登陆注册
5157800000036

第36章 WILL TELL(5)

"Come on," commanded the young man briskly."The pilot's going ashore.Here's your grip, here's your hat.The ladder's on the port side.Look where you're stepping.We can't show any lights, and it's dark as--"But, even as he spoke, like a flash of powder, as swiftly as one throws an electric switch, as blindingly as a train leaps from the tunnel into the glaring sun, the darkness vanished and the tug was swept by the fierce, blatant radiance of a search-light.

It was met by shrieks from two hundred throats, by screams, oaths, prayers, by the sharp jangling of bells, by the blind rush of many men scurrying like rats for a hole to hide in, by the ringing orders of one man.Above the tumult this one voice rose like the warning strokes of a fire-gong, and looking up to the pilot-house from whence the voice came, David saw the barkeeper still in his shirt-sleeves and with his derby hat pushed back behind his ears, with one hand clutching the telegraph to the engine-room, with the other holding the spoke of the wheel.

David felt the tug, like a hunter taking a fence, rise in a great leap.Her bow sank and rose, tossing the water from her in black, oily waves, the smoke poured from her funnel, from below her engines sobbed and quivered, and like a hound freed from a leash she raced for the open sea.But swiftly as she fled, as a thief is held in the circle of a policeman's bull's-eye, the shaft of light followed and exposed her and held her in its grip.The youth in the golf cap was clutching David by the arm.With his free hand he pointed down the shaft of light.So great was the tumult that to be heard he brought his lips close to David's ear.

"That's the revenue cutter!" he shouted."She's been laying for us for three weeks, and now," he shrieked exultingly, "the old man's going to give her a race for it."From excitement, from cold, from alarm, David's nerves were getting beyond his control.

"But how," he demanded, "how do I get ashore?""You don't!"

"When he drops the pilot, don't I--"

"How can he drop the pilot?" yelled the youth."The pilot's got to stick by the boat.So have you."David clutched the young man and swung him so that they stood face to face.

"Stick by what boat?" yelled David."Who are these men? Who are you? What boat is this?"In the glare of the search-light David saw the eyes of the youth staring at him as though he feared he were in the clutch of a madman.Wrenching himself free, the youth pointed at the pilot-house.Above it on a blue board in letters of gold-leaf a foot high was the name of the tug.As David read it his breath left him, a finger of ice passed slowly down his spine.The name he read was The Three Friends.

"THE THREE FRIENDS!" shrieked David."She's a filibuster! She's a pirate! Where're we going?

"To Cuba!"

David emitted a howl of anguish, rage, and protest.

"What for?" he shrieked.

The young man regarded him coldly.

"To pick bananas," he said.

"I won't go to Cuba," shouted David."I've got to work! I'm paid to sell machinery.I demand to be put ashore.I'll lose my job if I'm not put ashore.I'll sue you! I'll have the law--"David found himself suddenly upon his knees.His first thought was that the ship had struck a rock, and then that she was bumping herself over a succession of coral reefs.She dipped, dived, reared, and plunged.Like a hooked fish, she flung herself in the air, quivering from bow to stern.No longer was David of a mind to sue the filibusters if they did not put him ashore.If only they had put him ashore, in gratitude he would have crawled on his knees.What followed was of no interest to David, nor to many of the filibusters, nor to any of the Cuban patriots.Their groans of self-pity, their prayers and curses in eloquent Spanish, rose high above the crash of broken crockery and the pounding of the waves.Even when the search-light gave way to a brilliant sunlight the circumstance was unobserved by David.Nor was he concerned in the tidings brought forward by the youth in the golf cap, who raced the slippery decks and vaulted the prostrate forms as sure-footedly as a hurdler on a cinder track.

To David, in whom he seemed to think he had found a congenial spirit, he shouted Joyfully, "She's fired two blanks at us!" he cried; "now she's firing cannon-balls!""Thank God," whispered David; "perhaps she'll sink us!"But The Three Friends showed her heels to the revenue cutter, and so far as David knew hours passed into days and days into weeks.

It was like those nightmares in which in a minute one is whirled through centuries of fear and torment.Sometimes, regardless of nausea, of his aching head, of the hard deck, of the waves that splashed and smothered him, David fell into broken slumber.

Sometimes he woke to a dull consciousness of his position.At such moments he added to his misery by speculating upon the other misfortunes that might have befallen him on shore.Emily, he decided, had given him up for lost and married--probably a navy officer in command of a battle-ship.Burdett and Sons had cast him off forever.Possibly his disappearance had caused them to suspect him; even now they might be regarding him as a defaulter, as a fugitive from justice.His accounts, no doubt, were being carefully overhauled.In actual time, two days and two nights had passed; to David it seemed many ages.

On the third day he crawled to the stern, where there seemed less motion, and finding a boat's cushion threw it in the lee scupper and fell upon it.From time to time the youth in the golf cap had brought him food and drink, and he now appeared from the cook's galley bearing a bowl of smoking soup.

David considered it a doubtful attention.

But he said, "You're very kind.How did a fellow like you come to mix up with these pirates?"The youth laughed good-naturedly.

"They're not pirates, they're patriots," he said, "and I'm not mixed up with them.My name is Henry Carr and I'm a guest of Jimmy Doyle, the captain.""The barkeeper with the derby hat?" said David.

同类推荐
  • 古今类传

    古今类传

    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。
  • 医学衷中参西录

    医学衷中参西录

    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。
  • 镜换杯

    镜换杯

    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。
  • 洞玄灵宝太上六斋十直圣纪经

    洞玄灵宝太上六斋十直圣纪经

    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。
  • 养生辩疑诀

    养生辩疑诀

    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
  • 天意难逆

    天意难逆

    世事如烟,摸不着,看不见,猜不透。什么是善?什么是恶?什么是正?什么又是邪?在这世间,当浑浊成了一种普遍,清醒便成了一种罪过。真理掌握在大部分人的手里,而历史永远由活着的人改写。世事无常,你我又如何逃得过这天道?(咳咳,相信我,这本书没这么正经的)(垃圾作者在线发誓.ing)(不过有时候也会有这样正经的样子,大都是很虐的地方)
  • 能言善辩

    能言善辩

    面对形形色色的难题和困境,开动脑筋,运用智慧,往往就能找出答案,想出对策。“先有故事,后有智慧”。智慧故事是青少年不可不读的经典之作。故事,是通往智慧殿堂的使者,引领我们透过一扇扇明亮的窗口,引领你走向人生的辉煌。故事,是连缀智慧的闪亮珠玑,折射出哲人思想的光辉,照耀着你的人生成功之旅。一个故事就是智慧长河中的一朵涟漪,也许它不能改变这条河流的方向,但它会以自身的灵性让你在阳光的滋养中聆听智慧流过的声音,早日抵达你人生的巅峰。轻松阅读精彩的故事,聆听哲人的忠告,让智者的思想浸润我们。
  • 绑架大主角

    绑架大主角

    人生如戏,处处惊喜。凭空落下的一个花盆没有把安生一盆带走,反而带来了一个坑爹的绑架系统,各种作死的绑架任务如约而至......神仙、鬼怪、大侠、皇帝,各个世界的主角成了他的绑架对象,最重要的是绑架任务一旦发布,那便无法停止,拒绝接受视为任务失败,各种惩罚让人蛋疼......而绑架成功之后的奖励也是让人无法抗拒。
  • 情商与影响力

    情商与影响力

    在竞争日益激烈的今天,情商与影响力越来越为人们所重视。本书从培养习惯、缔造个人魅力入手,通过精辟入理的分析、具体典型的实例,为读者打造个人影响力提供了一些简单实用的方法,帮助读者在模拟的情境中走出对幸福、成功的迷思,获得完美人生。作者在第3版中,对情商的构成因素以实际案例为背景,面向应用进行了解释,提出以下概念:情绪弹簧、情绪单级化、情绪免疫力,等等。还增加了职场成功与不太成功的案例,帮助读者创造和谐的职场氛围与个人生活。
  • 网游之慢慢情歌

    网游之慢慢情歌

    一个是智商为负数的秀秀,一个是情商为负数的天策。当智商负数遇到情商负数,会不会负负得正呢?
  • A Brief Enquiry

    A Brief Enquiry

    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。
  • 我家皇子被绿了

    我家皇子被绿了

    宋钰在阴差阳错之下穿越到了南岳国,更离谱的是,她穿越之后居然成了女扮男装的假皇子。所以她戏称自己为超级假货,正当她费尽心思想将欺君大罪解决时,其母妃竟妄想她一步登天当上太子。虽说宋钰极力反对,但是母妃并不允她的做法。如此一来,宋钰自得另寻法子。不过天无绝人之路!碰巧此时南岳和北齐需要和亲来舒缓两国之交的场面,她被赐婚,与这北齐公主萧凤天喜结连理。原本宋钰想要通过她来得到帮助,没曾想却发生了一个惊天的大秘密——这看起来膀大腰粗的北齐公主萧凤天,竟然是个男扮女装的假货?!
  • 繁华落尽只为等你

    繁华落尽只为等你

    沈姰从来没有想过,这样的事情会发生在自己身上。她竟然被婆婆老公,断送了婚姻!
  • 极品妖孽:邪女王逆天重生

    极品妖孽:邪女王逆天重生

    【正文已完结】轩辕娥凰是废材,身为皇者却是废材,忠了皇室千年的臣子在她登基大典上准备改朝换代。置死地而生,逆天重生,她还是她,只是唤醒了血脉里逆天修道的天赋,威震八方。皇城四少之首的公子哥上官夜放下身段,来做贴身护花使者;神秘莫测的皇城工会少主独孤擎天愿百里红妆倒嫁上门,原本是死敌的魔界之皇东方熬乔装打扮,百般讨好加勾引,只为让她让爱上他……招惹下的桃花越来越多,拜托公子,请慢慢排队等我轩辕女王长大再说究竟是要单恋一株草?还是统统收入后宫一个都不放过?……修仙踏征途,破万难,除险阻,纵横三界……荐完结文《第一闪婚撞来的豪门老公》《欢喜冤家:司令千金闯情关》
  • 世界很大但我们很小

    世界很大但我们很小

    我曾手忙脚乱爱过你,以后也会再去厚待别人!