登陆注册
5399300000056

第56章

The Captain was dead.Ethel had loved the Captain.She had told the Captain of her love.As consequence, she could not love himself, Harvard Weldon.But he loved her.He had loved her for thirteen months and twenty-one days.Carefully he reckoned up the time; then, to make sure, he counted it off upon his fingers.Yes, he had loved her ever since that first lunch on the steamer, when she had snubbed him so roundly.He did not know it then.Looking backward, he knew it now.And there had been Cape Town, and Johannesburg, and Cape Town again.He stumbled into the open mouth of an ant-bear's hole and came down with a crash, full upon his wounded shoulder.Strange that his step should be so uncertain! Strange that he should feel so little inclination to swear! As he picked himself up, he wondered vaguely whether his pipe would be refreshing; but his wonder stopped, impotent to lead his dangling hand in the direction of his pocket.Then his mind took up its interrupted story, its record of brief, categorical facts.

He had meant to go home, that winter.Instead, Ethel had fanned the flame of his desire to go back to the front.He had left her, one evening, to pass a sleepless night, and, the next morning, to take himself out to enlist for another six months of service.The six months were nearly ended.Only three weeks remained.And then?

Nothing.

The second night found him still far from Lindley.He had plodded on mechanically, stumbling often, but halting never, while his mind went whirling on and on, over and over the same old questions.His lips were feverish, and his eyes burned hotly, so it was almost with a sense of relief that he greeted the swift chill which followed the dropping of the sun.Over his head, the great arch of the sky shaded from east to west through every tint of purple and blue and turquoise and emerald-green, down to the golden band of the afterglow.Then the stars began to dot the purple, their tiny points of light serving only to emphasize its darkness, until the full moon swept up across the heavens, throwing its mystic silver light over all the land and adding tenfold to the empty loneliness of the veldt.Sleep was out of the question.He could only snuggle more closely into his blankets and wait for morning with what grace he could.The stopping of his physical action only increased the swiftness of his swirling thoughts which chased each other round and round in circling eddies about one fixed point.That point was Ethel.

Across the veldt at his left hand, he had watched the chain of blockhouses which lay along the country between Kroonstad and Lindley.Their squat outlines and the shining blue of their corrugated iron roofs had caught his wandering attention, held it, pinned it to other associations with those same blockhouses and, of a sudden, had brought him to a full realization that griefs did not come singly.He had left Johannesburg, to face a future apart from Ethel.He was coming back to Lindley, to face a future bereft of the Captain.

It was full noon, the next day, when the camp came into view.

Leaving the convoy to follow in his wake, he headed straight for the rise where he had so often sat with Carew and gossiped of all things under the light of the sun.Then, as the round tents lay under his eyes like rows of dots punched into relief above the surface of the plain, he sank down on the coarse, parched grass and hid his eyes in his shaking hands.Yet even then the pitiless circle of tragic thoughts refused to stop their ceaseless round.

He roused himself at a touch on his arm.Kruger Bobs, at a distance, was eying him with a look of chastened welcome; but Carew stood beside him, one thin, sun-tanned hand on Weldon's shoulder.

"It's all right, old man," he was saying."Don't try to tell me anything about it.Kruger Bobs saw you coming, and we rode out to meet you.Come in and rest.You look utterly done up."Half way back to the camp, Carew spoke again; but it was only once.

"I told the fellows you were coming, and that you would be tired.

They will keep out of your way, till you have had time to rest up a bit.Paddy is waiting to look out for you; but you needn't worry.He knows when to hold his tongue.If you need anything, or if you care to talk, send him out to look for me.Meanwhile, you need some rest."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 斗罗之血影修罗

    斗罗之血影修罗

    一切笼罩在黑暗中的谜团终将逝去,未知的因果也会一一了断,当梦醒来的那一刻,或许会有人发现,你我的故事远不止于此。本书是斗罗同人,故事为原创,时间线设定位于斗罗大陆原著万年前,所讲述的是一个小人物的成长故事,属于练笔之作,纪念之作,不喜勿喷,如侵立删!本故事纯属虚构,情节臆想,切勿当真!友情提示,本书水虽不深,旱鸭亦勿入!
  • 365夜故事:春夏秋冬(套装共4册)

    365夜故事:春夏秋冬(套装共4册)

    1.《365夜故事》是由鲁兵先生专为孩子编选的“国宝级”童书。以孩子的视角为选择眼光,以儿童的口语来裁剪语言,便于年轻父母的口述。一经出版,好评如潮,风靡全国,总销超700万册,荣获“国家图书奖”、“全国优秀儿童读物一等奖”,堪称中国童书出版史上的奇迹。书中的故事饱含智慧,纯真童趣,具有永恒的美与韵味,是享誉全球的华语儿童经典。2.本书获得鲁兵先生的作品授权,在选编故事篇目时,因循鲁兵先生的指引,询访诸位儿童文学名家,叶圣陶、赵冰波、野军、顾城……
  • 春色盈门

    春色盈门

    温婉贤淑,姿色过人的她,从一个人人轻视无名女子成为朱门大户的当家女主人!朱大宅是非多,一颦一笑,皆是算计,勾心斗角,虚情假意,一个都不能少!饶是不争不抢,步步退让,却也会沾得一身血腥!暗潮汹涌的大宅里,波谲云诡的朝堂上,她想要抽身,却是太难太难!且看她一双素手,如何平定大宅风波,为朝堂之上的他出谋划策!
  • Bucolics

    Bucolics

    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。
  • 逆流而王

    逆流而王

    一个架空的现代化岛国如何在短时间内覆灭的过程。
  • 成长Growing

    成长Growing

    真实自身感想,灵感来源于人性的枷锁,在大都市中生活,不断的新的感悟以及对自身枷锁的一次次突破,人生如戏,戏如人生,正如人性的枷锁中所说,真正的艺术是来源于现实生活的,但这种现实又不同于我们所直观切实感受的现实,这种现实又是什么呢?值得我们深思,我现在还很模糊,但我坚信,这个模糊的身影终将随着日出日落,变得清晰。
  • THE MAGICIAN?S NEPHEW (英文朗读版)

    THE MAGICIAN?S NEPHEW (英文朗读版)

    《纳尼亚传奇》系列作品对后世作家影响深远,包括《哈利波特》系列的作者J·K·罗琳都曾表示自己深受C·S·刘易斯作品的影响。随着《纳尼亚传奇》系列故事改编成电影,全世界更多观众和读者开始认识这部不朽的作品。穿梭在一个又一个的纳尼亚冒险故事中,这绝对是你一生难忘的神奇旅程……
  • 投手物语

    投手物语

    以作为捕手的主角视角,讲述各种各样投手的故事
  • 废材逆袭:呆萌腹黑三小姐

    废材逆袭:呆萌腹黑三小姐

    (已完结包月免费看此文)她是紫翼佣兵界的女王,一朝穿越成为痴傻三小姐。穿越又怎样,在异世她一样混的风生水起。对敌人,她狠绝毒辣,她冰冷凶残。为解除强大的封印,获取六大神兽的鲜血,她决定闯“上古八荒界”。她有神界大神当靠山,更有上古神兽当小弟,只是这一只狐貂和一只青龙为毛总喜欢打击她?请问,她养得是两只禽、兽吗?(第一次写文,文笔不足之处请多多点评!你们的支持就是我的力量!此文纯属虚构,如有雷同纯属巧合。)
  • 娱乐说唱天王

    娱乐说唱天王

    前世被雪藏的说唱歌手谭啸穿越到平行世界,且看他如何玩转说唱、综艺、电影和商业,最终成为一名横跨娱乐和商业的超级大亨。