slowly mounted the piazza steps. He staggered under his share of their burden as he crossed the hall. Lottie, puzzled by his silence, now saw his deathly pallor with alarm, and instinctively stood at his side.
"You had better take Miss Martell directly to her room," said Mrs.
Marchmont.
"In here, quick," gasped Hemstead. He tottered to the nearest sofa, and, a second later, lay unconscious at Miss Martell"s feet.
At this moment Alice again became conscious. Hemstead"s condition did more to revive her than all restoratives; for, woman-like, she thought of him more than herself. She sat up and exclaimed faintly: "O, can"t something be done for him? Quick. It looks as if he had given his life for us"; and she looked around, not far enough to see the expression of Harcourt"s face as he welcomed her back to consciousness, but only to see Addie clinging to his arm, repeatedly asking to be a.s.sured that he was not hurt.
"Thank heaven you are safe," he bent down and whispered.
"Don"t think of me. Look at Mr. Hemstead."
Again he misunderstood her, and with bitterness thought, "After all my anguish on her account, she gives me not even a thought, and her first words are, "Don"t think of me";" and he felt that fate had been very cruel in sending Hemstead to her rescue instead of himself.
Mrs. Marchmont now appeared upon the confused scene, and proved that she was equal to the occasion. It was a sad pity that she had not imparted to her daughter a little of her own capability. She bade De Forrest, and the still stout and hearty ex-sailor, carry Hemstead at once to his room, while she and one of the maids a.s.sisted Miss Martell to hers. No opportunity whatever was given for any romantic and affecting scenes.
Lottie had stood for a second in dismay, after seeing her "true knight" sink on the floor, and then, like a sensible girl, instead of going off into hysterics, went like a flash to her aunt"s wine-closet for brandy. But before she could find it Mrs. Marchmont had caused both the rescued and the rescuer to be conveyed to the privacy of their own rooms, where they could at once receive the prosaic treatment that their condition required.
The room which a moment before had presented a scene which she would never forget was empty, Harcourt having gone for a physician.
She met Mr. Dimmerly on the stairs, who took the brandy from her, saying: "That"s sensible. We"ll rub him down with it, inside and out, and he"ll be all right in the morning. Now you see how blood tells. Making a parson of him can"t change the fact of his coming from an old family. He has been as brave to-night as the Dimmerlys were a thousand years ago."
But Lottie was not a bit interested in the millennial Dimmerlys, and, putting her arms around her uncle"s neck in a way that surprised that ancient fossil, she coaxed:
"Won"t you promise me, uncle, that as soon as he is safe you will come out and let me know?"
"Safe! He"s safe now. Who ever heard of even a half-blooded Dimmerly dying from a mere faint? Old age is the only disease that runs in our family, my dear. But I will let you know as soon as he is comfortably asleep. I am going to make my proper parson nephew almost drunk, for once in his life; and you needn"t expect to see him much before ten o"clock to-morrow."
Lottie, finding her services were not needed in Miss Martell"s room, went down to the kitchen, where she found the half-frozen oarsman-now rigged out in the dress-coat and white vest of the colored waiter--and the brave coachman who had put his old sea-craft to such good use. They were being royally cared for by the cook and laundress. The poor fellow who out in the boat had thought that the hearts of even his neighbors were as cold and hard as the ice that was destroying them had now forgotten his misanthropy, and was making a supper that, considering the hour, would threaten to an ordinary mortal more peril than that from which he had escaped.
She drew from him--and especially from the coachman--the narrative of their thrilling experience, and every moment Hemstead grew more heroic in her eyes.
"Bless you, miss," said the bluff ex-sailor, his tongue a little loosened by the whiskey he had taken as an antidote for the cold and wet, "there"s stuff enough in him to make a hundred such as t"other young gentleman as wouldn"t go. Sudden spells, like that he had t"other night, is all he"ll ever be "stinguished for, I"m a-thinking. But I ax your pardon, miss."
"I can forgive you anything to-night, my brave fellow," said Lottie, blushing. "Though you have given Mr. Hemstead so much credit, he will give you more to-morrow. Take this and get something to remember this evening by"; and she slipped a twenty-dollar bank-note into his hand.
"Now bless your sweet eyes!" exclaimed the man, ducking and bobbing with bewildering rapidity; "it"s your kindness that"ll make me remember the evening to my dying day."
"How could you speak so of Mr. De Forrest, when the young leddy is engaged to him?" said the cook, reproachfully, after Lottie had gone.
"No matter," said the ex-sailor, stoutly. "I"ve had it on my conscience to give her a warnin". I hadn"t the heart to see such a trim little craft run into shallow water, and hoist no signal. If she was my darter, she"d have to mitten that lubber if he was wuth a million."
As Lottie pa.s.sed through the hall with silent tread, she saw that De Forrest was in the parlor, and to escape him continued on up to her room, musing as she went: "What a strange blending of weakness and strength Mr. Hemstead is! Well, I should like that. I should like a man to be as strong as Samson generally, but often so weak that he would have to lean on me."
Whom did Lottie mean by that indefinite word "man"? It did not occur to her that there was a very definite image in her mind of one who was pale and exhausted, and whom it would now be a dear privilege to nurse back into strength and vigor.
She met her uncle and the physician in the upper hall, and the latter said: "Mr. and Miss Martell are doing as well as could be expected, when we consider the fearful ordeal they have pa.s.sed through. As far as I can foresee, a few days" rest and quiet will quite restore them."
"And Mr.--Mr. Hemstead?" faltered Lottie, the color mounting into her face, that anxiety had made unwontedly pale.
"The brave fellow who rescued them? Now he is the right kind of a dominie,--not all white choker and starch. No fear about him, Miss Marsden. He"s made of good stuff, well put together. A night"s rest and a warm breakfast, and he will be himself again"; and the old doctor bustled away.
"What delightful prose!" thought Lottie, and she tripped lightly to her room and kissed the sullen and offended Bel good night; and, very grateful and at peace with all the world, soon fell asleep.