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
热门推荐
  • 爱如空气

    爱如空气

    这是一个十月怀胎,一朝分娩的新生儿。我热切地期盼我的朋友、我的读者捧出自己那颗真诚、慈爱、友善的心去爱怜她、呵护她、扶持她,让她在爱的阳光雨露下健康快乐地成长。生命如烟花般绚烂,生命是人世间最可宝贵的财富,生命对于每个人只有一次。三十而立,四十不惑,五十知天命,六十耳顺,七十人生古来稀。人生是美好的,但也是公平的。
  • 《最后驱魔师:蔷薇花胎记》

    《最后驱魔师:蔷薇花胎记》

    一个蔷薇花胎记牵出一个隐秘家族的耻辱,梦中的白老妇,驱魔师老祖母,为保护她付出生命在所不惜的阴阳师后裔周莫……为揭开身世之谜,她将一步步揭开谜底。最终究竟是被欲望吞噬还是被理智取代,一切敬请期待。
  • 重生之极限求生

    重生之极限求生

    谋杀、癌症、车祸、矿难、意外、自杀、凶杀、火灾、溺亡、死刑枪决。他们每一个人都已经死亡,每个人都有自己的死亡原因。忽然有一天他们全部重生了,死神给了他们第二次生命的机会!但是要想抓住这第二次生的机会,便必须经受住死神的考验。死神将他们44人放置在一座荒岛上,任由他们自生自灭。没有任何规矩,没有任何法度的约束,所有人的终极目标都是活下去!死刑犯是这个岛上所有人的威胁!极端环境下,人人都有可能心理扭曲变成杀人狂!再美的女神为了食物和水,可以出卖自己的肉体!这将是一场与大自然斗,与人斗的残酷角逐,只有强者才能最终存活下来。
  • 新年

    新年

    一天又一天,一年又一年。烦透了今天知道明天,明天知道后天的生活。李欢总在尝试,在寻找,在抗争。他得到一个特别的物品,但是这个物品却没有任何帮助。直到年近30了,他准备放弃,准备向命运妥协的前夕,这个物品表现了他的特别的能力。奇遇来临,当选择一种什么样的人生呢?金钱权利或是其他希望朋友多给意见,指正作品
  • 洪荒召唤

    洪荒召唤

    无聊的李默从古玩店淘到了一个奇怪的卷轴,不小心滴上自己的鲜血却昏了过去,清醒后却发现自己来到了一个奇怪的大陆。这种大陆的战士全部以召唤为业,但之后李默却惊愕的发现穿越到这里的不止自己,马丹!说好的主角光环呢!!!没办法,拿起这个神秘的卷轴,李默毅然决然的踏上了干掉其他穿越者的不归路……
  • 陋石

    陋石

    烈坤本来是一个青龙观的小弟子,一次意外的相遇,神秘老人托付给他一样东西。从此,他的命运被一点一点改变了。为了完成自己的诺言他要行走险恶的江湖,深陷情感的泥沼。在经历了重重艰难险阻,他终于明白了自己的使命。究竟是接受自己的心声,勇敢面对自己的宿敌,还是选择逃避,从此归隐山林。铁剑红颜,一切,只在他一念之间。
  • 绝世无双:轻狂大小姐

    绝世无双:轻狂大小姐

    她,现代第一金牌杀手,代号“希煞”,却错误的爱上了f国第一特工,往昔的爱恋竟是一场惊心动魄的骗局,要了他的紫晶石魂穿异世,附到一个废材小姐身上,废物?颜羽希不屑的冷哼。看她华丽逆袭蜕变绝世天才。他,是东璃国的陌王爷,鼎鼎大名,惊才艳艳,却看上了她一个被赶出家门的废物,他霸道的宣布,“颜羽希,你是我的女人!”……他们强强联手,谱写了一曲盛世篇章。
  • 爱的来临时刻

    爱的来临时刻

    这是一本青春校园故事,当吃货呆萌女遇到腹黑冷漠男,当外温柔内暴力女遇到花心男,会是什么结果呢?请大家敬请期待吧!小编不会弃更的呦!
  • 隔代教育须注意的100个细节

    隔代教育须注意的100个细节

    本书从认识隔代教育、与子女统一教育理念、注重培养孩子的品德、与孙辈做最好的沟通、培养孩子的独立性、注意生活的一些细节等11个方面,讲述了隔代教育必须注意的100个细节,并对其进行了深入解读,给出了可操作性的方法与建议。这是一本做好隔代教育的必不可少的读物。
  • 网游之末世强者

    网游之末世强者

    白浩轩,一个曾经辉煌的游戏强者,如今却沦落到打工仔的地步。老板给了他进入新游《末世》的机会,不甘堕落的他又会在此书写怎样的传奇。《末世》传奇,由你创造!