"Robert Stevenson, Lloyd Osbourne. The Wrecker (англ.)" - читать интересную книгу автора

Outside, the night was full of the roaring of the surf. Scattered lights
glowed in the green thicket. Native women came by twos and threes out of
the darkness, smiled and ogled the two whites, perhaps wooed them with a
strain of laughter, and went by again, bequeathing to the air a heady
perfume of palm-oil and frangipani blossom. From the club to Mr. Havens's
residence was but a step or two, and to any dweller in Europe they must
have seemed steps in fairyland. If such an one could but have followed our
two friends into the wide-verandahed house, sat down with them in the cool
trellised room, where the wine shone on the lamp-lighted tablecloth; tasted
of their exotic food-the raw fish, the breadfruit, the cooked bananas, the
roast pig served with the inimitable miti, and that king of delicacies,
palm-tree salad; seen and heard by fits and starts, now peering round the
corner of the door, now railing within against invisible assistants, a
certain comely young native lady in a sacque, who seemed too modest to be a
member of the family, and too imperious to be less; and then if such an one
were whisked again through space to Upper Tooting, or wherever else he
honored the domestic gods, "I have had a dream," I think he would say, as
he sat up, rubbing his eyes, in the familiar chimney-corner chair, "I have
had a dream of a place, and I declare I believe it must be heaven." But to
Dodd and his entertainer, all this amenity of the tropic night and all
these dainties of the island table, were grown things of custom; and they
fell to meat like men who were hungry, and drifted into idle talk like men
who were a trifle bored.

The scene in the club was referred to.

"I never heard you talk so much nonsense, Loudon," said the host.

"Well, it seemed to me there was sulphur in the air, so I talked for
talking," returned the other. "But it was none of it nonsense."

"Do you mean to say it was true?" cried Havens,-"that about the opium and
the wreck, and the blackmailing and the man who became your friend?"

"Every last word of it," said Loudon.

"You seem to have been seeing life," returned the other.

"Yes, it's a queer yarn," said his friend; "if you think you would like,
I'll tell it you."

Here follows the yarn of Loudon Dodd, not as he told it to his friend, but
as he subsequently wrote it.



THE YARN.