“It’s all over with him by this time, master,” replied Ben, turning the head of his boat, and rowing swiftly towards the scene of strife; “but d——n him, he was the chap as hit poor Bill Thomson just now, and I don’t much care if he should be food for fishes.”
As Ben spoke, they drew near the opposing parties. The contest was now carried on between Rowland and Darrell. The latter had delivered himself from one of his assailants, the attendant, Davies. Hurled over the sides of the skiff, the ruffian speedily found a watery grave. It was a spring-tide at half ebb; and the current, which was running fast and furiously, bore him instantly away. While the strife raged between the principals, the watermen in the larger wherry were occupied in stemming the force of the torrent, and endeavouring to keep the boats, they had lashed together, stationary. Owing to this circumstance, Mr. Wood’s boat, impelled alike by oar and tide, shot past the mark at which it aimed; and before it could be again brought about, the struggle had terminated. For a few minutes, Darrell seemed to have the advantage in the conflict. Neither combatant could use his sword; and in strength the fugitive was evidently superior to his antagonist. The boat rocked violently with the struggle. Had it not been lashed to the adjoining wherry, it must have been upset, and have precipitated the opponents into the water. Rowland felt himself sinking beneath the powerful grasp of his enemy. He called to the other attendant, who held the torch. Understanding the appeal, the man snatched his master’s sword from his grasp, and passed it through Darrell’s body. The next moment, a heavy plunge told that the fugitive had been consigned to the waves.
Darrell, however, rose again instantly; and though mortally wounded, made a desperate effort to regain the boat.
“My child!” he groaned faintly.
“Well reminded,” answered Rowland, who had witnessed his struggles with a smile of gratified vengeance; “I had forgotten the accursed imp in this confusion. Take it,” he cried, lifting the babe from the bottom of the boat, and flinging it towards its unfortunate father.
The child fell within a short distance of Darrell, who, hearing the splash, struck out in that direction, and caught it before it sank. At this juncture, the sound of oars reached his ears, and he perceived Mr. Wood’s boat bearing up towards him.
“Here he is, waterman,” exclaimed the benevolent carpenter. “I see him! — row for your life!”
“That’s the way to miss him, master,” replied Ben coolly. “We must keep still. The tide’ll bring him to us fast enough.”
Ben judged correctly. Borne along by the current, Darrell was instantly at the boat’s side.
“Seize this oar,” vociferated the waterman.
“First take the child,” cried Darrell, holding up the infant, and clinging to the oar with a dying effort.
“Give it me,” returned the carpenter; “all’s safe. Now lend me your own hand.”
“My strength fails me,” gasped the fugitive. “I cannot climb the boat. Take my child to — it is — oh God! — I am sinking — take it — take it!”
“Where?” shouted Wood.
Darrell attempted to reply. But he could only utter an inarticulate exclamation. The next moment his grasp relaxed, and he sank to rise no more.
The Murder on the Thames
Rowland, meantime, alarmed by the voices, snatched a torch from his attendant, and holding it over the side of the wherry, witnessed the incident just described.
“Confusion!” cried he; “there is another boat in our wake. They have rescued the child. Loose the wherry, and stand to your oars — quick — quick!”
These commands were promptly obeyed. The boat was set free, and the men resumed their seats. Rowland’s purposes were, however, defeated in a manner as unexpected as appalling.
During the foregoing occurrences a dead calm prevailed. But as Rowland sprang to the helm, and gave the signal for pursuit, a roar like a volley of ordnance was heard aloft, and the wind again burst its bondage. A moment before, the surface of the stream was black as ink. It was now whitening, hissing, and seething like an enormous cauldron. The blast once more swept over the agitated river: whirled off the sheets of foam, scattered them far and wide in rain-drops, and left the raging torrent blacker than before. The gale had become a hurricane: that hurricane was the most terrible that ever laid waste our city. Destruction everywhere marked its course. Steeples toppled, and towers reeled beneath its fury. Trees were torn up by the roots; many houses were levelled to the ground; others were unroofed; the leads on the churches were ripped off, and “shrivelled up like scrolls of parchment.” Nothing on land or water was spared by the remorseless gale. Most of the vessels lying in the river were driven from their moorings, dashed tumultuously against each other, or blown ashore. All was darkness, horror, confusion, ruin. Men fled from their tottering habitations, and returned to them scared by greater dangers. The end of the world seemed at hand.
At this time of universal havoc and despair — when all London quaked at the voice of the storm — the carpenter, who was exposed to its utmost fury, fared better than might have been anticipated. The boat in which he rode was not overset. Fortunately, her course had been shifted immediately after the rescue of the child; and, in consequence of this movement, she received the first shock of the hurricane, which blew from the southwest, upon her stern. Her head dipped deeply into the current, and she narrowly escaped being swamped. Righting, however, instantly afterwards, she scudded with the greatest rapidity over the boiling waves, to whose mercy she was now entirely abandoned. On this fresh outburst of the storm, Wood threw himself instinctively into the bottom of the boat, and clasping the little orphan to his breast, endeavoured to prepare himself to meet his fate.
While he was thus occupied, he felt a rough grasp upon his arm, and presently afterwards Ben’s lips approached close to his ear. The waterman sheltered his mouth with his hand while he spoke, or his voice would have been carried away by the violence of the blast.
“It’s all up, master,” groaned Ben, “nothin’ short of a merracle can save us. The boat’s sure to run foul o’ the bridge; and if she ‘scapes stavin’ above, she’ll be swamped to a sartainty below. There’ll be a fall of above twelve foot o’ water, and think o’ that on a night as ‘ud blow a whole fleet to the devil.”
Mr. Wood did think of it, and groaned aloud.
“Heaven help us!” he exclaimed; “we were mad to neglect the old sailor’s advice.”
“That’s what troubles me,” rejoined Ben. “I tell ‘ee what, master, if you’re more fortinate nor I am, and get ashore, give old saltwater your fare. I pledged my thumb that, dead or alive, I’d pay the wager if I lost; and I should like to be as good as my word.”
“I will — I will,” replied Wood hastily. “Was that thunder?” he faltered, as a terrible clap was heard overhead.
“No; it’s only a fresh gale,” Ben returned: “hark! now it comes.”
“Lord have mercy upon us, miserable sinners!” ejaculated Wood, as a fearful gust dashed the water over the side of the boat, deluging him with spray.
The hurricane had now reached its climax. The blast shrieked, as if exulting in its wrathful mission. Stunning and continuous, the din seemed almost to take away the power of hearing. He, who had faced the gale, would have been instantly stifled. Piercing through every crevice in the clothes, it, in some cases, tore them from the wearer’s limbs, or from his grasp. It penetrated the skin; benumbed the flesh; paralysed the faculties. The intense darkness added to the terror of the storm. The destroying angel hurried by, shrouded in his gloomiest apparel. None saw, though all felt, his presence,