Tales Of Hearsay eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 126 pages of information about Tales Of Hearsay.

Tales Of Hearsay eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 126 pages of information about Tales Of Hearsay.

“‘I mean—­out of this war,’ added the commanding officer.

“The Northman stared at him in a curiously unseeing and at the same time interested manner, as only eyes of a particular blue shade can stare.

“‘And you wouldn’t be angry at it,’ he said, ’would you?  You are too much of a gentleman.  We didn’t bring this on you.  And suppose we sat down and cried.  What good would that be?  Let those cry who made the trouble,’ he concluded, with energy.  ’Time’s money, you say.  Well—­this time is money.  Oh! isn’t it!’

“The commanding officer tried to keep under the feeling of immense disgust.  He said to himself that it was unreasonable.  Men were like that—­moral cannibals feeding on each other’s misfortunes.  He said aloud: 

“’You have made it perfectly plain how it is that you are here.  Your log-book confirms you very minutely.  Of course, a log-book may be cooked.  Nothing easier.’

“The Northman never moved a muscle.  He was gazing at the floor; he seemed not to have heard.  He raised his head after a while.

“‘But you can’t suspect me of anything,’ he muttered, negligently.

“The commanding officer thought:  ‘Why should he say this?’

“Immediately afterwards the man before him added:  ’My cargo is for an English port.’

“His voice had turned husky for the moment.  The commanding officer reflected:  ’That’s true.  There can be nothing.  I can’t suspect him.  Yet why was he lying with steam up in this fog—­and then, hearing us come in, why didn’t he give some sign of life?  Why?  Could it be anything else but a guilty conscience?  He could tell by the leadsmen that this was a man-of-war.’

“Yes—­why?  The commanding officer went on thinking:  ’Suppose I ask him and then watch his face.  He will betray himself in some way.  It’s perfectly plain that the fellow has been drinking.  Yes, he has been drinking; but he will have a lie ready all the same.’  The commanding officer was one of those men who are made morally and almost physically uncomfortable by the mere thought of having to beat down a lie.  He shrank from the act in scorn and disgust, which were invincible because more temperamental than moral.

“So he went out on deck instead and had the crew mustered formally for his inspection.  He found them very much what the report of the boarding officer had led him to expect.  And from their answers to his questions he could discover no flaw in the log-book story.

“He dismissed them.  His impression of them was—­a picked lot; have been promised a fistful of money each if this came off; all slightly anxious, but not frightened.  Not a single one of them likely to give the show away.  They don’t feel in danger of their life.  They know England and English ways too well!

“He felt alarmed at catching himself thinking as if his vaguest suspicions were turning into a certitude.  For, indeed, there was no shadow of reason for his inferences.  There was nothing to give away.

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Tales Of Hearsay from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.