He did not finish, and we went on at full speed.
Lower and lower descended the wall above. At half-past four it was within two feet of our heads, when we sat upright, and stretching away into the blackness on either side it seemed an irresistible mountain mass that was to crush us beneath the flood. We felt that we were going slower, too, for the tide had opposed and checked the current.
At quarter of five I was obliged to stoop.
“Low bridge,” said Gale, but less than an hour later the situation lost its last vestige of humor, even for him.
From the bottom of the boat where we were lying, he called:
“Nick, I forgot one thing. The ebb tide and the incoming tide probably meet about here. I think we’re goners.”
I lay in the bow, which still lacked a few inches of touching the ice above. I had my eyes lifted as high as possible, looking ahead. The world weight of ice was coming down—down—the world of water rising, and steadily rising from below. Between, the space was narrowing from feet to inches, and the line of meeting seemed just ahead. Once I thought I saw there a tiny spark that was not of our own light. Then it disappeared, came again, disappeared—I could not look. I felt already that I was being crushed, smothered, drowned.
The ice above brushed against my hair. I lowered my head quickly until like the others I lay full length in the bottom of the boat.
“Gale—Sturritt,” I groaned, “forgive me! I got you into all this.”
Chauncey Gale’s smothered voice was first to answer.