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.

Bunter had also another annoyance that day.  A confounded berthing master came on board on some pretence or other, but in reality, Bunter thought, simply impelled by an inconvenient curiosity—­inconvenient to Bunter, that is.  After some beating about the bush, that man suddenly said: 

“I can’t help thinking.  I’ve seen you before somewhere, Mr. Mate.  If I heard your name, perhaps Bunter—­”

That’s the worst of a life with a mystery in it—­he was much alarmed.  It was very likely that the man had seen him before—­worse luck to his excellent memory.  Bunter himself could not be expected to remember every casual dock walloper he might have had to do with.  Bunter brazened it out by turning upon the man, making use of that impressive, black-as-night sternness of expression his unusual hair furnished him with: 

“My name’s Bunter, sir.  Does that enlighten your inquisitive intellect?  And I don’t ask what your name may be.  I don’t want to know.  I’ve no use for it, sir.  An individual who calmly tells me to my face that he is not sure if he has seen me before, either means to be impudent or is no better than a worm, sir.  Yes, I said a worm—­a blind worm!”

Brave Bunter.  That was the line to take.  He fairly drove the beggar out of the ship, as if every word had been a blow.  But the pertinacity of that brass-bound Paul Pry was astonishing.  He cleared out of the ship, of course, before Bunter’s ire, not saying anything, and only trying to cover up his retreat by a sickly smile.  But once on the Jetty he turned deliberately round, and set himself to stare in dead earnest at the ship.  He remained planted there like a mooring-post, absolutely motionless, and with his stupid eyes winking no more than a pair of cabin portholes.

What could Bunter do?  It was awkward for him, you know.  He could not go and put his head into the bread-locker.  What he did was to take up a position abaft the mizzen-rigging, and stare back as unwinking as the other.  So they remained, and I don’t know which of them grew giddy first; but the man on the Jetty, not having the advantage of something to hold on to, got tired the soonest, flung his arm, giving the contest up, as it were, and went away at last.

Bunter told me he was glad the Sapphire, “that gem amongst ships” as he alluded to her sarcastically, was going to sea next day.  He had had enough of the Dock.  I understood his impatience.  He had steeled himself against any possible worry the voyage might bring, though it is clear enough now that he was not prepared for the extraordinary experience that was awaiting him already, and in no other part of the world than the Indian Ocean itself; the very part of the world where the poor fellow had lost his ship and had broken his luck, as it seemed for good and all, at the same time.

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Tales Of Hearsay from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.