The Flying Death
furiously, but there was little rain. Over the sea hung a black bank of cloud, from which spurted great charges of lightning. Colton, implicitly following his guides, presently found himself passing down a little gully where the still air bore an uncanny contrast to the gale overhead. Hardly had they entered the hollow when Haynes checked himself. 

 “Did you hear it?” he said in a low voice to the girl. 

 Colton saw her press closer to her companion, shudderingly. She poised her head, staring with great eager, sombre eyes, into the void above. 

 “When haven’t I heard it, in my dreams!” she half whispered. 

 “There!” cried Haynes. 

 “Yes,” said the girl. “To seaward, wasn’t it?” 

 On the word, Colton, straining his ears, heard through the multiform clamour of the gale aloft the same faint, strange, wailing note of his earlier experience, not unlike the shrieking of metal upon metal, yet an animate voice, infinitely melancholy, infinitely lonely. 

 “It chills me like a portent,” said Helga. 

 “Never mind, Princess,” reassured Haynes, in his caressing voice. “It was stupid of me to say anything about it, and make you more nervous.” 

 “Nervous! I never knew I had nerves—until now.” She turned to Colton. 

 “Did you hear it too?” 

 “Yes. What was it?” 

 A furious flurry of the gale intervened. The girl shook her head. Johnston in the lead now turned to climb a grassy knoll, and conversation became impossible. 

 At the top they came in view of a score of busy figures outlined sharply against a lurid background as the lightning spread its shining drapery from horizon to zenith. Presently the four people from Third House stood on the cliff overhanging the sledge-hammer surf, and watched the life-saving crews of two stations, Bow Hill to the east, Sand Spit to the west, play their desperate game for a hazard of human lives. Straining their eyes, they could discern, in the whiteness of the whipped seas, a dull, undefined lump, which ever and anon flashed, like a magician’s trick, into the clean, pencilled outlines of a schooner, lying on her beam ends, and swept by every giant comber that rolled in 
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