[Foul Play by Charles Reade]@TWC D-Link book
Foul Play

CHAPTER XIX
5/13

He cursed them with such horrible curses that Miss Rolleston put her fingers in her ears, and shuddered from head to foot.
Even this was new to her, to hear foul language.
A calm voice rose in the midst and said: "Let us pray." There was a dead silence, and Mr.Hazel kneeled down and prayed loud and fervently; and, while he prayed, the furious cries subsided for a while, and deep groans only were heard.

He prayed for food, for rain, for wind, for patience.
The men were not so far gone but they could just manage to say "Amen." He rose from his knees and gathered the pale faces of the men together in one glance; and saw that intense expression of agony which physical pain can mold with men's features.

And then he strained his eyes over the brassy horizon; but no cloud, no veil of vapor was visible.
"Water, water everywhere, but never a drop to drink." "We must be mad," he cried, "to die of thirst with all this water round us." His invention being stimulated by this idea, and his own dire need, he eagerly scanned everything in the boat, and his eyes soon lighted on two objects disconnected in themselves, but it struck him he could use them in combination.

These were a common glass bottle, and Miss Rolleston's life-preserving jacket, that served her for a couch.

He drew this garment over his knees and considered it attentively; then untwisted the brass nozzle through which the jacket was inflated, and so left a tube, some nine inches in length, hanging down from the neck of the garment.
He now applied his breath to the tube, and the jacket swelling rapidly proved that the whole receptacle was air-tight.
He then allowed the air to escape.


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