[The Barrier by Rex Beach]@TWC D-Link book
The Barrier

CHAPTER XVII
19/37

By now he was drawing opposite them with the speed of a hound.

The girl, gagged and held by her captor's hands, struggled and moaned despairingly, and, crouching back of the boat, they might have escaped discovery in the gray morning light had it not been for the telltale fire--a tiny, crackling blaze no larger than a man's hat.

It betrayed them.

The dancing craft upon which their eyes were fixed whipped about, almost leaping from the water at one stroke, then came towards them, now nothing but a narrow thing, half again the width of a man's body.

The current carried it down abreast of them, then past, and Runnion rose, releasing the girl, who cried out with all her might to the boatman.


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