登陆注册
5264300000101

第101章 CHAPTER XX THE STONE MUGS(1)

Frederick Stone, N.A., member of the Stone Mugs, late war correspondent and special artist on the spot, paused before the cheerful blaze of his studio fire, shaking the wet snow from his feet. He had tramped across Washington Square in drifts that were over his shoe-tops, mounted the three flights of steps to his cosey rooms, and was at the moment expressing his views on the weather, in terms more forcible than polite, to our very old friend, Jack Bedford, the famous marine-painter. Bedford, on hearing the sound of Fred's footsteps, had strolled in from his own studio, in the same building, and had thrown himself into a big arm-chair, where he was sitting hunched up, his knees almost touching his chin, his round head covered by a skull-cap that showed above the chair-back.

"Nice weather for ducks, Jack, isn't it? Can't see how anybody can get here to-night," cried Fred, striking the mantel with his wet cap, and scattering the rain-drops over the hearth. "Just passed a Broadway stage stuck in a hole as I came by the New York Hotel. Been there an hour, they told me."

"Shouldn't wonder. Whose night is it, Fred?" asked Jack, stretching out one leg in the direction of the cheery blaze.

"Horn's."

"What's he going to do?"

"Give it up. Ask me an easy one. Said he wanted a thirty by forty. There it is on the easel," and Fred moved a chair out of his way, hung his wet coat and hat on a peg behind the door, and started to clear up a tangle of artillery harness that littered the floor.

"Thirty by forty, eh," grunted Jack, from the depths of his chair. "Thunder and Mars! Is the beggar going to paint a panorama? Thought that canvas was for a new cavalry charge of yours!" He had lowered the other leg now, making a double-barrelled gun of the pair.

"No; it's Horn's. He's going to paint one of the fellows to-night."

"In costume?" Jack's head was now so low in the chair that his eyes could draw a bead along his legs to the fire.

"Yes, as an old Burgomaster, or something with a ruff," and he kicked an army blanket into a corner as he spoke. "There's the ruff hanging on that pair of foils, Waller sent it over." Then his merry eyes fell on Jack's sprawled-out figure, his feet almost in the grate--a favorite attitude of his neighbor's when tired out with the day's work, comfortable perhaps, but especially objectionable at the moment.

"Here--get up, you old stick-in-the-mud. Don't sit there, doubled up like a government mule," he laughed. (The army lingo still showed itself once in a while in Fred's speech.) "Help me get this room ready or I'll whale you with this," and he waved one end of a trace over his head. "If the fellows are coming they'll be here in half an hour. Shove back that easel and bring in that beer--it's outside the door in a box. I'll get out the tobacco and pipes."

Jack stretched both arms above his head, emitted a yawn that could be heard in his room below, and sprang to his feet.

Fred, by this time, had taken down from a closet a tin box of crackers, unwrapped a yellow cheese, and was trimming its raw edges with a palette knife.

Then they both moved out a big table from the inner room to the larger one, and, while Jack placed the eatables on its bare top, Fred mounted a chair, and began lighting a circle of gas-jets that hung from the ceiling of the skylight. The war-painter was host to-night, and the task of arranging the rooms for the comfort of his fellow-members consequently devolved upon him.

The refreshments having been made ready, Fred roamed about the rooms straightening the pictures on the walls--an old fad of his when guests of any kind were expected--punching the cushions and Turkish saddle-bags into plumpness, that he had picked up in a flying trip abroad the year the war was over, and stringing them along the divan ready for the backs and legs of the club-members. Next he stripped the piano of a collection of camp sketches that had littered it up for a week, dumped the pile into a closet, and, with a sudden wrench of his arms, whirled the instrument itself close against the wall.

Then some fire-arms, saddles, and artillery trappings were hidden away in dark corners, and a lay figure, clothed in fatigue cap and blue overcoat, and which had done duty as "a picket" during the day, was wheeled around with its face to the wall, where it stood guard over Fred's famous picture ofb"The Last Gun at Appomattox." His final touches were bestowed on the grate-fire and the coal-scuttle, both of which were replenished from a big pine box in the hall.

Jack Bedford, meanwhile, had busied himself rolling another table--a long one--under the circle of gas-jets so that the men could see to work the better, and loading it with palettes, china tiles, canvases, etc., to be used by the members of the club in their work of the evening. Last of all and not by any means the least important, Jack, by the aid of a chair, gathered together, on the top shelf of the closet, the unique collection of stone beer-mugs from which the club took its name. These he handed down one by one to Fred, who arranged them in a row on one end of the long table. The mugs were to hold the contents of sundry bottles of beer, now safely stowed away in the lidless, pigeon-holed box, standing in the hall, which Fred unloaded later, placing the bottles on the window-sill outside to cool.

Before they had ended their preparations, the stamping of feet on the stair was heard, the door was thrown back, and the several members of the club began to arrive.

The great Waller came first, brushing the snow from his shaggy coat, looking like a great bear, growling as he rolled in, as was his wont. Close behind him, puffing with the run upstairs, and half-hidden behind Waller's broad shoulders, trotted Simmons, the musician.

同类推荐
  • 姜氏秘史

    姜氏秘史

    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。
  • Colonel Chabert

    Colonel Chabert

    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。
  • 送刘禹锡

    送刘禹锡

    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。
  • 绝岸可湘禅师语录

    绝岸可湘禅师语录

    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。
  • 玉井樵唱

    玉井樵唱

    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
  • 方山先生文录

    方山先生文录

    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。
  • 吃货修真记

    吃货修真记

    “师父,我想跟您去启源大陆修真成仙。”“你高中还没读完,去了也白瞎。”“学那些有什么用啊?您一飞起来,牛顿的棺材板都压不住了!”“相对论你都不懂,怎么面对虚空洪流时间对冲?”“那……不是有您的法宝护身嘛!”“等你学习过神经系统再说吧。”“神经系统?学好了是不是就能教我点穴擒拿?”“不,怕你在拉尼亚凯亚超星系里迷路。”
  • 小旅途

    小旅途

    好看的皮囊漂泊成性,有趣的灵魂旅游成瘾。寻找简单生活中的平淡、快乐。一个人独自走在陌生城市的大街上,感受当地人文。海边升起当天的第一束阳光,冲破森林雾霭后的剪影,满天繁星,以及掠过的流星,一湾明月下的思念,旅途中,兴许会匆匆赶赶地追逐列车,兴许会慢悠悠地街头游荡,兴许融进当地的一场婚宴中表演,兴许偶然相遇一位故人……人间至味是清欢!
  • 江湖恩怨录

    江湖恩怨录

    双甲子,一轮回,飘雪门重现江湖。一个大时代的来临!你,准备好抢夺你的机缘了吗?
  • 错出的姻缘(中国小小说名家档案)

    错出的姻缘(中国小小说名家档案)

    《中国小小说名家档案》百部小小说名家出版工程,旨在打造文体,推崇作家,推出精品。集结杨晓敏、许行、聂鑫森、孙方友、孙春平、刘国芳、谢志强、陈毓、周海亮、海飞、曾颖等当代小小说最华丽的作家阵容和经典意味的力作新作,由100名小小说名家一人一册单行本(共100册)组成,兼容不同年龄不同区域不同流派不同内容不同风格,是当代文学史上第一个小小说的系统出版工程,是广大读者特别是青少年读者认识社会人生、充实人文精神,提升文化素养,增强写作能力的读本。
  • 世界最具推理性的侦破故事(5)

    世界最具推理性的侦破故事(5)

    我的课外第一本书——震撼心灵阅读之旅经典文库,《阅读文库》编委会编。通过各种形式的故事和语言,讲述我们在成长中需要的知识。
  • 幻想情之我缘

    幻想情之我缘

    一次意外,她拥有了螺星球生灵的“特异功能”,这些“特异功能”为她带来了从未有过的体验,也从此麻烦不断。钟浩宇是一个温润儒雅的男人,一直在她身边默默的守候,星级之间的战争却让他一次一次的受伤,最后,一颗子弹正中他的心脏:“月儿,不能陪你了,来世做平凡的人!”
  • 好久不见,南先生

    好久不见,南先生

    五年前,他们门当户对郎才女貌,是蓝城市人人称赞的金童玉女。他爱她宠她,为了她可以不惜一切,但换来的,却是一场背叛。公司破产、兄弟罹难,就连他自己也差点命丧异国。五年后,当他荣耀归来,势必要让当年那些人付出惨痛的代价!......男人蹙着眉,大步走过去,伸手一拽,就将景真甩进一旁的沙发,高大的身体随之压下,将她固定于身体与沙发之间,阴暗的视线,几乎将她整个吞噬,“想死?有那么容易吗?景真,你欠我的,我要你一笔一笔偿还,这是你应得的惩罚!想一死了之,门都没有!”她苦笑,从出卖他的那一刻开始,她就已经失去了选择权,这是她欠他的。只是事实的真相,真如他们看到的那样吗?
  • 农门喜事:娘子会种田

    农门喜事:娘子会种田

    天可怜见地,她贵族贵了三十年,连小手都没和男人拉过,一穿越居然变成了一个叫李铁柱的农夫的糟糠妻,你让她如何承受这生命之重?!更过分的是,这里太!穷!了!她发誓要改变这一切,好吧,先从种田开始!...
  • 我有系统不可能这么菜

    我有系统不可能这么菜

    系统赞叹,小哥哥演技太逼真,演啥像啥!傲娇大狼狗总裁:“我不要面子,我要你,你是我的。”——不,你是我的,我一个人的。高高在上的清冷仙君:“我的心里只有苍生。”——好巧,我就叫苍生。桀骜不驯的少年:“你愿意带没人要的小可爱回家,成为他的一生吗?”——不愿意,因为,我要生生世世。系统忍不住长叹一声:小哥哥走过最远的路,就是小姐姐的套路!【一对一!苏爽甜!宠翻天!】