登陆注册
20004000000062

第62章 THE NINTH(2)

"Is your wife at home!"

"She is in Wales with her people.But the household is well trained.I can manage.""Go in a closed car from door to door.Wrap up like a mummy.

I wish the Committee room wasn't down those abominable House of Commons corridors...."They parted with an affectionate handshake.

Section 3

Death approved of Sir Richmond's determination to see the Committee through.Our universal creditor gave this particular debtor grace to the very last meeting.Then he brushed a gust of chilly rain across the face of Sir Richmond as he stood waiting for his car outside the strangers'

entrance to the House.For a couple of days Sir Richmond felt almost intolerably tired, but scarcely noted the changed timbre of the wheezy notes in his throat.He rose later each day and with ebbing vigour, jotted down notes and corrections upon the proofs of the Minority Report.He found it increasingly difficult to make decisions; he would correct and alter back and then repeat the correction, perhaps half a dozen times.On the evening of the second day his lungs became painful and his breathing difficult.His head ached and a sense of some great impending evil came upon him.His skin was suddenly a detestable garment to wear.He took his temperature with a little clinical thermometer he kept by him and found it was a hundred and one.He telephoned hastily for Dr.Martineau and without waiting for his arrival took a hot bath and got into bed.He was already thoroughly ill when the doctor arrived.

"Forgive my sending for you," he said."Not your line.Iknow....My wife's G.P.--an exasperating sort of ass.

Can't stand him.No one else."

He was lying on a narrow little bed with a hard pillow that the doctor replaced by one from Lady Hardy's room.He had twisted the bed-clothes into a hopeless muddle, the sheet was on the floor.

Sir Richmond's bedroom was a large apartment in which sleep seemed to have been an admitted necessity rather than a principal purpose.On one hand it opened into a business-like dressing and bath room, on the other into the day study.It bore witness to the nocturnal habits of a man who had long lived a life of irregular impulses to activity and dislocated hours and habits.There was a desk and reading lamp for night work near the fireplace, an electric kettle for making tea at night, a silver biscuit tin; all the apparatus for the lonely intent industry of the small hours.There was a bookcase of bluebooks, books of reference and suchlike material, and some files.Over the mantelpiece was an enlarged photograph of Lady Hardy and a plain office calendar.The desk was littered with the galley proofs of the Minority Report upon which Sir Richmond had been working up to the moment of his hasty retreat to bed.And lying among the proofs, as though it had been taken out and looked at quite recently was the photograph of a girl.For a moment Dr.Martineau's mind hung in doubt and then he knew it for the young American of Stonehenge.How that affair had ended he did not know.And now it was not his business to know.

These various observations printed themselves on Dr.

Martineau's mind after his first cursory examination of his patient and while he cast about for anything that would give this large industrious apartment a little more of the restfulness and comfort of a sick room."I must get in a night nurse at once," he said."We must find a small table somewhere to put near the bed.

"I am afraid you are very ill," he said, returning to the bedside."This is not, as you say, my sort of work.Will you let me call in another man, a man we can trust thoroughly, to consult?""I'm in your hands, said Sir Richmond.I want to pull through.""He will know better where to get the right sort of nurse for the case--and everything."The second doctor presently came, with the right sort of nurse hard on his heels.Sir Richmond submitted almost silently to his expert handling and was sounded and looked to and listened at.

"H'm," said the second doctor, and then encouragingly to Sir Richmond: "We've got to take care of you.

"There's a lot about this I don't like," said the second doctor and drew Dr.Martineau by the arm towards the study.

For a moment or so Sir Richmond listened to the low murmur of their voices, but he did not feel very deeply interested in what they were saying.He began to think what a decent chap Dr.Martineau was, how helpful and fine and forgiving his professional training had made him, how completely he had ignored the smothered incivilities of their parting at Salisbury.All men ought to have some such training, Not a bad idea to put every boy and girl through a year or so of hospital service....Sir Richmond must have dozed, for his next perception was of Dr.Martineau standing over him and saying "I am afraid, my dear Hardy, that you are very ill indeed.Much more so than I thought you were at first."Sir Richmond's raised eyebrows conveyed that he accepted this fact.

"I think Lady Hardy ought to be sent for."Sir Richmond shook his head with unexpected vigour.

"Don't want her about," he said, and after a pause, "Don't want anybody about.""But if anything happens-?"

"Send then."

An expression of obstinate calm overspread Sir Richmond's face.He seemed to regard the matter as settled.He closed his eyes.

For a time Dr.Martineau desisted.He went to the window and turned to look again at the impassive figure on the bed.Did Sir Richmond fully understand? He made a step towards his patient and hesitated.Then he brought a chair and sat down at the bedside.

Sir Richmond opened his eyes and regarded him with a slight frown.

"A case of pneumonia," said the doctor, "after great exertion and fatigue, may take very rapid and unexpected turns."Sir Richmond, cheek on pillow, seemed to assent.

同类推荐
  • He Fell In Love With His Wife

    He Fell In Love With His Wife

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 针经指南

    针经指南

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 济公诗词

    济公诗词

    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。
  • Peg Woffington

    Peg Woffington

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 除一切疾病陀罗尼经

    除一切疾病陀罗尼经

    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
  • 遇上幸福好孕

    遇上幸福好孕

    “司玹熙,你为什么不接受我?”“因为我不够好。”“你的感受我都能感受到,你太渴望被人爱了,既然不知道怎么去爱别人,就不要把自己封闭起来,接受别人对你的关爱,爱与被爱是双向的,终有一天,你会明白爱是什么样子的。”
  • 绯色缭绕

    绯色缭绕

    她为情跳楼,不想竟穿越到了古代。她想今生一定不会再为情所困,桃花下,我们曾许诺,一世安好……
  • 大汉国母—吕雉传

    大汉国母—吕雉传

    本书将还原吕雉作为一个女人怎样别无选择的需要用权力来保护自己和在追逐权力的路上所施展的高于常人的手腕,将原本遥远模糊的历史人物用鲜活麻辣的语言展现出来。
  • 携你之手伴你终老

    携你之手伴你终老

    她是如梅般清傲的女子,他是如雪般圣洁的男子她心疼他,他怜惜她,相处中情愫暗生可他有他的寻找,她有她的苦等最终能否画一幅腊雪红梅
  • 春风一暖,我们在一起

    春风一暖,我们在一起

    那一年,她在樱花下撞见了他,一天被砸了三次头,全都是因为他,后来,他竟是她的同桌,再后来,他因为无法在看到别人接近她而对她发脾气,而她又不懂,他只能独自郁闷,再在后来,她,不得已到了他的家借住,直到那一天,一个温柔的男生捧着鲜花走向她时,他再也无法忍住了,霸道地向她表白了,她站在他们初见的樱花树下,羞涩的笑了,笑容干净,纯洁,愿所有的女孩都能遇到一个真心对自己好的他。。
  • 天道神位

    天道神位

    两个不同的世界,两个相同的心愿。一个坚韧不拔但出生卑微,在这个物欲横流的时代难展拳脚。一个天赋异禀,却被雪藏命不久矣。当一颗流星划过,他们的命运轨迹发生了那么一瞬间的交集。他能否继承遗志,创造一个属于他的时代?一切尽在天道神位!
  • 真人lol

    真人lol

    德玛西亚、诺克萨斯、艾欧尼亚、弗雷尔卓德。。。英雄联盟各大阵营齐聚现实世界,光辉女郎是个美艳冷酷女总裁龙血武姬是个热辣凶残暴力女皮城女警成了最美女特工好运姐是个风骚成熟美少妇。。。
  • 留守

    留守

    本书是关注现实、关注农村留守少年生存状态的长篇小说。思念、孤独、早恋、自杀、谋杀、性骚扰等等现实问题,困扰着留守在山村的孩子与大人们,作品通过对山乡留守下来的这一弱势群体的生活状况的描述,提出了一个值得关注的严肃问题,很具社会意义。
  • 学渣超进化

    学渣超进化

    被特种兵王的父亲狂虐,被赛车女皇的母亲狂练,少年终成超级奇葩,热血狂放,美女缭绕,悄然开启快意激扬的都市生活!
  • 神葫

    神葫

    在弱肉强食的异世,小明体验到了那些尔虞我诈,在他选择走上成神的道路,魔兽的凶残、上层社会的腐败无能、敌人的花样百出。他抱着自己的命器葫芦,带着虫皇的后裔,开始了生死的经历,寻找回到神州大地之路。