The Rescue eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 505 pages of information about The Rescue.

The Rescue eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 505 pages of information about The Rescue.
in the mist of a rain-squall, or could observe her at leisure, upright and with shivering sails, forging ahead through a long day of unsteady airs.  Men saw her battling with a heavy monsoon in the Bay of Bengal, lying becalmed in the Java Sea, or gliding out suddenly from behind a point of land, graceful and silent in the clear moonlight.  Her activity was the subject of excited but low-toned conversations, which would be interrupted when her master appeared.

“Here he is.  Came in last night,” whispered the gossiping group.

Lingard did not see the covert glances of respect tempered by irony; he nodded and passed on.

“Hey, Tom!  No time for a drink?” would shout someone.

He would shake his head without looking back—­far away already.

Florid and burly he could be seen, for a day or two, getting out of dusty gharries, striding in sunshine from the Occidental Bank to the Harbour Office, crossing the Esplanade, disappearing down a street of Chinese shops, while at his elbow and as tall as himself, old Jorgenson paced along, lean and faded, obstinate and disregarded, like a haunting spirit from the past eager to step back into the life of men.

Lingard ignored this wreck of an adventurer, sticking to him closer than his shadow, and the other did not try to attract attention.  He waited patiently at the doors of offices, would vanish at tiffin time, would invariably turn up again in the evening and then he kept his place till Lingard went aboard for the night.  The police peons on duty looked disdainfully at the phantom of Captain H. C. Jorgenson, Barque Wild Rose, wandering on the silent quay or standing still for hours at the edge of the sombre roadstead speckled by the anchor lights of ships—­an adventurous soul longing to recross the waters of oblivion.

The sampan-men, sculling lazily homeward past the black hull of the brig at anchor, could hear far into the night the drawl of the New England voice escaping through the lifted panes of the cabin skylight.  Snatches of nasal sentences floated in the stillness around the still craft.

“Yes, siree!  Mexican war rifles—­good as new—­six in a case—­my people in Baltimore—­that’s so.  Hundred and twenty rounds thrown in for each specimen—­marked to suit your requirements.  Suppose—­musical instruments, this side up with care—­how’s that for your taste?  No, no!  Cash down—­my people in Balt—­Shooting sea-gulls you say?  Waal!  It’s a risky business—­see here—­ten per cent. discount—­it’s out of my own pocket—­”

As time wore on, and nothing happened, at least nothing that one could hear of, the excitement died out.  Lingard’s new attitude was accepted as only “his way.”  There was nothing in it, maintained some.  Others dissented.  A good deal of curiosity, however, remained and the faint rumour of something big being in preparation followed him into every harbour he went to, from Rangoon to Hongkong.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Rescue from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.