登陆注册
34547500000036

第36章

The old-fashioned Union Street cable car, with its low, comfortable outside seats, put Blix and Condy down just inside the Presidio Government Reservation. Condy asked a direction of a sentry nursing his Krag-Jorgensen at the terminus of the track, and then with Blix set off down the long board walk through the tunnel of overhanging evergreens.

The day could not have been more desirable. It was a little after ten of a Monday morning, Condy's weekly holiday. The air was neither cool nor warm, effervescent merely, brisk and full of the smell of grass and of the sea. The sky was a speckless sheen of pale blue. To their right, and not far off, was the bay, blue as indigo. Alcatraz seemed close at hand; beyond was the enormous green, red, and purple pyramid of Tamalpais climbing out of the water, head and shoulders above the little foothills, and looking out to the sea and to the west.

The Reservation itself was delightful. There were rows of the officers' houses, all alike, drawn up in lines like an assembly of the staff; there were huge barracks, most like college dormitories; and on their porches enlisted men in shirt sleeves and overalls were cleaning saddles, and polishing the brass of head-stalls and bridles, whistling the while or smoking corn-cob pipes. Here on the parade-ground a soldier, his coat and vest removed, was batting grounders and flies to a half-dozen of his fellows. Over by the stables, strings of horses, all of the same color, were being curried and cleaned. A young lieutenant upon a bicycle spun silently past. An officer came from his front gate, his coat unbuttoned and a briar in his teeth. The walks and roads were flanked with lines of black-painted cannon-balls; inverted pieces of abandoned ordnance stood at corners. From a distance came the mellow snarling of a bugle.

Blix and Condy had planned a long walk for that day. They were to go out through the Presidio Reservation, past the barracks and officers' quarters, and on to the old fort at the Golden Gate.

Here they would turn and follow the shore-line for a way, then strike inland across the hills for a short half-mile, and regain the city and the street-car lines by way of the golf-links. Condy had insisted upon wearing his bicycle outfit for the occasion, and, moreover, carried a little satchel, which, he said, contained a pair of shoes.

But Blix was as sweet as a rose that morning, all in tailor-made black but for the inevitable bands of white satin wrapped high and tight about her neck. The St. Bernard dog-collar did duty as a belt. She had disdained a veil, and her yellow hair was already blowing about her smooth pink cheeks. She walked at his side, her step as firm and solid as his own, her round, strong arms swinging, her little brown eyes shining with good spirits and vigor, and the pure, clean animal joy of being alive on that fine cool Western morning. She talked almost incessantly. She was positively garrulous. She talked about the fine day that it was, about the queer new forage caps of the soldiers, about the bare green hills of the Reservation, about the little cemetery they passed just beyond the limits of the barracks, about a rabbit she saw, and about the quail they both heard whistling and calling in the hollows under the bushes.

Condy walked at her side in silence, yet no less happy than she, smoking his pipe and casting occasional glances at a great ship--a four-master that was being towed out toward the Golden Gate. At every moment and at every turn they noted things that interested them, and to which they called each other's attention.

"Look, Blix!"

"Oh, Condy, look at that!"

They were soon out of the miniature city of the Post, and held on down through the low reach of tules and sand-dunes that stretch between the barracks and the old red fort.

"Look, Condy!" said Blix. "What's that building down there on the shore of the bay--the one with the flagstaff?""I think that must be the lifeboat station."

"I wonder if we could go down and visit it. I think it would be good fun.""Idea!" exclaimed Condy.

The station was close at hand. To reach it they had but to leave the crazy board walk that led on toward the fort, and cross a few hundred yards of sand-dune. Condy opened the gate that broke the line of evergreen hedge around the little two-story house, and promptly unchained a veritable pandemonium of dogs.

Inside, the place was not without a certain charm of its own. Abrick wall, bordered with shells, led to the front of the station, which gave directly upon the bay; a little well-kept lawn opened to right and left, and six or eight gaily-painted old rowboats were set about, half filled with loam in which fuchsias, geraniums, and mignonettes were flowering. A cat or two dozed upon the window-sills in the sun. Upon a sort of porch overhead, two of the crew paced up and down in a manner that at once suggested the poop. Here and there was a gleam of highly polished red copper or brass trimmings. The bay was within two steps of the front door, while a little further down the beach was the house where the surf-boat was kept, and the long runway leading down from it to the water. Condy rapped loudly at the front door.

It was opened by Captain Jack.

Captain Jack, and no other; only now he wore a blue sweater and a leather-visored cap, with the letters U. S. L. B. S. around the band.

Not an instant was given them for preparation. The thing had happened with the abruptness of a transformation scene at a theatre. Condy's knock had evoked a situation. Speech was stricken from their mouths. For a moment they were bereft even of action, and stood there on the threshold, staring open-mouthed and open-eyed at the sudden reappearance of their "matrimonial object." Condy was literally dumb; in the end it was Blix who tided them over the crisis.

"We were just going by--just taking a walk," she explained, "and we thought we'd like to see the station. Is it all right? Can we look around?""Why, of course," assented the Captain with great cordiality.

同类推荐
  • 怀麓堂诗话

    怀麓堂诗话

    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。
  • 太上太玄女青三元品诫拔罪妙经

    太上太玄女青三元品诫拔罪妙经

    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。
  • Albert Savarus

    Albert Savarus

    One of the few drawing-rooms where, under the Restoration, the Archbishop of Besancon was sometimes to be seen, was that of the Baronne de Watteville, to whom he was particularly attached on account of her religious sentiments.
  • 群书治要六韬

    群书治要六韬

    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。
  • 李星沅日记选录

    李星沅日记选录

    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
  • 微风太大

    微风太大

    开挂女孩和三位大哥的各种日常,带你体验不一样的总裁大人,不一样的当红网红,不一样的IT高手,不一样的豪门生活。内含皮皮作者的高级自黑,超级彩蛋这里这里(不是恋爱!不是恋爱!不是恋爱!嗑CP的等下一部!!!)
  • 非常变身奏鸣曲

    非常变身奏鸣曲

    这是一个彻底YY的故事,主人公很不幸地在一个微小的意外里从一个男人变成了一个女人,最让他头疼的是变成的女人居然不是超级美女!然后一系列莫名其妙的事情就这么发生了……
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 涅槃传

    涅槃传

    无知少年,万千宠爱,一失足成千古恨;废物之名,玉中世界,柳暗花明又一村;玉府求仙,逆天改命,破人蛮荒,掌控一方大千世界;真武大陆传承万年,气运非凡,然而无数修仙者惨遭屠戮;仙魔之争,血流成河,谁能独当一面?剑指雪域,睥睨天下,踏入妖域,收服荒兽;不灭战域,惊现灭世之战;覆灭血魔,涅槃重生,返璞归真,谁与争锋。
  • 少年武痴

    少年武痴

    一个富家公子,酿酒世家,富甲一方,不料天下打乱,黑帮横行,军阀混战,革命之势如星火燎原。而大背景下的慕家也因为祖传秘方被江湖三教九流垂涎,父母亲双双被军阀扣押,身为慕家唯一火种的他该如何选择……本书为你解谜。
  • 凰易凤

    凰易凤

    她本是凰却因宫廷争斗被易为凤,成了傀儡皇帝。于是后宫佳丽、满苑娈童,为讨她欢心使出浑身解数,她成了人人骂之的荒淫无度昏君。帝王,权位,儿女情长。她朱字御批杀死儿时青梅竹马,她怒持宝剑手刃一心为她叛乱的娈童。他问,权势对你真的如此重要么?她笑,朕是大魏国国君,一个杀字便可要了千万人的性命。铁骑铮铮、尘土飞扬笼罩了帝都城门,他心死离去。他说,我要夺了你的王位,让你做我的宠妃。她怒,你不过是朕的娈童而已!血染枫叶,他死在她的宝剑之下。高娥宫墙内桃花凋尽,杏花铺路,只留那身至尊龙袍与至高权势陪着她。与她争权夺位的人死了,助她取得权位的人走了。已然关关鸣,奈何雎鸠离。
  • 这不是日记

    这不是日记

    你应有什么,没有什么,都是一早就注定好的。不是你的,拿了,要么还回来,要么付出同等的代价。白米,你呢?你怎么选?选?凭什么选?捡到了,就是我的。它现在只不过是在那里寄存而已,是我的,就理应是。不会变!十天?十天,就十天。等着!
  • 中华人民共和国突发事件应对法

    中华人民共和国突发事件应对法

    为了预防和减少突发事件的发生,控制、减轻和消除突发事件引起的严重社会危害,规范突发事件应对活动,保护人民生命财产安全,维护国家安全、公共安全、环境安全和社会秩序,制定本法。
  • 宝贝你究竟是谁

    宝贝你究竟是谁

    女强男强。一次又一次的相遇,一次又一次的合作,他受伤,她来治;她难受,他来医。在这年代,所有的故事只能是他们的背景,他们会擦出怎样的火花呢?
  • 力转色界

    力转色界

    天地有七色,赤橙黄绿青蓝紫。天下人只知,一生二,二生三,三生万物,九为极。却不识五七之数,十之有三我道之巅峰也!五七,无奇曰也,实幻化道衍,力转色界,变之吾起,成无上道力。