The water was still rising. That must be stopped, anyhow, unless he was to be drowned out like a sewer rat.
He stuck the torch into a cleft in the rock beside him, hung the net to it, and swam over to the conduit, which was already submerged. But the handle which had turned so easily was stiff now; possibly because of the pressure of the water, possibly because there was some other rude mechanism of which he was unaware. Anyhow, after a few trials he realized that he was helpless until the water had found its own level.
But what was that? Who could tell? Would it rise, and rise, and rise, till it filled the whole place?
Who could tell?
It was not fear which clutched at his heart--only a vague self-pity; almost an amused wonder that this Immortality for others might bring Death to him.
He looked up into the vaulted arch above him, then to the, as yet, dry passages which he could just see, as darker arches of shadow.
Unless one of them rose abruptly to a higher level--and the chance that one did, or that he should find it, was remote--he would be wiser to stay here, and see what happened. The roof was at least higher.
He swam back to the torch and, holding on to the crevices of the wall, waited.
Still rising. He shifted the torch to a higher crevice and waited again, a dull curiosity taking possession of him.
Still rising. He wondered, suddenly, whether it would not have been better for him to have gone back the way he had come. The passage had certainly seemed to ascend, and it was a question of levels. That was all. A mere question of levels.