登陆注册
20035200000084

第84章 THE LOST ROAD(5)

For a month death stood at the side of his cot; and then, still weak and at times delirious with fever, by slow stages he was removed to the hospital in Manila. In one of his sane moments a cable was shown him. It read: "Whereabouts still unknown." Lee at once rebelled against his doctors. He must rise, he declared, and proceed to Europe. It was upon a matter of life and death. The surgeons assured him his remaining exactly where he was also was a matter of as great consequence. Lee's knowledge of his own lack of strength told him they were right.

Then, from headquarters, he was informed that, as a reward for his services and in recognition of his approaching convalescence, he was ordered to return to his own climate and that an easy billet had been found for him as a recruiting officer in New York City. Believing the woman he loved to be in Europe, this plan for his comfort only succeeded in bringing on a relapse. But the day following there came another cablegram. It put an abrupt end to his mutiny, and brought him and the War Department into complete accord.

"She is in New York," it read, "acting as agent for a charitable institution, which one not known, but hope in a few days to cable correct address."In all the world there was no man so happy. The next morning a transport was sailing, and, probably because they had read the cablegram, the surgeons agreed with Lee that a sea voyage would do him no harm. He was carried on board, and when the propellers first churned the water and he knew he was moving toward her, the hero of the fight around the crater shed unmanly tears. He would see her again, hear her voice; the same great city would shelter them. It was worth a dozen bullets.

He reached New York in a snow-storm, a week before Christmas, and went straight to the office of his lawyers. They received him with embarrassment. Six weeks before, on the very day they had cabled him that Mrs. Stedman was in New York, she had left the charitable institution where she had been employed, and had again disappeared.

Lee sent his trunks to the Army and Navy Club, which was immediately around the corner from the recruiting office in Sixth Avenue, and began discharging telegrams at every one who had ever known Frances Gardner. The net result was discouraging. In the year and a half in which he had been absent every friend of the girl he sought had temporarily changed his place of residence or was permanently dead.

Meanwhile his arrival by the transport was announced in the afternoon papers. At the wharf an admiring trooper had told a fine tale of his conduct at the battle of the crater, and reporters called at the club to see him. He did not discourage them, as he hoped through them the fact of his return might be made known to Frances. She might send him a line of welcome, and he would discover her whereabouts. But, though many others sent him hearty greetings, from her there was no word.

On the second day after his arrival one of the telegrams was answered in person by a friend of Mrs. Stedman. He knew only that she had been in New York, that she was very poor and in ill health, that she shunned all of her friends, and was earning her living as the matron of some sort of a club for working girls. He did not know the name of it.

On the third day there still was no news. On the fourth Lee decided that the next morning he would advertise. He would say only: "Will Mrs. Arthur Stedman communicate with Messrs. Fuller &Fuller?" Fuller & Fuller were his lawyers. That afternoon he remained until six o'clock at the recruiting office, and when he left it the electric street lights were burning brightly. A heavy damp snow was falling, and the lights and the falling flakes and the shouts of drivers and the toots of taxicabs made for the man from the tropics a welcome homecoming.

Instead of returning at once to his club, he slackened his steps.

The shop windows of Sixth Avenue hung with Christmas garlands, and colored lamps glowed like open fireplaces. Lee passed slowly before them, glad that he had been able to get back at such a season. For the moment he had forgotten the woman he sought, and was conscious only of his surroundings. He had paused in front of the window of a pawn-shop. Over the array of cheap jewelry, of banjos, shot-guns, and razors, his eyes moved idly. And then they became transfixed and staring. In the very front of the window, directly under his nose, was a tarnished silver loving-cup. On it was engraved, "Mixed Doubles. Agawamsett, 1910." In all the world there were only two such cups, and as though he were dodging the slash of a bolo, Lee leaped into the shop. Many precious seconds were wasted in persuading Mrs. Cohen that he did not believe the cup had been stolen; that he was not from the Central Office;that he believed the lady who had pawned the cup had come by it honestly; that he meant no harm to the lady; that he meant no harm to Mrs. Cohen; that, much as the young lady may have needed the money Mrs. Cohen had loaned her on the cup, he needed the address of the young lady still more.

Mrs. Cohen retired behind a screen, and Lee was conscious that from the other side of it the whole family of Cohens were taking his measurements. He approved of their efforts to protect the owner of the cup, but not from him.

He offered, if one of the younger Cohens would take him to the young lady, to let him first ask her if she would receive Captain Lee, and for his service he would give the young Cohen untold gold.

He exhibited the untold gold. The young Cohen choked at the sight and sprang into the seat beside the driver of a taxicab.

"To the Working Girls' Home, on Tenth Street!" he commanded.

同类推荐
  • 玉室经

    玉室经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • When the Sleeper Wakes

    When the Sleeper Wakes

    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。
  • 太上洞神五星赞

    太上洞神五星赞

    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。
  • 将赴朔方军应制

    将赴朔方军应制

    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。
  • 牧云和尚七会语录

    牧云和尚七会语录

    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
  • 十年约定:冰冷复仇

    十年约定:冰冷复仇

    十年前,一场人为的事故夺走了她的父母的性命,十年后,她卷土归来,是否记得当年的他,他(她)再次相遇后,他们之间会有怎样的结果?
  • 寒王的娇宠妃

    寒王的娇宠妃

    她,墨龙王朝当国丞相的小女儿,是个废柴中的废柴,墨龙王朝的一大笑柄。花痴而又蠢。他,墨龙王朝的弑神,人称‘冷面修罗’。且看他与她最后会不会在一起!!!!
  • 武玄界

    武玄界

    他,文家少主,却被封印。他,受尽十年屈辱。他,被封废物称号。他,一日破开封印,得知家族世仇。……从此背负家族使命,走向复兴之路。……虽知家族仇敌强大,却抹不掉他复仇之心。……神挡灭神,佛档诛佛。---复兴之路,既是成就强者之道---
  • 蔷薇夜曲

    蔷薇夜曲

    我,林灵,一个普普通通的孤儿大学生,但却一直被一个噩梦纠缠,直到一个平凡的早晨,经历一次车祸的我,终于明白我的身份,我为什么会变成孤儿。明白一切的我,现在只有一个目的——复仇,我要将夺走我一切的人蹂躏至死。于是,我和恶魔签约,交换条件是:他帮我复仇,复仇之后我将永远呆在他身边......
  • 佛说稻秆经

    佛说稻秆经

    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。
  • 吾之意志

    吾之意志

    皮特大少爷又外出游玩了,让圣阶狼人车夫驾驶着用炼狱龙马拉着的幽冥马车,打着自己死亡行者的招牌大旗——金色河蟹之旗,挡道者一律格杀勿论,到处宣扬自己响亮的口号:“河蟹旗帜所过之处,不服从者尽被和谐!”
  • tfboys之梦一场

    tfboys之梦一场

    王俊凯,我爱了你那么久,得来的却是一声谢谢与对不起!你可知我爱你入骨。离开了,可你为什么要在我已经放弃时来挽留我。我只是一个少女,一个爱了初恋十年的女孩。我可以放弃你,可我放不了爱你的心。你若安好,便是晴天!
  • 瓦诺然之歌

    瓦诺然之歌

    人要么精彩地活着,要么壮烈地死去,苟延残喘的那不能称之为人。你,今天活了么?
  • 上古寻魔记

    上古寻魔记

    十二英雄的时代过去多年,战争的火焰被不朽庭院的恶魔重新点燃,新的英雄即将到来,开启那尘封多年的庭院之门,寻找并杀死涂炭生灵的恶魔。
  • 其实是两次

    其实是两次

    其实你是我喜欢的人,其实我并不害怕,其实我从来没认为我可以,其实是两次。我知道你喜欢我,我从没想过你会害怕,我知道你从来没发现自己有多好,我知道还会有第三次。