PAGE 9
Madman’s Luck
by
* * * * *
Having come, at last, to a doubtful lane, sparsely spread with ice, Tommy Lark and Sandy Rowl were halted. They were then not more than half a mile from the rocks of Scalawag. From the substantial ground of a commodious block, with feet spread to brace themselves against the pitch of the pan as a man stands on a heaving deck, they appraised the chances and were disheartened. The lane was like a narrow arm of the sea, extending, as nearly as could be determined in the dusk, far into the floe; and there was an opposite shore–another commodious pan. In the black water of the arm there floated white blocks of ice. Some were manifestly substantial: a leaping man could pause to rest; but many–necessary pans, these, to a crossing of the lane–were as manifestly incapable of bearing a man up.
As the pan upon which Tommy Lark and Sandy Rowl stood lay near the edge of the floe, the sea was running up the lane in almost undiminished swells–the long, slow waves of a great ground swell, not a choppy wind-lop, but agitated by the wind and occasionally breaking. It was a thirty-foot sea in the open. In the lane it was somewhat less–not much, however; and the ice in the lane and all round about was heaving in it–tumbled about, rising and falling, the surface all the while at a changing slant from the perpendicular.
Rowl was uneasy.
“What you think, Tommy?” said he. “I don’t like t’ try it. I ‘low we better not.”
“We can’t turn back.”
“No; not very well.”
“There’s a big pan out there in the middle. If a man could reach that he could choose the path beyond.”
“‘Tis not a big pan.”
“Oh, ’tis a fairish sort o’ pan.”
“‘Tis not big enough, Tommy.”
Tommy Lark, staggering in the motion of the ice, almost off his balance, peered at the pan in the middle of the lane.
“‘Twould easily bear a man,” said he.
“‘Twould never bear two men.”
“Maybe not.”
“Isn’t no ‘maybe’ about it,” Rowl declared. “I’m sure ‘twouldn’t bear two men.”
“No,” Tommy Lark agreed. “I ‘low ‘twouldn’t.”
“A man would cast hisself away tryin’ t’ cross on that small ice.”
“I ‘low he might.”
“Well, then,” Rowl demanded, “what we goin’ t’ do?”
“We’re goin’ t’ cross, isn’t we?”
“‘Tis too parlous a footin’ on them small cakes.”
“Ay; ‘twould be ticklish enough if the sea lay flat an’ still all the way. An’ as ’tis—-“
“‘Tis like leapin’ along the side of a steep.”
“Wonderful steep on the side o’ the seas.”
“Too slippery, Tommy. It can’t be done. If a man didn’t land jus’ right he’d shoot off.”
“That he would, Sandy!”
“Well?”
“I’ll go first, Sandy. I’ll start when we lies in the trough. I ‘low I can make that big pan in the middle afore the next sea cants it. You watch me, Sandy, an’ practice my tactics when you follow. I ‘low a clever man can cross that lane alive.”
“We’re in a mess out here!” Sandy Rowl complained. “I wish we hadn’t started.”
“‘Tisn’t so bad as all that.”
“A loud folly!” Rowl growled.
“Ah, well,” Tommy Lark replied, “a telegram’s a telegram; an’ the need o’ haste—-“
“‘Twould have kept well enough.”
“‘Tis not a letter, Sandy.”
“Whatever it is, there’s no call for two men t’ come into peril o’ their lives—-“
“You never can tell.”
“I’d not chance it again for—-“
“We isn’t drowned yet.”
“Yet!” Rowl exclaimed. “No–not yet! We’ve a minute or so for prayers!”
Tommy Lark laughed.
“I’ll get under way now,” said he. “I’m not so very much afraid o’ failin’.”
* * * * *
There was no melodrama in the situation. It was a commonplace peril of the coast; it was a reasonable endeavor. It was thrilling, to be sure–the conjunction of a living peril with the emergency of the message. Yet the dusk and sweeping drizzle of rain, the vanishing lights of Scalawag Harbor, the interruption of the lane of water, the mounting seas, their declivities flecked with a path of treacherous ice, all were familiar realities to Tommy Lark and Sandy Rowl. Moreover, a telegram was not a letter. It was an urgent message. It imposed upon a man’s conscience the obligation to speed it. It should be delivered with determined expedition. Elsewhere, in a rural community, for example, a good neighbor would not hesitate to harness his horse on a similar errand and travel a deep road of a dark night in the fall of the year; nor, with the snow falling thick, would he confront a midnight trudge to his neighbor’s house with any louder complaint than a fretful growl.