登陆注册
15517000000011

第11章 CHAPTER II(6)

It had turned altogether to a different admonition; to a supreme hint, for him, of the value of Discretion! This slowly dawned, no doubt - for it could take its time; so perfectly, on his threshold, had he been stayed, so little as yet had he either advanced or retreated. It was the strangest of all things that now when, by his taking ten steps and applying his hand to a latch, or even his shoulder and his knee, if necessary, to a panel, all the hunger of his prime need might have been met, his high curiosity crowned, his unrest assuaged - it was amazing, but it was also exquisite and rare, that insistence should have, at a touch, quite dropped from him. Discretion - he jumped at that; and yet not, verily, at such a pitch, because it saved his nerves or his skin, but because, much more valuably, it saved the situation. When I say he "jumped" at it I feel the consonance of this term with the fact that - at the end indeed of I know not how long - he did move again, he crossed straight to the door. He wouldn't touch it - it seemed now that he might if he would: he would only just wait there a little, to show, to prove, that he wouldn't. He had thus another station, close to the thin partition by which revelation was denied him; but with his eyes bent and his hands held off in a mere intensity of stillness. He listened as if there had been something to hear, but this attitude, while it lasted, was his own communication. "If you won't then - good: I spare you and I give up. You affect me as by the appeal positively for pity: you convince me that for reasons rigid and sublime - what do I know? - we both of us should have suffered. I respect them then, and, though moved and privileged as, I believe, it has never been given to man, I retire, I renounce - never, on my honour, to try again. So rest for ever - and let ME!"That, for Brydon, was the deep sense of this last demonstration -solemn, measured, directed, as he felt it to be. He brought it to a close, he turned away; and now verily he knew how deeply he had been stirred. He retraced his steps, taking up his candle, burnt, he observed, well-nigh to the socket, and marking again, lighten it as he would, the distinctness of his footfall; after which, in a moment, he knew himself at the other side of the house. He did here what he had not yet done at these hours - he opened half a casement, one of those in the front, and let in the air of the night; a thing he would have taken at any time previous for a sharp rupture of his spell. His spell was broken now, and it didn't matter - broken by his concession and his surrender, which made it idle henceforth that he should ever come back. The empty street -its other life so marked even by great lamp-lit vacancy - was within call, within touch; he stayed there as to be in it again, high above it though he was still perched; he watched as for some comforting common fact, some vulgar human note, the passage of a scavenger or a thief, some night-bird however base. He would have blessed that sign of life; he would have welcomed positively the slow approach of his friend the policeman, whom he had hitherto only sought to avoid, and was not sure that if the patrol had come into sight he mightn't have felt the impulse to get into relation with it, to hail it, on some pretext, from his fourth floor.

The pretext that wouldn't have been too silly or too compromising, the explanation that would have saved his dignity and kept his name, in such a case, out of the papers, was not definite to him: he was so occupied with the thought of recording his Discretion -as an effect of the vow he had just uttered to his intimate adversary - that the importance of this loomed large and something had overtaken all ironically his sense of proportion. If there had been a ladder applied to the front of the house, even one of the vertiginous perpendiculars employed by painters and roofers and sometimes left standing overnight, he would have managed somehow, astride of the window-sill, to compass by outstretched leg and arm that mode of descent. If there had been some such uncanny thing as he had found in his room at hotels, a workable fire-escape in the form of notched cable or a canvas shoot, he would have availed himself of it as a proof - well, of his present delicacy. He nursed that sentiment, as the question stood, a little in vain, and even - at the end of he scarce knew, once more, how long - found it, as by the action on his mind of the failure of response of the outer world, sinking back to vague anguish. It seemed to him he had waited an age for some stir of the great grim hush; the life of the town was itself under a spell - so unnaturally, up and down the whole prospect of known and rather ugly objects, the blankness and the silence lasted. Had they ever, he asked himself, the hard-faced houses, which had begun to look livid in the dim dawn, had they ever spoken so little to any need of his spirit? Great builded voids, great crowded stillnesses put on, often, in the heart of cities, for the small hours, a sort of sinister mask, and it was of this large collective negation that Brydon presently became conscious - all the more that the break of day was, almost incredibly, now at hand, proving to him what a night he had made of it.

He looked again at his watch, saw what had become of his time-values (he had taken hours for minutes - not, as in other tense situations, minutes for hours) and the strange air of the streets was but the weak, the sullen flush of a dawn in which everything was still locked up. His choked appeal from his own open window had been the sole note of life, and he could but break off at last as for a worse despair. Yet while so deeply demoralised he was capable again of an impulse denoting - at least by his present measure - extraordinary resolution; of retracing his steps to the spot where he had turned cold with the extinction of his last pulse of doubt as to there being in the place another presence than his own. This required an effort strong enough to sicken him; but he had his reason, which over-mastered for the moment everything else.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 许我一个奇迹:港大诗影

    许我一个奇迹:港大诗影

    本书为作者十多年来以港大为创作重心的诗歌精选集。这部诗集着眼于游历东西地域空间的感验,寻求传统和现代转化、东方和西方汇通的可能。以杭州、香港、纽约、北京、台北、泉州、新加坡等名城为主线,记录了作者对于历史时空和人情世事的文化思考。
  • 风华绝代:月家九公子

    风华绝代:月家九公子

    月倾穿越成了一个女扮男装的月家九公子,一醒来就有个温润如玉的美男子温柔地照顾,月倾表示,如果没有她那个不靠谱的便宜老爹和更加不靠谱的任务的话,她觉得这日子是相当滋润的。然而,身为月家家主的“嫡长子”,月倾入京城没几天就刺杀、毒杀接踵而来,月倾深深表示这日子是没法过了。但是,有温润如玉的美男和美艳动人的二小姐,还有各种美食诱惑,月倾不禁表示这日子还是可以好好过的。俗话说:既来之则安之。所以,月倾斗志昂扬地表示她要好好当好这个九公子……
  • 总裁不放手:再爱一次好不好

    总裁不放手:再爱一次好不好

    宋瑶22岁嫁给邵氏接班人邵衍笙,两年后两人又因婚姻破碎离了婚。当她裹着大衣出了邵家庄园的那一刻才明白这都不是梦,两年来,他不是出差就是应酬,两年1130天见面的时间只有30天不到。宋瑶能做的就是做好邵家太太的本分,他的出现像是一个骑着白马的黑骑士,把深处水深火热的她解救了,当他在所有人看自己笑话的时候,说自己是他此生最爱的女人,她就知道自己的心沦陷了,不顾别人的异样目光,义无反顾的嫁给了他。可是如今,她该何去何从?
  • 血域花开

    血域花开

    一群孤独的少年,一个充满血统天赋的世界,当圣杯的光芒再次闪耀,新的王座即将诞生,又一段奇幻的战斗旅程,我们一路欢笑,我们一路悲伤。我不知道会有多少人看到我这本小说,但我会用尽全力讲一个与众不同的世界,许多个与众不同的故事。仅以此书,献给那些孤独着的少年,在你们前行的路上,还有很多人在我书中,一路相随。
  • 朝花夕拾古记

    朝花夕拾古记

    她,从一个小乞丐一朝贵为公主;他,无双公子,江湖神医。一顶大红喜轿子抬向何家?!师徒二人是否再有爱恨交集?看今朝天下第一悲剧!
  • 靖夷纪事

    靖夷纪事

    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。
  • 无上刀修

    无上刀修

    修仙者修的是逆天争命,在漫漫的旅途中,李辰选择了刀为伴。
  • 天录之七神传说

    天录之七神传说

    自圣战之后,大魔王被封印,百族同盟。奥法大陆在大陆守护者七神法的守护下一片平和。索利多帝国越加富强昌盛。可是,人的野心从没有断绝过。直到有一天,七神法和七神军被毁灭了。大陆重现陷入了纷争,这是魔族的阴谋还是人的阴谋?这是天界的棋局还是人的棋局?一个全新的世界,百族争战!为了正义?不,为了生存!
  • 巅峰界

    巅峰界

    故事发生在一个偏远的小山村,一位神秘少爷带着两个女婴给李巧儿抚养后又神秘消失,女婴的一次次成长,一次次的奇遇,一次次的看遍世间冷暖。没有神的大陆,如何一步步走向巅峰?
  • 传奇之幸运戒指

    传奇之幸运戒指

    一位有钱的宅男,刚买来新电脑,却意外穿越平行世界,没心没肺玩起了虚拟游戏,打开游戏发现自己背包里面有个戒指,在游戏称王称霸之后,发现这个戒指并不那么简单…