登陆注册
25135000000022

第22章

On turning to descend Massy perceived the head of Sterne the mate loitering, with his sly confident smile, his red mustaches and blinking eyes, at the foot of the ladder.

Sterne had been a junior in one of the larger shipping concerns before joining the Sofala. He had thrown up his berth, he said, "on general principles." The pro-motion in the employ was very slow, he complained, and he thought it was time for him to try and get on a bit in the world. It seemed as though nobody would ever die or leave the firm; they all stuck fast in their berths till they got mildewed; he was tired of waiting; and he feared that when a vacancy did occur the best servants were by no means sure of being treated fairly. Besides, the captain he had to serve under--Captain Provost--was an unaccountable sort of man, and, he fancied, had taken a dislike to him for some reason or other. For doing rather more than his bare duty as likely as not.

When he had done anything wrong he could take a talking to, like a man; but he expected to be treated like a man too, and not to be addressed invariably as though he were a dog. He had asked Captain Provost plump and plain to tell him where he was at fault, and Captain Provost, in a most scornful way, had told him that he was a perfect officer, and that if he disliked the way he was being spoken to there was the gangway--he could take himself off ashore at once. But everybody knew what sort of man Captain Provost was. It was no use appealing to the office. Captain Provost had too much influence in the employ. All the same, they had to give him a good character. He made bold to say there was nothing in the world against him, and, as he had happened to hear that the mate of the Sofala had been taken to the hospital that morning with a sun-stroke, he thought there would be no harm in seeing whether he would not do. . . .

He had come to Captain Whalley freshly shaved, red-faced, thin-flanked, throwing out his lean chest; and had recited his little tale with an open and manly as-surance. Now and then his eyelids quivered slightly, his hand would steal up to the end of the flaming mus-tache; his eyebrows were straight, furry, of a chestnut color, and the directness of his frank gaze seemed to tremble on the verge of impudence. Captain Whalley had engaged him temporarily; then, the other man hav-ing been ordered home by the doctors, he had remained for the next trip, and then the next. He had now at-tained permanency, and the performance of his duties was marked by an air of serious, single-minded appli-cation. Directly he was spoken to, he began to smile attentively, with a great deference expressed in his whole attitude; but there was in the rapid winking which went on all the time something quizzical, as though he had possessed the secret of some universal joke cheating all creation and impenetrable to other mortals.

Grave and smiling he watched Massy come down step by step; when the chief engineer had reached the deck he swung about, and they found themselves face to face.

Matched as to height and utterly dissimilar, they con-fronted each other as if there had been something be-tween them--something else than the bright strip of sunlight that, falling through the wide lacing of two awnings, cut crosswise the narrow planking of the deck and separated their feet as it were a stream; something profound and subtle and incalculable, like an unex-pressed understanding, a secret mistrust, or some sort of fear.

At last Sterne, blinking his deep-set eyes and sticking forward his scraped, clean-cut chin, as crimson as the rest of his face, murmured--"You've seen? He grazed! You've seen?"

Massy, contemptuous, and without raising his yellow, fleshy countenance, replied in the same pitch--"Maybe. But if it had been you we would have been stuck fast in the mud."

"Pardon me, Mr. Massy. I beg to deny it. Of course a shipowner may say what he jolly well pleases on his own deck. That's all right; but I beg to . . ."

"Get out of my way!"

The other had a slight start, the impulse of suppressed indignation perhaps, but held his ground. Massy's downward glance wandered right and left, as though the deck all round Sterne had been bestrewn with eggs that must not be broken, and he had looked irritably for places where he could set his feet in flight. In the end he too did not move, though there was plenty of room to pass on.

"I heard you say up there," went on the mate--"and a very just remark it was too--that there's always something wrong. . . ."

"Eavesdropping is what's wrong with YOU, Mr. Sterne."

"Now, if you would only listen to me for a moment, Mr. Massy, sir, I could . . ."

"You are a sneak," interrupted Massy in a great hurry, and even managed to get so far as to repeat, "a common sneak," before the mate had broken in argu-mentatively--"Now, sir, what is it you want? You want . . ."

"I want--I want," stammered Massy, infuriated and astonished--"I want. How do you know that I want anything? How dare you? . . . What do you mean? . . . What are you after--you . . ."

"Promotion." Sterne silenced him with a sort of candid bravado. The engineer's round soft cheeks quiv-ered still, but he said quietly enough--"You are only worrying my head off," and Sterne met him with a confident little smile.

"A chap in business I know (well up in the world he is now) used to tell me that this was the proper way.

'Always push on to the front,' he would say. 'Keep yourself well before your boss. Interfere whenever you get a chance. Show him what you know. Worry him into seeing you.' That was his advice. Now I know no other boss than you here. You are the owner, and no one else counts for THAT much in my eyes. See, Mr. Massy? I want to get on. I make no secret of it that I am one of the sort that means to get on. These are the men to make use of, sir. You haven't arrived at the top of the tree, sir, without finding that out--I dare say."

同类推荐
  • 论语拾遗

    论语拾遗

    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。
  • 紫团丹经

    紫团丹经

    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。
  • STORIES

    STORIES

    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。
  • 大圣天欢喜双身毗那夜迦法

    大圣天欢喜双身毗那夜迦法

    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。
  • Stage-Land

    Stage-Land

    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。
热门推荐
  • 剑掌四方

    剑掌四方

    当仙魔之战,一触即发,两处世界的生死存亡。那决定了这一战的第三方世界,又是什么?没有生命的世界,如何决定,?当一个少年身具开启这一方世界的能力,他的命运,早已被人为注定。当魔界以他为攻破仙界的那一点,布下重重的局,却不知,他们亦在仙界所布之局中,然而,这背后还存在一个,弥天之局。皇者归来,屠尽当年,天下敌。
  • 吕后与陈平

    吕后与陈平

    秦朝末年,阳武县人陈平去参加项羽的反秦起义军,路上救了逃亡中的吕雉,二人从此相识。陈平离开忌贤妒能的项羽投奔刘邦,六出奇计为建立和巩固汉室江山立下大功,是著名的开国功臣,被做了皇帝的刘邦封为曲逆侯。单父县人吕雉听从痴迷相术的父亲吕公的安排下嫁刘邦。刘邦率兵反秦,吕雉被抓入秦廷监狱,受苦遭罪,险些丧命。楚汉战争中她被项羽捉住,在楚营中做了两年多的人质。刘邦得了天下,另寻新欢宠幸年轻貌美的戚妃。吕雉不能容忍戚妃的夺嫡行动,求助与自己同患过难的陈平出谋划策,使一对儿女避免死于非命,保住了她的皇后位。刘邦去世后,吕雉揽政弄权,寻仇解恨,肆意杀戮刘氏皇族子弟和贬谪敢于直谏的大臣,令陈平茫然、后悔。陈平采取曲意逢迎的策略,赢得吕后信任,保护了一些刘氏皇族子弟和刚正老臣,虽多次涉险仍忠诚无畏。陈平联合太尉周勃、齐王刘襄、朱虚侯刘章、颍阴侯灌婴等剪除吕党,安定了刘汉王朝。
  • TFBOYS之加油勇敢爱

    TFBOYS之加油勇敢爱

    暗恋生活是漫长的,是痛苦的。但,就是因为各位男女主吃了这么长的暗恋之苦。所以才取得真爱。那一晚的浪漫告白让我们的女主找到真命天子,爱的归宿。他们说好要在一起,在一起一辈子,,,一辈子不长,一辈子也不短。好了,就让他们在一起吧,在一起一辈子,恩爱一辈子,幸福一辈子......就让我来做一次月老,帮相爱的人们找到彼此的真爱............
  • 最终的修罗

    最终的修罗

    三大位面,神兽巨头之首结束掉最大规模的神兽大战后身受重伤,元神受损,换作元神状态,在一次机缘巧合下传承到江宽体内,江宽得到传承后实力大增,到达其他位面后,继续努力修炼,不断成长,终于站到了三个位面的顶峰,最终修得空前绝后的新境界…………
  • exo勋鹿久别的爱

    exo勋鹿久别的爱

    exo王道文,主勋鹿,副开度,第一次写,写不好表拍我,(我不太会写简介)
  • 想要一个家

    想要一个家

    我也只是想要一个家而已,为什么就那么难,那么倒霉呢,青梅竹马的男朋友变了心,参加好朋友的婚礼居然都会被车撞,没想到自己再次醒来却不知道在那里·····
  • 你的愿望,我确实听见了

    你的愿望,我确实听见了

    耀明,自称厄运之人也。在学校,无人敢接触。凡有不怕者,轻者买的股票崩盘,重者踩到香蕉皮重伤。人见人躲,上课就连课室也只有一人在自习,被学校人默契的重点照顾。‘我其实也想成为帮助人。’——耀明。直到他因为救掉入河中的人而死,进入地府,这才明白自已厄运的原因。转生异世界完成别人的愿望,用愿力消除厄运。从此打着宗教的旗号,化为神棍,踏上了积愿消厄之路。
  • 再嫁也是祸

    再嫁也是祸

    霍淼觉得自己就是一张茶几,谁娶了她谁就是杯具。在霍淼第二次离婚之后。终于认清事实,发誓再也不嫁。不过,两个前夫好像不是那么想的……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 中欧现代著名作家(世界文学百科)

    中欧现代著名作家(世界文学百科)

    本套书系共计24册,包括三大部分。第一部分“文学大师篇”,主要包括中国古代著名作家、中国现代著名作家、世界古代著名作家、亚非现代著名作家、美洲现代著名作家、俄苏现代著名作家、中欧现代著名作家、西欧现代著名作家、南北欧现代著名作家等内容;第二部分“文学作品篇”,主要包括中国古代著名作品、中国现代著名作品、世界古代著名作品、亚非现代著名作品、美洲现代著名作品、俄苏现代著名作品、西欧现代著名作品、中北欧现代著名作品、东南欧现代著名作品等内容;第三部分“文学简史篇”,主要包括中国古代文学简史、中国近代文学简史、中国现代文学简史、世界古代文学简史、世界近代文学简史、世界现代文学简史等内容。
  • 不存在

    不存在

    你真的活着吗?对于你来说小说只是一个虚拟的存在,那么对于“其他人”我们是不是也是存在于类似小说中的而已。坚持,奋斗,挣扎,一次次的疼痛,一段段刻骨铭心的情感,我的全部经历都如此真实,你却说我只是你虚拟出的……不,每个人,每件事,都一直存在着,而我只是一个“发现者”,我不是“创造”了你,只是“发现”了你。你活着吗?真的活着吗?你确定自己不是“别人”想象出来的。一念一世界,一叶一菩提作品分三部分(第一卷:乱世;第二卷:异界行;第三卷:回归。)