登陆注册
14324600000016

第16章

A laid-up steamer was a dead thing and no mistake; a sailing-ship somehow seems always ready to spring into life with the breath of the incorruptible heaven; but a teamer, thought Captain Whalley, with her fires out, without the warm whiffs from below meeting you on her decks, without the hiss of steam, the clangs of iron in her breast--lies there as cold and still and pulseless as a corpse.

In the solitude of the avenue, all black above and lighted below, Captain Whalley, considering the dis-cretion of his course, met, as it were incidentally, the thought of death. He pushed it aside with dislike and contempt. He almost laughed at it; and in the un-quenchable vitality of his age only thought with a kind of exultation how little he needed to keep body and soul together. Not a bad investment for the poor woman this solid carcass of her father. And for the rest--in case of anything--the agreement should be clear: the whole five hundred to be paid back to her integrally within three months. Integrally. Every penny. He was not to lose any of her money whatever else had to go--a little dignity--some of his self-respect. He had never before allowed anybody to remain under any sort of false impression as to himself. Well, let that go--for her sake. After all, he had never SAID any-thing misleading--and Captain Whalley felt himself corrupt to the marrow of his bones. He laughed a little with the intimate scorn of his worldly prudence.

Clearly, with a fellow of that sort, and in the peculiar relation they were to stand to each other, it would not have done to blurt out everything. He did not like the fellow. He did not like his spells of fawning loquacity and bursts of resentfulness. In the end--a poor devil.

He would not have liked to stand in his shoes. Men were not evil, after all. He did not like his sleek hair, his queer way of standing at right angles, with his nose in the air, and glancing along his shoulder at you. No.

On the whole, men were not bad--they were only silly or unhappy.

Captain Whalley had finished considering the discre-tion of that step--and there was the whole long night before him. In the full light his long beard would glisten like a silver breastplate covering his heart; in the spaces between the lamps his burly figure passed less distinct, loomed very big, wandering, and mysterious.

No; there was not much real harm in men: and all the time a shadow marched with him, slanting on his left hand--which in the East is a presage of evil.

. . . . . . .

"Can you make out the clump of palms yet, Serang?" asked Captain Whalley from his chair on the bridge of the Sofala approaching the bar of Batu Beru.

"No, Tuan. By-and-by see." The old Malay, in a blue dungaree suit, planted on his bony dark feet under the bridge awning, put his hands behind his back and stared ahead out of the innumerable wrinkles at the corners of his eyes.

Captain Whalley sat still, without lifting his head to look for himself. Three years--thirty-six times. He had made these palms thirty-six times from the south-ward. They would come into view at the proper time.

Thank God, the old ship made her courses and distances trip after trip, as correct as clockwork. At last he mur-mured again--"In sight yet?"

"The sun makes a very great glare, Tuan."

"Watch well, Serang."

"Ya, Tuan."

A white man had ascended the ladder from the deck noiselessly, and had listened quietly to this short col-loquy. Then he stepped out on the bridge and began to walk from end to end, holding up the long cherry-wood stem of a pipe. His black hair lay plastered in long lanky wisps across the bald summit of his head; he had a furrowed brow, a yellow complexion, and a thick shapeless nose. A scanty growth of whisker did not conceal the contour of his jaw. His aspect was of brooding care; and sucking at a curved black mouth-piece, he presented such a heavy overhanging profile that even the Serang could not help reflecting sometimes upon the extreme unloveliness of some white men.

Captain Whalley seemed to brace himself up in his chair, but gave no recognition whatever to his presence.

The other puffed jets of smoke; then suddenly--"I could never understand that new mania of yours of having this Malay here for your shadow, partner."

Captain Whalley got up from the chair in all his im-posing stature and walked across to the binnacle, hold-ing such an unswerving course that the other had to back away hurriedly, and remained as if intimidated, with the pipe trembling in his hand. "Walk over me now," he muttered in a sort of astounded and dis-comfited whisper. Then slowly and distinctly he said--"I--am--not--dirt." And then added defiantly, "As you seem to think."

The Serang jerked out--"See the palms now, Tuan."

Captain Whalley strode forward to the rail; but his eyes, instead of going straight to the point, with the assured keen glance of a sailor, wandered irresolutely in space, as though he, the discoverer of new routes, had lost his way upon this narrow sea.

Another white man, the mate, came up on the bridge.

He was tall, young, lean, with a mustache like a trooper, and something malicious in the eye. He took up a position beside the engineer. Captain Whalley, with his back to them, inquired--"What's on the log?"

"Eighty-five," answered the mate quickly, and nudged the engineer with his elbow.

Captain Whalley's muscular hands squeezed the iron rail with an extraordinary force; his eyes glared with an enormous effort; he knitted his eyebrows, the per-spiration fell from under his hat,--and in a faint voice he murmured, "Steady her, Serang--when she is on the proper bearing."

The silent Malay stepped back, waited a little, and lifted his arm warningly to the helmsman. The wheel revolved rapidly to meet the swing of the ship. Again the made nudged the engineer. But Massy turned upon him.

"Mr. Sterne," he said violently, "let me tell you--as a shipowner--that you are no better than a con-founded fool."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 逍遥纵世

    逍遥纵世

    “倚剑而生,仗剑天涯,仍他世事万千变化,我自逍遥!”“愿爱我的人与我所爱的人能一生幸福,虽想逍遥一世,但为守护他们,我愿背上一生的枷锁!”一场阴谋,异变横生,失去所爱,身寄逍遥神灵魂转世的药尘背负着血海深仇,开始了登顶巅峰的路程,带着不羁放荡的性格游走于世间,尝尽世间欢乐悲痛,有红颜的芳心暗许,兄弟之间的侠肝义胆,前世的深仇旧爱;是该执着,杀戮天下,还是该放下,相忘于江湖,冷眼天下,我自快活?
  • 昨日之日不可留

    昨日之日不可留

    2012年6月24日7:05是的,正如你们所想的,逗逼的高考坑了我也坑了一大批对未来抱有无限想象的少年。是的,正如你们所想的,我一个人落寞的走在街上,我不知道天气如何,我不知道自己走到了哪里,甚至我不知道自己是否还活着,还是如行尸走肉般不知目的的一点点的向前挪移~~~~不过这个世界似乎不会因为我的失意而变得暗淡,路边的大爷们依旧下着棋,大妈们跳着小苹果,路边摊的叔叔阿姨喝着啤酒吃着串,是的他们不会注意到一个垂头丧气的学生,一切在按部就班的进行着。可猪儿的一个电话,却让我意识到,这个世界突然变了。
  • 宠物狗驯养200问

    宠物狗驯养200问

    本书针对宠物狗爱好者的实际需要,采用问答的形式,对家庭养狗过程中经常遇到的各种具体问题及解决办法,一一作了详尽解答。
  • 倾世毒医:邪妃太嚣张

    倾世毒医:邪妃太嚣张

    就算重生异世又如何?依旧笑傲天下,废柴?抱歉,引灵体质是废柴,那你们是什么?人渣吗?神器,神兽,丹药,手到擒来,啊哦,桃花朵朵开,抱歉,本小姐统统看不上!可是直到遇见某人之后,一切都变了。。。"清酒,来,我躺好了,不要留情,不顾一切的扑上来吧!"某人眨着邪魅的眸子,一脸期待而旁边的陌清酒则嘴角抽搐"亲,你走错片场了吧,把那个冷酷无情的邪帝还回来吧""呵呵,想的美,一经出售,永不退换"话音刚落,就只看到一个人影扑向清酒,便只剩下一句"这不科学!"
  • 佳樱勿念

    佳樱勿念

    年少时期的白洛洛不笑不闹也很淡定即使被人指成为杀人犯,也是面色冷静没有人知道她想什么然而只有季枫才会逗她,笑她后来再次遇见,却形同陌路“一切可好?”“一切安好。”落枫白归佳樱勿念
  • 燃烧的红烛

    燃烧的红烛

    张家界这地方,出奇山,出秀水,出异物。单以花言,便有鸽子花、龙虾花、五色花等珍稀品种。鸽子花即“中国珙桐”,系冰川运动的孓遗物,全世界仅我们中国极少数地方幸存之;龙虾花多长于金鞭溪一带,模样酷似龙虾。遥想远古时候这里曾是一片海洋,便自然会生出纷纷的想像;绝无仅有的五色花,长于景区内的神仙湾一处。
  • 坠晶

    坠晶

    欢笑、幸福、美满......都在那一天,在陨石坠落的那一刻,全部消失在这个星球上。哭泣声,枪声、强奸、抢劫、抢夺......徘徊在这个世界。这里没有感情、友情、亲情......有的只是血腥的杀戮,每个人只为了生存而生存。谁才能在这样的世界留下属于自己的足迹。
  • 第七次无限地狱

    第七次无限地狱

    一个挂点也不能砍掉重练的世界中一个腹黑毒舌外貌女神内在魔鬼的副长外加一个重生七次腹黑中之腹黑的老人级青年队长当然小三也是不能少尤其是白富美靠山很凶很强大的王女组成小队欢欢乐乐一同去攻打大BOSS好吧故事半魔幻半中二纯粹作者YY的合成物
  • 小公主

    小公主

    是一部灰姑娘式的儿童小说,写的是19世纪的故事。既刻画了心地善良、不怕困苦的萨拉,使人对她又是同情又是佩服,又对明卿女士那种势利小人作了淋漓尽致的讽刺。
  • 冥婚正娶:我的男神是只鬼

    冥婚正娶:我的男神是只鬼

    平淡的生活了十八年,迟婉从离世前的养母口中得知了自己的亲生父母的下落。震惊,茫然,无措中她踏上了寻亲之路……原以为平常的一趟寻亲路因为一桩杀人案却变得一点也不平常。甚至最后还知道她从小就与鬼结了冥婚。原来在出生后她就已经被舍弃了。本以为这是命中注定,后来却发现这一切不过是早有预谋……