登陆注册
20035200000033

第33章 THE LONG ARM(3)

He was overcome with an intolerable melancholy. From where he sat he could see, softened into shadows by the wire screens of the veranda, Admiral Preble and his wife and their guests at tea. Amonth before, he would have reported to the admiral as the commandant of the station, and paid his respects. Now he could not do that; at least not without inviting a rebuff. A month before, he need only have shown his card to the admiral's orderly, and the orderly and the guard and the officers' mess and the admiral himself would have turned the post upside down to do him honor. But of what avail now was his record in three campaigns? Of what avail now was his medal of honor? They now knew him as Swanson, who had been court-martialled, who had been allowed to resign, who had left the army for the army's good; they knew him as a civilian without rank or authority, as an ex-officer who had robbed his brother officers, as an outcast.

His position, as his morbid mind thus distorted it, tempted Swanson no longer. For being in this plight he did not feel that in any way he was to blame. But with a flaming anger he still blamed his brother officers of the court-martial who had not cleared his name and with a clean bill of health restored him to duty. Those were the men he blamed; not Rueff, the sergeant, who he believed had robbed him, nor himself, who, in a passion of wounded pride, had resigned and so had given reason for gossip;but the men who had not in tones like a bugle-call proclaimed his innocence, who, when they had handed him back his sword, had given it grudgingly, not with congratulation.

As he saw it, he stood in a perpetual pillory. When they had robbed him of his honor they had left him naked, and life without honor had lost its flavor. He could eat, he could drink, he could exist. He knew that in many corners of the world white arms would reach out to him and men would beckon him to a place at table.

But he could not cross that little strip of turf between him and the chattering group on the veranda and hand his card to the admiral's orderly. Swanson loved life. He loved it so that without help, money, or affection he could each morning have greeted it with a smile. But life without honor! He felt a sudden hot nausea of disgust. Why was he still clinging to what had lost its purpose, to what lacked the one thing needful?

"If life be an ill thing," he thought, "I can lay it down!"The thought was not new to him, and during the two past weeks of aimless wandering he had carried with him his service automatic.

To reassure himself he laid his fingers on its cold smooth surface.

He would wait, he determined, until the musicians had finished their concert and the women and children had departed, and then--Then the orderly would find him where he was now seated, sunken against the hawser-post with a hole through his heart. To his disordered brain his decision appeared quite sane. He was sure he never had been more calm. And as he prepared himself for death he assured himself that for one of his standard no other choice was possible. Thoughts of the active past, or of what distress in the future his act would bring to others, did not disturb him. The thing had to be, no one lost more heavily than himself, and regrets were cowardly.

He counted the money he had on his person and was pleased to find there was enough to pay for what services others soon must render him. In his pockets were letters, cards, a cigarette-case, each of which would tell his identity. He had no wish to conceal it, for of what he was about to do he was not ashamed. It was not his act.

He would not have died "by his own hand." To his unbalanced brain the officers of the court-martial were responsible. It was they who had killed him. As he saw it, they had made his death as inevitable as though they had sentenced him to be shot at sunrise.

A line from "The Drums of the Fore and Aft" came back to him.

Often he had quoted it, when some one in the service had suffered through the fault of others. It was the death-cry of the boy officer, Devlin. The knives of the Ghazi had cut him down, but it was his own people's abandoning him in terror that had killed him. And so, with a sob, he flung the line at the retreating backs of his comrades:

"You've killed me, you cowards!"

Swanson, nursing his anger, repeated this savagely. He wished he could bring it home to those men of the court-martial. He wished he could make them know that his death lay at their door. He determined that they should know. On one of his visiting-cards he pencilled:

"To the Officers of my Court-Martial: 'You've killed me, you cowards!'"He placed the card in the pocket of his waistcoat. They would find it just above the place where the bullet would burn the cloth.

The band was playing "Auf Wiedersehen," and the waltz carried with it the sadness that had made people call the man who wrote it the waltz king. Swanson listened gratefully. He was glad that before he went out, his last mood had been of regret and gentleness.

The sting of his anger had departed, the music soothed and sobered him. It had been a very good world. Until he had broken the spine of things it had treated him well, far better, he admitted, than he deserved. There were many in it who had been kind, to whom he was grateful. He wished there was some way by which he could let them know that. As though in answer to his wish, from across the parade-ground the wireless again began to crash and crackle; but now Swanson was at a greater distance from it, and the sighing rhythm of the waltz was not interrupted.

Swanson considered to whom he might send a farewell message, but as in his mind he passed from one friend to another, he saw that to each such a greeting could bring only distress. He decided it was the music that had led him astray. This was no moment for false sentiment. He let his hand close upon the pistol.

同类推荐
  • 唐宋分门名贤诗话

    唐宋分门名贤诗话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Copy-Cat

    The Copy-Cat

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 梵网经古迹记

    梵网经古迹记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Culture and Anarchy

    Culture and Anarchy

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 顺中论

    顺中论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 申天

    申天

    他只是一个孤儿,但他有梦想,有信仰。12岁他父母找到他,但他却迷茫了。......我第一次写小说,写的不好多多见谅。
  • 第一幻术师:普通职员女尊篇

    第一幻术师:普通职员女尊篇

    【欢快女尊文,轻松解压】非杀手非特工,普通小职员,如何成为备受尊崇的女尊强者?厉害的银色天赋,却是个无元素修炼者?稀缺的炼药师,炼制的药丸却不能给人吃?穿越开了超多外挂,却像装了杀毒软件一样不能用。尊贵的千足鸟王郑重颁发她的职业徽章,“幻术师?可攻击可治愈的稀缺职业?”大陆当权者争相让她去当儿媳妇,什么时候太子也都成了滞销品?还“别走啊,你看不上太子大哥,看上王爷小弟也成啊!”某男心情很不好,娶妻娶妻,为什么附带了那么多追随者,管你是植宠第一还是萌宠最高者,跟他抢老婆,统统没门也没窗!
  • 国运拐点:中西精英大对决

    国运拐点:中西精英大对决

    千年中西的精英人物,仿佛生动在场;历史关口的进退抉择,多么耐人寻味。他们都苦胆忧天,壮心填海,在满腔热忱中孜孜求索,又在沉浮起落里经历荣辱兴衰。他们曲折复杂的人生轨迹,不仅勾勒出个体生命的心路历程,更深深地映射出国运民生的关键拐点。本书将古今中外同一时期的精英人物进行一一对比,深刻反思中西文化差别下的不同价值取舍,以全新的视角揭示中国与西方的不同选择和必然命运,从其他民族的兴衰成败中找到普适的经验教训,为未来中国的发展之路寻找思想借鉴。
  • 侯门贵女宅斗日常

    侯门贵女宅斗日常

    穿越深宅做宅女,哪有不躺枪的理儿?什么虾兵蟹将,表姐庶妹搁这儿添乱。雪芊轻笑一声:“见招拆招,老娘自有妙招!”一路整治贪姨娘,拍飞恶姐妹,踢开花男渣,发誓重活二世,定要谋个幸福结局来!
  • 攻略总裁计划

    攻略总裁计划

    一次意外的相遇,一次意外的亲密接触,从此开启了她攻略总裁的漫长旅途。就算不自量力,就算不被看好,就算差距是整个银河系。可是那有怎样!外貌不行?那就美容!内涵不行?那就琴棋书画!没有机会?那就飞机坦克!可就当万事俱备的时候却发现原来他早已经有了心爱的人。
  • 传承神之旅

    传承神之旅

    都市浪涛杀之殇,血泪丈量登仙榜逍遥天地掌万界,情之飘零恨埋葬盘古族以全族十万顶尖神祗命魂为引,通天石丕为基,混沌之力为能,化作一个独立于万物之外的空间——传承之心万古剑尊的擎天剑气,坤虚战王的寂灭神光;暗影杀神的移形换影,不死邪神的不巧魔躯;癫狂仙翁的造化丹录,血屠老祖的锻器神篇;夺命神君的生命十策,天机太子的观天八法。且看主角龙城得到天外盘古一族的传承之心,接受诸神的传承功法和秘技,摆脱蝼蚁的宿命,以凡身逆天命;以贱命搏长生。注:此书为长篇修炼成神小说,内容慢热,请耐心观看。
  • 不浮躁:淡定宁静的悠然生活智慧

    不浮躁:淡定宁静的悠然生活智慧

    现实生活中往往会碰到很多的不公正,遭遇很多的挫折,我们很容易变得浮躁。但是,我们不应该让人生从此蒙上浮躁的阴影,我们的翅膀不应该因此而折断,这个时候我们所应当做的就是让我们的内心世界变得强大,解决那些让我们变得浮躁的困惑,从而找回淡泊与宁静。
  • 萌宠邪妃之倒霉王爷追妻忙

    萌宠邪妃之倒霉王爷追妻忙

    她,是二十一世纪著名的杀手兼小偷,偷不到就杀,杀不了就跑是她的人生信条,却因赏金太高被自己情同手足的姐妹无情的杀害。他,是灵天大陆上家喻户晓的冥王殿下,弱者是膜拜,长者是欣慰,所到之处总会有人为他欢呼,因为是天才中的天才,却在遇见她之后彻底的变了。两人从相遇到相知,相知到相识,其中的过程也是惊心动魄。
  • 冷少的限时前妻

    冷少的限时前妻

    未婚先孕,她独自抚养着女儿。一次意外,孩子身份意外曝光。她被迫和无情冷少闪婚,嫁入豪门。婚后他不理不睬,她承受多重压力。心灰意冷下,她只想逃离。可却在逃离时,被他强势圈回身边。她的身份被揭开,两家的恩怨难解,两人婚姻再度触礁。一场车祸改变一切,她失踪,他发疯寻找。再次相见,她已成他人妻,忘记过去。看着她和老公秀恩爱,他完全沉不住气,嫉妒得红了眼,展开夺妻之战。“这辈子你都别想逃离我,我们没有离婚!”他霸道地说。她害怕地往后退了几步,声音略带颤抖,“你认错人了。我不是你的妻子。”
  • 器缘

    器缘

    亘古星河、熠熠星光,哪有那一缕袅袅炊烟划破空间镌刻在他心田的蚀骨温柔、相思。他疼入骨髓的女孩、捧在手心的挚爱!这无尽的寂寥、空洞他又怎舍得让她默默承受------什么天命的桎梏,分明就是最无情的枷锁;既是枷锁,那挣脱又有何妨!