登陆注册
20075100000125

第125章 CHAPTER XL. NEMESIS AT LAST.(6)

I could see the drift of his story plainly enough. His object, under the thin disguise of the Italian romance, was to meet my unanswerable objection to suspecting Mrs. Beauly's maid--the objection that the woman had no motive for committing herself to an act of murder. If he could practically contradict this, by discovering a motive which I should be obliged to admit, his end would be gained. Those inquiries which I had pledged myself to pursue--those inquiries which might, at any moment, take a turn that directly concerned him--would, in that case, be successfully diverted from the right to the wrong person. The innocent maid would set my strictest scrutiny at defiance; and Dexter would be safely shielded behind her.

I determined to give him time. Not a word passed my lips.

The minutes followed each other. I waited in the deepest anxiety.

It was a trying and a critical moment. If he succeeded in inventing a probable motive, and in shaping it neatly to suit the purpose of his story, he would prove, by that act alone, that there were reserves of mental power still left in him which the practiced eye of the Scotch doctor had failed to see. But the question was--would he do it?

He did it! Not in a new way; not in a convincing way; not without a painfully evident effort. Still, well done or ill done, he found a motive for the maid.

"Cunegonda," he resumed, "takes from its place of concealment in her bosom a written paper, and unfolds it. 'Look at this,' she says. Damoride looks at the paper, and sinks again at her mistress's feet in a paroxysm of horror and despair. Cunegonda is in possession of a shameful secret in the maid's past life.

Cunegonda can say to her, 'Choose your alternative. Either submit to an exposure which disgraces you and--disgraces your parents forever--or make up your mind to obey Me.' Damoride might submit to the disgrace if it only affected herself. But her parents are honest people; she cannot disgrace her parents. She is driven to her last refuge--there is no hope of melting the hard heart of Cunegonda. Her only resource is to raise difficulties; she tries to show that there are obstacles between her and the crime.

'Madam! madam!' she cries; 'how can I do it, when the nurse is there to see me?' Cunegonda answers, 'Sometimes the nurse sleeps;sometimes the nurse is away.' Damoride still persists. 'Madam! madam! the door is kept locked, and the nurse has got the key.'"The key! I instantly thought of the missing key at Gleninch. Had he thought of it too? He certainly checked himself as the word escaped him. I resolved to make the signal. I rested my elbow on the arm of my chair, and played with my earring. Benjamin took out his pencil and arranged his note-book so that Ariel could not see what he was about if she happened to look his way.

We waited until it pleased Miserrimus Dexter to proceed. The interval was a long one. His hand went up again to his forehead.

A duller and duller look was palpably stealing over his eyes.

When he did speak, it was not to go on with the narrative, but to put a question.

"Where did I leave off?" he asked.

My hopes sank again as rapidly as they had risen. I managed to answer him, however, without showing any change in my,manner.

"You left off," I said, "where Damoride was speaking to Cunegonda--""Yes, yes!" he interposed. "And what did she say?""She said, 'The door is kept locked, and the nurse has got the key.'"He instantly leaned forward in his chair.

"No!" he answered, vehemently. "You're wrong. 'Key?' Nonsense! Inever said 'Key.'"

"I thought you did, Mr. Dexter."

"I never did! I said something else, and you have forgotten it."I refrained from disputing with him, in fear of what might follow. We waited again. Benjamin, sullenly submitting to my caprices, had taken down the questions and answers that had passed between Dexter and myself. He still mechanically kept his page open, and still held his pencil in readiness to go on.

Ariel, quietly submitting to the drowsy influence of the wine while Dexter's voice was in her ears, felt uneasily the change to silence. She glanced round her restlessly; she lifted her eyes to "the Master."There he sat, silent, with his hand to his head, still struggling to marshal his wandering thoughts, still trying to see light through the darkness that was closing round him.

"Master!" cried Ariel, piteously. "What's become of the story?"He started as if she had awakened him out of a sleep; he shook his head impatiently, as though he wanted to throw off some oppression that weighed upon it.

"Patience, patience," he said. "The story is going on again."He dashed at it desperately; he picked up the first lost thread that fell in his way, reckless whether it were the right thread or the wrong one:

"Damoride fell on her knees. She burst into tears. She said--"He stopped, and looked about him with vacant eyes.

"What name did I give the other woman?" he asked, not putting the question to me, or to either of my companions: asking it of himself, or asking it of the empty air.

"You called the other woman Cunegonda," I said.

At the sound of my voice his eyes turned slowly--turned on me, and yet failed to look at me. Dull and absent, still and changeless, they were eyes that seemed to be fixed on something far away. Even his voice was altered when he spoke next. It had dropped to a quiet, vacant, monotonous tone. I had heard something like it while I was watching by my husband's bedside, at the time of his delirium--when Eustace's mind appeared to be too weary to follow his speech. Was the end so near as this?

"I called her Cunegonda," he repeated. "And I called the other--"He stopped once more.

"And you called the other Damoride," I said.

Ariel looked up at him with a broad stare of bewilderment. She pulled impatiently at the sleeve of his jacket to attract his notice.

"Is this the story, Master?" she asked.

He answered without looking at her, his changeless eyes still fixed, as it seemed, on something far away.

同类推荐
  • 阿毗昙甘露味论

    阿毗昙甘露味论

    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 Letters

    The Letters

    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。
  • 成唯识论演秘

    成唯识论演秘

    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。
  • 六字课斋卑议

    六字课斋卑议

    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。
  • 水镜录

    水镜录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 名剑录记

    名剑录记

    穿越的异世,剑谱上的神剑,纷乱的朝局,广大的江湖,地球来的他要怎么行事?
  • 我们都未曾知道

    我们都未曾知道

    少年在一次被世界第一个异能力者绿沙所救,但由于身世发生争执后少被突然送回到七街,却在少年回去时,绿沙所居住的地方已经成为一片荒芜……为了找到绿沙的真相,少年开始一步步踏入了无限城中心区换笔名写书了,笔名:作命面具
  • 七真年谱

    七真年谱

    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。
  • 医医小草

    医医小草

    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。
  • 我的大明星女友

    我的大明星女友

    新书《我是大天王》已发,求关注。下边车位有直通车。影坛新星昙花一现,得罪高层导致雪藏。学艺学礼,修身修德,重新归来的李胜阴差阳错的成了一个临时女演员的经纪人。该来的总会来,该走的终会走,一个个美女在李胜的身边走过,会发生怎样的暧昧和纠葛。对于娱乐圈的愤怒和无力,李胜终于觉悟,奋起直追,拍电影出唱片,重临影帝,势要掌控娱乐圈,打造自己的娱乐帝国。
  • 逆世屠天

    逆世屠天

    当他力量太强,本来要救老婆的却阴差阳错的打破时空,穿越到灵力枯竭的地球。可是,谁让他是魔法师,即便没有灵力照样可以使用魔法,没什么多说,就因为主角必须逆天!他代替死去的废柴身份生活下去,从此走上人生的巅峰,他必须要再次让自己的力量强大,才能打破时空救老婆。怎么回事?校花,班花,大小姐……连警花都蜂拥而至,打住!不好意思,我有老婆了!他笑着谢绝所有美女们,怎么样,主角够专一吧!当他打破虚空后,能否与其妻相聚?还是只此一人孤至老的归隐?还是为红颜怒,屠尽苍生?一切未果。
  • 战场or兄弟

    战场or兄弟

    他为了所有人默默奔向野狼突击队,一年后,他的队友也为了他,奋战到底!
  • 傲娇娘子:快到怀里来

    傲娇娘子:快到怀里来

    穿成一个土匪头子,萧然觉得自己绝对是第一个。没爹疼没娘爱,唯一一个亲近的弟弟天天带着官兵上山围剿。自从在森林里捡到一头奇怪的小兽,她便开始犯桃花了。邪魅无双的狐王大人,身怀奇才的四王爷,英俊潇洒的洛神……某女开始犯花痴却被某男一把拥住,“你只能是我的,其他男人都不许看。”某女挣扎,“娘子,快到怀里来。”
  • 万化归一

    万化归一

    这是一个修道的大陆。每个生物都有自己的属性,金木水火土,更有佼佼者衍生出了雷石冰风等稀有属性,天才或者世家可能身兼几种属性。属性相生相克,相辅相成,随着实力的增强,机遇的不同,属性可能还会改变。但是这些属性都是这个大陆上所拥有的属性,是这个大陆上的道。不管那种属性修习到极致,也就没了相克,道让它们趋于平衡,让极致者傲世天下。可是偏偏有人突破了极致,幻灭了属性,成就了道。
  • 界王离歌

    界王离歌

    你有你的坚持,我有我的道路;你可以嘲笑我的现在,但不可以否定我的未来。我是离歌,我为自己代言。这个夏天,看离歌,赢精神大奖。......“你叫什么名字?”“叫我离歌就好。”“做我媳妇吧?”“咳咳咳...我是男的,24k纯男。还有,我不搞基!”......“放开那个女孩,冲我来——”“我只是想要守护身边的每一个人!”这,便是一代界王——离歌的成长之路(熊猫前面的文字或许不够好,但请相信熊猫在不断地进步,熊猫肯定会给大家打造一个不一样的玄幻世界。肯定完本,放心收藏!