登陆注册
5150700000029

第29章 THE SHERIFF OF KONA(5)

"He wound up all his affairs from the Receiving Station at Honolulu,and went down to Molokai.He didn't get on well there.The resident physician wrote us that he was a shadow of his old self.You see he was grieving about his wife and the kids.He knew we were taking care of them, but it hurt him just the same.After six months or so I went down to Molokai.I sat on one side a plate- glass window, and he on the other.We looked at each other through the glass and talked through what might be called a speaking tube.But it was hopeless.He had made up his mind to remain.Four mortal hours I argued.I was exhausted at the end. My steamer waswhistling for me, too.

"But we couldn't stand for it.Three months later we chartered the schooner Halcyon.She was an opium smuggler, and she sailed like a witch.Her master was a squarehead who would do anything for money, and we made a charter to China worth his while.He sailed from San Francisco, and a few days later we took out Landhouse's sloop for a cruise.She was only a five-ton yacht, but we slammed her fifty miles to windward into the north-east trade.Seasick? I neversuffered so in my life.Out of sight of land we picked up the Halcyon, and Burnley and I went aboard.

"We ran down to Molokai, arriving about eleven at night.The schooner hove to and we landed through the surf in a whale-boat at Kalawao--the place, you know, where Father Damien died.That squarehead was game.With a couple of revolvers strapped on him he came right along.The three of us crossed the peninsula to Kalaupapa, something like two miles. Just imagine hunting in thedead of night for a man in a settlement of over a thousand lepers.You see, if the alarm was given, it was all off with us.It was strange ground, and pitch dark.The leper's dogs came out and bayed at us, and we stumbled around till we got lost.

"The squarehead solved it.He led the way into the first detached house.We shut the door after us and struck a light.There were six lepers. We routed them up, and I talked in native. What Iwanted was a kokua.A kokua is, literally, a helper, a native whois clean that lives in the settlement and is paid by the Board of Health to nurse the lepers, dress their sores, and such things. Westayed in the house to keep trackof the inmates, while the squarehead led one of them off to find a kokua.He got him, and he brought him along at the point of his revolver.But the kokua was all right.While the squarehead guarded the house, Burnley and I were guided by the kokua to Lyte's house.He was all alone.

"'I thought you fellows would come,' Lyte said.'Don't touch me, John.How's Ned, and Charley, and all the crowd? Never mind, tell me afterward.I am ready to go now.I've had nine months of it.Where's the boat?'

"We started back for the other house to pick up the squarehead.But the alarm had got out.Lights were showing in the houses, and doors were slamming.We had agreed that there was to be no shooting unless absolutely necessary, and when we were halted we went at it with our fists and the butts of our revolvers.I found myself tangled up with a big man.I couldn't keep him off me, though twice I smashed him fairly in the face with my fist.He grappled with me, and we went down, rolling and scrambling and struggling for grips.He was getting away with me, when some one came running up with a lantern.Then I saw his face.How shall I describe the horror of it.It was not a face-- only wasted or wasting features--a living ravage, noseless, lipless, with one ear swollen and distorted, hanging down to the shoulder.I was frantic.In a clinch he hugged me close to him until that ear flapped in my face.Then I guess I went insane.It was too terrible.I began striking him with my revolver.How it happened I don't know, but just as I was getting clear he fastened upon me with his teeth.The whole side of my hand was in that lipless mouth.Then I struck him with the revolver buttsquarely between the eyes, and his teeth relaxed."Cudworth held his hand to me in the moonlight, and I could see the scars. It looked as if it had been mangled by a dog.

"Weren't you afraid?" I asked.

"I was.Seven years I waited.You know, it takes that long for the disease to incubate.Here in Kona I waited, and it did not come.But there was never a day of those seven years, and never a night, that I did not look out on...on all this..."His voicebroke as he swept hiseyes from the moon-bathed sea beneath to the snowy summits above."I could not bear to think of losing it, of never again beholding Kona.Seven years! I stayed clean.But that is why I am single.I was engaged.I could not dare to marry while I was in doubt.She did not understand.She went away to the States and married.I have never seen her since.

"Just at the moment I got clear of the leper policeman there was a rush and clatter of hoofs like a cavalry charge.It was the squarehead.He had been afraid of a rumpus and he had improved his time by making those blessed lepers he was guarding saddle up four horses.We were ready for him.Lyte had accounted for three kokuas, and between us we untangled Burnley from a couple more. Thewhole settlement was in an uproar by that time, and as we dashed away somebody opened upon us with a Winchester.It must have been Jack McVeigh, the superintendent of Molokai.

"That was a ride! Leper horses, leper saddles, leper bridles, pitch- black darkness, whistling bullets, and a road none of the best.And the squarehead's horse was a mule, and he didn't know how to ride, either.But we made the whaleboat, and as we shoved off through the surf we could hear the horses coming down the hill fromKalaupapa.

"You're going to Shanghai.You look Lyte Gregory up.He is employed in a German firm there.Take him out to dinner.Open up wine.Give him everything of the best, but don't let him pay for anything.Send the bill to me.His wife and the kids are in Honolulu, and he needs the money for them.I know.He sends most of his salary, and lives like an anchorite.And tell him about Kona.There's where his heart is. Tell him all you can aboutKona."

同类推荐
  • 唐享太庙乐章·凯安

    唐享太庙乐章·凯安

    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。
  • 佛说缘本致经

    佛说缘本致经

    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。
  • 净名玄论

    净名玄论

    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。
  • 脉象口诀歌

    脉象口诀歌

    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。
  • 富克锦舆地略

    富克锦舆地略

    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。
热门推荐
  • 思考机器之微笑的上帝

    思考机器之微笑的上帝

    《微笑的上帝》为杰克·福翠尔夫妇合作完成的作品。两人的合作方式有些不同寻常——第一部分《暴雨幻影》由福翠尔夫人独立创作,叙述了一个匪夷所思、无从侦破的案件,第二部分《房子的秘密》由福翠尔先生完成,讲述了在思考机器的帮助下,通过逻辑推理侦破案件最终查出事实真相的故事。
  • 幸存者

    幸存者

    "在“5.12”汶川特大地震中,他被埋在废墟之下长达76小时。他说他是幸运的,可以活下来,可以用写作抚慰受创的心灵,可是,那些失去健康、失去家园、失去亲人的人,忍受着更加巨大的伤痛,更需要我们的关心……于是,他写下了这些文字,为了这段不该忘却的记忆。用血写就的实录以命换来的 真情;献给所有地震遇难者与幸存者的宝贵记忆;这是我们共同的追思,为了不能忘却的纪念。
  • 嫡女重生纪事

    嫡女重生纪事

    家有阴险毒辣的继母,优柔寡断的父亲,外加善良单纯的哥哥,刻薄成性的妹妹,最厉害的还是人老成精的祖母。重生的豪门嫡女面对如此情况,又要如何在夹缝里求生存,活出属于自己的精彩人生呢?感谢宝贝古提供的漂亮封面!
  • 玉谷传奇

    玉谷传奇

    古代有个种玉谷。最好的玉是种出来的。浸润这美玉的沃土,是人们的血汗、油脂、骨殖……今天的种玉谷,成了贪婪之徒舐舔正义之剑的硝烟战场。作者在丰赡的文史底蕴,娓娓讲述古今故事,从容不迫之中,道出人世间至真之理。
  • 真神至上

    真神至上

    天生智儿,遗笑百里,一朝蜕变,惊艳天下。这是一个弱智逆转的故事!亦是一个热血沸腾,战歌不断的传奇事迹。
  • 不一样的青梅:爱上迷糊小女警

    不一样的青梅:爱上迷糊小女警

    “小韩妞,你不认识我了吗?”这是他们久别重逢后她对她说的第一句话。她却一脸懵逼“我应该认识你吗?”还有,谁是小韩妞?自此,她的生活彻底变了,她走到哪他都如影随形,平时也就算了,可相亲什么的,他跟来干什么?不说大老板都走高冷范吗?可面前这个大膏药是怎么回事?
  • 至尊仙魔

    至尊仙魔

    “我命由我不由天!”废公子姬晨,被族人罢黜驱逐,幸得父亲鼎力相助,但却被逼上生死台……被击落悬崖,得上古秘术,遇神奇老者,破而后立!斩仇敌,断天道,灭穹宇,一击破万界,终成至尊仙道……
  • 口是心非之帅气坏校草

    口是心非之帅气坏校草

    三年前,全上流社会皆知,舒家小女儿以打不死的小强般的毅力追求夜家的独生子夜子承。最终,以失败告终。三年前,全上流社会皆知,舒家的小女儿把舒家的大小姐推进了泳池,差点儿溺水而亡。最终,以出国告终。三年后,也就是今天,夜家独生子夜子承和舒家小女儿联姻了,一个月后,举行订婚仪式。最终……?不!暂时还没有最终,因为,这是现在……
  • 三天读懂五千年黄金传奇

    三天读懂五千年黄金传奇

    跌宕起伏黄金历史,错综复杂财富传奇。黄金历史发展脉络、趣闻故事、黄金开采冶炼过程等奇闻异事,让您从历史、文化、宗教、生产、生活诸多方面领会黄金的魅力,了解真正的黄金时代。
  • Alexander Hamilton