登陆注册
5357000000005

第5章 THE RED CROSS GIRL(1)

When Spencer Flagg laid the foundation-stone for the new million-dollar wing he was adding to the Flagg Home for Convalescents, on the hills above Greenwich, the New York REPUBLIC sent Sam Ward to cover the story, and with him Redding to take photographs.It was a crisp, beautiful day in October, full of sunshine and the joy of living, and from the great lawn in front of the Home you could see half over Connecticut and across the waters of the Sound to Oyster Bay.

Upon Sam Ward, however, the beauties of Nature were wasted.

When, the night previous, he had been given the assignment he had sulked, and he was still sulking.Only a year before he had graduated into New York from a small up-state college and a small up-state newspaper, but already he was a "star" man, and Hewitt, the city editor, humored him.

"What's the matter with the story?" asked the city editor.

"With the speeches and lists of names it ought to run to two columns.""Suppose it does!" exclaimed Ward; "anybody can collect type-written speeches and lists of names.That's a messenger boy's job.Where's there any heart-interest in a Wall Street broker like Flagg waving a silver trowel and singing, 'See what a good boy am!' and a lot of grownup men in pinafores saying, 'This stone is well and truly laid.' Where's the story in that?""When I was a reporter," declared the city editor, "I used to be glad to get a day in the country.""Because you'd never lived in the country," returned Sam."If you'd wasted twenty-six years in the backwoods, as I did, you'd know that every minute you spend outside of New York you're robbing yourself.""Of what?" demanded the city editor."There's nothing to New York except cement, iron girders, noise, and zinc garbage cans.You never see the sun in New York; you never see the moon unless you stand in the middle of the street and bend backward.We never see flowers in New York except on the women's hats.We never see the women except in cages in the elevators--they spend their lives shooting up and down elevator shafts in department stores, in apartment houses, in office buildings.And we never see children in New York because the janitors won't let the women who live in elevators have children! Don't talk to me! New York's a Little Nemo nightmare.It's a joke.It's an insult!""How curious!" said Sam."Now I see why they took you off the street and made you a city editor.I don't agree with anything you say.Especially are you wrong about the women.

They ought to be caged in elevators, but they're not.

Instead, they flash past you in the street; they shine upon you from boxes in the theatre; they frown at you from the tops of buses; they smile at you from the cushions of a taxi, across restaurant tables under red candle shades, when you offer them a seat in the subway.They are the only thing in New York that gives me any trouble."The city editor sighed."How young you are!" he exclaimed.

"However, to-morrow you will be free from your only trouble.

There will be few women at the celebration, and they will be interested only in convalescents--and you do not look like a convalescent."Sam Ward sat at the outer edge of the crowd of overdressed females and overfed men, and, with a sardonic smile, listened to Flagg telling his assembled friends and sycophants how glad he was they were there to see him give away a million dollars.

"Aren't you going to get his speech?", asked Redding, the staff photographer.

"Get HIS speech!" said Sam."They have Pinkertons all over the grounds to see that you don't escape with less than three copies.I'm waiting to hear the ritual they always have, and then I'm going to sprint for the first train back to the centre of civilization.""There's going to be a fine lunch," said Redding, "and reporters are expected.I asked the policeman if we were, and he said we were."Sam rose, shook his trousers into place, stuck his stick under his armpit and smoothed his yellow gloves.He was very thoughtful of his clothes and always treated them with courtesy.

"You can have my share," he said."I cannot forget that I am fifty-five minutes from Broadway.And even if I were starving I would rather have a club sandwich in New York than a Thanksgiving turkey dinner in New Rochelle."He nodded and with eager, athletic strides started toward the iron gates; but he did not reach the iron gates, for on the instant trouble barred his way.Trouble came to him wearing the blue cambric uniform of a nursing sister, with a red cross on her arm, with a white collar turned down, white cuffs turned back, and a tiny black velvet bonnet.A bow of white lawn chucked her impudently under the chin.She had hair like golden-rod and eyes as blue as flax, and a complexion of such health and cleanliness and dewiness as blooms only on trained nurses.

She was so lovely that Redding swung his hooded camera at her as swiftly as a cowboy could have covered her with his gun.

Reporters become star reporters because they observe things that other people miss and because they do not let it appear that they have observed them.When the great man who is being interviewed blurts out that which is indiscreet but most important, the cub reporter says: "That's most interesting, sir.I'll make a note of that." And so warns the great man into silence.But the star reporter receives the indiscreet utterance as though it bored him; and the great man does not know he has blundered until he reads of it the next morning under screaming headlines.

同类推荐
  • 中法兵事始末

    中法兵事始末

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 归砚录

    归砚录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 得依释序文缘起

    得依释序文缘起

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 四念处

    四念处

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 续佐治药言

    续佐治药言

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 情浅终言深

    情浅终言深

    他说“你喜欢他,我也喜欢他,你顺便也喜欢一下我吧,我还能帮你一起喜欢他”。当她陷入了,他却反悔了……
  • 温故念之

    温故念之

    陆瑾之第一次见顾温然,是在机场,她从他的身边走过,轻风吹动了他的衣角而后他们位置挨着,他感觉她有点眼熟
  • 道门定制

    道门定制

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 剑魂断情

    剑魂断情

    在一个山洞里因为湖心父母毒王和毒后的江湖恩怨引来了江湖人的追杀,一群追杀的人穿过森林里毒王毒后设下的迷香林,途中死了很多手下,在穿过毒药丛,来到毒王毒后的山洞门口,百针出击死了许多手下,毒后看见情况危急就把女儿湖心藏了起来,原来毒王和毒后不愿被冰客(冰岛谷的谷主)所用而遭到寻仇,毒后:想不到堂堂冰客谷主会大驾光临,真是稀客稀客毒王:哈哈哈。没想到我们夫妻俩还有这样的福气能得到较量,战斗中冰客好想全知毒王毒后的缺点轻易就把他们打败,八岁的湖心看着父母在战斗中一个个死去,没有掉一滴眼泪而是充满了复仇的仇恨....
  • 越夜越诡异:雨夜怪谈

    越夜越诡异:雨夜怪谈

    一间无名客栈开在深山老林之中。客栈是间老宅,很多年以前发生过一场凶案之后,便再无人接近。一队徒步旅游的驴友在贵州某个荒僻的村子里遇到了大雨,无法赶路,于是住进了当地一个非常古老的客栈。
  • 拐个冥王来试毒

    拐个冥王来试毒

    一代神医,爹不疼娘不爱,竟还要去代嫁,大婚之夜,郎君还有隐疾这还没完,竟还有人想代新郎强上她简直不知天高地厚,当下废其小弟,脱其裤子,果奔去吧!哼,敢惹姑奶奶,算你倒霉!这边斗完了湘王,那边后院又着了火,娘家姐妹姨娘相继作死更可怕的是自家郎君月圆之夜必发狂嗜血,还查其底细,欲行灭口之事上有三十六员天罡,下有七十二座地煞,姑奶奶我有一百零八般本事,我只是低调,我不说--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 大神救命

    大神救命

    这个世界病了,重症,感染。一梦醒来,神话传说中的怪物们粉墨登场,生化神兽,机甲天兵,这是看不见黎明的沉沉黑暗。PS:克苏鲁风的东方神话+机甲废土,风格轻松,故事有趣。大概如此。
  • 中国性别理论与女性文学批评

    中国性别理论与女性文学批评

    在中国女性文学批评领域,西方女性主义学说一直拥有话语霸权,“以西律中”“借西构体”是大多数学者选择的批评范式与批评路径。西方女性主义学说以西方性别政治压迫与文学实践为批判指涉创构,在中国的适用程度值得分析。走出西学话语藩篱,进行民族主体性理论建构,已成为中国女性文学批评持续发展的重要课题,为此,本书在研究中国传统性别理论与观照中国女性主义文学批评实践基础上,提出中国女性文学批评民族主体性理论建构的构想。
  • 王妃,快给我解药

    王妃,快给我解药

    莱安郡主含恨重生,暴虐王妃一朝转性,化身无名公子,医术毒术均冠绝天下。原本一心只想虐渣男,报家仇,断情绝爱,潇洒快活,谁知半路杀出来个腹黑王爷……既然都厌恶这王朝,不如一道覆了这天下,你的仇,我来给你报,至于你,不论是谁,本王要了!想来这买卖也不亏,尚初萤就这么上了齐北桓的贼船,谁料魏王殿下不止霸道,还拈酸吃醋又傲娇,可这时候说后悔也晚了。
  • 凤鸣天下:冷情王妃太妖娆

    凤鸣天下:冷情王妃太妖娆

    她是顶级杀手,一朝穿越,成为丞相府的九小姐,从此以后,斗恶仆、闹王府、闯皇宫,不亦乐乎!可是半路杀出一个王爷,天天求撩,天天求撩。看在王爷的颜值上,她只能勉为其难的撩一撩了……