[Kilgorman by Talbot Baines Reed]@TWC D-Link book
Kilgorman

CHAPTER TWENTY FOUR
4/17

Once, on a specially happy evening, she had sung it in the attic on the Quai Necker in Paris, and had laughed when I put in a rough bass.
I could not help, as I stood and listened, repeating the experiment, first very softly, then less so, and finally loud enough for her to hear.
What fools we men are! At that instant, with a savage howl, a dog--my own dog Con--rushed down the garden to the spot.

The window closed abruptly; there was a sound of voices in the yard and a drawing of bolts at the hall-door, and a hurrying of lights within.

I had barely time to cast off from the stake by which I held, and let my boat into the rapid ebb, when footsteps sounded on the gravel, and a shot fired into the night woke the echoes of the lough.
So much for my serenading, and so much for the life of security and peace my little mistress was doomed to live in her father's house.
I cared not much where the tide took me after that, till presently the tossing of my boat warned me that I must be on the reef off Kilgorman cliffs.

In the darkness I could see nothing, but my memory was strong enough to serve for moon and compass both.

On this tide and with this wind ten minutes would bring me into the creek.
Why not?
Why not now as well as any other time?
I was a man, and feared ghosts no longer.


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