登陆注册
15454500000093

第93章 CHAPTER XXXVI(2)

"Don't speak loud!" she said. "Don't let the child hear us! My dream of you this time has left a painful impression on my mind. The child is mixed up in it--and I don't like that. Then the place in which I saw you is associated--" She paused, leaving the sentence unfinished. "I am nervous and wretched to-night," she resumed; "and I don't want to speak of it. And yet, I should like to know whether my dream has misled me, or whether you really were in that cottage, of all places in the world?" I was at a loss to understand the embarrassment which she appeared to feel in putting her question. There was nothing very wonderful, to my mind, in the discovery that she had been in Suffolk, and that she was acquainted with Greenwater Broad. The lake was known all over the county as a favorite resort of picnic parties; and Dermody's pretty cottage used to be one of the popular attractions of the scene. What really surprised me was to see, as I now plainly saw, that she had some painful association with my old home. I decided on answering her question in such terms as might encourage her to take me into her confidence. In a moment more I should have told her that my boyhood had been passed at Greenwater Broad--in a moment more, we should have recognized each other--when a trivial interruption suspended the words on my lips. The child ran out of the bed-chamber, with a quaintly shaped key in her hand. It was one of the things she had taken out of my pockets. and it belonged to the cabin door on board the boat. A sudden fit of curiosity (the insatiable curiosity of a child) had seized her on the subject of this key. She insisted on knowing what door it locked; and, when I had satisfied her on that point, she implored me to take her immediately to see the boat. This entreaty led naturally to a renewal of the disputed question of going, or not going, to bed. By the time the little creature had left us again, with permission to play for a few minutes longer, the conversation between Mrs. Van Brandt and myself had taken a new direction. Speaking now of the child's health, we were led naturally to the kindred subject of the child's connection with her mother's dream.

"She had been ill with fever," Mrs. Van Brandt began; "and she was just getting better again on the day when I was left deserted in this miserable place. Toward evening, she had another attack that frightened me dreadfully. She became perfectly insensible--her little limbs were stiff and cold. There is one doctor here who has not yet abandoned the town. Of course I sent for him. He thought her insensibility was caused by a sort of cataleptic seizure. At the same time, he comforted me by saying that she was in no immediate danger of death; and he left me certain remedies to be given, if certain symptoms appeared. I took her to bed, and held her to me, with the idea of keeping her warm. Without believing in mesmerism, it has since struck me that we might unconsciously have had some influence over each other, which may explain what followed. Do you think it likely?"

"Quite likely. At the same time, the mesmeric theory (if you could believe in it) would carry the explanation further still. Mesmerism would assert, not only that you and the child influenced each other, but that--in spite of the distance--you both influenced _me_. And in that way, mesmerism would account for my vision as the necessary result of a highly developed sympathy between us. Tell me, did you fall asleep with the child in your arms?"

"Yes. I was completely worn out; and I fell asleep, in spite of my resolution to watch through the night. In my forlorn situation, forsaken in a strange place, I dreamed of you again, and I appealed to you again as my one protector and friend. The only new thing in the dream was, that I thought I had the child with me when I approached you, and that the child put the words into my mind when I wrote in your book. You saw the words, I suppose? and they vanished, as before, no doubt, when I awoke? I found the child still lying, like a dead creature, in my arms. All through the night there was no change in her. She only recovered her senses at noon the next day. Why do you start? What have I said that surprises you?" There was good reason for my feeling startled, and showing it. On the day and at the hour when the child had come to herself, I had stood on the deck of the vessel, and had seen the apparition of her disappear from my view.

"Did she say anything," I asked, "when she recovered her senses?"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 倾尘绝恋

    倾尘绝恋

    “兮儿,如有来生,我想陪你看尽一世繁华,生死相依……”他用尽最后心力,终于对她说出,这么多年,一直深埋在他心底的话语,他终是满足了,笑着闭上了眼睛。而她,亦是知道了他的深情,流下眼泪,,今生亦是辜负了他,“愿有来生,,我会爱你”,她转过身,用眼睛狠狠的看着害死他的凶手,却没想到,他竟是……(作者第一次写文,如有不好,请见谅,也请爱看的读者们,能支持我)
  • 为爱痴狂:冥王独宠妃

    为爱痴狂:冥王独宠妃

    冥婚,明月清风,醉一人心。冥王,冥宠,当爱成为利用,当你我成为敌人,当光明黑暗终将开战,你我,是否还能回到最初,身世的谜团,是否是阻挡我们的一块陨石!爱恨交加中,终有属于我们的那一片天!
  • 优等生最爱做的228个科学游戏

    优等生最爱做的228个科学游戏

    本书为你精心挑选了228个妙趣横生的科学游戏,内容涉及大自然、身边游戏、光的世界、声音、简单力学、电和磁、动植物等多个领域。
  • 语文新课标课外必读第十辑:彼得·潘

    语文新课标课外必读第十辑:彼得·潘

    国家教育部颁布了最新《语文课程标准》,统称新课标,对中、小学语文教学指定了阅读书目,对阅读的数量、内容、质量以及速度都提出了明确的要求,这对于提高学生的阅读能力,培养语文素养,陶冶情操,促进学生终身学习和终身可持续发展,对于提高广大人民的文学素养具有极大的意义。
  • 权谋残卷

    权谋残卷

    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。
  • 风雨十年路

    风雨十年路

    风风雨雨间,走过十年路,不曾再相见,只愿你安好!
  • 冰火恋人

    冰火恋人

    春山派大弟子栖冰与他的师妹丹焰相恋,是众人眼中的神仙眷侣,更是世人眼中的救世主“冰火恋人”!一对欢喜冤家,他们矛盾不断,他貌似多情,她又对栖冰“情有独钟”,可是,谁又知道,其实他们才是真正的“冰火恋人”?他们真的是该是恋人吗?可是,他们为什么如此“水火不容”?当末日来临,他们是否能走到一起?而原来的那一对,又会怎样?-------------------------------------------此文比较小白,语言很粗糙,情节也普通,乃作者练笔之作。慎入。
  • DNF之鬼剑神

    DNF之鬼剑神

    有一种人,他们珍视自己的剑超过对自己身体的珍视,不论是少了一只手还是心脏虚弱,即便被鬼神侵占了身体,他们都一如既往的修炼自己的宝剑。从小在孤儿院长大的赵然偶然来到神启大陆,携带鬼剑士和枪炮师的他会在大陆掀起怎样的风云?“什么?为什么是个女大枪?难道是幻觉?”赵然说。
  • 都市修真强少

    都市修真强少

    重生到地球第一天,林子峰就干了件大事情,将京城第一美女叶轻柔给甩了,之后还主动退出了林家了,最后一个个麻烦相续而来!且看一个废物如何走上世界的巅峰!
  • 时光漫步,化蝶

    时光漫步,化蝶

    梁山伯与祝英台化蝶之后,发生的种种有趣故事等。