"MacLean, Alistair - South by Java Head" - читать интересную книгу автора (Maclean Alistair)

THE SUBALTERN in charge of the soldiers touched Farnholme on the arm and nodded out to sea. "The boat, sir -- she's gone!"

Farnholme restrained himself with an effort. His voice, when he spoke, was as calm and as matter-of-fact as ever.

"So it would appear, Lieutenant. In the words of the old song, they've left us standing on the shore. Deuced inconvenient, to say the least of it."

"Yes, sir." Farnholme's reaction to the urgency of the situation, Lieutenant Parker felt, was hardly impressive. "What's to be done now, sir?"

"You may well ask, my boy." Farnholme stood still for several moments, a hand rubbing his chin, an abstracted expression on his face. "Do you hear a child crying there, along the waterfront?" he asked suddenly.

"Yes, sir."

"Have one of your men bring him here. Preferably," Farnholme added, "a kindly, fatherly type that won't scare the living daylights out of him."

"Bring him here, sir? "The subaltern was astonished. "But there are hundreds of these little street Arabs-----" He broke off suddenly as Farnholme towered over him, his eyes cold and still beneath the jutting brows.

"I trust you are not deaf, Lieutenant Parker," he inquired solicitously. The low-pitched voice was for the lieutenant's ears alone, as it had been throughout.

"Yes, sir! I mean, no, sir!" Parker hastily revised his earlier impression of Farnholme. "I'll send a man right away, sir."

"Thank you. Then send a few men in either direction along the waterfront, maybe half a mile or so. Have them bring back here any person or persons they find -- they may be able to throw some light on the missing boat. Let them use persuasion if necessary."

"Persuasion, sir?"

"In any form. We're not playing for pennies tonight, Lieutenant. And when you've given the necessary orders, I'd like a private little talk with you."

Famholme strolled off some yards into the gloom. Lieutenant Parker rejoined him within a minute. Farnholme lit a fresh cheroot and looked speculatively at the young officer before him.

"Do you know who I am, young man?" he asked abruptly.

"No, sir."

"Brigadier Farnholme." Farnholme grinned in the darkness as he saw the perceptible stiffening of the lieutenant's shoulders. "Now that you've heard it, forget it. You've never heard of me. Understand?"

"No, sir," Parker said politely. "But I understand the order well enough."

"That's all you need to understand. And cut out the 'sirs' from now on. Do you know my business?"

"No, sir, I-----"

"No 'sirs,' I said," Farnholme interrupted. "If you cut them out in private, there's no chance of your using them in public."

"I'm sorry, No, I don't know your business. But the colonel impressed upon me that it was a matter of the utmost importance and gravity."

"The colonel was in no way exaggerating," Farnholme murmured feelingly. "It is better, much better, that you don't know my business. If we ever reach safety I promise you I'll tell you what it's all about. Meantime, the less you and your men know the safer for all of us." He paused, drew heavily on the cheroot and watched the tip glow redly in the night. "Do you know what a beachcomber is, Lieutenant?"

"A beachcomber?" The sudden switch caught Parker off balance, but he recovered quickly. "Naturally."

"Good. That's what I am from now on, and you will kindly treat me as such. An elderly, alcoholic and somewhat no-account beachcomber hell-bent on saving his own skin. Good-natured and tolerant contempt -- that's your line. Firm, even severe when you've got to be. You found me wandering about the streets, searching for some form of transport out of Singapore. You heard from me that I had arrived on a little inter-island steamer and decided that you would commandeer it for your own uses."