[The White Company by Arthur Conan Doyle]@TWC D-Link bookThe White Company CHAPTER XX 16/19
For a hundred strokes he did not seem to gain an inch.
Then at last, amid a shout of joy and praise from the bank, they slowly drew clear into more stagnant water, at the instant that a rope, made of a dozen sword-belts linked together by the buckles, was thrown by Ford into their very hands.
Three pulls from eager arms, and the two combatants, dripping and pale, were dragged up the bank, and lay panting upon the grass. John Tranter was the first to come to himself, for although he had been longer in the water, he had done nothing during that fierce battle with the current.
He staggered to his feet and looked down upon his rescuer, who had raised himself upon his elbow, and was smiling faintly at the buzz of congratulation and of praise which broke from the squires around him. "I am much beholden to you, sir," said Tranter, though in no very friendly voice.
"Certes, I should have been in the river now but for you, for I was born in Warwickshire, which is but a dry county, and there are few who swim in those parts." "I ask no thanks," Alleyne answered shortly.
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