登陆注册
37832200000066

第66章 CHAPTER XI.(9)

Then, if Coventry had not loved her sincerely, and also been a man of the world, he would have lost his temper; and if he had lost his temper, he would have lost the lady, for she would have seized the first fair opportunity to quarrel. But no, he took her hand gently, and set himself to comfort her. He poured out his love to her, and promised her a life of wedded happiness. He drew so delightful a picture of their wedded life, and in a voice so winning, that she began to be consoled, and her tears ceased.

"I believe you love me," she murmured; "and I esteem you sincerely."

Mr. Coventry drew a family ring from his pocket. It was a sapphire of uncommon beauty.

"This was my mother's," said he. "Will you do me the honor to wear it, as a pledge?"

But the actual fetter startled her, I think. She started up, and said, "Oh, please take me home first! IT IS GOING TO SNOW."

Call her slippery, if you don't like her; call her unhappy and wavering, if you do like her.

Mr. Coventry smiled now at this attempt to put off the inevitable, and complied at once.

But, before they had gone a hundred yards, the snow did really fall, and so heavily that the air was darkened.

"We had better go back to the shed till it is over," said Mr. Coventry.

"Do you think so?" said Grace, doubtfully. "Well."

And they went back.

But the snow did not abate, and the air got darker. So, by-and-by, Grace suggested that Mr. Coventry should run down the hill, and send George up to her with an umbrella.

"What, and leave you alone?" said he.

"Well, then, we had better go together."

They started together.

By this time the whole ground was covered about three inches deep; not enough to impede their progress; but it had the unfortunate effect of effacing the distinct features of the ground; and, as the declining sun could no longer struggle successfully through the atmosphere, which was half air, half snow, they were almost in darkness, and soon lost their way. They kept slanting unconsciously to the left, till they got over one of the forks of the mountain and into a ravine: they managed to get out of that, and continued to descend; for the great thing they had to do was to reach the valley, no matter where.

But, after a long laborious, and even dangerous descent, they found themselves beginning to ascend. Another mountain or hill barred their progress. Then they knew they must be all wrong, and began to feel rather anxious. They wished they had stayed up on the hill.

They consulted together, and agreed to go on for the present; it might be only a small rise in the ground.

And so it proved. After a while they found themselves descending again.

But now the path was full of pitfalls, hidden by the snow and the darkness.

Mr. Coventry insisted on going first.

In this order they moved cautiously on, often stumbling.

Suddenly Mr. Coventry disappeared with a sudden plunge, and rolled down a ravine, with a loud cry.

Grace stood transfixed with terror.

Then she called to him.

There was no answer.

She called again.

A faint voice replied that he was not much hurt, and would try to get back to her.

This, however, was impossible, and all he could do was to scramble along the bottom of the ravine.

Grace kept on the high ground, and they called to each other every moment. They seemed to be a long way from each other; yet they were never sixty yards apart. At last the descent moderated, and Grace rejoined him.

Then they kept in the hollow for some time, but at last found another acclivity to mount: they toiled up it, laden with snow, yet perspiring profusely with the exertion of toiling uphill through heather clogged with heavy snow.

They reached the summit, and began to descend again. But now their hearts began to quake. Men had been lost on Cairnhope before to-day, and never found alive: and they were lost on Cairnhope; buried in the sinuosities of the mountain, and in a tremendous snowstorm.

They wandered and staggered, sick at heart; since each step might be for the worse.

They wandered and staggered, miserably; and the man began to sigh, and the woman to cry.

At last they were so exhausted, they sat down in despair: and, in a few minutes, they were a couple of snow-heaps.

Mr. Coventry was the first to see all the danger they ran by this course.

"For God's sake, let us go on!" he said; "if we once get benumbed, we are lost. We MUST keep moving, till help comes to us."

Then they staggered, and stumbled on again, till they both sank into a deep snow-drift.

They extricated themselves, but, oh, when they felt that deep cold snow all round them, it was a foretaste of the grave.

The sun had set, it was bitterly cold, and still the enormous flakes fell, and doubled the darkness of the night.

They staggered and stumbled on, not now with any hope of extricating themselves from the fatal mountain, but merely to keep the blood alive in their veins. And, when they were exhausted, they sat down, and soon were heaps of snow.

While they sat thus, side by side, thinking no more of love, or any other thing but this: should they ever see the sun rise, or sit by a fireside again? suddenly they heard a sound in the air behind them, and, in a moment, what seemed a pack of hounds in full cry passed close over their heads.

They uttered a loud cry.

"We are saved!" cried Grace. "Mr. Raby is hunting us with his dogs.

That was the echo."

Coventry groaned. "What scent would lie?" said he. "Those hounds were in the air; a hundred strong."

Neither spoke for a moment, and then it was Grace who broke the terrible silence.

"THE GABRIEL HOUNDS!"

"The Gabriel hounds; that run before calamity! Mr. Coventry, there's nothing to be done now, but to make our peace with God. For you are a dead man, and I'm a dead woman. My poor papa! poor Mr. Little!"

She kneeled down on the snow, and prayed patiently, and prepared to deliver up her innocent soul to Him who gave it.

Not so her companion. He writhed away from death. He groaned, he sighed, he cursed, he complained. What was Raby thinking of, to let them perish?

同类推荐
  • 通占大象历星经

    通占大象历星经

    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。
  • 白石道人诗说

    白石道人诗说

    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。
  • 技击余闻

    技击余闻

    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。
  • 明词综

    明词综

    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。
  • 佛说佛地经

    佛说佛地经

    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
  • 你见过仙女吗?会追你的那种

    你见过仙女吗?会追你的那种

    胆大少女VS王子本尊,撑死温言的肥胆她都想不到!她处处碾压的留学生江森竟然是帛莱国的24k如假包换小王子!温言小仙女表示,生活真是太刺激了!暑假返校,温言被教授钦点去做留学生江森的翻译特助,她利用中文优势,对十分不对盘的江森进行了360度全方位无死角碾压,在他面前耍足了威风。后来,温言误以为一直隐瞒身世的江森是私生子,脑补了靠政府救济成才的贫苦少年励志故事后,反省良久,决定化爱意为行动,变身小太阳,对他百般照顾。不料却很快被江森洗脑带进川剧变脸艺术及他本人的粉丝大军,开启了小跟班模式。终于有一天,温言收到来自帛莱国皇室的家书。温言:你你你……是帛莱国小王子?!室友统一拱手福身:恭喜王妃大大!
  • 真实监狱故事之相爱莫及

    真实监狱故事之相爱莫及

    超惊悚、超感动的真人真事来袭!看惯了玄幻穿越,来试试这一款屌丝在监狱中的真实逆袭和他不期而至的爱情与基情。猛一看,你会以为是官场小说;仔细看,原来是监狱故事;深入看,会发现动人的爱情;穿插着看,可以当幻想小说。但浏览到结尾时,也许见仁见智的复杂哲理会被顿悟出来。这到底是什么型的小说,由你来看。但绝对老少皆宜、男女通吃。本书由某监狱警倾情奉献,书中的绝大部分内容源自真人真事,向大家展示一个深刻立体且如假包换的现代监狱。看过之后,你才知道原来真相比你想象的要残忍。欢迎加入qq群:301816658,希望和大家一同交流。在不违反保密原则的情况下知无不言、言无不尽。感谢腾讯文学书评团提供书评支持!
  • 魂界王座

    魂界王座

    林海的魂界人生,从平凡到不凡,沧海桑田,斗转星移,他在魂界永生,最终点亮王座魂灯
  • 仙神奏

    仙神奏

    他,身世如迷,亦因此受尽屈辱折磨。灵仙峰,世人口中的神仙山,唯有征服方能继续梦想。两名俗界少年,历尽百般磨难终入传说之地,自此踏上搅动修界风云之路。试看他们如何震慑天下,撼动苍宇!
  • 无尽神衍

    无尽神衍

    一梦尽倾,落花香,一笑尽颜,一场空,浮生若梦,一场追逐,有何相恋?一场梦的追求,一个飘渺的世界,我用时间来证明。暮雨潇潇终于写了,倚楼蝼蚁终于不发狂啦
  • 哈利波特与亚希伯恩

    哈利波特与亚希伯恩

    一个幸运的男孩重生在哈利波特的世界这是他的故事,这是我们当年的记忆------------------已经完本了!
  • 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!
  • 药魔心智

    药魔心智

    家境富裕的医药学院的校花映雪,和男友魏浩同学等六人出海坐船游玩,一场突如其来的暴虐台风把他们带向了一座名叫“生死岛”的神奇岛屿上,进入了一个诡异的神秘王国,在阴恶毒药的威逼下,他们为求生而做出不得已的选择,从此,女友变岳母、朋友成仇敌、情侣变冤家……为生存,他们斗智斗勇、用尽心机、耗尽心智......一切情份从此断,生死也虚然,夜半独哭眠,珠泪断......
  • 破歧剑

    破歧剑

    一个大世界中有三十六重天,每一重天都有一位界主。大世界资源由界主实力强弱分配。本为三十三界的星河界面,因为界主战胜第六界主。直接从凡阶资源升级为仙阶,从此星河界迎来大修仙时代。我们的故事就从这里开始。
  • 我本人间一只狐

    我本人间一只狐

    我本千年一白狐,流落深山与世殊。惯看花开花又谢,春秋变换成人躯。灵性有忆须报恩,数载倏忽不留痕。偶见书生窗畔读,青灯昏昏风曳竹。自是徘徊不忍去,音容一遇便如故。应觉相思为君痴,一入情网又难悟。但着华服娇娇姿,从此誓将此身随。环佩交映花前语,风流吟唱月下诗。怎奈世事有离合,长亭别去杨柳折。清风摇落缕缕花,时时孤身望远陌。楚梦醒来暗失魂,懒画眉妆倚朱门。再待君回情已绝,惟有空枝听鹈鴂。我舞衣袂无人看,对影依依念前约。何曾梦断无人惜,应是秋回有雁翔。尘心漫着俗世误,人去亭台更凄凉。遥隔幽院佳人笑,闻此戚戚肝肠伤。清泪涟涟谁可怜,思心经过情未谙。一番来去成枉然。