Page:Augusta Seaman--Jacqueline of the carrier pigeons.djvu/133

Rh from fighting the current he was helped along by it, and in a short time stood safe within  the town again. Arrived there, another swim awaited him, for as he could not run  through the town clad in nothing at all, he  was obliged to take to the canal till he  reached the spot where he had left his clothes. Once only he stopped to climb out and investigate the place where Dirk had sat examining his papers. As good luck would have it, he discovered hidden away in the grass  where it had evidently fallen unnoticed, one  of the scraps. On it were written a few words, evidently only a part of the whole,  whatever that might have been. Gysbert read them and his eyes grew big with wonder,  and then snapped angrily. “Ah, this is shameful!” he cried. “We’ll see about this, Dirk Willumhoog, thou traitor as well as  coward!”

With the paper in his mouth for safety, he plunged into the canal, swam to the point  where he had left his clothes, flung them on