[Fair Margaret by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link bookFair Margaret CHAPTER X 11/15
Yes, and they saw more than this, for presently two women ran from some cabin waving a white cloth to them; then were hustled back, whereby they learned that Margaret and Betty still lived and knew that they followed, and thanked God. Presently, also, there was a flash, and, before ever they heard the report, a great iron bullet fell upon their decks and, rebounding, struck a sailor, who stood by Peter, on the breast, and dashed him away into the sea.
The _San Antonio_ had fired the bombard which she carried, but as no more shots came they judged that the cannon had broke its lashings or burst. A while after the _San Antonio_, two of whose masts were gone, tried to put about and run for Malaga, which they could see far away beneath the snow-capped mountains of the Sierra.
But this the Spaniard could not do, for while she hung in the wind the _Margaret_ came right atop of her, and as her men laboured at the sails, every one of the Englishmen who could be spared, under the command of Peter, let loose on them with their long shafts and crossbows, and, though the heaving deck of the _Margaret_ was no good platform, and the wind bent the arrows from their line, they killed and wounded eight or ten of them, causing them to loose the ropes so that the _San Antonio_ swung round into the gale again.
On the high tower of the caravel, his arm round the sternmost mast, stood d'Aguilar, shouting commands to his crew.
Peter fitted an arrow to his string and, waiting until the _Margaret_ was poised for a moment on the crest of a great sea, aimed and loosed, making allowance for the wind. True to line sped that shaft of his, yet, alas! a span too high, for when a moment later d'Aguilar leapt from the mast, the arrow quivered in its wood, and pinned to it was the velvet cap he wore.
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