登陆注册
20098100000079

第79章 CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

Valentine Corliss had nothing to do but to wait for the money his friend Antonio would send him by cable. His own cable, anticipating his letter, had been sent yesterday, when he came back to the hotel, after lunching in the country with Cora.

As he walked down Corliss Street, after his tumultuous interview with her, he was surprised to find himself physically tremulous: he had not supposed that an encounter, however violent, with an angry woman could so upset his nerves. It was no fear of Pryor which shook him. He knew that Pryor did not mean to cause his arrest--certainly not immediately. Of course, Pryor knew that Cora would tell him. The old fellow's move was a final notification. It meant: "Get out of town within twenty-four hours." And Corliss intended to obey. He would have left that evening, indeed, without the warning; his trunk was packed.

He would miss Cora. He had kept a cool head throughout their affair until the last; but this morning she had fascinated him: and he found himself passionately admiring the fury of her. She had confused him as he had never been confused. He thought he had tamed her; thought he owned her; and the discovery of this mistake was what made him regret that she would not come away with him. Such a flight, until to-day, had been one of his apprehensions: but now the thought that it was not to be, brought something like pain. At least, he felt a vacancy; had a sense of something lacking. She would have been a bright comrade for the voyage; and he thought of gestures of hers, turns of the head, tricks of the lovely voice; and sighed.

Of course it was best for him that he could return to his old trails alone and free; he saw that. Cora would have been a complication and an embarrassment without predictable end, but she would have been a rare flame for a while. He wondered what she meant to do; of course she had a plan. Should he try again, give her another chance? No; there was one point upon which she had not mystified him: he knew she really hated him.

. . . The wind was against the smoke that day; and his spirits rose, as he walked in the brisk air with the rich sky above him. After all, this venture upon his native purlieus had been fax from fruitless: he could not have expected to do much better. He had made his coup; he knew no other who could have done it. It was a handsome bit of work, in fact, and possible only to a talented native thoroughly sophisticated in certain foreign subtleties. He knew himself for a rare combination.

He had a glimmer of Richard Lindley beginning at the beginning again to build a modest fortune: it was the sort of thing the Richard Lindleys were made for. Corliss was not troubled. Richard had disliked him as a boy; did not like him now; but Corliss had not taken his money out of malice for that.

The adventurer was not revengeful; he was merely impervious.

At the hotel, he learned that Moliterno's cable had not yet arrived; but he went to an agency of one of the steamship lines and reserved his passage, and to a railway ticket office and secured a compartment for himself on an evening train. Then he returned to his room in the hotel.

The mirror over the mantelpiece, in the front room of his suite, showed him a fine figure of a man: hale, deep-chested, handsome, straight and cheerful.

He nodded to it.

"Well, old top," he said, reviewing and summing up his whole campaign, "not so bad. Not so bad, all in all; not so bad, old top. Well played indeed!"

At a sound of footsteps approaching his door, he turned in casual expectancy, thinking it might be a boy to notify him that Moliterno's cable had arrived. But there was no knock, and the door was flung wide open.

It was Vilas, and he had his gun with him this time. He had two.

There was a shallow clothes-closet in the wall near the fireplace, and Corliss ran in there; but Vilas began to shoot through the door.

Mutilated, already a dead man, and knowing it, Corliss came out, and tried to run into the bedroom. It was no use.

Ray saved his last shot for himself. It did the work.

同类推荐
  • Concerning Letters

    Concerning 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。
  • 平台纪略

    平台纪略

    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。
  • 注同教问答

    注同教问答

    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。
  • 词说

    词说

    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。
  • 全元曲戏文

    全元曲戏文

    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
  • 香薰恋

    香薰恋

    再一次偶遇,慕雪荀有了家庭,同时也拥有了爱情,在这次她和他究竟会碰擦出什么样的火花........
  • 琉璃逆神

    琉璃逆神

    一百年前,聂当和白舞娇因摩诃琉璃玉双双坠入轮回,一百年后,再世的白舞娇与重生的聂当又因摩诃琉璃玉而重遇,可惜白舞娇却失去了往事记忆,聂当又会发现什么,漫天诸神,又为什么不断的扰乱世间秩序呢?南北乱世,争斗无穷,人,妖,半神出世,风起云涌。乱世之中,看聂当如何冲破九霄,撕裂神道!
  • 风君云妹

    风君云妹

    一个修行者,在归入凡间前,天庭执事官向他道:「五位仙女将随你入凡间,你与她们间的关系将是考验内容。」修行者归入凡间后,投身在一父严母慈之家。二十岁那一年,修行者进京参加科举考试,途中遇劫难,他被贼人抓进贼窟。在贼窟,五位试验仙女一一出现,天使的容貌,高雅的气质,争风吹不动的矜持含藏,泄露她们仙女的潜藏身份。五位仙女下凡的任务是要试验修行者,然而在试验中,她们自己也胡涂了。她们不想身陷其中,却发现自己竟不能全身而退,反而越陷越深,不能自拔。最后,她们承认完了,陷的很深。风君是修行者,云妹是五位仙女,风君的英雄世界,与五个云妹的爱情故事似乎是我们未知的。精采内容将在卷中揭露。
  • 依依

    依依

    一切的怀恋终将结束于青春一切的青春终会有迷茫和幸运
  • 冷CEO,你好狠

    冷CEO,你好狠

    一个三流模特安小小,一个冷酷总裁宋潇然,在相遇的那一刻,就已经注定了一切。在相遇后短短几天内,安小小以闪电般的速度嫁给了宋潇然,这段人人称羡的婚姻,其中的辛酸又有几个人知道?爱上宋潇然了,安小小虽然知道这是一条万劫不复的道路,她还是毅然决然地走上了这条路。男朋友的背叛,父母的抛弃,宋潇然的狠心,安小小又该何去何从?
  • 一梦朵

    一梦朵

    一花一世界,一梦一乾坤。丧尸,怪兽,城堡,恶魔。一幕幕奇异的世界,一回回清醒后的迷茫,罗犇,心中迷惑不解。离奇的书,诡异的记载,谜团要怎么破解?真相又是如何?罗犇和身边的朋友正在经历一场不平凡的事……
  • 天极录

    天极录

    以不甘为剑,踏破星河灿烂,以情为盾,百折而不挠。不求长生、不问未来,只求心之所欲。以不为而做有为,再回首时,岁月峥嵘,忆往昔时,传奇吾筑!
  • 穿越火线之无尽巅峰

    穿越火线之无尽巅峰

    ..............突然出现的高手他是谁...................谁有知道
  • 傲视苍穹

    傲视苍穹

    弃子伍云才,机遇巧合下获得前辈高人血脉传承——血技九式,从此一步步踏上武道巅峰。一朝梦醒,剑在手,问天下谁是英雄?热血我心,雪前耻,傲视苍穹!
  • 洪荒战神域

    洪荒战神域

    有一块远古的大陆名唤战神域。何为战?战天,战地,战命运!没有实力你什么都不是!唯有手持战斧,涌满腔热血,与天比高才对的起自己!不为别的,只为一个问心无愧!我为战神,谁敢一战!