登陆注册
15451100000008

第8章 THE MIRACLE OF LAS PALMAS(2)

He allowed himself but one dissipation, one excess. That was to hate Major Aintree, commanding the Thirty-third Infantry. Of all the world could give, Aintree possessed everything that Standish considered the most to be desired. He was a graduate of West Point, he had seen service in Cuba, in the Boxer business, and in the Philippines. For an act of conspicuous courage at Batangas, he had received the medal of honor. He had had the luck of the devil. Wherever he held command turned out to be the place where things broke loose. And Aintree always attacked and routed them, always was the man on the job. It was his name that appeared in the newspapers, it was his name that headed the list of the junior officers mentioned for distinguished conduct.

Standish had followed his career with an admiration and a joy that was without taint of envy or detraction. He gloried in Aintree, he delighted to know the army held such a man. He was grateful to Aintree for upholding the traditions of a profession to which he himself gave all the devotion of a fanatic. He made a god of him. This was the attitude of mind toward Aintree before he came to the Isthmus. Up to that time he had never seen his idol. Aintree had been only a name signed to brilliant articles in the service magazines, a man of whom those who had served with him or under him, when asked concerning him, spoke with loyalty and awe, the man the newspapers called "the hero of Batangas."And when at last he saw his hero, he believed his worship was justified. For Aintree looked the part. He was built like a greyhound with the shoulders of a stevedore. His chin was as projecting, and as hard, as the pointed end of a flat-iron. His every movement showed physical fitness, and his every glance and tone a confidence in himself that approached insolence. He was thirty-eight, twelve years older than the youth who had failed to make his commission, and who, as Aintree strode past, looked after him with wistful, hero-worshipping eyes. The revulsion, when it came, was extreme. The hero-worship gave way to contempt, to indignant condemnation, in which there was no pity, no excuse. That one upon whom so much had been lavished, who for himself had accomplished such good things, should bring disgrace upon his profession, should by his example demoralize his men, should risk losing all he had attained, all that had been given, was intolerable. When Standish learned his hero was a drunkard, when day after day Aintree furnished visible evidences of that fact, Standish felt Aintree had betrayed him and the army and the government that had educated, trained, clothed, and fed him. He regarded Aintree as worse than Benedict Arnold, because Arnold had turned traitor for power and money; Aintree was a traitor through mere weakness, because he could not say "no" to a bottle.

Only in secret Standish railed against Aintree. When his brother policemen gossiped and jested about him, out of loyalty to the army he remained silent. But in his heart he could not forgive.

The man he had so generously envied, the man after whose career he had wished to model his own, had voluntarily stepped from his pedestal and made a swine of himself. And not only could he not forgive, but as day after day Aintree furnished fresh food for his indignation he felt a fierce desire to punish.

Meanwhile, of the conduct of Aintree, men older and wiser, if less intolerant than Standish, were beginning to take notice. It was after a dinner on Ancon Hill, and the women had left the men to themselves. They were the men who were placing the Panama Canal on the map. They were officers of the army who for five years had not worn a uniform. But for five years they had been at war with an enemy that never slept. Daily they had engaged in battle with mountains, rivers, swamps, two oceans, and disease. Where Aintree commanded five hundred soldiers, they commanded a body of men better drilled, better disciplined, and in number half as many as those who formed the entire army of the United States. The mind of each was occupied with a world problem. They thought and talked in millions --of millions of cubic yards of dirt, of millions of barrels of cement, of millions of tons of steel, of hundreds of millions of dollars, of which latter each received enough to keep himself and his family just beyond the reach of necessity. To these men with the world waiting upon the outcome of their endeavor, with responsibilities that never relaxed, Aintree's behavior was an incident, an annoyance of less importance than an overturned dirt train that for five minutes dared to block the completion of their work. But they were human and loyal to the army, and in such an infrequent moment as this, over the coffee and cigars, they could afford to remember the junior officer, to feel sorry for him, for the sake of the army, to save him from himself.

"He takes his orders direct from the War Department," said the chief. "I've no authority over him. If he'd been one of my workmen I'd have shipped him north three months ago.""That's it," said the surgeon, "he's not a workman. He has nothing to do, and idleness is the curse of the army. And in this climate--""Nothing to do!" snorted the civil administrator. "Keeping his men in hand is what he has to do! They're running amuck all over Panama, getting into fights with the Spiggoty police, bringing the uniform into contempt. As for the climate, it's the same climate for all of us. Look at Butler's marines and Barber's Zone police. The climate hasn't hurt them. They're as smart men as ever wore khaki. It's not the climate or lack of work that ails the Thirty- third, it's their commanding officer. 'So the colonel, so the regiment.' That's as old as the hills. Until Aintree takes a brace, his men won't. Some one ought to talk to him. It's a shame to see a fine fellow like that going to the dogs because no one has the courage to tell him the truth."The chief smiled mockingly.

"Then why don't you?" he asked.

同类推荐
  • London in 1731

    London in 1731

    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。
  • 摩诃僧祇比丘尼戒本

    摩诃僧祇比丘尼戒本

    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。
  • 东度记

    东度记

    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。
  • The Pit

    The Pit

    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。
  • 议兵

    议兵

    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
  • 满天星的花瓣

    满天星的花瓣

    “你送过我三次礼物,第一份礼物和第二份礼物我都没有好好珍惜,第三份礼物你送了我一架吉他,我每天都会弹奏。……今天与你送我第一份礼物的时间已经过了两年,我今天也送你一束满天星吧,你说这束满天星……能变成玫瑰吗?”“我不知道,也许这一切,只有时间才能证明吧……。”
  • 长阿含十报法经

    长阿含十报法经

    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。
  • 裁员

    裁员

    本人在不同时期所写的短篇小说汇总
  • 山神,今晚一起睡吧

    山神,今晚一起睡吧

    群:477153363十年小说梦,管他能不能上架简介:她是一棵桃树,不巧长在了山神的院落里。他是这座山的山神,不巧很讨厌桃子树。她发现只有和山神靠的很近,她才能化成人形,而且越长越水灵。然后他发现院子里面某颗讨厌的的桃子树开始恬不知耻地缠着他,更加可恶的是桃子树的梦想竟然是与他双修。于是桃子死皮赖脸地缠着山神,山神千方百计地躲避着桃子的纠缠。当有一天,蠢桃子再也不是蠢桃子,她……不再缠着山神,她……在阴谋中泥足深陷。她只知道山神在一直在她背后,却从来不知道山神为她付出了多少。当蠢桃子忘却了山神:“我是魔尊凤鸣!”阿桃冷冷道,眼前这个男人是一个强劲的对手。“蠢桃子永远是蠢桃子。”山神一脸宠溺。而后阿桃发现,在这个男人的面前,她愿意放下魔尊的身份,变成他的蠢桃子。只是当山神不再是山神的时候,阿桃发现即使自己倾尽温情都难以去温暖那个人的心。“吾对你,从未认真。”冰冷的话语让挺着大肚子的她泪流满面。“当真要如此?”她语气决绝,仔细地不遗漏他任何一丝表情。可是,那绝情的眼神让她不愿再多问一句。五年后,魔族。“娘亲,为什么那么多人想让我叫他们爹爹~”小奶娃奶声奶气地问道。“因为娘亲太厉害了,他们都想做娘亲的夫婿,让娘亲保护他们。”凤鸣淡笑道。奶娃的眸中闪过一丝狡黠的光芒,看来门外那个长得像他的人不过也就一吃软饭的!“魔族不需要吃软饭的男人。”奶娃抬头,看着比自己高了不知道多少个头的男人。男人听了脸瞬间黑了下来,“你可知道吾是谁?”“上古之神云苍~”奶娃的回答让男子一喜,看来他家蠢桃子还是知道告诉孩子父亲是谁的。“娘亲的房里都是你的资料。”话还没说完,男子又是一喜,看来他还有机会,“娘亲说,这辈子打不死你她就不姓凤!”语毕,男子嘴角微抽,看来路漫漫其修远兮。有虐,有甜,欢迎跳坑,推荐,收藏,评论,加印象,一条龙哦~
  • 重案追踪

    重案追踪

    犯罪,这个行为具体应该追溯到何时,估计没有人能给出一个具体的时间,只知道从有人类的时候开始,这个行为就一直伴随着人类前进的步伐走到了今天。可以说,它的生命力比世界上任何的生物都顽强,蟑螂、老鼠或许随着人类科技的进步,早晚会有灭绝的一天,可是犯罪行为却随着人类的不断进步也同时在进步着,并且不断地“推陈出新”,或许这也和人类永无止境的欲望是密不可分的。本书收录了近年来中国最为刺激、惊险、复杂的真实案件,以档案小说的形式,深度剖析犯罪动机,完美演绎犯罪情节,并对罪犯的心理做了深入的解剖探讨,最完整地还原了扑朔迷离的复杂案情。此书作为犯罪记录的范本,将给研究犯罪这一课题提供最具权威性的参考借鉴价值。尊敬的书友,本书选载最精华部分供您阅读。留足悬念,同样精彩!
  • 时间漏洞

    时间漏洞

    本书为小说集,收录的作品包括:2007年的快乐情事、河套轶事、床、四季平安、时间漏洞、两岔、蓝绸子。
  • 后青春盛宴的诗

    后青春盛宴的诗

    他从未说过喜欢她,却用十年的时光完成了一场最沉默的告白。她说“不管再怎么念念不忘,也就真的就只是念念不忘了”这场注定不愿安稳的青春盛宴中,有没有那么一个人,你想拼尽全力的想让他一直露出哀伤的眼睛涌动光彩;有没有那么一个人,你拼了命的想要去抓紧去拥抱去亲吻,而他,却像是与你隔了千愁万绪一般,从遥远的未来伸出手来,而你永远也追不到,赶不上;有没有那么一个人,他哀痛的时候你比他还难过,你高兴的时候想让他比你更高兴,而你因为他而悲伤的悲伤却掩藏的滴水不漏,你看着那些悲伤像是挤满棉絮的水一样湿漉漉的放在心口,任凭发烂腐臭。而那些无数汹涌看不到边的悲伤全部汇聚到一个名字一瞬惊艳上。
  • 卧龙奇谭

    卧龙奇谭

    世间兵器千百般,棍可称百兵之祖,刀可为百兵之王,唯剑可尊百兵之首。而要在这人心不古的混沌乱世中,唯以剑鸣天地者,可留后世铸奇谭。
  • tfboys我们一起看流星划过

    tfboys我们一起看流星划过

    这是当红偶像组合tfboys与普通三个女孩的故事
  • 一时兴起得来一世欢喜

    一时兴起得来一世欢喜

    她的一时兴起,他的恰好出勤,得来他们一世的欢喜。白梓轩:“若当初你未想自杀,我懒得出勤,那我们是不是可能永远不会相交,我们是不是过着各自的生活。人们说‘前世的五百次回眸才换来今生一次擦肩而过’那么我们在前世有多少次回眸,才换来今世我和你在这大千世界的相遇。所以...我又怎么会放你离开!小辞,我爱你.”于是,之后的乔小辞开始了打BOSS,生猴子的路程。本文为暖暖的宠文,无虐无纠结。