The sail filled as Bill sheeted it home, and the raft began to glide more rapidly over the water.
Jack took in the oars, for he wanted to rest, and there was but little use rowing, though it might have helped the raft on slightly.
He could now look about him, and as the two harbours to the east and west opened out, he turned his eyes anxiously towards them.
If they were pursued, it would be from one or the other. He had little fear from that on the west, as there was no one likely to trouble himself about the matter; but there were officials living near the larger harbour, and they might think it their duty to ascertain what the small raft standing off sh.o.r.e under sail could be about.
"I wish that we had got away a couple of hours ago," said Bill; but he did not remind Jack that it was through his fault they had not done so.
He blamed himself, indeed, for having gone to see the Turgots, much as he would have regretted leaving the country without paying them a visit.
The farther the raft got from the sh.o.r.e the more rapidly it glided along, the sea being too smooth in any way to impede its progress.
Bill"s whole attention was taken up in steering, so as to keep the raft right before the wind.
Presently Jack cried out, "There"s a boat coming out of the harbour.
She"s just hoisted her sail, and a whacking big sail it is. She"s coming after us. Oh! Bill! what shall we do?"
"Try to keep ahead of her," answered Bill, glancing round for a moment.
"The Frenchmen may not think it worth while to chase us far, even if they are in chase of us, and that"s not certain. Don"t let us cry out before we are hurt. Get out the oars, they"ll help us on a little, and we"ll do our best to escape. I don"t fancy being shut up again, or perhaps being carried off to a prison, and forced into a dungeon, or maybe shot, for they"ll declare that we are escaped prisoners."
Jack did not, however, require these remarks to make him pull with all his might; still he could not help looking back occasionally. He was standing up, it should be understood, rowing forward, with the oars crossing, the larboard oar held in the right hand, and the starboard in the left.
"The boat"s coming on three knots to our one," he cried out. "It won"t take her long to be up with us."
"Pull away," again cried Bill. "We"ll hold on till the Frenchmen begin to fire. If their bullets come near us, it will be time to think whether it will be worth running the risk of being shot."
Jack continued to row with might and main, and the raft went wonderfully fast over the water. It was too evident, however, that the boat was in pursuit of them, and in a few minutes a musket ball splashed into the water a short distance astern of the raft.
"That shows that they are in earnest," said Jack. "We had better lower the sail, another might come aboard us."
"Hold all fast, perhaps they are getting tired of chasing us, and may give it up when they see that we are determined to get away," replied Bill; not that he had much hope that this was the case, but he stuck to the principle of not giving in as long as there was a chance of escape.
Jack had plenty of courage, but he did not like being fired at without the means of returning the compliment.
Another shot from the boat came whistling close to them.
"It"s of no use," cried Jack, "we must lower the sail."
"If you"re afraid, take in the oars and lie down between the chests; you"ll run very little risk of being hit there; but for my part, I"ll stand at the helm till the boat gets up with us," said Bill.
Jack would not do this, but pulled away as stoutly as at first.
Presently another shot struck one of the oars, and so splintered it that the next pull Jack gave it broke short off. He was now compelled to take in the other.
"The next time the Frenchmen fire they may aim better," he said. "Come, Bill, I"m ready to stand by you, but there"s no use being killed if we can help it."
"The boat isn"t up with us yet," answered Bill. "Till she gets alongside I"ll hold on, and maybe at the very last the Frenchmen will give up."
"I don"t see any hope of that," said Jack. "In ten minutes we shall be prisoners. By-the-bye, I turned all my gold into this chest. If the Frenchmen find it they"ll keep it, so I"ll fill my pockets again, and they may not think of looking into them, but they"re sure to rummage the chest."
Saying this, Jack opened the chest, and soon found his treasure, which he restored to his pockets. He asked Bill to take some, but Bill declined on the same ground that he had before refused to appropriate it.
Bill again advised Jack to lie down, and, to induce him to do so, he himself knelt on the raft, as he could in that position steer as well as when standing up.
Thus they presented the smallest possible mark to the Frenchmen.
Shot after shot was fired at them. Their chances of escape were indeed rapidly diminishing.
At last the Frenchmen ceased firing.
They were either struck by the hardihood of the boys, or had expended their ammunition; but the boat came on as rapidly as before, and was now not half a cable"s length from them.
"We must lower the sail," cried Bill, with a sigh, "or the Frenchmen maybe will run us down;" and Jack let go the halyards.
In another minute the boat was up to them.
Besides her crew, there were five soldiers on board.
A volley of questions burst from the people in the boat; and all seemed jabbering and talking together.
As she got alongside the raft, two men leaped out, and seizing Jack and Bill, hauled them into the boat, while another made fast the raft, ready to tow it back to the harbour.
Jack and Bill were at once handed aft to the stern-sheets, where they were made to sit down. Immediately the officer in command of the boat put various questions to them, as to who they were, where they had come from, and where they were going.
According to their previous agreement they made no reply, so that their captors might not discover that they understood French; still, as far as Bill could make out, the Frenchmen were not aware that they were the lads who had escaped from the old tower.
They had no reason to complain of the way they were spoken of by the Frenchmen, who were evidently struck by their hardihood and determination in their persevering efforts to escape. They remarked to each other that their young prisoners were brave boys, and expressed their satisfaction that they were not hurt.
When the officer found, as he supposed, that they could not answer him, he forbore to put any further questions.
The crew did not appear to be angry at the long pull that had been given them back; indeed, Jack and Bill suspected, from what they heard, that the seamen, at all events, would not have been sorry if they had escaped altogether.
On reaching the landing-place in the harbour, they found a party of soldiers, with an officer, who, from what Bill made out, had sent the boat in pursuit of them.
As soon as they stepped on sh.o.r.e the officer began to question them, in the same way as the commander of the boat had done.
Bill shrugged his shoulders and turned to Jack, and Jack shrugged his and turned to Bill, as much as to say, "I wonder what he"s talking about?"
"The lads do not understand French, that is evident," said the officer to a subordinate standing near him; "I shall get nothing out of them without an interpreter. They do not look stupid either, and they must be bold fellows, or they would not have attempted to made a voyage on that raft. I must have a nearer look at it;" and he ordered the boatmen to bring it in close to the sh.o.r.e, so that he might examine it.
He again turned to Bill, and said, "What were you going to attempt to cross the Channel on that?"
Bill, as before, shrugged his shoulders, quite in the French fashion, for he had learnt the trick from Pierre, who, when he was in doubt about a matter, always did so.
"I forgot; the boy doesn"t understand French," observed the officer.
Bill had some little difficulty in refraining from laughing, as he understood perfectly well everything that was said around him, except when the Frenchmen talked unusually fast.