am sure; I 
feel a premonition Of approaching danger. I pray you, guard against it." 
"Nonsense, my child," returned Monte-Cristo, with a laugh that, in 
spite of all his efforts at self-control, betrayed nervous agitation and an 
undefinable dread. "The sky is clear, the moon is shining brilliantly and 
the sea is altogether tranquil; if a storm were coming it would not be so. 
Banish your fears and reassure yourself; the lightning is but a freak of 
nature." 
The captain, too, was disturbed, though he could give himself no 
satisfactory reason for his uneasiness. 
Ali, with the characteristic superstition of the Nubian race, had 
prostrated himself upon the deck, and was making signs the Moslems 
of his country use to drive away malignant spirits. 
The night, however, passed without accident, though the singular 
lightning continued for several hours. 
Next morning the sun rose, encircled by a ruddy band, fringed on the 
outer rim with a faint yellow, while its beams had a sullen glare instead 
of their normal brilliancy. The lightning of the previous night was 
absent, but soon another and not less disquieting phenomenon 
manifested itself; as far as the eye could reach the sea seemed boiling, 
and, at intervals, a puff, as if of vapor, would filter through the waves, 
rising and disappearing in the heavens. Meanwhile the wind had fallen,
and amid an almost dead calm the sails of the Alcyon hung listlessly, 
with only an occasional flapping. The yacht moved forward, indeed, 
but so slowly that it scarcely appeared to move at all. 
Monte-Cristo and Haydée came on deck at dawn, but the young girl 
displayed such terror at the unwonted aspect of the sun and the sea that 
the Count speedily persuaded her to return with him to the cabin. There 
she cowered upon a divan, hiding her face in her hands and moaning 
piteously. Her fiancé, distressed at her condition, endeavored to soothe 
and comfort her, but utterly without avail; her fears could neither be 
banished nor allayed. At length he threw himself on a rug at her feet, 
and, disengaging her hands from her face, drew them about his neck; 
Haydée clasped him frantically and clung to him as if she deemed that 
embrace a final one. 
As they were sitting thus, the Alcyon received a sudden and violent 
shock that shook the noble yacht from stem to stern. Instantly there was 
a sound of hurrying feet on deck, and the captain could be heard 
shouting hoarsely to the sailors. 
Monte-Cristo leaped up and caught Haydée in his arms. At that 
moment Ali darted down the companion-way and stood trembling 
before his master. 
"What was that shock?" demanded the Count, hurriedly. 
The agitated Nubian made a sign signifying he did not know, but that 
all was yet safe. 
"Remain with your mistress, Ali," said Monte-Cristo. "I am going to 
see what is the matter." 
"Oh! no, no," cried Haydée, imploringly, as the Count placed her again 
on the divan and was moving away. "Oh! no, no; do not leave me, my 
lord, or I shall die!" 
Ashy pale, Haydée arose from the divan, and cast herself on her knees 
at Monte-Cristo's feet.
"Swear to me, at least, that you will not needlessly expose yourself to 
danger," she uttered, in a pleading tone. 
"I swear it," answered the Count. "Ali will faithfully guard you while I 
am gone," he added, "and ere you can realize my absence, I shall be 
again at your side." 
With these words he tore himself away and hastened to the deck. 
There a scene met his eye as unexpected as it was appalling. The entire 
surface of the Mediterranean was aglow with phosphorescence, and the 
sun was veiled completely by a heavy cloud that seemed to cover the 
whole expanse of the sky. This cloud was not black, but of a bloody 
hue, and the atmosphere was so densely charged with sulphur that it 
was almost impossible to breathe. The sea was boiling more furiously 
than ever, and the puffs of vapor that had before only occasionally 
filtered through the waves now leaped up incessantly, each puff 
attended with a slight explosion; the vapor was grayish when it first 
arose from the water, but as it ascended it became red, mingling at 
length with the bloody cloud that each moment acquired greater density. 
The wind blew fitfully, sometimes amounting to a gale and then utterly 
vanishing without the slightest warning. Soon the bloody cloud seemed 
to settle of its own weight upon the sea, growing so thick that the eye 
could not penetrate it, and a few feet from the yacht all was inky 
darkness. 
Monte-Cristo hurried to the captain, who was endeavoring to quiet the 
superstitious fears of the sailors. Drawing him aside, he said, in a low 
tone: 
"Giacomo,    
    
		
	
	
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