登陆注册
19640600000030

第30章 CHAPTER VIII NEIGHBORS AND WASPS(1)

And now affairs at the lights settled down into a daily routine in which the lightkeeper and his helper each played his appointed part.

All mysteries now being solved, and the trust between them mutual and without reserve, they no longer were on their guard in each other's presence, but talked freely on all sorts of topics, and expressed their mutual dislike of woman with frequency and point.

No regular assistant was appointed or seemed likely to be, for the summer, at least. Seth and his friend, the superintendent, held another lengthy conversation over the wire, and, while Brown's uncertain status remained the same, there was a tacit understanding that, by the first of September, if the young man was sufficiently "broken in," the position vacated by Ezra Payne should be his--if he still wanted it.

"You may change your mind by that time," observed Seth. "This ain't no place for a chap with your trainin', and I know it. It does well enough for an old derelict like me, with nobody to care a hang whether he lives or dies, but you're different. And even for me the lonesomeness of it drives me 'most crazy sometimes. I've noticed you've been havin' blue streaks more often than when you first came.

I cal'late that by fall you'll be headin' somewheres else, Mr. 'John Brown,'" with significant emphasis upon the name.

Brown stoutly denied being "bluer" than usual, and his superior did not press the point. Seth busied himself in his spare time with the work on the Daisy M. and with his occasional trips behind Joshua to the village. Brown might have made some of these trips, but he did not care to. Solitude and seclusion he still desired, and there were more of these than anything else at the Twin-Lights.

The lightkeeper experimented with no more dogs, but he had evidently not forgotten the lifesaving man's warning concerning possible thieves, for he purchased a big spring-lock in Eastboro and attached it to the door of the boathouse on the little wharf. The lock was, at first, a good deal more of a nuisance than an advantage, for the key was always being forgotten or mislaid, and, on one occasion, the door blew shut with Atkins inside the building, and he pounded and shrieked for ten minutes before his helper heard him and descended to the rescue.

June crawled by, and July came. Crawled is the proper word, for John Brown had never known days so long or weeks so unending as those of that early summer. The monotony was almost never broken, and he began to find it deadly. He invented new duties about the lights and added swimming and walks up and down the beach to his limited list of recreations.

The swimming he especially enjoyed. The cove made a fine bathing place, and the boathouse was his dressing room, though the fragrance of the ancient fish nets stored within it was not that of attar of roses. A cheap bathing suit was one of the luxuries Atkins had bought for him, by request, in Eastboro. Seth bought the suit under protest, for he scoffed openly at his helper's daily bath.

"I should think," the lightkeeper declared over and over again, "that you'd had salt water soak enough to last you for one spell; a feller that come as nigh drownin' as you done!"

Seth did not care for swimming; the washtub every Saturday night furnished him with baths sufficient.

He was particular to warn his helper against the tide in the inlet:

"The cove's all right," he said, "but you want to look out and not try to swim in the crick where it's narrow, or in that deep hole by the end of the wharf, where the lobster car's moored. When the tide's comin' in or it's dead high water, the current's strong there. On the ebb it'll snake you out into the breakers sure as I'm settin' here tellin' you. The cove's all right and good and safe; but keep away from the narrer part of the crick."

Swimming was good fun, and walking, on pleasant days, was an aid in shaking off depression; but, in spite of his denials and his attempts at appearing contented, the substitute assistant realized that he was far from that happy condition. He did not want to meet people, least of all people of his own station in life--his former station. Atkins was a fine chap, in his way; but . . . Brown was lonely . . . and when one is lonely, one thinks of what might have been, and, perhaps, regrets. Regrets, unavailing regrets, are the poorest companions possible.

The lightkeeper, too, seemed lonely, which, considering his years of experience in his present situation, was odd. He explained his loneliness one evening by observing that he cal'lated he missed the painting chaps.

"What painting chaps?" asked Brown.

"Oh, them two young fellers that always used to come to the cottage-- what you call the bungalow--across the cove there, the ones I told you about. They was real friendly, sociable young chaps, and I kind of liked to have 'em runnin' in and out. Seems queer to have it July, and they not here to hail me and come over to borrow stuff.

And they was forever settin' around under white sunshades, sloppin' paint onto paper. I most wish they hadn't gone to Europe. I cal'late you'd have liked 'em, too."

"Perhaps," said the helper, doubtfully.

"Oh, you would; no perhaps about it. It don't seem right to see the bungalow all shuttered up and deserted this time of year. You'd have liked to meet them young painters; they was your kind."

"Yes, I know. Perhaps that's why I shouldn't like to meet them."

"Hey? . . . Oh, yes, yes; I see. I never thought of that. But 'tain't likely they'd know you; they hailed from Boston, not New York."

"How did you know I came from New York? I didn't tell you that."

"No, you didn't, that's a fact. But, you said you left the city where you lived and came to Boston, so I sort of guessed New York.

But that's all right; I don't know and I don't care. Names and places you and me might just as well not tell, even to each other.

If we don't tell them, we can answer 'don't know' to questions and tell the truth; hey?"

同类推荐
  • 蜀鉴

    蜀鉴

    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。
  • 海角续编

    海角续编

    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。
  • 幼科心法要诀

    幼科心法要诀

    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。
  • Louisa of Prussia and Her Times

    Louisa of Prussia and Her Times

    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。
  • 玉闺红

    玉闺红

    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。
热门推荐
  • 等一个故事

    等一个故事

    这是一个贩卖青春的地方。故事的原型大多来自我身边的人,我们都是普通人,可是我们有着各自闪闪发光的故事。告诉我你的过往,愿以我之笔,写你之心。
  • 梦盗

    梦盗

    从高空坠落,无尽的虚空之中,隐藏着数不清的黑暗和神秘.林隐,一个普通大学生,机缘下获得特殊能力,等待他的会是什么?
  • 珂家嫡女:惹不起

    珂家嫡女:惹不起

    一朝穿越,杀手变废柴,废柴变天才,曾经侮辱过我的,要死,曾经想要我死的,我要他生不如死!
  • 请不要对我说sorry

    请不要对我说sorry

    张东和周莲本是互不相干的两条线,过着各自的生活,然而,一次偶然的相遇,让他们相识,相知,相恋,相离……从最初的排斥到最后的互相欣赏,从内心的波澜起伏,到后来的逐渐归于平静。也许相濡以沫,不如相忘于江湖……
  • 昨日已随风之年少无知

    昨日已随风之年少无知

    “只可惜生活是一堆挫折,只可惜生命是必须妥协。”年少无知太仓促。太多错过的人,太多做错的事。总渴望自己的生活惊险刺激波澜壮阔,可往往脆弱的经不起一点点风吹草动。因为没有所以去争取;因为失去所以去折腾。即使不会有好的结果。陈哼说:“我只是想让爱我和我爱的人都过上好日子。”
  • 冲霄战意

    冲霄战意

    娱乐版:-暴力直男叶锋灵魂穿越了!-可是,为啥这伙计也叫叶锋?最过分的是这家伙是个资深高富帅也就算了,可他怎么还是个二逼型文艺青年?!——“不知道爷们一向霸气侧漏用拳头说话的么?”深沉版:斗气魔法的怀旧经典路线,演绎一段一向被视为废柴软蛋的精髓逆袭。ps:骚年撅着臀部,求各种收藏、推荐来尽情侮辱啊!!
  • 末日刀锋

    末日刀锋

    鲜血与泪水交织成那未来的舞台,抖落的弹壳奏响那命运的乐章,是谁在悲鸣?是那燃烧的天空,还是那撕裂的大地,当灾难来临之时,世界归于黑暗之际,谁才是那最后一丝黎明!-->一次任务出现了意外-->唐龙被俘无奈变成了实验品-->侥幸被救却发现自己跟家人早已卷入其中-->黑白两道,全民公敌,他该何去何从……(郑重声明:本书非现在流行的那种灾难末日文,而是关于异种战争、人类起源和星际争霸等的科幻文,书内含有黑暗、血腥、暴力、情色、欲望、基因、变异、异种、生化、兽血、黑科技等元素,不喜勿入,本书属小兵传奇类慢热,望喜爱这类的的朋友多多支持。)如果你喜欢本书,请收藏推荐,如果你在别处看到,也请来起点给个点击、推荐支持一下金宵,最后希望这个新马甲能带来新的成绩,希望走过路过的朋友能多多支持,感谢!
  • 疯行都市

    疯行都市

    这是一个疯子复仇的故事,一个疯子的都市之行,一个只有可爱的女儿才能让他平静下来的疯子。
  • 阴魂不散修订版

    阴魂不散修订版

    申明:本书为驻站作品,作品已经由作者本人重新修正,驻站与创世中文网,希望广大读者能够喜欢。一个含冤而死的女人,积压百年的怨气重现人间,凶灵现世,天地昏暗。一个没有结束的无限恐怖蔓延,一切敬在《阴魂不散》……
  • 武帝当空

    武帝当空

    武道一途,以武为基,以灵为辅,称霸一方;魂师一脉,以魂为主,念力为引,掌控天下,武之极,凌天下,驾众生。