登陆注册
37648500000067

第67章 THE EPISODE OF THE TELLTALE THUMB(13)

"It was many days before I could see how anything short of a miracle could enable me to escape.I tried to calmly reason it all out, and every time came to the same horrible conclusion, viz.: I must rot there unless help came to me from without.This seemed impossible, and all the horrors of a lingering death stared me in the face.

Every two or three days one of the jailers would come to the slit in the masonry and leave there a dish of water and a few crusts of bread.I tried on one occasion to speak with him, but he only laughed in my face and turned away.Finally I hit upon a plan which seemed to offer the only possible means of escape.In my college days I was well acquainted with M.Charcot, and even assisted in some of his earlier hypnotic experiments.The subject interested me, and I followed it closely till I became something of an adept myself.There were in those days but few people I could not mesmerise, provided sufficient opportunity were allowed me for hypnotic suggestion.I determined to see if any of this old power still remained with me, and, if so, to strive to render my jailer subservient to my will.But how should I keep him within ear-shot long enough to work upon him? Clearly all appeals to pity were useless.I must excite his greed, nothing else would reach him.

This was not an easy thing to do without a sou in my possession, yet I did it.When I heard his step I crawled to the opening in the wall and mumbled in a crazy sort of a way about a hidden treasure.At the word 'treasure' I saw him pause and listen, but I pretended not to be aware of his presence and rambled on, in a loose, disjointed fashion, about piracies committed by me and the great amount of booty I had secreted.My plan worked perfectly.

The jailer came to the aperture in the wall and called me to him.

Muttering incoherently, I obeyed.He asked me what offence brought me there, and I, with a good deal of intentional misunderstanding, told him I was a pirate and a smuggler.He asked me where the treasure I had been talking about was hidden.My reply, - Iremember the exact words in which I couched it, - made him mine completely.I said: 'We buried it near Fez - Treasure? I don't know anything about any treasure.'

"To all the many questions he then asked me I returned only incoherent replies, but I was careful to be again raving about buried riches upon the next visit.In this way I kept him by me long enough to influence him, and in less than a month he was completely subject to my will.I tested my power over him in divers ways.Any delicacy I wished I compelled him to bring me.In this way I was enabled to regain a portion of my lost strength.When Iconcluded the time had come for me to make good my escape, I caused him to come to my cell at midnight and remove the bricks from the slit while I put on the disguise he had brought me.Once out of my stone tomb we carefully walled it up again and then departed to find my imaginary hidden treasure.We made our way without trouble to Algiers, for my companion had money, and sailed thence via Gibraltar for England.During the trip my companion jumped overboard and was drowned in the Bay of Biscay.Thus I was completely freed from Ceuta and its terrible pest-hole.

"From England I sailed to New York, reaching America penniless and in ill health.Things not going to my liking in New York, I came to Boston and took up my old callings of gambler and detective.It was at this time that I saw John Darrow's curious notice in the newspaper, offering, in the event of his murder, a most liberal reward to anyone who would bring the assassin to justice.

"Mon Dieu! How I needed money.I would have bartered my soul for a tithe of that amount.It was the old, old story, only new in Eden.

Ah! but how I loved her! She must have money, money, always money!

That was ever her cry.When I could not supply it she sought it of others, and this drove me mad.If, I said to myself, I could only get this reward! This was something really worth working for, and if I could but get it, she should be mine only.I at once set to work upon the problem.

"It was not an easy thing to solve.I might be able to hire a man to do the deed for me, but he would hardly be willing to hang for it without disclosing my part in the transaction.It was at this time that I first met M.Latour on Decatur Street.He at once impressed me as being just the man I wanted, and I began to gradually subdue his will.In this circumstances greatly aided me.When Ifound him he was in very poor health and without any means of sustenance.His daughter was able to earn a little, but not nearly enough to keep the wolf from the door.Add to this that he had a cancer, which several physicians had assured him would prove fatal within a year, that he was afflicted with an almost insane fear that his daughter would come to want after his death, and you have before you the conditions which determined my course.My first thought was to influence him to do the deed himself, but, recalling the researches of M.Charcot in these matters, I came to the conclusion that such a course would be almost certain to lead to detection, since a hypnotic subject can only be depended upon so long as the conditions under which he acts are precisely those which have been suggested to him.Any unforeseen variations in these conditions and he fails to act, exposes everything, and the whole carefully planned structure falls to the ground.When, therefore, the time came which I had set for the deed, I found it possible to drug M.

Latour, abduct him from his home, and to keep him confined and unconscious until I had killed Mr.Darrow in a manner I will describe in due course.As soon as I had committed the murder and established what I fondly believed would be a perfect alibi in my attendance at the examination, I secretly conveyed the still unconscious M.Latour to his rooms and awaited his return to consciousness.I then asked him how he came in such a state and what he was doing in Dorchester.

同类推荐
  • New Thought Pastels

    New Thought Pastels

    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。
  • 百花历

    百花历

    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。
  • 子不语

    子不语

    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。
  • 后三国石珠演义

    后三国石珠演义

    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。
  • 张聿青医案

    张聿青医案

    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
  • 贵人

    贵人

    五星级酒店是八方神圣、三教九流的聚集之地,浓缩了一个社会的明潮与暗流。林启东,一个普通的酒店人,从最平凡的岗位起步,经历十几年奋斗,建立了自己的酒店帝国。无数的贵人改变了他的命运,无数的职场、商场争斗磨炼了他的意志,无数的情感纠葛、爱恨情仇丰富了他的人生。
  • 酒店轶事

    酒店轶事

    这是我换了新工作第一次单独出差,也是第一次来鹿城这个边陲小镇。我叫徐秋瞑,是一名专业设备的销售代表。入职才三个月,刚刚熟悉了工作流程,就被派到这个偏远的小县城出差。我知道这次销售的成败,将直接关系到我是否能转正,当然也决定着我的去留。
  • 异界战皇

    异界战皇

    地球一个普通道士,渡劫穿越到异界,开启一个传奇之旅,美女,萌宠,搞笑,热血等一网打尽。
  • 天道圣皇

    天道圣皇

    他的一切都是个谜,他亲眼目睹了创造人类的整个过程,但令他奇怪的是,人类虽然可以修炼,但终会死去,但是他却过了几千年样貌不变,寻找记忆的路上一次又一次的觉醒逆天能力,这让他踏上了一条巅峰之路!
  • 龙凤呈祥:妈咪老师要爬墙

    龙凤呈祥:妈咪老师要爬墙

    风楚楚长这么大,第一次被一个六岁的孩子碰瓷她耍流氓?本以为是个误会,不想招惹上了霸道的秦三爷。初见时,他说,“听说你偷看我儿子上厕所?”“三爷,这是个误会......”“没有误会,如果你想借此机会引起我的注意......”风楚楚笑容逐渐僵硬,“三爷,我......”没有这种想法,您哪来的自信?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 秦时明月之东君魅影

    秦时明月之东君魅影

    东皇太一的亲妹妹,因为与哥哥东皇太一目标相反而离家出走,从而开启的一系列故事【本文基本按照剧情走,但后来会渐渐离开剧情,早就一本特别的同人,本人学生党,更文时间不定,请各位谅解哈~】
  • 峥倾

    峥倾

    岁月多情,自盘古开天地之后,仙凡之间似乎差距越来越大。人世间多了罪恶,贪婪,欲望,自视清高的散仙陆峥无意间碰到了在渡天劫的岚倾会发生什么?他冷傲中带着一点任性,她活泼中有着一丝稳重,世间繁花三千中凋零?还是心中三千繁花零落?是孽缘?还是良缘?尚未可知……
  • 小兔彼得经典全集

    小兔彼得经典全集

    本书是英国著名儿童读物作家。收录了作者全部全部作品。共23篇童话故事。每个故事都配有精美插图,插图中的小动物们造型非常写实,惹人喜爱。
  • 妃手遮天:指染浮华

    妃手遮天:指染浮华

    一朝穿越,她,竟穿越到了小胳膊小腿、没胸没屁股的搓衣板身上,开始嚎啕大哭!再次睁眼,某冷峻美男闯入视线:住嘴,哭什么哭~!某女气急,闪电般出腿朝着某男下体踢去,顿时,时间静止,乌鸦飞过。囧!失策失策,腿短没踢到!某男黑了脸:“来人,给本少拖出去,喂狗。”情节虚构,请勿模仿!
  • 太佩珏

    太佩珏

    所谓江湖,就是海阔天空的生活!在陌生的天地里,可以长啸当歌,可以放浪行迹,可以一日看遍八百里山河,也可以随时邂逅不同的人,缘起无数不可预测的故事!那些眷恋的远方与自由,那些难以泯灭的江湖梦,那些千里奔波,沥血断剑,不顾生死,都只为相约一见,只为一起看看那最高处绝美之景……