One of Ours eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 482 pages of information about One of Ours.

One of Ours eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 482 pages of information about One of Ours.

“In a moment, Steward.  I know that last night a number of cases of eggs and oranges were carried into this room.  They are here now, and they belong to the A.E.F.  If you will agree to provision my man, what I know won’t go any further.  But if you refuse, I’ll get this matter investigated.  I won’t stop till I do.”

The Steward sat down, and took up a pen.  His large, soft hand looked cheesy, like his face.  “What is the number of the cabin?” he asked indifferently.

“Ninety-six.”

“Exactly what do you require?”

“One dozen eggs and one dozen oranges every twenty-four hours, to be delivered at any time convenient to you.”

“I will see what I can do.”

The Steward did not look up from his writing pad, and his visitors left as abruptly as they had come.

At about four o’clock every morning, before even the bath stewards were on duty, there was a scratching at Claude’s door, and a covered basket was left there by a messenger who was unwashed, half-naked, with a sacking apron tied round his middle and his hairy chest splashed with flour.  He never spoke, had only one eye and an inflamed socket.  Claude learned that he was a half-witted brother of the Chief Steward, a potato peeler and dish-washer in the galley.

Four day after their interview with Mr. Micks, when they were at last nearing the end of the voyage, Doctor Trueman detained Claude after medical inspection to tell him that the Chief Steward had come down with the epidemic.  “He sent for me last night and asked me to take his case,—­won’t have anything to do with Chessup.  I had to get Chessup’s permission.  He seemed very glad to hand the case over to me.”

“Is he very bad?”

“He hasn’t a look-in, and he knows it.  Complications; chronic Bright’s disease.  It seems he has nine children.  I’ll try to get him into a hospital when we make port, but he’ll only live a few days at most.  I wonder who’ll get the shillings for all the eggs and oranges he hoarded away.  Claude, my boy,” the doctor spoke with sudden energy, “if I ever set foot on land again, I’m going to forget this voyage like a bad dream.  When I’m in normal health, I’m a Presbyterian, but just now I feel that even the wicked get worse than they deserve.”

A day came at last when Claude was wakened from sleep by a sense of stillness.  He sprang up with a dazed fear that some one had died; but Fanning lay in his berth, breathing quietly.

Something caught his eye through the porthole,—­a great grey shoulder of land standing up in the pink light of dawn, powerful and strangely still after the distressing instability of the sea.  Pale trees and long, low fortifications... close grey buildings with red roofs... little sailboats bounding seaward... up on the cliff a gloomy fortress.

He had always thought of his destination as a country shattered and desolated,—­“bleeding France”; but he had never seen anything that looked so strong, so self-sufficient, so fixed from the first foundation, as the coast that rose before him.  It was like a pillar of eternity.  The ocean lay submissive at its feet, and over it was the great meekness of early morning.

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One of Ours from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.