could see something dark reaching out from the woodwork to the rope. The throbbing went on violently, and before I could grasp what it meant, the rope gave way in my hand, there was a peculiar rushing in the water, I lost my balance, my foot in the iron ring felt as if snatched off the slippery beam, and I was rushing down through the black water rapidly toward the bottom.
CHAPTER VI.
I suppose I must have struck out involuntarily, and in the act, as the water thundered in my ears and literally jarred me as if blows had been struck over my head, the weight glided from my foot and I rose to the surface choking, panting, and grasping wildly at the first object I touched. It was rope, and it gave way beneath my grasp. I caught at something again. It was a wheel and it turned round, but, as strange sounds, shouts, and cries reached my ears, I got hold of the cross beam, and somehow, by help of the wheel, managed to reach my old position, but crouching down and holding on for dear life.
"Below there!" shouted a familiar voice, but hollow and strange, "who is it?"
"I! Help! Help!" I gasped, now thoroughly unnerved.
"Right; can you hold on till we send you down a rope?"
I did not answer for a few moments as I strove to realise my chances.
"Yes," I said hoarsely. "Don't be long."
It seemed an age before the rope came, and during the terrible waiting time I listened to words of encouragement mingled with stern orders delivered in Lord Gurtleigh's voice.
Then came a cheer, and he shouted to me—
"Hold on, lad! Rope's being rigged over the wheel. I'm coming down."
"No, no," I shouted, rousing myself now from the apathy into which I had been fast sinking. "Send it down, and I'll make it fast."
Soon after a lantern began to descend, and by its light I saw the loop of a rope gradually glide lower and lower till it reached me, when I was so numbed and cramped that I had hard work to get it over my head and arms. But I succeeded, and it must have spun round and tightened about my chest as I was hoisted up, for I was quite unable to help myself, and insensible by the time I reached the top.
When I opened my eyes again with an understanding brain, my old friend was seated by my bedside; and, after I had assured him that I was not going to die, he told me that he had been roused up by the head keeper throwing shots at his window; and, upon his opening it, the man told him that there was something wrong, for, passing near the back of the buildings, he had seen a light in the well-house through the little window.
"We were only just in time, Charley. Caught the scoundrel with the knife in his hand. He had just cut through the rope.'
"Who—who was it?" I cried.
"Why, Brayson, of course!"
"Then he was the thief!" I cried, excitedly, "and the jewels are there."
"Jewels? Down the well? You were after them!"
"Of course," I said, and I told him all.
"Well," he said, as I finished my brief narrative, "I have heard about men being fit for Colney Hatch, and you're one !"
"Never mind that," I said, "if Lady Florry gets back her gems."
"And old Brayson is hung for trying to murder you," said Lord Gurtleigh. "But, I say, old fellow, I'm glad I came."
But Brayson was not hung, he only had a taste of penal servitude for the robbery of the jewels and also of some valuable plate, two packages secured in fine wire netting being brought up after proper dredging arrangements had been made.
As for myself, I was none the worse for my submersion, save that my nerves were unsteady for some time, especially when I used to lie and think—
"Suppose that keeper had not seen the light!"