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<h2> CHAPTER XXVI. THE WORK OF THE SEA. </h2>
<p>The lift of the water-spout had saved John Rex's life. At the moment when
it struck him he was on his hands and knees at the entrance of the cavern.
The wave, gushing upwards, at the same time expanded, laterally, and this
lateral force drove the convict into the mouth of the subterranean
passage. The passage trended downwards, and for some seconds he was rolled
over and over, the rush of water wedging him at length into a crevice
between two enormous stones, which overhung a still more formidable abyss.
Fortunately for the preservation of his hard-fought-for life, this very
fury of incoming water prevented him from being washed out again with the
recoil of the wave. He could hear the water dashing with frightful echoes
far down into the depths beyond him, but it was evident that the two
stones against which he had been thrust acted as breakwaters to the
torrent poured in from the outside, and repelled the main body of the
stream in the fashion he had observed from his position on the ledge. In a
few seconds the cavern was empty.</p>
<p>Painfully extricating himself, and feeling as yet doubtful of his safety,
John Rex essayed to climb the twin-blocks that barred the unknown depths
below him. The first movement he made caused him to shriek aloud. His left
arm—with which he clung to the rope—hung powerless. Ground
against the ragged entrance, it was momentarily paralysed. For an instant
the unfortunate wretch sank despairingly on the wet and rugged floor of
the cave; then a terrible gurgling beneath his feet warned him of the
approaching torrent, and, collecting all his energies, he scrambled up the
incline. Though nigh fainting with pain and exhaustion, he pressed
desperately higher and higher. He heard the hideous shriek of the
whirlpool which was beneath him grow louder and louder. He saw the
darkness grow darker as the rising water-spout covered the mouth of the
cave. He felt the salt spray sting his face, and the wrathful tide lick
the hand that hung over the shelf on which he fell. But that was all. He
was out of danger at last! And as the thought blessed his senses, his eyes
closed, and the wonderful courage and strength which had sustained the
villain so long exhaled in stupor.</p>
<p>When he awoke the cavern was filled with the soft light of dawn. Raising
his eyes, he beheld, high above his head, a roof of rock, on which the
reflection of the sunbeams, playing upwards through a pool of water, cast
flickering colours. On his right hand was the mouth of the cave, on his
left a terrific abyss, at the bottom of which he could hear the sea
faintly lapping and washing. He raised himself and stretched his stiffened
limbs. Despite his injured shoulder, it was imperative that he should
bestir himself. He knew not if his escape had been noticed, or if the
cavern had another inlet, by which McNab, returning, might penetrate.
Moreover, he was wet and famished. To preserve the life which he had torn
from the sea, he must have fire and food. First he examined the crevice by
which he had entered. It was shaped like an irregular triangle, hollowed
at the base by the action of the water which in such storms as that of the
preceding night was forced into it by the rising of the sea. John Rex
dared not crawl too near the edge, lest he should slide out of the damp
and slippery orifice, and be dashed upon the rocks at the bottom of the
Blow-hole. Craning his neck, he could see, a hundred feet below him, the
sullenly frothing water, gurgling, spouting, and creaming, in huge turbid
eddies, occasionally leaping upwards as though it longed for another storm
to send it raging up to the man who had escaped its fury. It was
impossible to get down that way. He turned back into the cavern, and began
to explore in that direction. The twin-rocks against which he had been
hurled were, in fact, pillars which supported the roof of the water-drive.
Beyond them lay a great grey shadow which was emptiness, faintly illumined
by the sea-light cast up through the bottom of the gulf. Midway across the
grey shadow fell a strange beam of dusky brilliance, which cast its
flickering light upon a wilderness of waving sea-weeds. Even in the
desperate position in which he found himself, there survived in the
vagabond's nature sufficient poetry to make him value the natural marvel
upon which he had so strangely stumbled. The immense promontory, which,
viewed from the outside, seemed as solid as a mountain, was in reality but
a hollow cone, reft and split into a thousand fissures by the unsuspected
action of the sea for centuries. The Blow-hole was but an insignificant
cranny compared with this enormous chasm. Descending with difficulty the
steep incline, he found himself on the brink of a gallery of rock, which,
jutting out over the pool, bore on its moist and weed-bearded edges signs
of frequent submersion. It must be low tide without the rock. Clinging to
the rough and root-like algae that fringed the ever-moist walls, John Rex
crept round the projection of the gallery, and passed at once from dimness
to daylight. There was a broad loop-hole in the side of the honey-combed
and wave-perforated cliff. The cloudless heaven expanded above him; a
fresh breeze kissed his cheek and, sixty feet below him, the sea wrinkled
all its lazy length, sparkling in myriad wavelets beneath the bright beams
of morning. Not a sign of the recent tempest marred the exquisite harmony
of the picture. Not a sign of human life gave evidence of the grim
neighbourhood of the prison. From the recess out of which he peered
nothing was visible but a sky of turquoise smiling upon a sea of sapphire.</p>
<p>The placidity of Nature was, however, to the hunted convict a new source
of alarm. It was a reason why the Blow-hole and its neighbourhood should
be thoroughly searched. He guessed that the favourable weather would be an
additional inducement to McNab and Burgess to satisfy themselves as to the
fate of their late prisoner. He turned from the opening, and prepared to
descend still farther into the rock pathway. The sunshine had revived and
cheered him, and a sort of instinct told him that the cliff, so
honey-combed above, could not be without some gully or chink at its base,
which at low tide would give upon the rocky shore. It grew darker as he
descended, and twice he almost turned back in dread of the gulfs on either
side of him. It seemed to him, also, that the gullet of weed-clad rock
through which he was crawling doubled upon itself, and led only into the
bowels of the mountain. Gnawed by hunger, and conscious that in a few
hours at most the rising tide would fill the subterranean passage and cut
off his retreat, he pushed desperately onwards. He had descended some
ninety feet, and had lost, in the devious windings of his downward path,
all but the reflection of the light from the gallery, when he was rewarded
by a glimpse of sunshine striking upwards. He parted two enormous masses
of seaweed, whose bubble-headed fronds hung curtainwise across his path,
and found himself in the very middle of the narrow cleft of rock through
which the sea was driven to the Blow-hole.</p>
<p>At an immense distance above him was the arch of cliff. Beyond that arch
appeared a segment of the ragged edge of the circular opening, down which
he had fallen. He looked in vain for the funnel-mouth whose friendly
shelter had received him. It was now indistinguishable. At his feet was a
long rift in the solid rock, so narrow that he could almost have leapt
across it. This rift was the channel of a swift black current which ran
from the sea for fifty yards under an arch eight feet high, until it broke
upon the jagged rocks that lay blistering in the sunshine at the bottom of
the circular opening in the upper cliff. A shudder shook the limbs of the
adventurous convict. He comprehended that at high tide the place where he
stood was under water, and that the narrow cavern became a subaqueous pipe
of solid rock forty feet long, through which were spouted the league-long
rollers of the Southern Sea.</p>
<p>The narrow strip of rock at the base of the cliff was as flat as a table.
Here and there were enormous hollows like pans, which the retreating tide
had left full of clear, still water. The crannies of the rock were
inhabited by small white crabs, and John Rex found to his delight that
there was on this little shelf abundance of mussels, which, though lean
and acrid, were sufficiently grateful to his famished stomach. Attached to
the flat surfaces of the numerous stones, moreover, were coarse limpets.
These, however, John Rex found too salt to be palatable, and was compelled
to reject them. A larger variety, however, having a succulent body as
thick as a man's thumb, contained in long razor-shaped shells, were in
some degree free from this objection, and he soon collected the materials
for a meal. Having eaten and sunned himself, he began to examine the
enormous rock, to the base of which he had so strangely penetrated. Rugged
and worn, it raised its huge breast against wind and wave, secure upon a
broad pedestal, which probably extended as far beneath the sea as the
massive column itself rose above it. Rising thus, with its shaggy drapery
of seaweed clinging about its knees, it seemed to be a motionless but
sentient being—some monster of the deep, a Titan of the ocean
condemned ever to front in silence the fury of that illimitable and
rarely-travelled sea. Yet—silent and motionless as he was—the
hoary ancient gave hint of the mysteries of his revenge. Standing upon the
broad and sea-girt platform where surely no human foot but his had ever
stood in life, the convict saw, many feet above him, pitched into a cavity
of the huge sun-blistered boulders, an object which his sailor eye told
him at once was part of the top hamper of some large ship. Crusted with
shells, and its ruin so overrun with the ivy of the ocean that its ropes
could barely be distinguished from the weeds with which they were
encumbered, this relic of human labour attested the triumph of nature over
human ingenuity. Perforated below by the relentless sea, exposed above to
the full fury of the tempest; set in solitary defiance to the waves, that
rolling from the ice-volcano of the Southern Pole, hurled their gathered
might unchecked upon its iron front, the great rock drew from its lonely
warfare the materials of its own silent vengeance. Clasped in iron arms,
it held its prey, snatched from the jaws of the all-devouring sea. One
might imagine that, when the doomed ship, with her crew of shrieking
souls, had splintered and gone down, the deaf, blind giant had clutched
this fragment, upheaved from the seething waters, with a thrill of savage
and terrible joy.</p>
<p>John Rex, gazing up at this memento of a forgotten agony, felt a sensation
of the most vulgar pleasure. "There's wood for my fire!" thought he; and
mounting to the spot, he essayed to fling down the splinters of timber
upon the platform. Long exposed to the sun, and flung high above the
water-mark of recent storms, the timber had dried to the condition of
touchwood, and would burn fiercely. It was precisely what he required.
Strange accident that had for years stored, upon a desolate rock, this
fragment of a vanished and long-forgotten vessel, that it might aid at
last to warm the limbs of a villain escaping from justice!</p>
<p>Striking the disintegrated mass with his iron-shod heel, John Rex broke
off convenient portions; and making a bag of his shirt by tying the
sleeves and neck, he was speedily staggering into the cavern with a supply
of fuel. He made two trips, flinging down the wood on the floor of the
gallery that overlooked the sea, and was returning for a third, when his
quick ear caught the dip of oars. He had barely time to lift the seaweed
curtain that veiled the entrance to the chasm, when the Eaglehawk boat
rounded the promontory. Burgess was in the stern-sheets, and seemed to be
making signals to someone on the top of the cliff. Rex, grinning behind
his veil, divined the manoeuvre. McNab and his party were to search above,
while the Commandant examined the gulf below. The boat headed direct for
the passage, and for an instant John Rex's undaunted soul shivered at the
thought that, perhaps, after all, his pursuers might be aware of the
existence of the cavern. Yet that was unlikely. He kept his ground, and
the boat passed within a foot of him, gliding silently into the gulf. He
observed that Burgess's usually florid face was pale, and that his left
sleeve was cut open, showing a bandage on the arm. There had been some
fighting, then, and it was not unlikely that all his fellow-desperadoes
had been captured! He chuckled at his own ingenuity and good sense. The
boat, emerging from the archway, entered the pool of the Blow-hole, and,
held with the full strength of the party, remained stationary. John Rex
watched Burgess scan the rocks and eddies, saw him signal to McNab, and
then, with much relief, beheld the boat's head brought round to the
sea-board.</p>
<p>He was so intent upon watching this dangerous and difficult operation that
he was oblivious of an extraordinary change which had taken place in the
interior of the cavern. The water which, an hour ago, had left exposed a
long reef of black hummock-rocks, was now spread in one foam-flecked sheet
over the ragged bottom of the rude staircase by which he had descended.
The tide had turned, and the sea, apparently sucked in through some deeper
tunnel in the portion of the cliff which was below water, was being forced
into the vault with a rapidity which bid fair to shortly submerge the
mouth of the cave. The convict's feet were already wetted by the incoming
waves, and as he turned for one last look at the boat he saw a green
billow heave up against the entrance to the chasm, and, almost blotting
out the daylight, roll majestically through the arch. It was high time for
Burgess to take his departure if he did not wish his whale-boat to be
cracked like a nut against the roof of the tunnel. Alive to his danger,
the Commandant abandoned the search after his late prisoner's corpse, and
he hastened to gain the open sea. The boat, carried backwards and upwards
on the bosom of a monstrous wave, narrowly escaped destruction, and John
Rex, climbing to the gallery, saw with much satisfaction the broad back of
his out-witted gaoler disappear round the sheltering promontory. The last
efforts of his pursuers had failed, and in another hour the only
accessible entrance to the convict's retreat was hidden under three feet
of furious seawater.</p>
<p>His gaolers were convinced of his death, and would search for him no more.
So far, so good. Now for the last desperate venture—the escape from
the wonderful cavern which was at once his shelter and his prison. Piling
his wood together, and succeeding after many efforts, by the aid of a
flint and the ring which yet clung to his ankle, in lighting a fire, and
warming his chilled limbs in its cheering blaze, he set himself to
meditate upon his course of action. He was safe for the present, and the
supply of food that the rock afforded was amply sufficient to sustain life
in him for many days, but it was impossible that he could remain for many
days concealed. He had no fresh water, and though, by reason of the
soaking he had received, he had hitherto felt little inconvenience from
this cause, the salt and acrid mussels speedily induced a raging thirst,
which he could not alleviate. It was imperative that within forty-eight
hours at farthest he should be on his way to the peninsula. He remembered
the little stream into which—in his flight of the previous night—he
had so nearly fallen, and hoped to be able, under cover of the darkness,
to steal round the reef and reach it unobserved. His desperate scheme was
then to commence. He had to run the gauntlet of the dogs and guards, gain
the peninsula, and await the rescuing vessel. He confessed to himself that
the chances were terribly against him. If Gabbett and the others had been
recaptured—as he devoutly trusted—the coast would be
comparatively clear; but if they had escaped, he knew Burgess too well to
think that he would give up the chase while hope of re-taking the
absconders remained to him. If indeed all fell out as he had wished, he
had still to sustain life until Blunt found him—if haply Blunt had
not returned, wearied with useless and dangerous waiting.</p>
<p>As night came on, and the firelight showed strange shadows waving from the
corners of the enormous vault, while the dismal abysses beneath him
murmured and muttered with uncouth and ghastly utterance, there fell upon
the lonely man the terror of Solitude. Was this marvellous hiding-place
that he had discovered to be his sepulchre? Was he—a monster amongst
his fellow-men—to die some monstrous death, entombed in this
mysterious and terrible cavern of the sea? He had tried to drive away
these gloomy thoughts by sketching out for himself a plan of action—but
in vain. In vain he strove to picture in its completeness that—as
yet vague—design by which he promised himself to wrest from the
vanished son of the wealthy ship-builder his name and heritage. His mind,
filled with forebodings of shadowy horror, could not give the subject the
calm consideration which it needed. In the midst of his schemes for the
baffling of the jealous love of the woman who was to save him, and the
getting to England, in shipwrecked and foreign guise, as the long-lost
heir to the fortune of Sir Richard Devine, there arose ghastly and awesome
shapes of death and horror, with whose terrible unsubstantiality he must
grapple in the lonely recesses of that dismal cavern. He heaped fresh wood
upon his fire, that the bright light might drive out the gruesome things
that lurked above, below, and around him. He became afraid to look behind
him, lest some shapeless mass of mid-sea birth—some voracious
polype, with far-reaching arms and jellied mouth ever open to devour—might
slide up over the edge of the dripping caves below, and fasten upon him in
the darkness. His imagination—always sufficiently vivid, and spurred
to an unnatural effect by the exciting scenes of the previous night—painted
each patch of shadow, clinging bat-like to the humid wall, as some
globular sea-spider ready to drop upon him with its viscid and clay-cold
body, and drain out his chilled blood, enfolding him in rough and hairy
arms. Each splash in the water beneath him, each sigh of the multitudinous
and melancholy sea, seemed to prelude the laborious advent of some
mis-shapen and ungainly abortion of the ooze. All the sensations induced
by lapping water and regurgitating waves took material shape and
surrounded him. All creatures that could be engendered by slime and salt
crept forth into the firelight to stare at him. Red dabs and splashes that
were living beings, having a strange phosphoric light of their own, glowed
upon the floor. The livid encrustations of a hundred years of humidity
slipped from off the walls and painfully heaved their mushroom surfaces to
the blaze. The red glow of the unwonted fire, crimsoning the wet sides of
the cavern, seemed to attract countless blisterous and transparent
shapelessnesses, which elongated themselves towards him. Bloodless and
bladdery things ran hither and thither noiselessly. Strange carapaces
crawled from out of the rocks. All the horrible unseen life of the ocean
seemed to be rising up and surrounding him. He retreated to the brink of
the gulf, and the glare of the upheld brand fell upon a rounded hummock,
whose coronal of silky weed out-floating in the water looked like the head
of a drowned man. He rushed to the entrance of the gallery, and his
shadow, thrown into the opening, took the shape of an avenging phantom,
with arms upraised to warn him back. The naturalist, the explorer, or the
shipwrecked seaman would have found nothing frightful in this exhibition
of the harmless life of the Australian ocean. But the convict's guilty
conscience, long suppressed and derided, asserted itself in this hour when
it was alone with Nature and Night. The bitter intellectual power which
had so long supported him succumbed beneath imagination—the
unconscious religion of the soul. If ever he was nigh repentance it was
then. Phantoms of his past crimes gibbered at him, and covering his eyes
with his hands, he fell shuddering upon his knees. The brand, loosening
from his grasp, dropped into the gulf, and was extinguished with a hissing
noise. As if the sound had called up some spirit that lurked below, a
whisper ran through the cavern.</p>
<p>"John Rex!" The hair on the convict's flesh stood up, and he cowered to
the earth.</p>
<p>"John Rex?"</p>
<p>It was a human voice! Whether of friend or enemy he did not pause to
think. His terror over-mastered all other considerations.</p>
<p>"Here! here!" he cried, and sprang to the opening of the vault.</p>
<p>Arrived at the foot of the cliff, Blunt and Staples found themselves in
almost complete darkness, for the light of the mysterious fire, which had
hitherto guided them, had necessarily disappeared. Calm as was the night,
and still as was the ocean, the sea yet ran with silent but dangerous
strength through the channel which led to the Blow-hole; and Blunt,
instinctively feeling the boat drawn towards some unknown peril, held off
the shelf of rocks out of reach of the current. A sudden flash of fire, as
from a flourished brand, burst out above them, and floating downwards
through the darkness, in erratic circles, came an atom of burning wood.
Surely no one but a hunted man would lurk in such a savage retreat.</p>
<p>Blunt, in desperate anxiety, determined to risk all upon one venture.
"John Rex!" he shouted up through his rounded hands. The light flashed
again at the eye-hole of the mountain, and on the point above them
appeared a wild figure, holding in its hands a burning log, whose fierce
glow illumined a face so contorted by deadly fear and agony of expectation
that it was scarce human.</p>
<p>"Here! here!"</p>
<p>"The poor devil seems half-crazy," said Will Staples, under his breath;
and then aloud, "We're FRIENDS!" A few moments sufficed to explain
matters. The terrors which had oppressed John Rex disappeared in human
presence, and the villain's coolness returned. Kneeling on the rock
platform, he held parley.</p>
<p>"It is impossible for me to come down now," he said. "The tide covers the
only way out of the cavern."</p>
<p>"Can't you dive through it?" said Will Staples.</p>
<p>"No, nor you neither," said Rex, shuddering at the thought of trusting
himself to that horrible whirlpool.</p>
<p>"What's to be done? You can't come down that wall." "Wait until morning,"
returned Rex coolly. "It will be dead low tide at seven o'clock. You must
send a boat at six, or there-abouts. It will be low enough for me to get
out, I dare say, by that time."</p>
<p>"But the Guard?"</p>
<p>"Won't come here, my man. They've got their work to do in watching the
Neck and exploring after my mates. They won't come here. Besides, I'm
dead."</p>
<p>"Dead!"</p>
<p>"Thought to be so, which is as well—better for me, perhaps. If they
don't see your ship, or your boat, you're safe enough."</p>
<p>"I don't like to risk it," said Blunt. "It's Life if we're caught."</p>
<p>"It's Death if I'm caught!" returned the other, with a sinister laugh.
"But there's no danger if you are cautious. No one looks for rats in a
terrier's kennel, and there's not a station along the beach from here to
Cape Pillar. Take your vessel out of eye-shot of the Neck, bring the boat
up Descent Beach, and the thing's done."</p>
<p>"Well," says Blunt, "I'll try it."</p>
<p>"You wouldn't like to stop here till morning? It is rather lonely,"
suggested Rex, absolutely making a jest of his late terrors.</p>
<p>Will Staples laughed. "You're a bold boy!" said he. "We'll come at
daybreak."</p>
<p>"Have you got the clothes as I directed?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Then good night. I'll put my fire out, in case somebody else might see
it, who wouldn't be as kind as you are."</p>
<p>"Good night."</p>
<p>"Not a word for the Madam," said Staples, when they reached the vessel.</p>
<p>"Not a word, the ungrateful dog," asserted Blunt, adding, with some heat,
"That's the way with women. They'll go through fire and water for a man
that doesn't care a snap of his fingers for 'em; but for any poor fellow
who risks his neck to pleasure 'em they've nothing but sneers! I wish I'd
never meddled in the business."</p>
<p>"There are no fools like old fools," thought Will Staples, looking back
through the darkness at the place where the fire had been, but he did not
utter his thoughts aloud.</p>
<p>At eight o'clock the next morning the Pretty Mary stood out to sea with
every stitch of canvas set, alow and aloft. The skipper's fishing had come
to an end. He had caught a shipwrecked seaman, who had been brought on
board at daylight, and was then at breakfast in the cabin. The crew winked
at each other when the haggard mariner, attired in garments that seemed
remarkably well preserved, mounted the side. But they, none of them, were
in a position to controvert the skipper's statement.</p>
<p>"Where are we bound for?" asked John Rex, smoking Staples's pipe in
lingering puffs of delight. "I'm entirely in your hands, Blunt."</p>
<p>"My orders are to cruise about the whaling grounds until I meet my
consort," returned Blunt sullenly, "and put you aboard her. She'll take
you back to Sydney. I'm victualled for a twelve-months' trip."</p>
<p>"Right!" cried Rex, clapping his preserver on the back. "I'm bound to get
to Sydney somehow; but, as the Philistines are abroad, I may as well tarry
in Jericho till my beard be grown. Don't stare at my Scriptural quotation,
Mr. Staples," he added, inspirited by creature comforts, and secure amid
his purchased friends. "I assure you that I've had the very best religious
instruction. Indeed, it is chiefly owing to my worthy spiritual pastor and
master that I am enabled to smoke this very villainous tobacco of yours at
the present moment!"</p>
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