A Dangerous Collaboration (A Veronica Speedwell Mystery) by Deanna Raybourn (english novels for students .txt) ๐
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- Author: Deanna Raybourn
Read book online ยซA Dangerous Collaboration (A Veronica Speedwell Mystery) by Deanna Raybourn (english novels for students .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Deanna Raybourn
โNow, let us turn our considerable energy and intellect to the problem at hand. We might row around the island,โ I suggested. โWe will soon be out of distance for a decent shot and we could risk pulling for the other side of the island. We would find help there.โ
โThe current will carry us the wrong way,โ Stoker said flatly. โAnd we cannot row against it all the way around the island.โ
โThen what if weโโ
Stoker gave a jerk of his head. โWe cannot do anything other than what she has ordered,โ he said. He looked down between his feet and I realized that the rising sensation of cold I had been feeling was not simply nerves. Seawater was seeping into the boat, filling the tiny hull.
Tiberius swore and began to pull harder at his oar. โShe means to drown us.โ
โNo, she means us to comply,โ I corrected. โIf she meant us to drown, she would have made a bigger hole.โ I inspected the series of small punctures drilled into the hull. Sawdust was floating on the top of the water, and I realized she must have damaged the boat just before coming to find us. A few other granules floated on the surface and I rubbed them between my fingers, dissolving them.
โSugar,โ I pronounced. โShe must have packed the holes with plugs of sugar to keep the boat afloat long enough to get us away from the beach.โ
Stoker and Tiberius pulled hard for the little isle, and we reached it just as my skirts were beginning to float. We were wet through to the waist. Tiberius vaulted over the side and onto the slippery rock, putting out his arms to me. I jumped, rocking the boat dangerously as Stoker steadied himself. The water was nearly to the gunwale in the boat, and with a single nimble rush, Stoker leapt to the rock, the quick motion thrusting the boat under the water.
โWell, that lets out any idea of rowing back,โ Tiberius mused.
I looked around the island. It was a single large rock, mostly flat, rising a little way out of the water. It was covered in seaweed and dreadfully exposed to the rising wind. I shivered in my wet clothes and without a word the three of us huddled together in the center of the rock. We were silent awhile, watching the last of the grey light fade and the stars begin winking to life. Across the narrow channel, the warm golden light of Mrs. Trengrouseโs lantern hovered like a firefly in the gathering darkness for a long time before at last it bobbed away.
Stoker turned towards the horizon, where the sea stretched away as to the end of the world. โโThe vast, salt, dread, eternal deep,โโ he pronounced.
โKeats?โ I asked.
โByron, actually.โ
โWhile the two of you natter on about poetry, I should like to point out that Mrs. Trengrouse is well and truly gone,โ Tiberius said. โAnd we are castaways.โ
โAnd me without a flask,โ Stoker said lightly.
I reached beneath my skirt. โHave mine,โ I told him, passing over the small flat bottle of aguardiente I always carried upon my person.
โThank Christ,โ Stoker said, taking a long pull. He offered it to Tiberius, who refused with a shudder.
โIt is not a very good plan, this scheme of Mrs. Trengrouseโs,โ Tiberius said. โShe has got us out here, now what? We pass an uncomfortable night and then hail a passing boat. She might have purchased a few hoursโ peace for herself to finish whatever diabolical machinations she intends, but she cannot hope to escape us.โ
Stoker gave me a long look in the starlight before looking to the horizon, where the moon, enormous and glimmering white as an agate, was rising, casting its light across the shimmering sea.
โโTis the full moon,โ he said slowly. He picked up a piece of seaweed in his hand and held it. โAnd the kelp is damp.โ
โWhat does that signify?โ Tiberius demanded. โI vow, when I get my hands on that witch, I will make bloody well certain she goes to Newgate for this. Who does she think she is, forcibly detaining a peer of the realm?โ
He went on in that vein for a few minutes, but I picked up a piece of seaweed for myself and looked at Stoker. โOh,โ I said quietly. He nodded.
Tiberius paused in the middle of his diatribe. โWhat?โ he said irritably. โIt is bad enough that I am marooned out here like bloody Robinson Crusoe without the pair of you doing that enraging thing where you seem to read one anotherโs minds.โ
โThe tide is rising,โ I said calmly, marking where the waters had climbed since our arrival.
โSo? They do that,โ Tiberius returned. โEvery twelve hours, I am told.โ
Stoker kept his face towards the horizon, the moonlight illuminating his profile like an emperor incised upon the face of a coin. โIt is the full moon,โ he repeated. โAnd the kelp is wet.โ
Tiberius rolled his eyes heavenwards. โWhy does he keep bloody saying that? I can see the damned moon and I do not give a queenโs quim for wet kelp.โ
Stoker turned at last, his expression fathomless. โToday is the first full moon after the autumn equinox. The sea will rise, higher than at any other time during the year. And at the last high tide, it rose enough to cover the island completely.โ
It took a moment for Tiberius to grasp the full implication of what he was saying. Even in the fitful light I could see him pale, his eyes suddenly bleak. โYou mean we shall drown here?โ
Stoker shrugged. โI see no boats, brother. It is only a matter of time before the sea closes over us.โ
โBut the other Sisters,โ Tiberius began.
I shook my head. โToo far to swim and pointless. There is no shelter and they are even further out to sea. No trees to provide fuel for a fire and even if there were, I suspect Stokerโs matches are worse than useless.โ
He reached into his pocket for his matchcase
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