Page:Doctor Syn - A Smuggler Tale of the Romney Marsh.djvu/248

 cried aloud: "Now by all the barrels of rum! if I ain't fit to take in the devil hisself, wot I believes is a sexton dressed up. For that same corpse wot you've seed a-danglin' from my gallows tree ain't a corpse at all, but sticks, sand, and sacks wot I invented to look like one."

"Are you sure, Jerry?" said the girl.

"I'm a-goin' out there myself now; so come along and see for yourself."

"I've been there once this evening, Jerry."

"Well, come along o' me and you shall give the old scarecrow wot's a-swing on my gallows a good sharp tweak in the ribs." So off they set through the churchyard and out over the Marsh.

"Jerry," whispered the girl presently, "there's something queer going to happen soon. Perhaps to-night. Perhaps to-morrow night. And it's something uncommon queer, too."

"Now what makes you think that?" said Jerry, looking up at her.

"I believe, Jerry, that there are certain tides that run from the Channel round Dungeness that wash up the dead seamen from the deep waters, and all the time that they lie near shore waiting for the ebb to take 'em back to their old wrecked ships in the deep their spirits come ashore and roam about us. I feel that way tonight. I can almost smell death in the air."

"Well, that's a funny notion," remarked the boy,