登陆注册
20287600000014

第14章 THE OCEAN IS CALLING FOR YOU

A little while after Wilbur had set off for the station,while Moran was making the last entries in the log-book,seated at the table in the cabin,Jim appeared at the door.

"Well,"she said,looking up.

"China boy him want go asho'plenty big,seeum flen up Chinatown in um city."

"Shore leave,is it?"said Moran."You deserted once before without even saying good-by;and my hand in the fire,you'll come back this time dotty with opium.Get away with you.We'll have men aboard here in a few days."

"Can go?"inquired Jim suavely.

"I said so.Report our arrival to your Six Companies."

Hoang rowed Jim and the coolies ashore,and then returned to the schooner with the dory and streamed her astern.As he passed the cabin door on his way forward,Moran hailed him.

"I thought you went ashore?"she cried.

"Heap flaid,"he answered."Him other boy go up Chinatown;him tell Sam Yup;I tink Sam Yup alla same killee me.I no leaveum ship two,thlee day;bimeby I go Olegon.I stay topside ship.

You wantum cook.I cook plenty fine;standum watch for you."

Indeed,ever since leaving Coronado the ex-beach-comber had made himself very useful about the schooner;had been,in fact,obsequiousness itself,and seemed to be particularly desirous of gaining the good-will of the "Bertha's"officers.He understood pigeon English better than Jim,and spoke it even better than Charlie had done.He acted the part of interpreter between Wilbur and the hands;even turned to in the galley upon occasion;and of his own accord offered to give the vessel a coat of paint above the water-line.Moran turned back to her log,and Hoang went forward.Standing on the forward deck,he looked after the "Bertha's"coolies until they disappeared behind a row of pine-trees on the Presidio Reservation,going cityward.Wilbur was nowhere in sight.For a longtime Hoang studied the Lifeboat Station narrowly,while he made a great show of coiling a length of rope.The station was just out of hailing distance.Nobody seemed stirring.The whole shore and back land thereabout was deserted;the edge of the city was four miles distant.Hoang returned to the forecastle-hatch and went below,groping under his bunk in his ditty-box.

"Well,what is it?"exclaimed Moran a moment later,as the beach-comber entered the cabin,and shut the door behind him.

Hoang did not answer;but she did not need to repeat the question.

In an instant Moran knew very well what he had come for.

"God!"she exclaimed under her breath,springing to her feet.

"Why didn't we think of this!"

Hoang slipped his knife from the sleeve of his blouse.For an instant the old imperiousness,the old savage pride and anger,leaped again in Moran's breast--then died away forever.She was no longer the same Moran of that first fight on board the schooner,when the beach-combers had plundered her of her "loot."

Only a few weeks ago,and she would have fought with Hoang without hesitation and without mercy;would have wrenched a leg from the table and brained him where he stood.But she had learned since to know what it meant to be dependent;to rely for protection upon some one who was stronger than she;to know her weakness;to know that she was at last a woman,and to be proud of it.

She did not fight;she had no thought of fighting.Instinctively she cried aloud,"Mate--mate!--Oh,mate,where are you?Help me!"and Hoang's knife nailed the words within her throat.

The "loot"was in a brass-bound chest under one of the cabin's bunks,stowed in two gunny-bags.Hoang drew them out,knotted the two together,and,slinging them over his shoulder,regained the deck.

He looked carefully at the angry sky and swelling seas,noting the direction of the wind and set of the tide;then went forward and cast the anchor-chains from the windlass in such a manner that the schooner must inevitably wrench free with the first heavy strain.

The dory was still tugging at the line astern.Hoang dropped the sacks in the boat,swung himself over the side,and rowed calmly toward the station's wharf.If any notion of putting to sea with the schooner had entered the obscure,perverted cunning of his mind,he had almost instantly rejected it.Chinatown was his aim;once there and under the protection of his Tong,Hoang knew that he was safe.He knew the hiding-places that the See Yup Association provided for its members--hiding places whose very existence was unknown to the police of the White Devil.

No one interrupted--no one even noticed--his passage to the station.At best,it was nothing more than a coolie carrying a couple of gunny-sacks across his shoulder.Two hours later,Hoang was lost in San Francisco's Chinatown.

At the sight of the schooner sweeping out to sea,Wilbur was for an instant smitten rigid.What had happened?Where was Moran?Why was there nobody on board?A swift,sharp sense of some unnamed calamity leaped suddenly at his throat.Then he was aware of a crattering of hoofs along the road that led to the fort.Hodgson threw himself from one of the horses that were used in handling the surf-boat,and ran to him hatless and panting.

"My God!"he shouted."Look,your schooner,do you see her?She broke away after I'd started to tell you--to tell you--to tell you--your girl there on board--It was horrible!"

"Is she all right?"cried Wilbur,at top voice,for the clamor of the gale was increasing every second.

"All right!No;they've killed her--somebody--the coolies,Ithink--knifed her!I went out to ask you people to come into the station to have supper with me--"

"Killed her--killed her!Who?I don't believe you--"

"Wait--to have supper with me,and I found her there on the cabin floor.She was still breathing.I carried her up on deck--there was nobody else aboard.I carried her up and laid her on the deck--and she died there.Just now I came after you to tell you,and--"

"Good God Almighty,man!who killed her?Where is she?Oh--but of course it isn't true!How did you know?Moran killed!Moran killed!"

"And the schooner broke away after I started!"

"Moran killed!But--but--she's not dead yet;we'll have to see--"

"She died on the deck;I brought her up and laid her on--"

"How do you know she's dead?Where is she?Come on,we'll go right back to her--to the station!"

"She's on board--out there!"

"Where--where is she?My God,man,tell me where she is!"

"Out there aboard the schooner.I brought her up on deck--I left her on the schooner--on the deck--she was stabbed in the throat--and then came after you to tell you.Then the schooner broke away while I was coming;she's drifting out to sea now!"

"Where is she?Where is she?"

"Who--the girl--the schooner--which one?The girl is on the schooner--and the schooner--that's her,right there--she's drifting out to sea!"

Wilbur put both hands to his temples,closing his eyes.

"I'll go back!"exclaimed Hodgson."We'll have the surf-boat out and get after her;we'll bring the body back!"

"No,no!"cried Wilbur,"it's better--this way.Leave her,let her go--she's going out to sea again!"

"But the schooner won't live two hours outside in this weather;she'll go down!"

"It's better--that way--let her go.I want it so!"

"I can't stay!"cried the other again."If the patrol should sig-storm coming up,and I've got to be at my station."

Wilbur did not answer;he was watching the schooner.

"I can't stay!"cried the other again."If the patrol should signal--I can't stop here,I must be on duty.Come back,you can't do anything!"

"No!"

"I have got to go!"Hodgson ran back,swung himself on the horse,and rode away at a furious gallop,inclining his head against the gusts.

And the schooner in a world of flying spray,white scud,and driving spoondrift,her cordage humming,her forefoot churning,the flag at her peak straining stiff in the gale,came up into the narrow passage of the Golden Gate,riding high upon the outgoing tide.On she came,swinging from crest to crest of the waves that kept her company and that ran to meet the ocean,shouting and calling out beyond there under the low,scudding clouds.

Wilbur had climbed to the top of the old fort.Erect upon its granite ledge he stood,and watched and waited.

Not once did the "Bertha Millner"falter in her race.Like an unbitted horse,all restraint shaken off,she ran free toward the ocean as to her pasture-land.She came nearer,nearer,rising and rolling with the seas,her bowsprit held due west,pointing like a finger out to sea,to the west--out to the world of romance.And then at last,as the little vessel drew opposite the old fort and passed not one hundred yards away,Wilbur,watching from the rampart,saw Moran lying upon the deck with outstretched arms and calm,upturned face;lying upon the deck of that lonely fleeing schooner as upon a bed of honor,still and calm,her great braids smooth upon her breast,her arms wide;alone with the sea;alone in death as she had been in life.She passed out of his life as she had come into it--alone,upon a derelict ship,abandoned to the sea.She went out with the tide,out with the storms;out,out,out to the great gray Pacific that knew her and loved her,and that shouted and called for her,and thundered in the joy of her as she came to meet him like a bride to meet a bridegroom.

"Good-by,Moran!"shouted Wilbur as she passed."Good-by,good-by,Moran!You were not for me--not for me!The ocean is calling for you,dear;don't you hear him?Don't you hear him?Good-by,good-by,good-by!"

The schooner swept by,shot like an arrow through the swirling currents of the Golden Gate,and dipped and bowed and courtesied to the Pacific that reached toward her his myriad curling fingers.

They infolded her,held her close,and drew her swiftly,swiftly out to the great heaving bosom,tumultuous and beating in its mighty joy,its savage exultation of possession.

Wilbur stood watching.The little schooner lessened in the distance--became a shadow in mist and flying spray--a shadow moving upon the face of the great waste of water.Fainter and fainter she grew,vanished,reappeared,was heaved up again--a mere speck upon the western sky--a speck that dwindled and dwindled,then slowly melted away into the gray of the horizon.

End

同类推荐
  • The Early Short Fiction Part Two

    The Early Short Fiction Part Two

    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。
  • 顺鼓篇

    顺鼓篇

    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。
  • 太初元气接要保生之论

    太初元气接要保生之论

    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。
  • 醉后赠马四

    醉后赠马四

    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。
  • Ion

    Ion

    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
  • 云慕歌之天下为娉

    云慕歌之天下为娉

    云涟后来时常想,如果当初没有遇到他,会怎么样呢?会怎么样?云涟自己也不知道。和他的相逢,是她一生最美的遇见。在这个以武为尊的世界,她变强,杀敌,身世之谜,灭门之恨,她在这条路上浮浮沉沉。某男坏笑:涟儿,别胡思乱想,快到为夫怀里来。他说:我这一生,被抛弃,被利用,尝尽人情冷暖。唯有云涟,是我的阳光。她比我的命还重要。她要变强,我陪她。她要报仇,我陪她。与天下人为敌又如何?这条路一定要我陪她走!男强女强,一生一世一双人,欢迎大家跳坑。
  • 贴心丹王

    贴心丹王

    杨迪偶得丹炉,成为最后一个炼丹师,从此踏上一条波澜壮阔的修仙之路,碾压各路天才,纵横无数位面,最终成为一代丹王。隆重推荐炫舞新书《美女之神秘高手》。
  • 菊花盛开的季节

    菊花盛开的季节

    《菊花盛开的季节》,作者卢群,大众文艺出版社出版,本书是一部小小说个人作品集。
  • 清之暮雪

    清之暮雪

    你就像烟火的美丽那么美丽轻划过无人的天际曾经交换过的秘密紧紧埋藏在心底你就像烟火的神秘那么神秘风随着你若即若离留下触不到的可惜陨落下了我们的回忆你就像烟火的美丽那么美丽轻划过无人的天际曾经交换过的秘密紧紧埋藏在心底你就像烟火的神秘那么神秘风随着你若即若离留下触不到的可惜陨落下了我们的回忆你就像烟火的美丽那么美丽轻划过无人的天际曾经交换过的秘密紧紧埋藏在心底你就像烟火的神秘那么神秘风随着你若即若离留下触不到的可惜陨落下了我们的回忆
  • 道行般若波罗蜜经

    道行般若波罗蜜经

    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。
  • 错嫁:再追前妻

    错嫁:再追前妻

    秦邵煊,是圈内有名的花花公子,明明心有所属,却因父亲一句话不得不娶另一个不爱的女人。慕潆,是被逼得走投无路的私生女,无缘无故成了交易对象。“先生,你够了!旁边不是很多位置么,干嘛老往我这边挤。”“因为这样我们才能更‘了解彼此’。”他笑得一脸不怀好意。她拍案而起,搞砸相亲宴,扔下他扬长而去。他无视餐厅内惊愕的目光,淡然掏出手机,对电话那头的人说:“就她了,我娶。”离婚后一个星期,他高调再婚,结婚对象是他心心念念的女人。
  • 伤寒舌鉴

    伤寒舌鉴

    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。
  • 重生之游戏帝国

    重生之游戏帝国

    你知道游戏编辑器么?对,就是那个可以制作,可以编辑游戏的游戏编辑器!这项来自未来科技的编辑器,可以满足你任何的制作游戏需求,精美的画风,完美的音质,高技术的数据压缩,无解的反盗版编制,只需要你讲出你想要的游戏需求,把剧情谱写出来,那么一款符合你心理要求的完美游戏就闪亮在你眼前!什么?人工智能?全新的网络数据通信压缩算法?超强悍的游戏引擎?不,一个游戏编辑器足矣……李广延与一张名为游戏编辑器的光盘回到过去,改变了自己,也改变了这个世界!……本书世界为小说虚构,请勿当真。
  • 王牌游戏玩家

    王牌游戏玩家

    扑克牌游戏中最强的主牌,被称作王牌。一个天生神经反应超强的家伙,原本对游戏毫无兴趣,却无意间进入游戏《诸世纪》,慢慢体会到这个虚拟世界的乐趣,同时也遇到了形形色色热爱游戏的人,发生了许许多多有趣的故事,走上了一条职业选手的另类巅峰之路。(书友群:480419350)新书《神禅》已发,请多多支持。
  • 异世界回忆录

    异世界回忆录

    主人公叶子,在自己的公寓中的奇遇,门的后面不紧紧是开始。