登陆注册
26254400000091

第91章 CHAPTER XVI(2)

When he had gone she shifted the load of wood to her other shoulder and started on, in her breast a quiet thrill of pride in Billy. Though behind prison bars, still she leaned against his strength. The mere naming of him was sufficient to drive away a brute like Charley Long.

On the day that Otto Frank was hanged she remained indoors. The evening papers published the account. There had been no reprieve.

In Sacramento was a railroad Governor who might reprieve or even pardon bank-wreckers and grafters, but who dared not lift his finger for a workingman. All this was the talk of the neighborhood. It had been Billy's talk. It had been Bert's talk.

The next day Saxon started out the Rock Wall, and the specter of Otto Frank walked by her side. And with him was a dimmer, mistier specter that she recognized as Billy. Was he, too, destined to tread his way to Otto Frank's dark end? Surely so, if the blood and strike continued. He was a fighter. He felt he was right in fighting. It was easy to kill a man. Even if he did not intend it, some time, when he was slugging a scab, the scab would fracture his skull on a stone curbing or a cement sidewalk. And then Billy would hang. That was why Otto Frank hanged. He had not intended to kill Henderson. It was only by accident that Henderson's skull was fractured. Yet Otto Frank had been hanged for it just the same.

She wrung her hands and wept loudly as she stumbled among the windy rocks. The hours passed, and she was lost to herself and her grief. When she came to she found herself on the far end of the wall where it jutted into the bay between the Oakland and Alameda Moles. But she could see no wall. It was the time of the full moon, and the unusual high tide covered the rocks. She was knee deep in the water, and about her knees swam scores of big rock rats, squeaking and fighting, scrambling to climb upon her out of the flood. She screamed with fright and horror, and kicked at them. Some dived and swam away under water; others circled about her warily at a distance; and one big fellow laid his teeth into her shoe. Him she stepped on and crushed with her free foot.

By this time, though still trembling, she was able coolly to consider the situation. She waded to a stout stick of driftwood a few feet away, and with this quickly cleared a space about herself.

A grinning small boy, in a small, bright-painted and half-decked skiff, sailed close in to the wall and let go his sheet to spill the wind. "Want to get aboard?" he called.

"Yes," she answered. "There are thousands of big rats here. I'm afraid of them."

He nodded, ran close in, spilled the wind from his sail, the boat's way carrying it gently to her.

"Shove out its bow," he commanded. "That's right. I don't want to break my centerboard.... An' then jump aboard in the stern--quick!--alongside of me."

She obeyed, stepping in lightly beside him. He held the tiller up with his elbow, pulled in on the sheet, and as the sail filled the boat sprang away over the rippling water.

"You know boats," the boy said approvingly.

He was a slender, almost frail lad, of twelve or thirteen years, though healthy enough, with sunburned freckled face and large gray eyes that were clear and wistful.

Despite his possession of the pretty boat, Saxon was quick to sense that he was one of them, a child of the people.

"First boat I was ever in, except ferryboats," Saxon laughed.

He looked at her keenly. "Well, you take to it like a duck to water is all I can say about it. Where d'ye want me to land you?"

"Anywhere."

He opened his mouth to speak, gave her another long look, considered for a space, then asked suddenly: "Got plenty of time?"

She nodded.

"All day?"

Again she nodded.

"Say--I'll tell you, I'm goin' out on this ebb to Goat Island for rockcod, an' I'll come in on the flood this evening. I got plenty of lines an' bait. Want to come along7 We can both fish. And what you catch you can have."

Saxon hesitated. The ******* and motion of the small boat appealed to her. Like the ships she had envied, it was outbound.

"Maybe you'll drown me," she parleyed.

The boy threw back his head with pride.

"I guess I've been sailin' many a long day by myself, an' I ain't drowned yet."

"All right," she consented. "Though remember, I don't know anything about boats."

"Aw, that's all right.--Now I'm goin' to go about. When I say 'Hard a-lee!' like that, you duck your head so the boom don't hit you, an' shift over to the other side."

He executed the maneuver, Saxon obeyed, and found herself sitting beside him on the opposite side of the boat, while the boat itself, on the other tack, was heading toward Long Wharf where the coal bunkers were. She was aglow with admiration, the more so because the mechanics of boat-sailing was to her a complex and mysterious thing.

"Where did you learn it all?" she inquired.

"Taught myself, just naturally taught myself. I liked it, you see, an' what a fellow likes he's likeliest to do. This is my second boat. My first didn't have a centerboard. I bought it for two dollars an' learned a lot, though it never stopped leaking.

What d 'ye think I paid for this one? It's worth twenty-five dollars right now. What d 'ye think I paid for it?"

"I give up," Saxon said. "How much?"

"Six dollars. Think of it! A boat like this! Of course I done a lot of work, an' the sail cost two dollars, the oars one forty, an' the paint one seventy-five. But just the same eleven dollars and fifteen cents is a real bargain. It took me a long time saving for it, though. I carry papers morning and evening--there's a boy taking my route for me this afternoon--I give 'm ten cents, an' all the extras he sells is his; and I'd a-got the boat sooner only I had to pay for my shorthand lessons.

My mother wants me to become a court reporter. They get sometimes as much as twenty dollars a day. Gee! But I don't want it. It's a shame to waste the money on the lessons."

"What do you want?" she asked, partly from idleness, and yet with genuine curiosity; for she felt drawn to this boy in knee pants who was so confident and at the same time so wistful.

"What do I want?" he repeated after her.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 春秋南山剑

    春秋南山剑

    春秋战国,百家争鸣。诸子百家,人杰辈出。春秋五霸,南有大楚,楚有南山。有一异鸟,三年不鸣,一鸣惊人。冲天异鸟虽离矣,留有绝强气脉,大楚国运皆在于此。
  • 废铁世纪

    废铁世纪

    河里流淌着发臭的液体,天空被黑沉沉的烟雾遮盖,干净的水源和柔软的面包,都成了最奢侈的享受。整个地球,除了锈迹斑斑的机器以及它们的轰鸣,剩下的不过是用机械将身体改造成各种形状的人们,行尸走肉般的挣扎求存。在这样的钢铁废墟里,仍然有着一个目光坚定的少年,为去到传说中的天堂之城而努力。而梦想被无情踏碎之时,少年拾起曾经放弃的神秘身躯,化身凶暴的战争机器。将胆敢阻挡在自己面前的敌人,将这个残破不堪的废铁世纪……摧毁殆尽!
  • 冬雪祭离辞(年年今日系列之大雪篇)

    冬雪祭离辞(年年今日系列之大雪篇)

    他身为堂堂冥主,只因对天帝说了一句令他不爽的话,就被这个心机超重的老头子挟怨报复,让他下凡历劫,不老不死,也不能……爱人!他真是活得够腻了,一心只想求死,可是她却说,他人怎么样都无所谓,这样做是对是错无所谓,她只要他好好地活下去,这就足够了……她自私得理所当然,她自私得无需理由,不管不顾,她只希望他能好好地活下去,其他全不理会。她希望他活,所以他活下来,不管过了多少百年,等着她……
  • 四方境

    四方境

    古人称地球为四方,人称北方为奴国,东方汉人国,西方妖国,南方蛮国。这天下无奇不有,妖魔鬼怪甚多。
  • 永恒灵尊

    永恒灵尊

    少年坠入沟壑,大难不死的他得到了上古灵神的传承,无人知晓,一代灵尊在元灵宗悄然崛起着!灵气不竭,吾之恒在。天地不灭,吾之永存。
  • 无鬼可驱

    无鬼可驱

    “这世无鬼!我辈何存?”驱鬼师一脉的悲哀,莫过于世间无鬼可驱
  • 超战舰

    超战舰

    穿越无限位面,追寻神秘科技,遨游星辰大海。这是一个宅男的寻梦之旅。假如你有一艘可以跨越无限世界的战舰,你的愿望是什么呢?张帆表示,我们的征途是星辰大海,有了战舰当然是要征服星辰大海了!另外刚开的新书“我的无限战舰”,已经上传,现在已经很肥了,大家可以来看看啊!书友群已经建好:超战舰597658098。大家喜欢的就来这个群灌灌水,我也可以顺便听听大家的意见!将脑洞开到天际!
  • 冢归墟

    冢归墟

    外星冢族入侵的故事,科幻正剧,希望您喜欢
  • 小高成长记

    小高成长记

    一个农村小孩的成长经过和到最后成家立业的故事。带有一些穿越的感觉。平凡的故事,品味出不平凡的人生。
  • 家有小怪兽

    家有小怪兽

    这个世界上总是一物降一物,猫吃鱼,狗吃肉,奥特曼打小怪兽。于是,当徐亦欢这个为非作歹、无法无天的小怪兽,遇上许大官人那一刻,也只有俯首称臣的料……即将开始的就是塘西街上最萌最忠犬的不良少女和柔弱贵公子之间不得不说的故事,敬请期待~~(注:本文不长请放心跳坑,如果您能喜欢,这将是我的荣幸~O(∩_∩)O~)