**** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE ****

Find this Story

Print, a form you can hold

Wireless download to your Amazon Kindle

Look for a summary or analysis of this Story.

Enjoy this? Share it!

PAGE 18

The Tidal Wave
by [?]

Rufus continued heavily, fatefully, gathering force with every word, as a loosened rock beginning to roll down a mountain side. “The light was bad. It was a tomfool thing to do. And Columbine was with you.”

Knight raised his shoulders ever so slightly. “Or rather–I was with her. Miss Columbine knows the lie of the quicksand. I–do not.”

Rufus went on as if he had not spoken. “There’s danger all along that beach as far as the Spear Point. Adam will tell you the same. When it’s a spring tide there’s times when there’s such a swell that it’s round the Point and over the pool like a tidal wave. You’ll hear the bell-buoy tolling when there’s a swell like that. We call it the Death Current hereabouts, because there’s nothing could live in it, and the bell always tolls. And once it comes up like that the way to the cliff-path is under water in less than thirty seconds. And the quicksand is the only chance left.” He paused; it was as if the rock halted for a moment on the edge of the precipice before plunging finally into the abyss of silence below. “When there’s a ground swell,” he said, “the quicksand will pull a man down quicker than hell. And there’s no one–not Adam himself–can tell the lay of it for certain when the light is bad.”

His mouth closed upon the words like the snap of a strong spring. Knight waited for more, but none came. Whatever the thought behind the warning that he had just uttered it was evident that Rufus had no intention of giving it expression. He had uttered the girl’s name with no more emotion than that of his father, but it seemed to Knight that by that very fact he had managed to convey a warning more potent than any that had followed. Otherwise he would scarcely have taken the trouble to mention her. The possibility of subtlety in this great, slow-speaking giant piqued him to a keener interest. He resolved to probe a little deeper.

“Miss Columbine is a very reliable guide,” he remarked. “If you and Adam have been her instructors in shore-craft, she does you credit.”

His remark went into utter silence. Rufus, with huge hands loosely clasped between his knees, appeared to be engrossed in watching the progress of the boat as she drifted gently on the rising tide. His face was utterly blank of expression, unless a certain grim fixity could be described as such.

Knight became slightly exasperated. Was the fellow no more than the fool Columbine believed him to be after all? He determined to settle this question once and for all at a single stroke.

“I suppose she has all you fellows at Spear Point at her feet?” he said, with an easy smile. “But I hope you are all too large-minded to grudge a poor artist the biggest find that has ever come his way.”

There was a pause, but the burning blue eyes were no longer fixed upon the sparkling ripples through which they had travelled. They were turned upon Knight’s face, searching, piercing, intent. Before he spoke again, Knight’s doubt as to the existence of a brain behind the massive brow was fully set at rest.

“There is another thing I have to say,” said Rufus.

Knight’s smile broadened encouragingly. “By all means let us hear it!” he said.

Rufus proceeded. “You speak of Columbine as if she were just a bit of amber or such-like as you’d found on the shore and picked up and put in your pocket. You speak as if she’s your property to do what you like with. That’s just what she is not. You’re making love to her. I know it. I seen it. And it’s got to stop.”

He spoke with blunt force; his hands were suddenly locked upon each other in a hard grip.

Knight lifted his shoulders; his smile had become whimsical. He had drawn the fellow at last. “I thought you’d seen something,” he remarked, “by your way. But who could help making love to a girl with a face like that? It would take a heart of stone to resist it. Why, even you”–and his look challenged Rufus with careless derision–“even you have fallen to that temptation before now, or I’m much mistaken. But I gather that your attentions did not meet with a very favourable response.”