FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   292   293   294   295   296   297   298   299   300   301   302   303   304   305   306   307   308   309   310   311   >>  
east forever. "Tell Wasub to open one of the long-cloth bales in the hold, Mr. Carter, and give the crew a cotton sheet to bury him decently according to their faith. Let it be done to-night. They must have the boats, too. I suppose they will want to take him on the sandbank." "Yes, sir," said Carter. "Let them have what they want, spades, torches. . . . Wasub will chant the right words. Paradise is the lot of all True Believers. Do you understand me, Mr. Carter? Paradise! I wonder what it will be for him! Unless he gets messages to carry through the jungle, avoiding ambushes, swimming in storms and knowing no rest, he won't like it." Carter listened with an unmoved face. It seemed to him that the Captain had forgotten his presence. "And all the time he will be sleeping on that sandbank," Lingard began again, sitting in his old place under the gilt thunderbolts suspended over his head with his elbows on the table and his hands to his temples. "If they want a board to set up at the grave let them have a piece of an oak plank. It will stay there--till the next monsoon. Perhaps." Carter felt uncomfortable before that tense stare which just missed him and in that confined cabin seemed awful in its piercing and far-off expression. But as he had not been dismissed he did not like to go away. "Everything will be done as you wish it, sir," he said. "I suppose the yacht will be leaving the first thing to-morrow morning, sir." "If she doesn't we must give her a solid shot or two to liven her up--eh, Mr. Carter?" Carter did not know whether to smile or to look horrified. In the end he did both, but as to saying anything he found it impossible. But Lingard did not expect an answer. "I believe you are going to stay with me, Mr. Carter?" "I told you, sir, I am your man if you want me." "The trouble is, Mr. Carter, that I am no longer the man to whom you spoke that night in Carimata." "Neither am I, sir, in a manner of speaking." Lingard, relaxing the tenseness of his stare, looked at the young man, thoughtfully. "After all, it is the brig that will want you. She will never change. The finest craft afloat in these seas. She will carry me about as she did before, but . . ." He unclasped his hands, made a sweeping gesture. Carter gave all his naive sympathy to that man who had certainly rescued the white people but seemed to have lost his own soul in the attempt. Carter had heard something from Wasu
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   292   293   294   295   296   297   298   299   300   301   302   303   304   305   306   307   308   309   310   311   >>  



Top keywords:

Carter

 

Lingard

 

Paradise

 
suppose
 

sandbank

 
Everything
 

impossible

 

expect

 

answer

 
horrified

leaving

 

morrow

 

morning

 

forever

 

Neither

 

sympathy

 

gesture

 
unclasped
 
sweeping
 
rescued

attempt

 

people

 
speaking
 

relaxing

 

tenseness

 

looked

 

manner

 
longer
 

Carimata

 

thoughtfully


finest

 

afloat

 

change

 

trouble

 

expression

 

unmoved

 

Captain

 
listened
 

forgotten

 
presence

sitting

 

sleeping

 

knowing

 

storms

 

Believers

 

understand

 

spades

 

torches

 

jungle

 

avoiding