Again the hope which animated our
breasts chased away the sense of depression and fatigue,
as, lighting our last candle to obtain a better light,
we clambered as rapidly as we could high up towards
where the water came roaring from its vast culvert,
just as with a loud shriek a bird flew out, like some
creature of shadow-land, from a niche which had hitherto
escaped our notice.
The next moment, after a flit round
the amphitheatre, it gave another shriek, and we saw
it re-enter the niche and disappear.
That there was an outlet to the upper
world there we now had no doubt, but the question
arose which exit presented the least peril the
ascent to this niche right over the arch of the torrent,
or the way back by the vault of the troubled waters,
to swim for our lives down the little river.
We did not pause long to consider,
but, drawing our breath hard, sought to climb up to
where the bird had disappeared.
We needed the activity and power of
some animal born to a climbing life, for it was a
terrible task, over slippery, spray-bedewed rocks,
that seemed composed of ice. Our feet and hands
slipped again and again, and more than once I felt
that I must fall upon the bow of that torrent of inky
water, at first by our side, soon right beneath us,
and so be plunged into the seething cauldron below.
I found myself wondering whether,
if I did so, my body would be forced through along
some subterranean way to the vault of the troubled
waters, from thence float out slowly along the little
river, and so to the mouth of the cave and the outer
sunshine.
Such thoughts were enough to unnerve
one; but, bit by bit, we climbed on in safety, handing
the candle from one to the other, and ever and anon
stretching out a helping hand, till, how I cannot tell,
we clung at length right over the falling torrent,
with a piece of rock, smooth as the polishing of ages
could make it, between us and the niche, which now
proved to be a good-sized split separating a couple
of rocks.
“You go first, Mas’r Harry,”
Tom whispered, with his mouth close to my ear.
“I’ll stand firm, and you can climb up
my shoulders, and then lend me a hand.”
I prepared to start, handing him the
one candle we now had alight, when I gave utterance
to a cry of despair; for the linen band which had
crossed my breast, and supported the wallet, had been
worn through by the constant climbing, and I suppose
must have broken when I was making this last ascent.
At all events, the wallet was gone plunged,
I expect, into the torrent, and bearing with it the
flint, steel, tinder-box, and matches; so that, should
any accident befall our one light, we should be in
the horrible darkness of the place.
“Never mind, Mas’r Harry,”
said Tom. “It ain’t no use crying
after spilt milk. Up you go, sir.”
With failing heart and knitted brow
I exerted myself, climbed to Tom’s hips, as
he clung to the rock and lighted me; then to his shoulders;
stood there for a moment trembling, and then struggled
into the cleft, turned round, lay down in a horrible
position, sloping towards the torrent, with my head
two feet lower than my knees, and then stretched out
my hands to Tom.
“Can’t reach, Mas’r
Harry,” he said, after one or two despairing
trials. “You’ll have to go and leave
me. See if you can get out and fetch help.”
For a moment I felt stunned at this
unforeseen termination of our efforts, for there really
had seemed hope now, unless this fresh passage should
prove too narrow to let us pass.
I did not answer Tom, but drew myself
up again to think; when, taking off my coat, I rolled
it round and round, laid fast hold of the collar,
and then, once more lying down, I lowered the coat
to Tom.
“Can you reach that?” I said.
“No, Mas’r Harry not
by a foot,” said Tom gloomily, his words being
shouted, as the roar of the torrent beneath us swept
his voice away.
He stood in a position of awful peril:
a false step, and he would be plunged into the torrent;
and as I looked down at his upturned face and the
flickering candle, I wondered how I could have ever
dared to stand there myself.
“Can you reach it now?”
I said, lowering myself a little more.
But his answer came in a dull, muffled,
despairing monotone:
“No.”
I wriggled and shuffled my body a
little more forward, forcing my boot toes into a crevice
as I did so, for it seemed that now the slightest
strain would draw me over the precipice. But
there was no other resource: Tom must have help;
and I lay shivering there as, with an upward spring,
the candle between his teeth, Tom clutched my coat,
I shuddering the while, and wondering whether the
cloth would give way, or whether I should be drawn
down.
We were looking straight into each
other’s eyeballs, lit by the guttering candle,
as, with trial after trial, exerting the great muscular
strength in his arms, Tom climbed higher and higher
till he could touch my hands, my arms, and then hold
on by my neck, when he stopped panting, just as, in
his convulsive efforts, his teeth met through the
candle, ground through the wick, and the upper portion
fell far below into the torrent to leave us in that
awful darkness.
“Hold fast, Mas’r Harry!”
Tom hissed in my ear. “Crook your hands.
No! Clasp ’em together, to give me a foothold.”
“Tom!” I groaned, “I’m
slipping. I can hold on no longer.”
“A moment a moment, Mas’r Harry,”
he cried.
I clasped my fingers together, when,
bending his body into a half circle, he got one foot
into my hands, forced himself rapidly up, staying
my downward progress of inch after inch, as the weight
of his body pressed me to the rock; but as he turned
to hold me in his turn, it was just as I felt myself
going faster and faster, gliding head downwards towards
the torrent.
Another struggle, and, wet and bleeding,
I was by Tom’s side, for him to hold tightly
by one of my hands, as with the other he felt his way
along slowly for some yards, when once more we sank
upon the rocky floor, to lie panting, our breath drawn
in hysterical sobs, and a darkness around that was
too fearful even to contemplate.
Our despair was such that we could
find no words; but at last Tom said, in a voice that
I could hardly hear for the roar of the torrent, which
seemed to be here condensed by the narrow passage:
“Mas’r Harry, I’ll
go first; follow close behind, and crawl.”
His words gave me energy, and we set
off, crawling slowly, now upwards, now downwards,
feeling every foot of the way, lest some new peril
should lie in our path. The roar of the torrent
rose and fell as we crept away, till by slow degrees
it became fainter, fading to quite a soft murmur;
but still no new horror assailed us. The dread
darkness was forgotten in the hope that shed a light
into our hearts, as foot by foot we progressed through
what was sometimes a narrow passage, sometimes a wide
vault, as we could tell by the echoing of our voices
from its arched roof. In one of these, too,
our ears were saluted by the shrieks of birds and
the rushing of wings a fact which told us
we could not be very far from the light of day; but
progress was so slow that I often despaired of seeing
that light again.
Often and often I could have lain
down and cried like a child, and it required no weak
effort to keep my emotion back.
“Seems to me, Mas’r Harry,”
said Tom at last, “this is a very big place
we’re in, for the more I try about, the less
I seem able to get on. Shall we rest a bit?”
Had Tom said, “Shall we keep
on?” I should have made the same reply “Yes.”
And then, as we extended our aching limbs upon the
soft soil which covered the floor of the cave in this
part, a delicious sense of tranquillity stole over
me, and almost instantaneously I sank into a deep
dreamless sleep.