登陆注册
34907700000030

第30章

The moon sailed high and almost full above the clouds; these were dispersing as the night wore on, and such as remained were of a beautiful soft tint between white and gray. The sky was too light for stars, and beneath it the open country stretched so clear and far that it was as though one looked out at noonday through slate-colored glass. Down the dewy slope below my window a few calves fed with toothless mouthings; the beck was very audible, the oak-trees less so; but for these peaceful sounds the stillness and the solitude were equally intense.

I may have sat there like a mouse for half an hour. The reason was that I had become mercifully engrossed in one of the subsidiary problems: whether it would be better to drop from the window or to trust to the creaking stairs. Would the creaking be much worse than the thud, and the difference worth the risk of a sprained ankle?

Well worth it, I at length decided; the risk was nothing; my window was scarce a dozen feet from the ground. How easily it could be done, how quickly, how safely in this deep, stillness and bright moonlight! I would fall so lightly on my stocking soles; a single soft, dull thud; then away under the moon without fear or risk of a false step; away over the stone walls to the main road, and so to the nearest police-station with my tale; and before sunrise the villains would be taken in their beds, and my darling would be safe!

I sprang up softly. Why not do it now? Was I bound to keep my rash, blind promise? Was it possible these murderers would murder her? I struck a match on my trousers, I lit a candle, I read her letter carefully again, and again it maddened and distracted me.

I struck my hands together. I paced the room wildly. Caution deserted me, and I made noise enough to wake the very mute; lost to every consideration but that of the terrifying day before me, the day of silence and of inactivity, that I must live through with an unsuspecting face, a cool head, a civil tongue! The prospect appalled me as nothing else could or did; nay, the sudden noise upon the stairs, the knock at my door, and the sense that I had betrayed myself already even now all was over - these came as a relief after the haunting terror which they interrupted.

I flung the door opcn, and there stood Mrs. Braithwaite, as fully dressed as myself.

"You'll not be very well sir?"

No, I'm not."

"What's t' matter wi' you?"

This second question was rude and fierce with suspicion: the real woman rang out in it, yet its effect on me was astonishng: once again was I inspired to turn my slip into a move.

"Matter?" I cried. "Can't you see what's the matter; couldn't you see when I came in? Drink's the matter! I came in drunk, and now I'm mad. I can't stand it; I'm not in a fit state. Do you know nothng of me? Have they told you nothing? I'm the only man that was saved from the Lady Jermyn, the ship that was burned to the water's edge with every soul but me. My nerves are in little ends.

I came down here for peace and quiet and sleep. Do you bow that I have hardly slept for two months? And now I shall never sleep again! O my God I shall die for want of it! The wine has done it.

I never should have touched a drop. I can't stand it; I can't sleep after it; I shall kill myself if I get no sleep. Do you hear, you woman? I shall kill myself in your house if I don't get to sleep!"I saw her shrink, virago as she was. I waved my arms, I shrieked in her face. It was not all acting. Heaven knows how true it was about the sleep. I was slowly dying of insomnia. I was a nervous wreck. She must have heard it. Now she saw it for herself.

No; it was by no means all acting. Intending only to lie, I found myself telling little but the strictest truth, and longing for sleep as passionately as though I had nothing to keep me awake. And yet, while my heart cried aloud in spite of me, and my nerves relieved themselves in this unpremeditated ebullition, I was all the time watching its effect as closely as though no word of it had been sincere.

Mrs. Braithwaite seemed frightened; not at all pitiful; and as Icalmed down she recovered her courage and became insolent. I had spoilt her night. She had not been told she was to take in a raving lunatic. She would speak to Squire Rattray in the morning.

"Morning?" I yelled after her as she went. "Send your husband to the nearest chemist as soon as it's dawn; send him for chloral, chloroform, morphia, anything they've got and as much of it as they'll let him have. I'll give you five pounds if you get me what'll send me to sleep all to-morrow - and to-morrow night!"Never, I feel sure, were truth and falsehood more craftily interwoven; yet I had thought of none of it until the woman was at my door, while of much I had not thought at all. It had rushed from my heart and from my lips. And no sooner was I alone than Iburst into hysterical tears, only to stop and compliment myself because they sounded genuine - as though they were not! Towards morning I took to my bed in a burning fever, and lay there, now congratulating myself upon it, because when night came they would all think me so secure; and now weeping because the night might find me dying or dead. So I tossed, with her note clasped in my hand underneath the sheets; and beneath my very body that stout weapon that I had bought in town. I might not have to use it, but I was fatalist enough to fancy that I should. In the meantime it helped me to lie still, my thoughts fixed on the night, and the day made easy for me after all.

If only I could sleep!

About nine o'clock Jane Braithwaite paid me a surly visit; in half an hour she was back with tea and toast and an altered mien. She not only lit my fire, but treated me the while to her original tone of almost fervent civility and respect and determination. Her vagaries soon ceased to puzzle me: the psychology of Jane Braithwaite was not recondite. In the night it had dawned upon her that Rattray had found me harmless and was done with me, therefore there was no need for her to put herself out any further on my account. In the morning, finding me really ill, she had gone to the hall in alarm;her subsequent attentions were an act of obedience; and in their midst came Rattray himself to my bedside.

同类推荐
  • 玄中记

    玄中记

    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。
  • 洞天清录

    洞天清录

    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。
  • 归有光集

    归有光集

    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。
  • 汉天师世家

    汉天师世家

    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。
  • The Red Cross Girl

    The Red Cross Girl

    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
  • 桃之夭夭灼灼祁华

    桃之夭夭灼灼祁华

    第一世,尝遍酸楚,受尽离别苦。第二世,享尽繁华,受尽锥心痛。第三世,轮回归来,伊人如梦。这一世,我定护你一世安康,鬓角无霜。第......世那一年,桃林树下、流水溪畔,花间醉、寒烟翠,桃夭夭看着那少年郎一袭锦绣青色华服,一头墨色长发披散在肩头,正矗立在林中,陌上人如玉,公子世无双。从此被惊艳了岁月,遗误了终生。桃夭夭:我命由我不由天。天说:你命不由我,由司马祁华(男主)男女主在粉饰太平下波诡云谲的暗潮中相爱相杀。食用指南:1、女主前期很精分,其实是背了男主(zuozhe)的锅。2、作者是手残党,又忙又懒,养肥在看。3、纯架空,历史什么的不要太关注。4、只是背了言情的外壳,但内里稍带烧脑剧情。
  • 吟风而散

    吟风而散

    那些岁月里的文字清晰扑朔在眼前,我写下的时候每支笔都知道了你的名字。
  • 佣兵太子妃

    佣兵太子妃

    她是二十一世纪佣兵之王,黑道最有名的神医,却被自己最信任的手下和最爱的人害死。她是天乾王朝镇南王唯一的女儿,深受家人宠爱,纨绔不化,却被未婚夫怂恿当街殴打他国使者,一纸圣旨杖行而亡。再睁眼,她已不再是她而是来自二十一世纪的佣兵之王,看她如何闪瞎众人的眼睛,玩转异世。可是这个腹黑的男人是谁,为何缠着她还总是对她毛手毛脚,虽然他长得很帅,但她不是花痴啊!他是一国太子,温润如玉,武道修为无人能及,却被太医诊出身患绝症活不过二十岁,他本不惧生死,却害怕他离开了她会伤心难过。看她和他如何强强联合,创建出一片新的天地。
  • 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!
  • 冰原之歌

    冰原之歌

    在冰原上,永恒的是千古的寒风与燃烧不尽的火炬……蒸汽机械与神秘力量相遇后又会迸发出怎样的火花呢?古神的低语响起在一座钢铁浇筑的城市,那些隐藏的在市井的旧日支配者已经准备好了戒律,对着这一块冰封的土地进行神礼。你听,有一曲葬歌,在这里。
  • 史上最强大魔神

    史上最强大魔神

    在离地球不知道有多少个亿万里之外,有一个奇幻般的世界,在这里、流传着这么一句话;“神……无所不能,”
  • 俗世万日游

    俗世万日游

    九天星辰之上,曾有一位大君。传闻,其体大如鲲鹏,可御风而上数万里,呼吸之间,可至九霄云外。大君生性暴虐,凶残至极,嗜血如魔,比那蛮荒之地的凶兽,有过之而无不及。忽有一日,大君寻了死,自此世间多了个叫肖正齐的人……
  • 锦瑟年华岁月不居

    锦瑟年华岁月不居

    那年,做过愚蠢的事。那年,抹不去的回忆。
  • 飞星传恨(少年游系列)

    飞星传恨(少年游系列)

    他是忽然出现的人,他要报复燕洲。当他看着燕洲的兵将,一一在他面前倒下去之时,却幡然醒悟,他是否要背叛自己的国家?而面对这个不顾一切地爱他的女子,他又要如何交代自己的意图……
  • 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!