Isle o' Dreams. Frederick Ferdinand Moore
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Frederick Ferdinand Moore
Isle o' Dreams
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066131746
Table of Contents
Robert Trask Arrives in Manila From Amoy
Captain Dinshaw Pulls a Long Bow
Captain Jarrow Goes Cruising in Strange Waters
Jarrow Does and Says Queer Things
Mr. Peth Is Particular About Where He Sleeps
Trask Has a Talk with Doc Bird
How the Schooner Arrived off the Island
Trask Undertakes a Private Investigation
Captain Jarrow Admits He Is Suspicious of Peth
Mr. Peth Does Most Amazing Things
What Happened to Doc and the Dinghy
What Jarrow Wanted and What He Got
ISLE O' DREAMS
ISLE O' DREAMS
CHAPTER I
Robert Trask Arrives in Manila From Amoy
As the tubby little China Coast steamer marched up Manila Bay, Trask stood under the bridge on the skimpy "promenade deck" and waited impatiently for the doctor's boat to come alongside. He was the only white passenger among a motley lot of Chinese merchants and half-castes of varied hues, and he was glad the passage was at an end.
He had made the trip with a Finnish skipper, disconcertingly cross-eyed, a Lascar mate who looked like a pirate and had a voice like a school-girl, a purser addicted to the piccolo late at night, and fellow-passengers who jabbered interminably about nothing at all in half a dozen languages. So Trask regarded the spires and red roofs of Manila with the hungry eyes of a man who has been separated from civilization and his own kind too many days to remember.
Before the steamer anchored, Trask saw the Taming passing out for Hong Kong, white moustaches of foam at her forefoot and her decks alive with men and women. She was as smart as a big liner.
But he looked away from her to the Luneta and the villa-like Bay View Hotel, white and stately, at the lip of the bay. That was his goal, for he had promised Marjorie Locke he would be in Manila the day before, and he was now a day late.
The customs boarding officer took him ashore with his bags and graciously allowed him to depart in a quilez, after holding his baggage for examination. Trask went whirling up Calle San Fernando, through Plaza Oriente, Calle Rosario, Plaza Moraga, over the Bridge of Spain and into shady Bazumbayan Drive, skirting the moat of the Walled City. It was a roundabout way but the quickest, for the cochero made his ponies travel at a good clip for a double fare.
The rig shot across the baking Luneta, and ere it had come to a full stop before the Bay View Trask was out and into the darkened hall of the tourist headquarters of the Philippine capital.
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