O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1919 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 406 pages of information about O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1919.

O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1919 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 406 pages of information about O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1919.

His pay and his rations, he was told, would begin two days hence, when he was to report to the fire junk now lying at the dock, awaiting the human cargo of which he was a part.  Kan Wong memorized the directions as he turned away from his instructing countryman.  Of the Foreign Devil he took no further notice.  Time enough for that when he passed into service.  The God of Luck had smiled upon his boldness, and, reflecting upon it Kan Wong turned back to the river and the sampan that had so long been his floating home.  No sentimental memories, however, clung about it for him.  Its freight of dreams he had landed here in Shanghai, marketing them for a realization.  The sampan now was but the empty shell of a water beetle, that had crawled upon the bank into the sun of Fortune to spill forth a dragon fly to try newly found wings of adventure.

He found a customer, and, with much haggling after the manner of his kind, disposed of his boat, the last tie, if tie there was, that bound him to his present life.  Waterman he had always been, and now had come to him the call of the Father of All Waters.  The tang of the salt in his nostrils conjured up dreams as magical as those invoked by the wand of the poppy god.  Wrapped in their rosy mantle, he walked the streets for the next two days, and on the third he took his way to the dock where lay the fire junk that was to bear him forth into the wonders of the Foreign Devils’ land.  Larger she loomed than any he had ever seen, larger, oh, much larger, than those which had steamed up the Yangtze in swanlike majesty.  But this huge bulk was grey—­grey and squat and powerful.  Once aboard, he found it crowded with an army of chattering coolies.  They swarmed in the hold like maggots.  Every inch of space was given over to them, an army, it seemed to Kan Wong, in which he was all but lost.

Day after day across the waste of water the ship took its eastern way.  Never had Kan Wong dreamed there was so much water in the world.  The broad, long river that had been his life’s path seemed but a narrow trickle on the earth’s face compared with this stretch of sea that never ended, though the days ran into weeks.  The land coolies chafed and found much sickness in the swell but Kan Wong, used ever to a moving deck, round the way none too long, and smiled softly to himself as he counted up the dollars they were paying him for the keenest pleasure he had ever known.

At last land appeared.  The ship swung into the dock, disclosing to the questioning eyes of Kan Won and his kind a new strange land.  In orderly discipline they were marched off the vessel and on to the dock.  But rest was not theirs as yet, nor was this their final destination.  From the fire junk they boarded the flying iron horse of the Foreign Devils; again they were on the move.  Swiftly across the land they went, over high mountains crowded with eternal snow, thence down upon brown, rolling plains as wide as the flat stretches of the broad Yangtze Valley;

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Project Gutenberg
O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1919 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.