登陆注册
20037000000042

第42章 II(3)

Richmond had struck us both as the best centre of operations in search of the suburban retreat which Raffles wanted, and by road, in a well-appointed, well-selected hansom, was certainly the most agreeable way of getting there. In a week or ten days Raffles was to write to me at the Richmond post-office, but for at least a week I should be "on my own." It was not an unpleasant sensation as I leant back in the comfortable hansom, and rather to one side, in order to have a good look at myself in the bevelled mirror that is almost as great an improvement in these vehicles as the rubber tires. Really I was not an ill-looking youth, if one may call one's self such at the age of thirty. I could lay no claim either to the striking cast of countenance or to the peculiar charm of expression which made the face of Raffles like no other in the world. But this very distinction was in itself a danger, for its impression was indelible, whereas I might still have been mistaken for a hundred other young fellows at large in London. Incredible as it may appear to the moralists, I had sustained no external hallmark by my term of imprisonment, and I am vain enough to believe that the evil which I did had not a separate existence in my face. This afternoon, indeed, I was struck by the purity of my fresh complexion, and rather depressed by the general innocence of the visage which peered into mine from the little mirror. My straw-colored moustache, grown in the flat after a protracted holiday, again preserved the most disappointing dimensions, and was still invisible in certain lights without wax. So far from discerning the desperate criminal who has "done time" once, and deserved it over and over again, the superior but superficial observer might have imagined that he detected a certain element of folly in my face.

At all events it was not the face to shut the doors of a first-class hotel against me, without accidental evidence of a more explicit kind, and it was with no little satisfaction that I directed the man to drive to the Star and Garter. I also told him to go through Richmond Park, though he warned me that it would add considerably to the distance and his fare. It was autumn, and it struck me that the tints would be fine. And I had learnt from Raffles to appreciate such things, even amid the excitement of an audacious enterprise.

If I dwell upon my appreciation of this occasion it is because, like most pleasures, it was exceedingly short-lived. I was very comfortable at the Star and Garter, which was so empty that I had a room worthy of a prince, where I could enjoy the finest of all views (in patriotic opinion) every morning while I shaved. I walked many miles through the noble park, over the commons of Ham and Wimbledon, and one day as far as that of Esher, where I was forcibly reminded of a service we once rendered to a distinguished resident in this delightful locality. But it was on Ham Common, one of the places which Raffles had mentioned as specially desirable, that I actually found an almost ideal retreat. This was a cottage where I heard, on inquiry, that rooms were to be let in the summer. The landlady, a motherly body, of visible excellence, was surprised indeed at receiving an application for the winter months; but I have generally found that the title of "author," claimed with an air, explains every little innocent irregularity of conduct or appearance, and even requires something of the kind to carry conviction to the lay intelligence. The present case was one in point, and when I said that I could only write in a room facing north, on mutton chops and milk, with a cold ham in the wardrobe in case of nocturnal inspiration, to which I was liable, my literary character was established beyond dispute. I secured the rooms, paid a month's rent in advance at my own request, and moped in them dreadfully until the week was up and Raffles due any day. I explained that the inspiration would not come, and asked abruptly if the mutton was New Zealand.

Thrice had I made fruitless inquiries at the Richmond post-office; but on the tenth day I was in and out almost every hour. Not a word was there for me up to th last post at night.

Home I trudged to Ham with horrible forebodings, and back again to Richmond after breakfast next morning. Still there was nothing. I could bear it no more. At ten minutes to eleven I was climbing the station stairs at Earl's Court.

It was a wretched morning there, a weeping mist shrouding the long, straight street, and clinging to one's face in clammy caresses. I felt how much better it was down at Ham, as I turned into our side street, and saw the flats looming like mountains, the chimney-pots hidden in the mist. At our entrance stood a nebulous conveyance, that I took at first for a tradesman's van; to my horror it proved to be a hearse; and all at once the white breath ceased upon my lips.

I had looked up at our windows and the blinds were down!

I rushed within. The doctor's door stood open. I neither knocked nor rang, but found him in his consulting-room with red eyes and a blotchy face. Otherwise he was in solemn black from head to heel.

"Who is dead?" I burst out. "Who is dead?"

The red eyes looked redder than ever as Dr. Theobald opened them at the unwarrantable sight of me; and he was terribly slow in answering. But in the end he did answer, and did not kick me out as he evidently had a mind.

"Mr. Maturin," he said, and sighed like a beaten man.

I said nothing. It was no surprise to me. I had known it all these minutes. Nay, I had dreaded this from the first, had divined it at the last, though to the last also I had refused to entertain my own conviction. Raffles dead! A real invalid after all! Raffles dead, and on the point of burial!

"What did he die of?" I asked, unconsciously drawing on that fund of grim self-control which the weakest of us seem to hold in reserve for real calamity.

"Typhoid," he answered. "Kensington is full of it."

"He was sickening for it when I left, and you knew it, and could get rid of me then!"

同类推荐
  • 淡水厅志

    淡水厅志

    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。
  • 金华冲碧丹经秘旨

    金华冲碧丹经秘旨

    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。
  • 益部方物略记

    益部方物略记

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • MARIE

    MARIE

    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。
  • 太极拳散手秘诀

    太极拳散手秘诀

    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。
热门推荐
  • 元游记

    元游记

    天有九界,法有九重;万千道法,只争巅峰;山村少年,偶得宝珠;为情为义,披荆斩棘;上穷碧落,下赴黄泉;笑傲九界,众神之巅。-------------------元游记书友群:432208575
  • 大唐二小姐武则天封天路

    大唐二小姐武则天封天路

    她,一个婢女,走向人生巅峰,寰宇世界,踏遍云端,登峰造极,肩负起大唐帝国的使命,征服日本,巡游西欧世界,大唐帝国的最强宫廷外交政策……当年扬名已立她,她已成仙……
  • 妖怪实录影

    妖怪实录影

    为了追溯自己的过去,少年毅然选择激发自己的血脉。踏上寻找自己身世的旅途,驱妖师的血脉,妖怪的鬼影,一切的一切的一切,是你的救赎,还是我的审判?驱妖之后,我的泪,为谁流?
  • 商务电话沟通的100个关键细节

    商务电话沟通的100个关键细节

    别告诉我你懂得商务电话沟通技巧。100个电话商务沟通的关键细节帮你成功开启商务工作中的宝藏。还在办公室里拿着电话踌躇不安吗?还在为一份成功的订单绞尽脑汁吗?赶紧阅读本书吧,拿起电话,财源滚滚而来。
  • 美味证道

    美味证道

    大道三千,合道者寥寥无几。是谓大道门前是祭场。以村姑之身艰难修行,斩却虚妄证见真我,在天才遍布的坤元大世界成就金丹元神,四劫五衰,以美味入道,以真味合道——这就是楚岚之道!
  • 炫舞小说:家有二货欢乐多

    炫舞小说:家有二货欢乐多

    炫舞真实小说,作者是平民,没有钱,没有高超的技术,故事里的玩伴们也是一般般的游戏爱好者,所以,本小说没有高大上,请各位看官三思,入坑请勿喷!
  • .阴阳系统.

    .阴阳系统.

    阴阳系统隐藏任务,只有用冥币才可以购买物品的道具商城,血脉,异能,符咒,高科技……
  • 有间咖啡店

    有间咖啡店

    开间咖啡店,见识各类人士。运动冠军?影帝?歌神?首富?没错,都是我造就的。原因?因为有缘。这是他们的愿望,我只是帮他们实现罢了。**********************“你好,我是有间咖啡店的老板!你和我有缘,我可以实现你的愿望。”潘逸又开始忽悠人了。ps:书友群548555929
  • 沉思录活学活用

    沉思录活学活用

    死亡是生命的另一面,就像一枚硬币的另一面。除非你接受死亡,否则你将保持的只是一半生命的意义,你将保持偏颇。当你同时也接受死亡,你才会变得平衡,这时候你才掌握了生命的完整意义,一切都被接受了——白天和晚上,夏天和冬天,光和黑暗,全部都被接受。当两者都被接受,当生命两极都被接受,你才能获得平衡和镇静。生命是很美的,而死亡也跟生命一样美;生命有它本身的祝福,死亡也应该得到祝福。
  • 世界经典探案故事全集:扑朔迷离的故事

    世界经典探案故事全集:扑朔迷离的故事

    我们编辑的这套《世界经典探案故事全集》包括《侦探出动的故事》、《高超推理的故事》、《蛛丝马迹的故事》、《扑朔迷离的故事》、《缉捕追踪的故事》、《原形毕露的故事》、《斗智斗勇的故事》、《智破奇案的故事》、《真相大白的故事》和《插翅难逃的故事》等10册,这些作品汇集了古今中外著名的疑案、迷案、奇案、悬案、冤案等近百篇,其故事情节惊险曲折,探案英雄大智大勇,阅读这些侦破故事,不仅可以启迪智慧、增强思维、了解社会、增长知识,还可以学到自我保卫、推理破案的常识,防范日常生活的不测。