[Pearl-Maiden by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link bookPearl-Maiden CHAPTER IV 11/19
Then, knowing that their hour was come, the crew made shift to launch the boat and raft on the lee side, and began to clamber into them.
Now Nehushta came out of the cabin and prayed the captain to save them also, whereon he answered her with an oath that this bad luck was because of them, and that if either she or her mistress tried to enter the boat, they would stab them and cast them into the sea as an offering to the storm-god. So Nehushta struggled back to the cabin, and kneeling by the side of her mistress, with tears told her that these black-hearted sailors had left them alone upon the ship to drown.
Rachel answered that she cared little, but only desired to be free of her fear and misery. As the words left her lips, Nehushta heard a sound of screaming, and crawling to the bulwarks, looked forth to see a dreadful sight.
The boat and the raft, laden with a great number of men who were fighting for places with each other, having loosed from the lee of the ship, were come among the breakers, which threw them up as a child throws a ball at play.
Even while Nehushta gazed, their crafts were overturned, casting them into the water, every one there to be dashed against the rocks or drowned by the violence of the waves, so that not a man of all that ship's company came living to the shore. Like tens of thousands of others on this coast in all ages, they perished, every one of them--and that was the reward of their wickedness. Giving thanks to God, Who had brought them out of that danger against their wills, Nehushta crept back to the cabin and told her mistress what had passed. "May they find pardon," said Rachel, shuddering; "but as for us, it will matter little whether we are drowned in the boat or upon the galley." "I do not think that we shall drown," answered Nehushta. "How are we to escape it, Nou? The ship lies upon the rock, where the great waves will batter her to pieces.
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