登陆注册
4808000000017

第17章 THE MUTINEY OF THE MAVERICKS(5)

"You know the rest of it, my Irish American-Jew boy. By gad, ye have to fight for the Queen in the inside av a fortnight, my darlin'"A roar of laughter interrupted. Mulcahy looked vacantly down the room. Bid a boy defy his father when the pantomime-cab is at the door, or a girl develop a will of her own when her mother is putting the last touches to the first ball-dress, but do not ask an Irish regiment to embark upon mutiny on the eve of a campaign, when it has fraternised with the native regiment that accompanies it, and driven its officers into retirement with ten thousand clamorous questions, and the prisoners dance for joy, and the sick men stand in the open calling down all known diseases on the head of the doctor, who has certified that they are "medically unfit for active service." At even the Mavericks might have been mistaken for mutineers by one so unversed in their natures as Mulcahy. At dawn a girls' school might have learned deportment from them. They knew that their colonel's hand had closed, and that he who broke that iron discipline would not go to the front: nothing in the world will persuade one of our soldiers, when he is ordered to the north on the smallest of affairs, that he is not immediately going gloriously to slay Cossacks and cook his kettles in the palace of the Czar. A few of the younger men mourned for Mulcahy's beer, because the campaign was to be conducted on strict temperance principles, but as Dan and Horse Egan said sternly, "We've got the beer-man with us. He shall drink now on his own hook."Mulcahy had not taken into account the possibility of being sent on active service. He had made up his mind that he would not go under any circumstances, but fortune was against him.

"Sick-you?" said the doctor, who had served an unholy apprenticeship to his trade in Tralee poorhouses. "You're only home-sick, and what you call varicose veins come from over-eating.

A little gentle exercise will cure that." And later, "Mulcahy, my man, everybody is allowed to apply for a sick-certificate once. If he tries it twice we call him by an ugly name. Go back to your duty, and let's hear no more of your diseases."I am ashamed to say that Horse Egan enjoyed the study of Mulcahy's soul in those days, and Dan took an equal interest. Together they would communicate to their corporal all the dark lore of death which is the portion of those who have seen men die. Egan had the larger experience, but Dan the finer imagination. Mulcahy shivered when the former spoke of the knife as an intimate acquaintance, or the latter dwelt with loving particularity on the fate of those who, wounded and helpless, had been overlooked by the ambulances, and had fallen into the hands of the Afghan women-folk.

Mulcahy knew that the mutiny, for the present at least, was dead;knew, too, that a change had come over Dan's usually respectful attitude towards him, and Horse Egan's laughter and frequent allusions to abortive conspiracies emphasised all that the conspirator had guessed. The horrible fascination of the death-stories, however, made him seek the men's society. He learned much more than he had bargained for; and in this manner. It was on the last night before the regiment entrained to the front. The barracks were stripped of everything movable, and the men were too excited to sleep. The bare walls gave out a heavy hospital smell of chloride of lime.

"And what," said Mulcahy in an awe-stricken whisper, after some conversation on the eternal subject, "are you going to do to me, Dan?" This might have been the language of an able conspirator conciliating a weak spirit.

"You'll see," said Dan grimly, turning over in his cot, "or Irather shud say you'll not see."

This was hardly the language of a weak spirit. Mulcahy shook under the bed-clothes.

"Bc easy with him," put in Egan from the next cot. "He has got his chanst o' goin' clean. Listen, Mulcahy, all we want is for the good sake of the regiment that you take your death standing up, as a man shud. There's be heaps an' heaps of enemy - plenshus heaps.

Go there an' do all you can and die decent. You'll die with a good name there. 'Tis not a hard thing considerin'."-

Again Mulcahy shivered.

"An' how could a man wish to die better than fightin'?" added Dan consolingly.

"And if I won't?" said the corporal in a dry whisper.

"There'll be a dale of smoke," returned Dan, sitting up and ticking off the situation on his fingers, "sure to be, an' the noise of the firin'll be tremenjus, an' we'll be running about up and down, the regiment will. But we, Horse and I - we'll stay by you, Mulcahy, and never let you go. Maybe there'll be an accident.""It's playing it low on me. Let me go. For pity's sake, let me go.

I never did you harm, and - and I stood you as much beer as Icould. Oh, don't be hard on me, Dan! You are - you were in it too.

You won't kill me up there, will you?"

"I'm not thinkin' of the treason; though you shud be glad any honest boys drank with you. It's for the regiment. We can't have the shame o' you bringin' shame on us. You went to the doctor quiet as a sick cat to get and stay behind an' live with the women at the depot - you that wanted us to run to the sea in wolf-packs like the rebels none of your black blood dared to be! But we knew about your goin' to the doctor, for he told in mess, and it's all over the regiment. Bein', as we are, your best friends, we didn't allow any one to molest you yet. We will see to you ourselves.

Fight which you will - us or the enemy you'll never lie in that cot again, and there's more glory and maybe less kicks from fightin' the enemy. That's fair speakin'."-

"And he told us by word of mouth to go and join with the niggers -you've forgotten that, Dan," said Horse Egan, to justify sentence.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 太上升玄说消灾护命妙经注

    太上升玄说消灾护命妙经注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 单项人生旅途

    单项人生旅途

    作者故事“遇见你真好”,好喜欢你啊!看着你开心的样子,我也很开心,你喜欢的,我也喜欢,这是喜欢还是爱呢?不敢妄下定论,好喜欢你的笑,真的,笑起来是最漂亮的,又或者是欣赏罢了!这让我与你保持了一定的距离,想说又不敢,喜欢又害怕,哈哈,大概这就是最美好的年纪了吧????'其实,一开始就该知道的,只是自己不愿意去相信罢了,最后……
  • 古风随想

    古风随想

    静以听天道,动则察人心。侧眼看尽繁花落,一曲古风诉离殇。
  • 奈何丞相非我不嫁

    奈何丞相非我不嫁

    她当了半辈子的定安君老夫人,满朝文武没有一个是不敬她的,连皇帝都对她以师礼相待。被人换做君老夫人的时间太久,在她寿宴时那一声‘少夫人’竟让她泪目了。是啊,她曾经被人唤少夫人是最多的。特别是那个风华绝代的男人,只是他再也回不来了。晚间,笑容伺候她入睡时她好像看见了他。他笑着说:“少夫人,本少伺候你休息可好。”在次睁眼醒来,她回到了那个豆蔻年华的时候,她是护国郡主。重来一世,她定要护他至老!
  • 葬天刃

    葬天刃

    来自于少年苏无咎可能一辈子也触及不到的世界的两个人和一块神秘碎片,让他经历了一场家破人亡,从此整日浑浑噩噩的他告别了锦衣玉食的少爷生活,开始了一场漫长而孤独的复仇之旅。在复仇的路上,他经历了以前从未经历的世界,也认识了以前绝不会有交集的人物,而修行界也在它面前慢慢揭开了面纱,他慢慢发现,自己的仇恨,居然牵涉甚大……PS:书友群865743528,有兴趣的朋友可以加进来随便聊聊。
  • 盛唐无妖

    盛唐无妖

    穿过盛世大唐茶都还没喝一口被迫上了花轿遇上了口味比较重的山村女鬼...老师傅:姑娘,世上竟有你这般如此骨骼精奇、命格贵重、百邪不侵...顾曳:说人话老师傅:你命硬,可驱邪,上吧!PS:新书《我只想种田》,17.12.01日上线,现代种田顺便快穿文,说什么都是虚的,自己过去看看呗~~(官方群:满一千粉丝值进后援群(五九零六五三四八三),满一万进VIP群)
  • 狱异行游

    狱异行游

    一个平凡的宅男,有一天……这一条路,死的人太多了
  • 沉沦

    沉沦

    本书是发表于1909年的小说『耽溺』是自传体小说,讲的是主人公在33岁的某个暑假,沐浴着日光,和艺妓吉弥痴情相爱的故事。『耽溺』的发表确立了岩野泡鸣自然主义文学作家的地位。
  • 神医狂后

    神医狂后

    北月魂穿成祸乱朝纲,打入冷宫的前朝皇后,斗渣妹,耍渣男,欠她的,百倍还回来,欺她者,千倍还之,害她者,直接杀死,一了百了;前朝帝王没死?还要暗算,当然要反算计,只是前朝皇帝的身份是个迷……【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 丫头她总是很多变

    丫头她总是很多变

    5岁被欧家捡回家收养的欧沐晴,却一直被养母虐待,被哥哥跟妹妹联手算计,被未婚夫背叛,被学校除名,试问还能有谁比她的人生更凄惨。当她下定决心脱离那个吃人的家,她的才华魅力再也无人可挡,且看她如何从一个丑小鸭蜕变成真正的白天鹅。备受感情伤害的她决心再也不要接受爱情,所以,那个传言中冷心冷情的顾总裁,请你离我远一点。什么?你说我是你失散多年的青梅竹马?这事我怎么不知道。简介无能,正文还是蛮精彩的,欢迎亲们收藏点评。 嫣然新书,锦瑟遥遥,期待各位小可爱们多多关照哦