第 29 节
作者:月寒      更新:2024-04-14 09:15      字数:9322
  form     of  Lighthouse      Harry    was   doubled     behind    a  water    butt。  A   shell
  splashed to port; a shell splashed to starboard。 For an instant David stood
  staring   wide…eyed   at   the   greyhound   of   a   boat   that   ate   up   the   distance
  between them; at the jets of smoke and stabs of flame that sprang from her
  bow; at the figures crouched behind her gunwale; firing in volleys。
  To David it came suddenly; convincingly; that in a dream he had lived
  it all before;  and something   like   raw  poison stirred in   David;  something
  leaped to his throat and choked him; something rose in his brain and made
  him see scarlet。 He felt rather than saw young Carr kneeling at the box of
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  ammunition;   and   holding   a   shell   toward   him。   He   heard   the   click   as   the
  breech shut; felt the rubber tire of the brace give against the weight of his
  shoulder;   down   a  long   shining   tube   saw  the   pursuing   gun…boat;   saw   her
  again and many times disappear behind a flash of flame。 A bullet gashed
  his   forehead;   a   bullet   passed   deftly   through   his   forearm;   but   he   did   not
  heed them。 Confused with the thrashing of the engines; with the roar of the
  gun he heard a strange voice shrieking unceasingly:
  〃Cuba   libre!〃   it   yelled。   〃To   hell   with   Spain!〃   and   he   found   that   the
  voice was his own。
  The story lost nothing in the way Carr wrote it。
  〃And the best of it is;〃 he exclaimed joyfully; 〃it's true!〃
  For a Spanish gun…boat HAD been crippled and forced to run herself
  aground   by   a   tug…boat   manned   by   Cuban   patriots;   and   by   a   single   gun
  served by one man; and that man an American。 It was the first sea…fight of
  the war。 Over night a Cuban navy had been born; and into the limelight a
  cub reporter had projected a new 〃hero;〃 a ready…made; warranted…not…to…
  run; popular idol。
  They were seated in the pilot…house; 〃Jimmy〃 Doyle; Carr; and David;
  the patriots and their arms had been safely dumped upon the coast of Cuba;
  and The Three Friends was gliding swiftly and; having caught the Florida
  straits napping; smoothly toward Key West。 Carr had just finished reading
  aloud his account of the engagement。
  You will tell the story just as I have written it;〃 commanded the proud
  author。 〃Your being South as a travelling salesman was only a blind。 You
  came to volunteer for this expedition。 Before you could explain your wish
  you   were   mistaken   for   a secret…service   man;   and hustled   on   board。 That
  was just where you wanted to be; and when the moment arrived you took
  command   of   the   ship   and   single…handed   won   the   naval   battle   of   Nipe
  Bay。〃
  Jimmy Doyle nodded his head approvingly。 〃You certainty did; Dave;〃
  protested the great man; 〃I seen you when you done it!〃
  At Key West Carr filed his story and while the hospital surgeons kept
  David there over one steamer; to dress his wounds; his fame and features
  spread across the map of the United States。
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  Burdett   and   Sons   basked   in   reflected   glory。   Reporters   besieged   their
  office。   At   the   Merchants   Down…Town   Club   the   business   men   of   lower
  Broadway tendered congratulations。
  〃Of course; it's a great surprise to us;〃 Burdett and Sons would protest
  and wink heavily。 〃Of course; when the boy asked to be sent South we'd
  no idea he was planning to fight for Cuba! Or we wouldn't have let him go;
  would we?〃 Then again they would wink heavily。 〃I suppose you know;〃
  they would say; 〃that he's a direct descendant of General Hiram Greene;
  who won the battle of Trenton。 What I say is; 'Blood will tell!'〃 And then
  in a body every one in the club would move against the bar and exclaim:
  〃Here's to Cuba libre!〃
  When the Olivette from Key West reached Tampa Bay every Cuban in
  the Tampa cigar factories was at the dock。 There were thousands of them
  and all of the Junta; in high hats; to read David an address of welcome。
  And; when they saw him at the top of the gang…plank with his head in
  a bandage and his arm in a sling; like a mob of maniacs they howled and
  surged toward him。 But before they could reach their hero the courteous
  Junta forced them back; and cleared a pathway for a young girl。 She was
  travel…worn and pale; her shirt…waist was disgracefully wrinkled; her best
  hat   was   a   wreck。   No   one   on   Broadway   would   have   recognized   her   as
  Burdett and Sons' most immaculate and beautiful stenographer。
  She   dug   the   shapeless   hat   into   David's   shoulder;   and   clung   to   him。
  〃David!〃 she sobbed; 〃promise me you'll never; never do it again!〃
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  CHAPTER 5。 THE SAILORMAN
  Before Latimer put him on watch; the Nantucket sailorman had not a
  care in the world。 If the wind blew from the north; he spun to the left; if it
  came from the south; he spun to the right。 But it was entirely the wind that
  was responsible。 So; whichever way he turned; he smiled broadly; happily。
  His outlook upon the world was that of one who loved his fellowman。 He
  had many brothers as like him as twins all over Nantucket and Cape Cod
  and the North Shore; smiling from the railings of verandas; from the roofs
  of bungalows; from the eaves of summer palaces。 Empaled on their little
  iron   uprights;   each   sailorman   whirledsometimes   languidly;   like   a   great
  lady revolving to the slow measures of a waltz; sometimes so rapidly that
  he made you quite dizzy; and had he not been a sailorman with a heart of
  oak and a head and stomach of pine; he would have been quite   seasick。
  But the particular sailorman that Latimer bought for Helen Page and put
  on    sentry    duty   carried    on   his   shoulders    most    grave    and    unusual
  responsibilities。 He was the guardian of a buried treasure; the keeper of the
  happiness of two young people。 It was really asking a great deal of a care…
  free; happy…go…lucky weather…vane。
  Every summer from Boston Helen Page's people had been coming to
  Fair Harbor。 They knew it when what now is the polo field was their cow
  pasture。 And   whether   at   the   age   of   twelve   or   of   twenty   or   more;   Helen
  Page ruled Fair Harbor。 When she arrived the 〃season〃 opened; when she
  departed the local trades…people sighed and began to take account of stock。
  She was so popular because she possessed charm; and because she played
  no   favorites。   To   the   grooms   who   held   the   ponies   on   the   sidelines   her
  manner   was   just   as   simple   and   interested   as   it   was   to   the   gilded   youths
  who came to win the championship cups and remained to try to win Helen。
  She was just as genuinely pleased to make a four at tennis with the 〃kids〃
  as to take tea on the veranda of the club…house with the matrons。 To each
  her manner was always as though she were of their age。 When she met the
  latter on the beach road; she greeted them riotously and joyfully by their
  maiden   names。   And   the   matrons   liked   it。   In   comparison   the   deference
  shown them by the other young women did not so strongly appeal。
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  〃When I'm jogging along in my station wagon;〃 said one of them; 〃and
  Helen shrieks and waves at me from her car; I feel as though I were twenty;
  and I believe that she is really sorry I am not sitting beside her; instead of
  that   good…looking   Latimer   man;   who   never   wears   a   hat。   Why   does   he
  never wear a hat? Because he knows he's good…looking; or because Helen
  drives so fast he can't keep it on?〃
  〃Does he wear a hat when he is not with Helen?〃 asked the new arrival。
  〃That might help some。〃
  〃We will never know;〃 exclaimed the young matron; 〃he never leaves
  her。〃
  This was so true that it had become a public scandal。 You met them so
  many      times   a  day    driving   together;    motoring     together;   playing    golf
  together; that you were embarrassed for them and did not know which way
  to look。 But they gloried in their shame。 If you tactfully pretended not to
  see them; Helen shouted at you。 She made you feel you had been caught
  doing something indelicate and underhand。
  The    mothers    of  Fair   Harbor    were    rather  slow    in  accepting    young
  Latimer。   So   many   of   their   sons   had   se