And now he thought he would
take a stroll through. He looked at the graves. They were neatly kept
and the pathways were free from weeds. There was a look of prosperity.
And as he sauntered along he read the names on the tombstones. Here were
three side by side; the captain, the first mate, and the second mate of
the barque Mary Baxter, who had all perished together in the typhoon of
1908. He remembered it well. There was a little group of two missionaries,
their wives and children, who had been massacred during the Boxer troubles.
Shocking thing that had been! Not that he took much stock in missionaries;
but, hang it all, one couldn‘t have these damned Chinese massacring
them. Then he came to a cross with a name on it he knew. Good chap, Edward
Mulock, but he couldn’t stand his liquor, drank himself to death,
poor devil, at twenty-five; the taipan had known a lot of them do that;
there were several more neat crosses with a man‘s name on them and
the age, twenty-five, twenty-six, or twenty-seven; it was always the same
story; they had come out to China; they had never seen so much money before,
they were good fellows and they wanted to drink with the rest: they couldn‘t
stand it, and there they were in the cemetery. You had to have a strong
head and a fine constitution to drink drink for drink on the China coast.
Of course it was very sad, but the taipan could hardly help a smile when
he thought how many of those young fellows he had drunk underground. And
there was a death that had been useful, a fellow in his own firm, senior
to him and a clever chap too: if that fellow had lived he might not have
been taipan now. Truly the ways of fate were inscrutable. Ah, and here
was little Mrs. Turner, Violet Turner, she had been a pretty little thing,
he had had quite an affair with her; he had been devilish cut up when
she died. He looked at her age on the tombstone. She‘d be no chicken
if she were alive now. And as he thought of all those dead people a sense
of satisfaction spread through him. He had beaten them all. They were
dead and he was alive, and by George he‘d scored them off. His eyes
collected in one picture all those crowded graves and he smiled scornfully.
He very nearly rubbed his hands.
"No one ever thought I was a fool" he muttered.
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