the red one-第9章
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givin' me a thought。〃
I was formally introduced to her。 It was patent that she had never
heard of me; and she surveyed me bleakly with shrewd black eyes;
set close together and as beady and restless as a bird's。
〃You ain't goin' to tell him about that hussy?〃 she complained。
〃Well; now; Sarah; this is business; you see;〃 he argued
plaintively。 〃I've been lookin' for a likely man this long while;
and now that he's shown up it seems to me I got a right to give him
the hang of what happened。〃
The small woman made no reply; but set her thin lips in a needle…
like line。 She gazed straight before her at the Tower of Jewels
with so austere an expression that no glint of refracted sunlight
could soften it。 We proceeded slowly to the lagoon; managed to
obtain an unoccupied seat; and sat down with mutual sighs of relief
as we released our weights from our tortured sightseeing feet。
〃One does get so mortal weary;〃 asserted the small woman; almost
defiantly。
Two swans waddled up from the mirroring water and investigated us。
When their suspicions of our niggardliness or lack of peanuts had
been confirmed; Jones half…turned his back on his life…partner and
gave me his story。
〃Ever been in Ecuador? Then take my advice … and don't。 Though I
take that back; for you and me might be hitting it for there
together if you can rustle up the faith in me and the backbone in
yourself for the trip。 Well; anyway; it ain't so many years ago
that I came ambling in there on a rusty; foul…bottomed; tramp
collier from Australia; forty…three days from land to land。 Seven
knots was her speed when everything favoured; and we'd had a two
weeks' gale to the north'ard of New Zealand; and broke our engines
down for two days off Pitcairn Island。
〃I was no sailor on her。 I'm a locomotive engineer。 But I'd made
friends with the skipper at Newcastle an' come along as his guest
for as far as Guayaquil。 You see; I'd heard wages was 'way up on
the American railroad runnin' from that place over the Andes to
Quito。 Now Guayaquil … 〃
〃Is a fever…hole;〃 I interpolated。
Julian Jones nodded。
〃Thomas Nast died there of it within a month after he landed。 … He
was our great American cartoonist;〃 I added。
〃Don't know him;〃 Julian Jones said shortly。 〃But I do know he
wasn't the first to pass out by a long shot。 Why; look you the way
I found it。 The pilot grounds is sixty miles down the river。
'How's the fever?' said I to the pilot who came aboard in the early
morning。 'See that Hamburg barque;' said he; pointing to a sizable
ship at anchor。 'Captain and fourteen men dead of it already; and
the cook and two men dying right now; and they're the last left of
her。'
〃And by jinks he told the truth。 And right then they were dying
forty a day in Guayaquil of Yellow Jack。 But that was nothing; as
I was to find out。 Bubonic plague and small…pox were raging; while
dysentery and pneumonia were reducing the population; and the
railroad was raging worst of all。 I mean that。 For them that
insisted in riding on it; it was more dangerous than all the other
diseases put together。
〃When we dropped anchor off Guayaquil half a dozen skippers from
other steamers came on board to warn our skipper not to let any of
his crew or officers go ashore except the ones he wanted to lose。
A launch came off for me from Duran; which is on the other side of
the river and is the terminal of the railroad。 And it brought off
a man that soared up the gangway three jumps at a time he was that
eager to get aboard。 When he hit the deck he hadn't time to speak
to any of us。 He just leaned out over the rail and shook his fist
at Duran and shouted: 'I beat you to it! I beat you to it!'
〃'Who'd you beat to it; friend?' I asked。 'The railroad;' he said;
as he unbuckled the straps and took off a big '44 Colt's automatic
from where he wore it handy on his left side under his coat; 'I
staved as long as I agreed … three months … and it didn't get me。
I was a conductor。'
〃And that was the railroad I was to work for。 All of which was
nothing to what he told me in the next few minutes。 The road ran
from sea level at Duran up to twelve thousand feet on Chimborazo
and down to ten thousand at Quito on the other side the range。 And
it was so dangerous that the trains didn't run nights。 The through
passengers had to get off and sleep in the towns at night while the
train waited for daylight。 And each train carried a guard of
Ecuadoriano soldiers which was the most dangerous of all。 They
were supposed to protect the train crews; but whenever trouble
started they unlimbered their rifles and joined the mob。 You see;
whenever a train wreck occurred; the first cry of the spiggoties
was 'Kill the Gringos!' They always did that; and proceeded to
kill the train crew and whatever chance Gringo passengers that'd
escaped being killed in the accident。 Which is their kind of
arithmetic; which I told you a while back as being different from
ours。
〃Shucks! Before the day was out I was to find out for myself that
that ex…conductor wasn't lying。 It was over at Duran。 I was to
take my run on the first division out to Quito; for which place I
was to start next morning … only one through train running every
twenty…four hours。 It was the afternoon of my first day; along
about four o'clock; when the boilers of the GOVERNOR HANCOCK
exploded and she sank in sixty feet of water alongside the dock。
She was the big ferry boat that carried the railroad passengers
across the river to Guayaquil。 It was a bad accident; but it was
the cause of worse that followed。 By half…past four; big
trainloads began to arrive。 It was a feast day and they'd run an
excursion up country but of Guayaquil; and this was the crowd
coming back。
〃And the crowd … there was five thousand of them … wanted to get
ferried across; and the ferry was at the bottom of the river; which
wasn't our fault。 But by the Spiggoty arithmetic; it was。 'Kill
the Gringos!' shouts one of them。 And right there the beans were
spilled。 Most of us got away by the skin of our teeth。 I raced on
the heels of the Master Mechanic; carrying one of his babies for
him; for the locomotives that was just pulling out。 You see; way
down there away from everywhere they just got to save their
locomotives in times of trouble; because; without them; a railroad
can't be run。 Half a dozen American wives and as many children
were crouching on the cab floors along with the rest of us when we
pulled out; and the Ecuadoriano soldiers; who should have been
protecting our lives and property; turned loose with their rifles
and must have given us all of a thousand rounds before we got out
of range。
〃We camped up country and didn't come back to clean up until next
day。 It was some cleaning。 Every flat…car; box…car; coach;
asthmatic switch engine; and even hand…car that mob of Spiggoties
had shoved off the dock into sixty feet of water on top of the
GOVERNOR HANCOCK。 They'd burnt the round house; set fire to the
coal bunkers; and made a scandal of the repair shops。 Oh; yes; and
there were three of our fellows they'd got that we had to bury
mighty quick。 It's hot weather all the time down there。〃
Julian Jones came to a full pause and over his shoulder studied the
straight…before…her gaze and forbidding expression of his wife's
face。
〃I ain't forgotten the nugget;〃 he assured me。
〃Nor the hussy;〃 the little woman snapped; apparently at the mud…
hens paddling on the surface of the lagoon。
〃I've been travelling toward the nugget right along … 〃
〃There was never no reason for you to stay in that dangerous
country;〃 his wife snapped in on him。
〃Now; Sarah;〃 he appealed。 〃I was working for you right along。〃
And to me he explained: 〃The risk was big; but so was the pay。
Some months I earned as high as five hundred gold。