登陆注册
15706800000037

第37章

My mother did not allude again to the subject; but the very next afternoon she took me herself to a hall in the neighbourhood, where we saw a magic-lantern, followed by a conjurer. She had dressed herself in a prettier frock than she had worn for many a long day, and was brighter and gayer in herself than had lately been her wont, laughing and talking merrily. But I, nursing my wrongs, remained moody and sulky. At any other time such rare amusement would have overjoyed me; but the wonders of the great theatre that from other boys I had heard so much of, that from gaudy-coloured posters I had built up for myself, were floating vague and undefined before me in the air; and neither the open-mouthed sleeper, swallowing his endless chain of rats; nor even the live rabbit found in the stout old gentleman's hat--the last sort of person in whose hat one would have expected to find such a thing--could draw away my mind from the joy I had caught a glimpse of only to lose.

So we walked home through the muddy, darkening streets, speaking but little; and that night, waking--or rather half waking, as children do--I thought I saw a figure in white crouching at the foot of my bed.

I must have gone to sleep again; and later, though I cannot say whether the intervening time was short or long, I opened my eyes to see it still there; and frightened, I cried out; and my mother rose from her knees.

She laughed, a curious broken laugh, in answer to my questions. "It was a silly dream I had," she explained "I must have been thinking of the conjurer we saw. I dreamt that a wicked Magician had spirited you away from me. I could not find you and was all alone in the world."

She put her arms around me, so tight as almost to hurt me. And thus we remained until again I must have fallen asleep.

It was towards the close of these same holidays that my mother and I called upon Mrs. Teidelmann in her great stone-built house at Clapton.

She had sent a note round that morning, saying she was suffering from terrible headaches that quite took her senses away, so that she was unable to come out. She would be leaving England in a few days to travel. Would my mother come and see her, she would like to say good-bye to her before she went. My mother handed the letter across the table to my father.

"Of course you will go," said my father. "Poor girl, I wonder what the cause can be. She used to be so free from everything of the kind."

"Do you think it well for me to go?" said my mother. "What can she have to say to me?"

"Oh, just to say good-bye," answered my father. "It would look so pointed not to go."

It was a dull, sombre house without, but one entered through its commonplace door as through the weed-grown rock into Aladdin's cave.

Old Teidelmann had been a great collector all his life, and his treasures, now scattered through a dozen galleries, were then heaped there in curious confusion. Pictures filled every inch of wall, stood propped against the wonderful old furniture, were even stretched unframed across the ceilings. Statues gleamed from every corner (a few of the statues were, I remember, the only things out of the entire collection that Mrs. Teidelmann kept for herself), carvings, embroideries, priceless china, miniatures framed in gems, illuminated missals and gorgeously bound books crowded the room. The ugly little thick-lipped man had surrounded himself with the beauty of every age, brought from every land. He himself must have been the only thing cheap and uninteresting to be found within his own walls; and now he lay shrivelled up in his coffin, under a monument by means of which an unknown cemetery became quite famous.

Instructions had been given that my mother was to be shown up into Mrs. Teidelmann's boudoir. She was lying on a sofa near the fire when we entered, asleep, dressed in a loose lace robe that fell away, showing her thin but snow-white arms, her rich dark hair falling loose about her. In sleep she looked less beautiful: harder and with a suggestion of coarseness about the face, of which at other times it showed no trace. My mother said she would wait, perhaps Mrs.

Teidelmann would awake; and the servant, closing the door softly, left us alone with her.

An old French clock standing on the mantelpiece, a heart supported by Cupids, ticked with a muffled, soothing sound. My mother, choosing a chair by the window, sat with her eyes fixed on the sleeping woman's face, and it seemed to me--though this may have been but my fancy born of after-thought--that a faint smile relaxed for a moment the sleeping woman's pained, pressed lips. Neither I nor my mother spoke, the only sound in the room being the hushed ticking of the great gilt clock.

Until the other woman after a few slight movements of unrest began to talk in her sleep.

Only confused murmurs escaped her at first, and then I heard her whisper my father's name. Very low--hardly more than breathed--were the words, but upon the silence each syllable struck clear and distinct: "Ah no, we must not. Luke, my darling."

My mother rose swiftly from her chair, but she spoke in quite matter-of-fact tones.

"Go, Paul," she said, "wait for me downstairs;" and noiselessly opening the door, she pushed me gently out, and closed it again behind me.

It was half an hour or more before she came down, and at once we left the house, letting ourselves out. All the way home my mother never once spoke, but walked as one in a dream with eyes that saw not. With her hand upon the lock of our gate she came back to life.

"You must say nothing, Paul, do you understand?" she said. "When people are delirious they use strange words that have no meaning. Do you understand, Paul; you must never breathe a word--never."

同类推荐
  • 草堂耨云实禅师语录

    草堂耨云实禅师语录

    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。
  • 衡藩重刻胥台先生集

    衡藩重刻胥台先生集

    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。
  • 花案奇闻

    花案奇闻

    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。
  • 松窗杂录

    松窗杂录

    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。
  • 铁崖古乐府

    铁崖古乐府

    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
  • 和女鬼大人生活的日子

    和女鬼大人生活的日子

    一名普通的的大学生,在中秋夜遇到一只逃离鬼宗的漂亮女鬼,从此开始和女鬼学习各种茅山道术。经历了原本一生都不可能遇到的种种奇事:赶尸术,策魂术??开始了一段与鬼怪,旱魃,鬼王,地府等种种传奇!!!
  • 魂珠鬼话

    魂珠鬼话

    世间万物,皆由灵生,有灵有肉为人、有肉无灵为尸、有灵无肉为鬼、有肉无全灵为兽、兽有全灵为妖。人、兽、鬼、尸、妖,并称‘五轮’。人、兽为‘阳’;鬼、妖为‘阴’;尸者阴阳不为,衡而中之,是为‘冥’。镇魂将,游离于人世之外的秘密组织,镇压与消灭世间亡灵。无论它生前,是善,是恶,是死有余辜,还是悲惨冤屈。都必须被镇魂将消灭!
  • 小女倾城,妖孽别再追

    小女倾城,妖孽别再追

    苏夜歌从一位22世纪的杀手一招穿越到相府小姐,原本是孤儿的她还没感受几天的爱,她的爷爷就一夜之间神秘消失,她就走上的寻爷之路……而神秘的他从此走上了追妻之路,没办法,谁叫他钟意她,万水千山也陪她去找,刀山火海也陪她去,不过……我会护你一世周全.
  • 魔无心

    魔无心

    无心无泪,无欲无求千百年的轮回,只为这一世,究竟是谁牵绊了谁当前世的意识觉醒,他们又将何去何从
  • 中国的修养

    中国的修养

    国学是研究中华传统学术精神及其载体的学问,是对中华民族在物质文明、精神文明、政治文明和社会文明进程中形成的,具有永恒意义和普遍价值的思想体系、文化观念与学术方法的总结。本书主要向广大读者讲授国学的修身精神,对国学中关于“人的修养”的问题展开详细的讨论,教读者学会自我修养、自我完善、自我锤炼,提高个人修养和德行。
  • 魅蓝传说

    魅蓝传说

    公元三零六八年,银河系被开发殆尽,人类步入了宇宙时代。与此同时无数的黑洞被开发利用,异界生物不断涌入,人类和异界生物的战争爆发在宇宙的各个角落。人类的源星--地球终于到了生命的终点,而和地球紧密相连的第一代智脑宙斯也面临毁灭......本书从异界开始,科技古武不断出现,敬请期待。
  • 娇妻在怀:你好,大总裁

    娇妻在怀:你好,大总裁

    “你好大总裁,我们又见面了。”再次见面,难道你还觉得她是曾经的软柿子么?不!难道你认为她还像曾经那么爱你么?不!难道你还觉得她还是以前的傻瓜么?不!“素素,求嫁……”某大灰狼可怜兮兮的说。“不我拒绝!”大灰狼一咬牙,横躺地上:“素素,你走一只可怜的老公需要捡回家……”卧槽!总裁大人你的节操呢?!苏素雨强势回归,只为报复,却不料自己刚出虎穴又进狼窝……
  • 萌系吃货女皇成长记

    萌系吃货女皇成长记

    "卿卿被养父母当牲口贩卖,被婊子情敌杀害,临死之际因老道士送的一场机缘来到架空时空,顾卿卿成为了乾清公主。在这里她有一个各种宠溺自己的女儿控父皇,一个名义上自己儿砸的小萌娃嘟嘟,还有一个救了自己能占卜能治病的银发神医林穆清,以及一群目的各异的不靠谱暗卫。到最后顾卿卿才醒悟,原来一切表面上的美好背后都是晦暗的阴谋。“呵,我便杀尽天下欺我,辱我,背叛我之人!”顾卿卿浑身浴血而立在万千尸骨之上,笑看染上殷红鲜血的万里河山,却唯独染不上林穆清银色的发,清冷的眸。他还是那般遗世而独立,“卿卿,真正爱你之人一直都在你身后,你可曾回眸一看。”【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 综漫之雨宫怜子

    综漫之雨宫怜子

    我不出声也不书写我不低唤你的名字这段感情里有罪孽这名字里有痛楚变成风也不敢和你相遇。——雨宫怜子------------------本文主兄战,涉及兄战、地狱少女、网王。
  • 闺蜜其实是男友

    闺蜜其实是男友

    那一年,在大学,她遇见了他,他们成为了朋友,却不知他一直默默的守护着她,时间一点一点流逝,他可以对她说出自己内心的感受吗?“如果闺蜜也有奖,你就是一等奖!”——叶枝枝,“枝枝我喜欢你”——王,“额,你不是闺蜜吗?”——叶枝枝,“闺蜜变男友啊”——王。…………她可以拒绝吗?但是,答案明显是不能。