第 25 节
作者:月寒      更新:2024-04-14 09:15      字数:9316
  It was a year before the Spanish…American War; while the patriots of
  Cuba were fighting the mother country for their independence。
  〃If I were a Son of the Revolution;〃 said Emily; 〃I'd go to Cuba and
  help free it。〃
  〃Don't talk nonsense;〃 cried David。 〃If I did that I'd lose my job; and
  we'd   never   be   able   to   marry。   Besides;   what's   Cuba   done   for   me?   All   I
  know about Cuba is; I once smoked a Cuban cigar and it made me ill。〃
  〃Did   Lafayette   talk   like   that?〃   demanded   Emily。   〃Did   he   ask   what
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  have the American rebels ever done for me?〃
  〃If   I   were   in   Lafayette's   class;〃   sighed   David;   〃I   wouldn't   be   selling
  automatic punches。〃
  〃There's   your   trouble;〃   declared   Emily   〃You   lack   self…   confidence。
  You're too humble; you've got fighting blood and you ought to keep saying
  to   yourself;  'Blood   will tell;'   and the   first thing   you know;  it WILL  tell!
  You might begin by going into politics in your ward。 Or; you could join
  the militia。 That takes only one night a week; and then; if we DID go to
  war with Spain; you'd get a commission; and come back a captain!〃
  Emily's eyes were beautiful with delight。 But the sight gave David no
  pleasure。 In genuine distress; he shook his head。
  〃Emily;〃 he said; 〃you're going to be awfully disappointed in me。〃
  Emily's eyes closed as though they shied at some mental picture。 But
  when she opened them they were bright; and her smile was kind and eager。
  〃No; I'm not;〃 she protested; 〃only I want a husband with a career; and
  one who'll tell me to keep quiet when I try to run it for him。〃
  〃I've often wished you would;〃 said David。
  〃Would what? Run your career for you?〃
  〃No; keep quiet。 Only it didn't seem polite to tell you so。〃
  〃Maybe   I'd   like   you   better;〃   said   Emily;   〃if   you   weren't   so   darned
  polite。〃
  A  week   later;   early  in   the   spring   of   1897;   the  unexpected   happened;
  and    David     was    promoted     into   the   flying   squadron。     He    now    was    a
  travelling salesman; with a rise in salary and a commission on orders。 It
  was a step forward; but as going on the road meant absence from Emily;
  David   was   not   elated。   Nor   did   it   satisfy   Emily。   It   was   not   money   she
  wanted。   Her   ambition   for   David   could   not   be   silenced   with   a   raise   in
  wages。 She did   not say  this;  but   David knew  that in him  she  still   found
  something lacking; and when they said good…by they both were ill at ease
  and    completely      unhappy。     Formerly;    each    day   when    Emily    in   passing
  David in the office said good…morning; she used to add the number of the
  days that still separated them from the vacation which also was to be their
  honeymoon。 But; for the last month she had stopped counting the daysat
  least she did not count them aloud。
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  David did not ask her why this was so。 He did not dare。 And; sooner
  than learn the truth that she had decided not to marry him; or that she was
  even     considering      not   marrying     him;    he   asked    no   questions;    but   in
  ignorance   of   her   present   feelings   set   forth   on   his   travels。 Absence   from
  Emily hurt just as much as he had feared it would。 He missed her; needed
  her; longed for her。 In numerous letters he told her so。 But; owing to the
  frequency with which he moved; her letters never caught up with him。 It
  was almost a relief。 He did not care to think of what they might tell him。
  The   route   assigned   David   took   him  through   the   South   and   kept   him
  close to the Atlantic seaboard。 In obtaining orders he was not unsuccessful;
  and   at   the   end   of   the   first   month   received   from   the   firm   a   telegram   of
  congratulation。   This   was   of   importance   chiefly   because   it   might   please
  Emily。   But   he   knew   that   in   her   eyes   the   great…great…grandson   of   Hiram
  Greene could not rest content with a telegram from Burdett and Sons。 A
  year    before    she   would    have    considered     it  a  high   honor;   a  cause    for
  celebration。 Now; he could see her press her pretty lips together and shake
  her pretty head。 It was not enough。 But how could he accomplish more。 He
  began to hate his great…great…grandfather。 He began to wish Hiram Greene
  had lived and died a bachelor。
  And then Dame Fortune took David in hand and toyed with him and
  spanked   him;  and   pelted   and petted   him;  until   finally  she   made   him  her
  favorite     son。   Dame     Fortune    went    about    this  work    in   an  abrupt    and
  arbitrary manner。
  On the night of the 1st of March; 1897; two trains were scheduled to
  leave   the   Union   Station   at   Jacksonville   at   exactly   the   same   minute;   and
  they left exactly on time。 As never before in the history of any Southern
  railroad has this miracle occurred; it shows that when Dame Fortune gets
  on the job she is omnipotent。 She placed David on the train to Miami as
  the   train   he   wanted   drew   out   for   Tampa;   and   an   hour   later;   when   the
  conductor   looked   at   David's   ticket;   he   pulled   the   bell…cord   and   dumped
  David over the side into the heart of a pine forest。 If he walked back along
  the track for one mile; the conductor reassured him; he would find a flag
  station where at midnight he could flag a train going north。 In an hour it
  would deliver him safely in Jacksonville。
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  There was a moon; but for the greater part of the time it was hidden by
  fitful; hurrying clouds; and; as David stumbled forward; at one moment he
  would      see   the   rails  like   streaks    of  silver;   and    the   next   would     be
  encompassed in a complete and bewildering darkness。 He   made his way
  from tie to tie only by feeling with his foot。 After an hour he came to a
  shed。 Whether it was or was not the flag station the conductor had in mind;
  he did not know; and he never did know。 He was too tired; too hot; and too
  disgusted   to   proceed;   and   dropping   his   suit   case   he   sat   down   under   the
  open roof of the shed prepared to wait either for the train or daylight。 So
  far as he could see; on every side of him stretched a swamp; silent; dismal;
  interminable。 From its black water rose dead trees; naked of bark and hung
  with streamers of funereal moss。 There was not a sound or sign of human
  habitation。     The    silence   was    the  silence    of  the   ocean    at  night   David
  remembered the berth reserved for him on the train to Tampa and of the
  loathing with which he had considered placing himself between its sheets。
  But   now   how   gladly   would   he   welcome   it!   For;   in   the   sleeping…car;   ill…
  smelling;   close;   and   stuffy;   he   at   least   would   have   been   surrounded   by
  fellow…sufferers       of  his  own    species。    Here   his   companions       were   owls;
  water…snakes; and sleeping buzzards。
  I   am   alone;〃   he   told   himself;   〃on   a   railroad   embankment;   entirely
  surrounded by alligators。〃
  And then he found he was not alone。
  In the darkness; illuminated by a match; not a hundred yards from him
  there flashed suddenly the face of a man。 Then the match went out and the
  face   with   it。   David   noted   that   it   had   appeared   at   some   height   above   the
  level    of   the   swamp;     at   an   elevation    higher    even    than    that  of   the
  embankment。 It was as though the man had been sitting on the limb of a
  tree。    David    crossed     the   tracks   and    found    that   on   the   side   of   the
  embankment opposite the shed there was solid ground and what once had
  been   a   wharf。   He   advanced   over   this   cautiously;   and   as   he   did   so   the
  clouds   disappeared;   and   in   the   full   light   of   the   moon   he   saw   a   bayou
  broadening into a river; and made fast to the decayed and rotting wharf an
  ocean…going tug。 It was from her deck that the man; in lighting his pipe;
  had    shown     his  face。   At   the  thought    of   a  warm    engine…room   and       the
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  company of   his   fellow   creatures;   David's heart   leaped   with pleasure。   He
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