The shore was a low, dark streak,
four miles away-an appalling distance away;
but as she clung lightly to his shoulders, as Thomas
Jefferson Brown told her to do, the horror and the
fear of the big sea went out of Lady Isobel’s
brave little heart. She put her face down against
his neck, pulled back his wet hair, and kissed him.
God bless all such true hearts, wherever they be!
“We’ll make it, Tom-we’ll
make it!” she told him a hundred times.
He felt the warm caresses of her lips,
the thrilling love of her voice, and he knew that
she was ready to die with him.
He swam in a strange way-a
wonderfully strange way-did Thomas Jefferson
Brown. He stood almost erect in the water, his
head and shoulders clear; and now and then he stopped
to rest, and it seemed no test for him at all to float
with the weight of the woman he loved, his face turned
up to her in those moments, her glorious blue eyes
devouring him, her sweet lips kissing him-still
kissing him.
He was doing a thing that she knew
no other man in the world could do. She kept
telling him so, while the land drew nearer and nearer,
until at last she cried out in joy that she could
see the little bushes along the shore.
“Another mile, Tom!” she
said. “Only another mile, and then-”
“And then-” he said.
“And then-life!” she cried.
“Life for you and me!”
He went on, seeming to grow stronger
as the shore drew nearer. It was wonderful; but
at last, when they came to the beach, he dropped down
like a dead man. Lady Isobel caught his head to
her dripping breast, and rocked him back and forth,
sobbing a pæan of love and pride, while far out she
saw the canoe and Lord Meton drifting shoreward.
A few minutes later, Thomas Jefferson
Brown went out into the sea again, until he was not
much more than a speck, and brought in the canoe and
Lord Meton, while Lady Isobel stood to her knees in
the water, praising her God that from riches and splendor
she had come out into a wilderness to find such a
man as this.
After that, at York Factory, there
was nothing left for Thomas Jefferson Brown to do
but to reveal himself, and when Lord Meton discovered
that there ran as good blood through his rescuer’s
veins as through his own, he gripped hands with the
man who had saved him, and gave his congratulations
cm the spot. But it made no difference to Isobel.
If anything, she was a little disappointed.
Thomas Jefferson Brown arranged to
go back with them on their yacht. The wedding
would take place in London, a quiet affair. One
day Isobel and her lover came along hand in hand,
and Thomas Jefferson Brown said to me:
“Bobby, you’re going to be best man.”
“Not best man,” Lady Isobel
added, “but second best, Bobby. There’s
only one best man in the world!”
But I haven’t been able to come
to the point of this story yet-the remarkable
part of it. Two weeks later, when we were up the
river and our canoe struck a snag, I discovered that
Thomas Jefferson Brown “couldn’t swim
a stroke!”
“Good Lord!” I said, but waited.
Back at the post, Thomas Jefferson
Brown took me into his little room, and said:
“Bobby, you’ve found that
I can’t swim, and I’m going to trust you
with a great secret. Love can accomplish miracles;
and love did-out there. For when I
let go of the canoe, Bobby, I knew that I was going
straight down to my death. But a wonderful thing
happened.” He brought a little map from
a drawer. “Look at this map, Bobby.
See all those little marks off Harrison’s Island-figures-twos
and threes and fives, and nothing above sixes?
That’s the depth of water for five miles out
from Harrison’s Island, at low tide; and it
was low tide when I jumped from the canoe. That’s
all, Bobby. I waded ashore. But what would
be the good of saying anything about it when it brought
me love like hers?”
Yes, what would be the use? For
Thomas Jefferson Brown stepped out deliberately to
go to his death, and found life. He’s a
hero and a man, is Thomas Jefferson Brown, even if
fate did step in to make heroism a little easy for
him at the time!