Towards dark the incoming tide began
to hit the cliff base. Raft had taken the things
from the bundle and had made her wrap herself in the
blanket. “You ain’t used to the weather
like me,” said he, “and this is nothing
to bother about. Lucky it’s not blowing.
Lucky we made this shelf. Hark at that!”
The first full blow of a wave hit
the basalt below them with a heart-sickening thud;
then miles of stricken cliff began to boom. The
terrific corridor was no more, and between them and
the Lizard point so many miles away to the east and
the point of safety miles away to the west, there
was nothing but cliff washed by sea.
“A rotten coast,” said
Raft as they listened. “Only for this shelf
we’d be down there.”
“We’d have been flung
against the cliff and beaten to pieces,” said
she.
“That’s so,” said Raft.
“When we get free from this,”
she said, “let us keep inland. I don’t
mind climbing over rocks, anything is better than the
coast, under these cliffs.”
“We’ve got to keep pretty
close to the cliffs, all the same, to strike that
bay,” he replied, “hope it’s there.”
“It is there,” said she.
“I feel I know it is there and that
we will find a ship. We are being looked after.”
“Which way?”
“We are being led. You
remember when you saved me from dying in that cave,
well, you were making for the bay then. If you
had not found me you would have kept on and you would
have crossed that plain where the bog places are,
it looked the easiest way.”
“That’s so,” said Raft.
“Bompard was swallowed up there.
You would have been swallowed up too; you were led
to find me for both our sakes. Then, to-day, I
could have gone no further only for you, and you remember
how we thought of going back? This ledge was
here waiting for us. It tells us we have to go
on and be brave and everything will come right.”
“Well, maybe, you aren’t
far wrong,” replied the other, “we’ve
scraped through so far and maybe we’ll scrape
through to the end. My main wish is to have a
plank under foot again, there ain’t no give and
take in land, I’m never surefooted on land,
there’s no lift in it. I reckon I’m
like one of them sea chickens not used to solid stuff
underfoot. D’you know what one of them
gulls does first thing he lands on board a ship by
chance?”
“No.”
“He gets sick as a dog.”
The cliff had an echo which, when
it was not answering some loud boost of the sea managed
to return words, and between the smack of two waves
the girl heard it remark something about a dog.
But the echo of the cliff soon had its mouth too full
to hold words. The sea now nearly at full flood
was bringing big waves along with it. In the gloom
they could see the racing grey ghosts, and here, on
account of the curve, there was little rhythm in the
sound of it that came like the continuous thunder
of big drums. At their feet, like the licking
vicious tongue of the roaring monster, came the continuous
gash-gash of waves washing up and falling back.
The girl sat with the blanket around
her leaning close up against the man. She felt
as a person feels standing before the cage of a tiger
uncertain as to the strength of the bars, sometimes
a puff of wind brought a touch of spray on her face,
whilst the continuous muffled thunder of the coast
leagues seemed like the bastions of the whole world
at war with the sea.
“There’s no call to be
afraid,” said Raft. He seemed, by some special
faculty, to be able to divine her feelings.
“I’m not exactly afraid,”
she replied. “It’s just that everything
seems so big and those cliffs, now, even
when they are hidden, they make one know they are
there, they seem wicked and alive, yet not able to
move.”
“You’ve hit it,”
said he, “they’re for all the world as
if they were looking at a chap. It’s a
rotten coast, but it’s near high water now and
the tide will soon be drawing out.”
This cheered her.
Then the whale birds began to cry
and flit about. The whale birds are blind by
daylight and their voices scarcely ever heard, they
are the owls of the sea.
The girl talked about them for something
to say, then she fell to wondering why on a beach
like this there were no sea elephants. Raft explained
“sea cows” would never come to a washed
beach like this, there were no dry rocks for them
to “hang about” on.
He had lit his pipe with the tinder
box and the smell of the tobacco came good and comforting,
the slap and dash of the waves sounded less vicious,
too, as though the sea had done its worst to get at
them and was foiled.
Then she said, apropos of nothing
but the last of her wandering thoughts: “Have
you ever seen a man killed?”
He laughed as though over some pleasant
reminiscence. “Dozens.” Then
he began to recall chaps he had seen killed, falling
from aloft and otherwise. He had seen one hit
the sea such a smack it split him open, and he had
seen a chap under water being pulled to pieces by sharks
just as terriers pull an old shoe.
Then he wandered off to a bar scene
where a dago it was at Nagasaki had
been drinking rice rum and knifed a man, a regular
prosy old sailor’s yarn, with “I says
to him,” and “he says to me” at every
turn.
Then he found that she was leaning
more heavily against him and was asleep. He put
his pipe beside him and slipped an arm round her.
Then, as though sleep were infectious, down he sank
still holding her and there they lay. He snoring
gently and she with her head pillowed on his chest.