登陆注册
19858700000020

第20章 CHAPTER IX(1)

I did not sleep well. To begin with, I read late. Not till two in the morning did I reach up and turn out the kerosene reading-lamp which Wada had purchased and installed for me. I was asleep immediately--perfect sleep being perhaps my greatest gift; but almost immediately I was awake again. And thereafter, with dozings and cat-naps and restless tossings, I struggled to win to sleep, then gave it up. For of all things, in my state of jangled nerves, to be afflicted with hives! And still again, to be afflicted with hives in cold winter weather!

At four I lighted up and went to reading, forgetting my irritated skin in Vernon Lee's delightful screed against William James, and his "will to believe." I was on the weather side of the ship, and from overhead, through the deck, came the steady footfalls of some officer on watch. I knew that they were not the steps of Mr. Pike, and wondered whether they were Mr. Mellaire's or the pilot's. Somebody above there was awake. The work was going on, the vigilant seeing and overseeing, that, I could plainly conclude, would go on through every hour of all the hours on the voyage.

At half-past four I heard the steward's alarm go off, instantly suppressed, and five minutes later I lifted my hand to motion him in through my open door. What I desired was a cup of coffee, and Wada had been with me through too many years for me to doubt that he had given the steward precise instructions and turned over to him my coffee and my coffee-making apparatus.

The steward was a jewel. In ten minutes he served me with a perfect cup of coffee. I read on until daylight, and half-past eight found me, breakfast in bed finished, dressed and shaved, and on deck. We were still towing, but all sails were set to a light favouring breeze from the north. In the chart-room Captain West and the pilot were smoking cigars. At the wheel I noted what I decided at once was an efficient. He was not a large man; if anything he was undersized.

But his countenance was broad-browed and intelligently formed. Tom, I later learned, was his name--Tom Spink, an Englishman. He was blue-eyed, fair-skinned, well-grizzled, and, to the eye, a hale fifty years of age. His reply of "Good morning, sir" was cheery, and he smiled as he uttered the simple phrase. He did not look sailor-like, as did Henry, the training-ship boy; and yet I felt at once that he was a sailor, and an able one.

It was Mr. Pike's watch, and on asking him about Tom he grudgingly admitted that the man was the "best of the boiling."Miss West emerged from the chart-house, with a rosy morning face and her vital, springy limb-movement, and immediately began establishing her contacts. On asking how I had slept, and when I said wretchedly, she demanded an explanation. I told her of my affliction of hives and showed her the lumps on my wrists.

"Your blood needs thinning and cooling," she adjudged promptly.

"Wait a minute. I'll see what can be done for you."And with that she was away and below and back in a trice, in her hand a part glass of water into which she stirred a teaspoonful of cream of tartar.

"Drink it," she ordered, as a matter of course.

I drank it. And at eleven in the morning she came up to my deck-chair with a second dose of the stuff. Also she reproached me soundly for permitting Wada to feed meat to Possum. It was from her that Wada and I learned how mortal a sin it was to give meat to a young puppy. Furthermore, she laid down the law and the diet for Possum, not alone to me and Wada, but to the steward, the carpenter, and Mr. Mellaire. Of the latter two, because they ate by themselves in the big after-room and because Possum played there, she was especially suspicious; and she was outspoken in voicing her suspicions to their faces. The carpenter mumbled embarrassed asseverations in broken English of past, present, and future innocence, the while he humbly scraped and shuffled before her on his huge feet. Mr. Mellaire's protestations were of the same nature, save that they were made with the grace and suavity of a Chesterfield.

In short, Possum's diet raised quite a tempest in the Elsinore teapot, and by the time it was over Miss West had established this particular contact with me and given me a feeling that we were the mutual owners of the puppy. I noticed, later in the day, that it was to Miss West that Wada went for instructions as to the quantity of warm water he must use to dilute Possum's condensed milk.

Lunch won my continued approbation of the cook. In the afternoon Imade a trip for'ard to the galley to make his acquaintance. To all intents he was a Chinese, until he spoke, whereupon, measured by speech alone, he was an Englishman. In fact, so cultured was his speech that I can fairly say it was vested with an Oxford accent.

He, too, was old, fully sixty--he acknowledged fifty-nine. Three things about him were markedly conspicuous: his smile, that embraced all of his clean-shaven Asiatic face and Asiatic eyes; his even-rowed, white, and perfect teeth, which I deemed false until Wada ascertained otherwise for me; and his hands and feet. It was his hands, ridiculously small and beautifully modelled, that led my scrutiny to his feet. They, too, were ridiculously small and very neatly, almost dandifiedly, shod.

We had put the pilot off at midday, but the Britannia towed us well into the afternoon and did not cast us off until the ocean was wide about us and the land a faint blur on the western horizon. Here, at the moment of leaving the tug, we made our "departure"--that is to say, technically began the voyage, despite the fact that we had already travelled a full twenty-four hours away from Baltimore.

It was about the time of casting off, when I was leaning on the poop-rail gazing for'ard, when Miss West joined me. She had been busy below all day, and had just come up, as she put it, for a breath of air. She surveyed the sky in weather-wise fashion for a full five minutes, then remarked:

同类推荐
  • 妇科玉尺

    妇科玉尺

    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。
  • 佛说栴檀树经

    佛说栴檀树经

    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。
  • The World Set Free

    The World Set Free

    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。
  • 南华真经

    南华真经

    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。
  • 修习止观坐禅法要

    修习止观坐禅法要

    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。
热门推荐
  • 霸神降世

    霸神降世

    一个充满斗气的世界,一个普通少年寻找着自己的未来,一部不该存在世间的功法,霸神决、霸神降世舍我其谁。红颜的陪伴、未知的阴谋、他将如何抉择,又能创造出怎样的奇迹。
  • 夷白斋诗话

    夷白斋诗话

    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。
  • 斗神在世

    斗神在世

    剑锋出世,谁与争锋!玄天大陆,西蛮边关,又是一年一度的考核;秦剑锋第三次没有通过考核!在嘲讽声、谩骂声中让他更加坚定了自己未来所走的路。深山石室中,是命、是运……?习得远古轩辕大帝所留九字真决。蛮荒战场,所向披靡,斗战之神,再现远古悲壮之战。
  • 废材翻身之狂傲炼药师

    废材翻身之狂傲炼药师

    从前世神域顶端的炼药大师到今生人人可欺的废材少女,落差也忒大了点吧!杀妖兽,夺秘宝;闯秘境,收灵宠;炼灵药,捡神器,照样玩得转!咦,“师姐,好美啊!”“傻妞,你又在取笑你的师兄!”啊——妖孽师兄啊!美!姐大发了!本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 重生之星途坦荡

    重生之星途坦荡

    登顶影后宝座的红玫,在事业的最高峰,突然重生到了一部剧本中的二流女配身上!年方十五,却星途坎坷,且看红玫如何带着小小包子,一步一步重新问鼎前世的巅峰,如烈焰红玫,重新绽放耀眼光芒!
  • 中国证券业产业组织与政策研究

    中国证券业产业组织与政策研究

    本书通过经纪业务佣金率、承销费用率对证券业的市场行为进行定量分析,同时还在搜集整理了大量案例的基础上进行了深入的案例分析,解决了目前对中国证券业市场行为的研究缺乏定量分析和案例分析的问题。
  • 猫巷小铺

    猫巷小铺

    -你听说过吗?那个猫巷小铺。-没有啊,那是什么?-传说那是在猫巷最深处的一家小店,不管你是什么样的人,有什么样的烦恼,只要付出相应的代价,就都可以帮你解决哦。-喔喔,听起来很不错呢。-呐,是吧?---【与我签订契约吧。】
  • 都市迷影

    都市迷影

    为了不失不败神偷的威名,莫凛逆袭而上,抢得魔晶碎片。事后得知碎片是假的,莫凛却也没有弃之不顾,而是带回了家。就在他打开浴室房门的时候,他与她邂逅了。丝娅是当今最红的女歌手,CCG公司旗下唯一的的艺人,由于机缘巧合,和莫凛“偶遇”。当丝娅是把真相告诉莫凛后,莫凛的的世界开始发生了巨大的变化。平凡的他开始看见了不属于这个时代的东西,死神也离他越来越近。每当一个个陌生的面孔才开始变得熟悉,却又被死神夺去的时候;当热闹的都市,转念之间都充满绝望的时候;当他得知一直要加害他的敌人却是自己最亲,最信任的人的时候,他的愤怒化成了沸腾的火焰,燃烧着这个都市暗藏的迷影。
  • 王牌师士

    王牌师士

    长安街·三十五号大道,这条拥有古老名称的大街,一栋栋仿古建筑林立在蓝雨星天兰境浦东大都西北一角,与之光鲜的外表让人称赞的科技与艺术相结合的完美,还有让在这里居住的民众为之懊恼的环境。也不知道是那位“污辱”艺术的联邦官员审批,竟然在这条古老大街旁堆建垃圾回收中心,当初无数的投诉没改变垃圾与这里的民众做邻居的事实。而事实就是垃圾站,迎来整个天兰境的废弃品。每个城市的规划自有他的意义,这条拥有古老名称的大街,的确挺老了,当星河时代到大破灭迷航时代,这条大街整整有一千几百年的历史。故事就从街角的一个少年开始!丢个自己的群44344527----欢迎加入,虽然我不知道建群有什么用,还是但了!
  • 世说清语:清朝生活图志

    世说清语:清朝生活图志

    《世说清语——清朝生活图志》是从服饰、饮食、建筑、交通、信仰、节日、仪礼七处着眼介绍中国古代最后一个王朝的历史。本书最大的特点就是“以小见大““史论结合”。在具体介绍一事一物发展历程的同时,注重从时代大背景去分析,更能加深读者对事物何以如此的理解。让读者产生强烈的共鸣。由于清朝是中国最后一个古代王朝,它又处于中西交融的起始阶段,所以读者在现代生活中司空见惯的事物多可以从清朝找到起源。这无疑可以增强代入感,增强读者阅读趣味。