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PAGE 19

Four Winds
by [?]

“There is a little risk certainly, but I don’t think there is a great one. Anyhow, the attempt must be made,” said Alan quietly.

Suddenly Lynde’s composure forsook her. She wrung her hands.

“I can’t let you do it,” she cried wildly. “You might be drowned–there’s every risk. You don’t know the force of that backwater. Alan, Alan, don’t think of it.”

She caught his arm in her white wet hands and looked into his face with passionate pleading.

Emily, who had said nothing, now spoke harshly.

“Lynde is right, Mr. Douglas. You have no right to risk your life for a stranger. My advice is to go to the village for help, and Lynde and I will make a fire and watch here. That is all that can be expected of you or us.”

Alan paid no heed to Emily. Very tenderly he loosened Lynde’s hold on his arm and looked into her quivering face.

“You know it is my duty, Lynde,” he said gently. “If anything can be done for that poor man, I am the only one who can do it. I will come back safe, please God. Be brave, dear.”

Lynde, with a little moan of resignation, turned away. Old Emily looked on with a face of grim disapproval as Alan waded out into the surf that boiled and swirled around him in a mad whirl of foam. The shower of sleet had again slackened, and the wreck half a mile away, with its solitary figure, was dearly visible. Alan beckoned to the man to jump overboard and swim ashore, enforcing his appeal by gestures that commanded haste before the next shower should come. For a few moments it seemed as if the seaman did not understand or lacked the courage or power to obey. The next minute he had dropped from the rigging on the crest of a mighty wave and was being borne onward to the shore.

Speedily the backwater was reached and the man, sucked down by the swirl of the wave, threw up his arms and disappeared. Alan dashed in, groping, swimming; it seemed an eternity before his hand clutched the drowning man and wrenched him from the undertow. And, with the seaman in his arms, he staggered back through the foam and dropped his burden on the sand at Lynde’s feet. Alan was reeling from exhaustion and chilled to the marrow, but he thought only of the man he had rescued. The latter was unconscious and, as Alan bent over him, he heard Lynde give a choking little cry.

“He is living still,” said Alan. “We must get him up to the house as soon as possible. How shall we manage it?”

“Lynde and I can go and bring the Captain’s mattress down,” said Emily. Now that Alan was safe she was eager to do all she could. “Then you and I can carry him up to the house.”

“That will be best,” said Alan. “Go quickly.”

He did not look at Lynde or he would have been shocked by the agony on her face. She cast one glance at the prostrate man and followed Emily. In a short time they returned with the mattress, and Alan and Emily carried the sailor on it to Four Winds. Lynde walked behind them, seemingly unconscious of both. She watched the stranger’s face as one fascinated.

At Four Winds they carried the man to a room where Emily and Alan worked over him, while Lynde heated water and hunted out stimulants in a mechanical fashion. When Alan came down she asked no questions but looked at him with the same strained horror on her face which it had borne ever since Alan had dropped his burden at her feet.

“Is he–conscious?” asked Lynde, as if she forced herself to ask the question.

“Yes, he has come back to life. But he is delirious and doesn’t realize his surroundings at all. He thinks he is still on board the vessel. He’ll probably come round all right. Emily is going to watch him and I’ll go up to Rexton and send Dr. Ames down.”