登陆注册
34550500000031

第31章 The Double Cross(3)

At the Sergeant's vehement summons Bruce turned reluctantly away from the foot of the church steps and came across the street toward the estaminet. He came slowly. Midway he halted and looked back over his shoulder at the nurse, his fangs glinting once more in a snarl. At a second and more emphatic call from Mahan the dog continued his progress.

The nurse had started back in alarm at the collie's angry demonstration. Now, gathering up her work, she retreated into the church.

"I'm sorry, Miss!" Mahan shouted after her. "I never saw him that way, before, when a lady spoke to him. If it was any dog but old Bruce, I'd give him a whaling for acting like that to you. I'm dead-sure he didn't mean any harm.""Oh, I was going in, anyway," replied the nurse, from the doorway. "It is of no consequence."She spoke nervously, her rich contralto voice shaken by the dog's fierce show of enmity. Then she vanished into the church; and Mahan and Vivier took turns in lecturing Bruce on his shameful dearth of courtesy.

The big dog paid no heed at all to his friends' discourse. He was staring sullenly at the doorway through which the nurse had gone.

"That's one swell way for a decently bred dog to treat a woman!"Mahan was telling him. "Least of all, a Red Cross nurse! I'm clean ashamed of you!"Bruce did not listen. In his heart he was still angry--and very much perplexed as well. For he knew what these stupid humans did not seem to know.

HE KNEW THE RED CROSS NURSE WAS NO WOMAN AT ALL, BUT A MAN.

Bruce knew, too, that the nurse did not belong to his loved friends of the Red Cross. For his uncanny power of scent told him the garments worn by the impostor belonged to some one else. To mere humans, a small and slender man, who can act, and who dons woman's garb, is a woman. To any dog, such a man is no more like a woman than a horse with a lambskin saddle-pad is a lamb. He is merely a man who is differently dressed from other men--even as this man who had chirped to Bruce, from the church steps, was no less a man for the costume in which he had swathed his body. Any dog, at a glance and at a sniff, would have known that.

Women, for one thing, do not usually smoke dozens of rank cigars daily for years, until their flesh is permeated with the smell of tobacco. A human could not have detected such a smell--such a MAN-smell,--on the person who had chirped to Bruce. Any dog, twenty feet away, would have noticed it, and would have tabulated the white-clad masquerader as a man. Nor do a woman's hair and skin carry the faint but unmistakable odor of barracks and of tent-life and of martial equipment, as did this man's. The masquerader was evidently not only a man but a soldier.

Dogs,--high-strung dogs,--do not like to have tricks played on them; least of all by strangers. Bruce seemed to take the nurse-disguise as a personal affront to himself. Then, too, the man was not of his own army. On the contrary, the scent proclaimed him one of the horde whom Bruce's friends so manifestly hated--one of the breed that had more than once fired on the dog.

Diet and equipment and other causes give a German soldier a markedly different scent, to dogs' miraculously keen nostrils,--and to those of certain humans,--from the French or British or American troops. War records prove this. Once having learned the scent, and having learned to detest it, Bruce was not to be deceived.

For all these reasons he had snarled loathingly at the man in white. For these same reasons he could not readily forget the incident, but continued every now and then to glance curiously across toward the church.

Presently,--not relishing the rebukes of the friends who had heretofore pestered him by overmuch petting,--the collie arose quietly from his couch of trampled earth at the foot of the stone bench and strolled back across the street. Most of the men were too busy, talking, to note Bruce's departure. But Sergeant Mahan caught sight of him just as the dog was mounting the last of the steps leading into the church.

As a rule, when Bruce went investigating, he walked carelessly and with his tail slightly a-wag. Now his tail was stiff as an icicle, and he moved warily, on the tips of his toes. His tawny-maned neck was low. Mahan, understanding dogs, did not like the collie's demeanor. Remembering that the nurse had entered the church a few minutes earlier, the Sergeant got to his feet and hastily followed Bruce.

The dog, meanwhile, had passed through the crazily splintered doorway and had paused on the threshold of the improvised hospital, as the reek of iodoform and of carbolic smote upon his sensitive nostrils. In front of him was the stone-paved vestibule. Beyond was the interior of the shattered church, lined now with double rows of cots.

Seated on a camp-chair in the shadowy vestibule was the pseudo Red Cross nurse. At sight of the collie the nurse got up in some haste. Bruce, still walking stiff-legged, drew closer.

Out from under the white skirt flashed a capable and solidly-shod foot. In a swinging kick, the foot let drive at the oncoming dog. Before Bruce could dodge or could so much as guess what was coming,--the kick smote him with agonizing force, square on the shoulder.

To a spirited collie, a kick carries more than the mere pain of its inflicting. It is a grossly unforgivable affront as well--as many a tramp and thief have learned, at high cost.

By the time the kick had fairly landed, Bruce had recovered from his instant of incredulous surprise; and with lightning swiftness he hurled himself at his assailant.

No bark or growl heralded the murderous throatlunge. It was all the more terrible for the noiselessness wherewith it was delivered. The masquerading man saw it coming, just too late to guard against it. He lurched backward, belatedly throwing both hands up to defend his throat. It was the involuntary backward step which saved his jugular. For his heel caught in the hem of his white skirt. And wholly off balance, he pitched headlong to the floor.

同类推荐
  • WIVES AND DAUGHTERS

    WIVES AND DAUGHTERS

    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。
  • 少林真传伤科秘方

    少林真传伤科秘方

    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。
  • 万灵灯仪

    万灵灯仪

    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。
  • 随手杂录

    随手杂录

    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。
  • 广知

    广知

    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
  • 混在修真界的忍者

    混在修真界的忍者

    百世大善人叶玄死后,本可立地成仙,位列仙班,却被阎王爷给忽悠到了火影世界,为了追求长生,叶玄毅然转生到修真世界,追寻长生之路。
  • 逆世电芒

    逆世电芒

    【不一样的玄幻!】(群号130232474)华夏利刃组织里的巅峰特工,因为特殊任务坐进了时空穿梭机,本应是去往大秦朝的他却因为一个特殊的意外,穿进一片神奇的魔法大陆…啊嘞?这是个什么鬼的异界?高楼大厦、汽车手机,飞机大炮,这异界怎么比地球上还发达?这只跟着自己穿过来的兔子是怎么回事?这块电池又是怎么回事?妹子来加个魔信,我们来探讨一下幻灭大陆的可持续发展…兄弟也来留个联系方式,打打杀杀多不好!这是一个巅峰特工玩转超魔法异界的故事,请兄弟们支持一下了…
  • 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!
  • 李禧龙

    李禧龙

    人间是个炼狱,人生是场修行。我就是我,十几岁出来打拼,从当初的身无分文,奋斗到一无所有,再从一无所有奋斗到现在的负债累累。我就是我,不一样的烟火,我看到自己都冒火。本故事纯属虚构,如有雷同纯属巧合。
  • 穿过命运河

    穿过命运河

    经历了生活磨难的叶龙本是一名特战队成员。因在任务中误伤人质而被退役!孤僻的他拒绝了朋友们好心安排。自己用自己特有的东西,为自己安排了自己心底的光明之路……
  • 酷少独一无二的阳光

    酷少独一无二的阳光

    十年前,林晓萱觉得世界都是单纯美好的,所以当她遇到冷酷的韩墨尘时,便想用她的阳光去照亮他所有的黑暗;一场误会,让原本以为能走到最后的两个人背道而驰,永不相见;十年后,他是国内外最知名珠宝集团的冷酷总裁及首席设计师,而她却意外的成为了一名菜鸟记者,一次舞会偶然相遇,他便悄悄地将她骗入了他为她编织的童话;事后还厚脸皮的说:”宝贝,我们已经签订了契约,你已经逃不掉了,快到家里来。林晓萱天真的说道:”契约只有半年,半年后我们互不干涉。“某男腹黑的笑道:“谁告诉你只有半年的,我忘了告诉你其实我们的契约是一辈子,所以不管是从前还是现在,你都是我独一无二的阳光。”
  • 我的小小鸹

    我的小小鸹

    既是那年少轻狂,也是那宛转悠扬,不仅纵然歌唱,还仿佛身在其旁。我的名字,不是我。我想去寻找,寻找遗去的真实,寻找稚嫩的诺言,寻找那个走失在时间里的你与我。
  • 从斗罗开始清除

    从斗罗开始清除

    纵横斗罗界,始终不懈。随心而动,写出自已的斗罗大陆。
  • 神御传

    神御传

    如果你魂穿到了修仙大陆,你会怎么做,是害怕和惊慌,还是一腔热血追求实力与长生。
  • 快穿:欲秦故纵丧尸成人计划

    快穿:欲秦故纵丧尸成人计划

    “在这个乱世之中,一个英勇无畏帅气无敌的系统拯救了身处危机迷途不返的可怜少女……”“duang--”一个空了的红酒瓶在它毫无准备的情况下砸在了它的头上,它嘟着嘴满眼泪光的回过头委屈的看向正在摇晃着一杯红酒周身充斥着高贵妖冶气息的女人“宿主大大,痛痛~”女人连一个眼角都没给它轻抿了一口红酒慵懒道“收起你的波浪号,再因卖萌而不务正业本王就在主世界给你差评。”“……”面对宿主大大强大的气场(威胁!这绝对是威胁!)它能说什么?【蹲墙角】看着挂着‘可怜兮兮’标签的系统,她的眸色凝重。自打她被这个自称系统的二缺弄到这个跟她变成丧尸前住的房子完全一样的房子里之后她就开始了紧凑的穿越生活,为的就是重新为人。