CHAPTER XLVI. SMITH AND CO. DISSOLVE PARTNERSHIP.
CHAPTER XLVII. MR. JABEZ MAKES A DISCOVERY.
CHAPTER XLVIII. MR. SETH PREENE EXECUTES A LITTLE COMMISSION.
CHAPTER XLIX. MR. MARSTON GOES TO CHURCH.
CHAPTER L. FOR BETTER, FOR WORSE.
CHAPTER LI. EXIT EDWARD MARSTON.
CHAPTER LII. AN ESCAPED CONVICT.
CHAPTER LIII. SHAKSPEARE’S NURSE.
CHAPTER LIV. AT HERITAGE HALL.
CHAPTER LVII. SQUIRE HERITAGE HAS A BAD ATTACK.
CHAPTER LVIII. DR. OLIVER BIRNIE’S NEW PATIENT.
CHAPTER LIX. A VISITOR FOR RUTH.
CHAPTER LXI. A LATE VISITOR FOR MR. EGERTON.
CHAPTER LXII. A MESSAGE FROM THE SEA.
CHAPTER LXIII. EDWARD MARSTON GOES HOME.
CHAPTER LXIV. GURTH AND HECKETT.
CHAPTER LXV. MR. JABEZ DUCK DISTINGUISHES HIMSELF AT LAST.
CHAPTER LXVI. BESS MAKES A CONFESSION.
CHAPTER LXVII. GERTIE’S BIBLE.
CHAPTER LXVIII. GERTIE GAINS HER HERITAGE.
CHAPTER I. THE WRECK OF THE ‘BON ESPOIR.’
The ship was going down!
The sky was cloudless, the sun rode high in the heavens, and the waves glistened in the clear, bright light. It was a glorious summer day—a time when life pulsed joyously, and everything invited a man to forget his troubles, close his eyes, and lie basking in the warmth.
A soft, invigorating breeze fanned the pallid cheeks of the eager watchers; the eyes worn with long vigils glistened in the silver light that fell on them; the glowing orb above sent its rays upon haggard faces and seemed to make them smile.
The ship was going down—going down in a calm sea. Here, shut off from all human aid—here, with no one to know the secret of that last hour of anguish and despair—Death had come to the fifty souls left on board the Bon Espoir. They were alone upon the trackless ocean. Around them lay leagues of lonely water. Their fate would be a mystery. As the weeks went on, and no tidings came of the ship, her name would be upon every tongue, and strange conjectures as to her fate would drop from thousands of lips.
The world would picture the good ship caught in some furious tempest, dashed to pieces, and engulfed amid the roar of the billows, the howling of the wind, and the wild cries for help of terror-stricken men.
But there was no tempest, no wind to howl—only a gentle zephyr, that kissed the men’s checks as gently as their mothers did in their happy childhoods; no billows to seethe—only little playful wavelets that lapped against the ship’s side gently, and seemed to say, ‘You are ours; presently we shall dance and sport above you, and toss your bodies softly to and fro in the merry sunshine.’
A night had passed since the crew and passengers of the Bon Espoir knew they were doomed. She had sprung a leak in midocean on the previous night, in a lonely part, far out of the regular track, where for weeks and weeks never a sail might be seen.
The night was dark.
The sea was rough, and there had been a panic. The boats had been filled with passengers and some of the crew at once. The captain had shouted to them to keep near the ship, but the order had been disobeyed. When the light dawned those on board the Bon Espoir scanned the horizon, and saw no floating thing upon the waves.
A light mist hung like a veil over the waters, narrowing their range of vision. The wind had sunk, the waves were at rest, and the sun bursting through the mist gleamed upon a vast expanse of smiling sea.
Those who had stuck to the ship, hoping against hope that she might keep afloat yet until they fell into the track of other vessels, took counsel together and talked of a raft when every effort to save the vessel had been found useless.
But they were in a latitude where the storm came swiftly on the calm; where, with little warning, the baby waves swelled into gigantic billows, and the sighing zephyr, gathering sudden strength, shrieked aloud and lashed the sea to fiercest fury.
The sailors who remained were principally foreigners. They had remained on the ship all night, refusing to work when they found the water gaining on them. They had gone below, torn their hair, beaten their breasts, cried aloud to the saints. Then they attacked the spirit store, and drank till they reeled down and slept a brutish, drunken sleep where they lay.
The passengers still left were all men, but unskilled. Without the aid of the sailors they could not make a raft. The sailors were not in a condition to move—certainly not to work. They had resigned themselves to their fate now. That strange sense of calm which comes mercifully even to cowards