登陆注册
25642600000091

第91章

DOT AND DASH

For a long time after the retreating footsteps of Strangwise and Bellward had died away, Desmond sat listless, preoccupied with his thoughts. They were somber enough. The sinister atmosphere of the house, weighing upon him, seemed to deepen his depression.

About his own position he was not concerned at all. This is not an example of unselfishness it is simply an instance of the force of discipline which trains a man to reckon the cause as everything and himself as naught. And Desmond was haunted by the awful conviction that he had at length reached the end of his tether and that nothing could now redeem the ignominious failure he had made of his mission.

He had sacrificed Barbara Mackwayte; he had sacrificed Nur-el-Din; he had not even been clever enough to save his own skin. And Strangwise, spy and murderer, had escaped and was now free to reorganize his band after he had put Barbara and Desmond out of the way.

The thought was so unbearable that it stung Desmond into action.

Strangwise should not get the better of him, he resolved, and he had yet this brief interval of being alone in which he might devise some scheme to rescue Barbara and secure the arrest of Strangwise and his accomplices. But how?

He raised his head and looked round the room. The curtains had not been drawn and enough light came into the room from the outside to enable him to distinguish the outlines of the furniture. It was a bedroom, furnished in rather a massive style, with some kind of thick, soft carpet into, which the feet sank.

Desmond tested his bonds. He was very skillfully tied up. He fancied that with a little manipulation he might contrive to loosen the rope round his right arm, for one of the knots had caught in the folds of his coat. The thongs round his left arm and two legs were, however, so tight that he thought he had but little chance of ridding himself of them, even should he get his right arm free; for the knots were tied at the back under the seat of the chair in such a way that he could not reach them.

He, therefore, resigned himself to conducting operations in the highly ridiculous posture in which he found himself, that is to say, with a large arm-chair attached to him, rather like a snail with its house on its back. After a certain amount of maneuvering he discovered that, by means of a kind of slow, lumbering crawl, he was able to move across the ground. It might have proved a noisy business on a parquet floor; but Desmond moved only a foot or two at a time and the pile carpet deadened the sound.

They had deposited him in his chair in the centre of the room near the big brass bedstead. After ten minutes' painful crawling he had reached the toilet table which stood in front of the window with a couple of electric candles on either side of the mirror. He moved the toilet table to one side, then bumped steadily across the carpet until he had reached the window. And then he gave a little gasp of surprise.

He found himself looking straight at the window of his own bedroom at Mrs. Viljohn-Smythe's. There was no mistaking it. The electric light was burning and the curtains had not yet been drawn. He could see the black and pink eiderdown on his bed and the black lining of the chintz curtains. Then he remembered the slope of the hill. He must be in the room from which he had seen Bellward looking out.

The sight of the natty bedroom across the way moved Desmond strangely. It seemed to bring home to him for the first time the extraordinary position in which he found himself, a prisoner in a perfectly respectable suburban house in a perfectly respectable quarter of London, in imminent danger of a violent death.

He wouldn't give in without a struggle. Safety stared him in the face, separated only by a hundred yards of grass and shrub and wall. He instinctively gripped the arms of the chair to raise himself to get a better view from the window, forgetting he was bound. The ropes cut his arms cruelly and brought him back to earth.

He tested again the thongs fastening his right arm. Yes! they were undoubtedly looser than the others. He pulled and tugged and writhed and strained. Once in his struggles he crashed into the toilet table and all but upset one of the electric candles which slid to the table's very brink and was saved, as by a miracle, from falling to the floor. He resumed his efforts, but with less violence. It was in vain. Though the ropes about his right arm were fairly loose, the wrist was solidly fastened to the chair, and do what he would, he could not wrest it free. He clawed desperately with his fingers and thumb, but all in vain.

In the midst of his struggles he was arrested by the sound of whistling. Somebody in the distance outside was whistling, clearly and musically, a quaint, jingling sort of jig that struck familiarly on Desmond's ear. Somehow it reminded him of the front. It brought with it dim memory of the awakening to the early morning chill of a Nissen hut, the smell of damp earth, the whirr of aircraft soaring through the morning sky, the squeak of flutes, the roll of drums... why, it was the Grand Reveille,"that ancient military air which every soldier knows.

He stopped struggling and peered cautiously out into the dusk.

The time for darkening the windows must be at hand, he thought, for in most of the houses the blinds were already drawn. Here and there, however, an oblong of yellow light showed up against the dark mass of the houses on the upper slopes of the hill. The curtains of his bedroom at Mrs. Viljohn-Smythe's were not yet drawn and the light still burned brightly above the bed.

The whistling continued with occasional interruptions as though the whistler were about some work or other. And then suddenly "Buzzer" Barling, holding something in one hand and rubbing violently with the other, stepped into the patch of light between the window and the bed in Desmond's bedroom.

同类推荐
  • The Ways of Men

    The Ways of Men

    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。
  • 玄灵转经晚朝行道仪

    玄灵转经晚朝行道仪

    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。
  • 黄帝阴符经注

    黄帝阴符经注

    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。
  • 医经原旨

    医经原旨

    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。
  • 观所缘论释

    观所缘论释

    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
  • 《鸢尾花开的那一天》

    《鸢尾花开的那一天》

    娱乐圈的那些不为人知的事
  • 炼金皇帝

    炼金皇帝

    炼金科技本是东大陆秦人所创,却被西大陆的罗马人发扬光大,并最终导致了罗马帝国的炼金革命。黑水秦国由此衰败,堂堂大秦反被各国列强蹂躏欺辱而不敢反抗。易凡,一个军校的高材生,因为意外穿越到了这样一个世界。他看到了这个国家的衰败,他发誓要改变这个贫穷落后的国家,让所有的秦人都有尊严的活着,让秦国的黑龙旗飘荡在世界所有角落!看一个有为青年怎样带领这个国家崛起吧。蒸汽朋克风格,热血校园流,想看你就来。…………暂时每日一更
  • 霸道撒旦乖一点

    霸道撒旦乖一点

    遇上这样的男人咋整?第一次相遇,他冷漠,暗红色的眸子中满是厌恶,“花痴滚远点。”第一次问他‘为什么’,他任性,“因为我愿意。”第一次告白,她昏倒,他满心焦虑第一次约会,他霸道,“这很无聊。但是如果你可以五分钟吻我一次,我可以陪你做所有无聊的事。”第一次分别,他颓废,“她已经离开了,怎样都已经无所谓了。”五年后,她霸气回归,笑的妖娆,主动吻上他的唇,“我的霸道撒旦,你的节操还在吗?”他露出五年内第一次真心的笑,“宝宝,你该永远都这么主动。”遇上这样的霸道撒旦让她咋整?咋整?(此文男强女强,非虐文。)本书读者群:124279331,欢迎宝贝们~
  • 我忘记了自杀的理由

    我忘记了自杀的理由

    我。。。到底是为什么自杀呢?我。。。什么都记不得了。。。
  • 忆年爱恋,墨韵成殇

    忆年爱恋,墨韵成殇

    我离理想有多远,我就离现实有多近。你能读懂我,我却看不清我自己。那样的悲哀,又何从解脱?
  • 魂弄九天

    魂弄九天

    人出生以来就存在着“魂”。而在这个大陆上人们的“魂”却不止于人之本源的“人魂”更有着赖于生存的“战魂”。而战魂在这个名为“魂陆”的地方就是强者的代名词。“魂陆”上有着一个传说,那就是——天生拥双战魂者,非王即尊。主角又如何在这个强者如云的大陆上展现光芒呢?
  • 女神族的崛起

    女神族的崛起

    远古时代,上帝创造了一种人,赋予他们力量,仁慈和智慧,她们是造物者的骄傲,他们被称女神族,预言师预言,女神族后裔将取代泰坦族,泰坦族首领灭世担心预言的发生,决定先发制人,无尽的战火吞噬了女神的家园,战争过后,女神族损失殆尽,最后女神们依靠圣恩之剑逃到圣芙艾尔大陆,但在这大陆上邪恶势力在不断蔓延,女神们为了家园一战再战,黑暗之王的到来,他们能否安定,敬请期待
  • 异校十一班

    异校十一班

    随着时间的推移,科学家发明了可以让脑电波增辐的仪器,改变了人类的基因,从而得到了对抗异界超能力,但受到该实验的人大都都难以承受痛苦的实验而死亡,一些幸存者在荒凉的沙丘中开起了名为异灵校的学校,专门收纳四处具有超能力的孩童,为政府机关做事,另一些人怀着对实验的仇恨在繁华都市的地下开办了隐秘的学校叫异蛮校,以专门猎杀异灵校的学生为乐,两校对立,在几百年中不停的争夺,异校十一班到底是???在故事的发展天平又会倒向哪边?余沫一个孤儿正太却被当成女生莫名其妙的被异校收去,妈妈咪啊,什么啊!睡女生宿舍?超能力?神马?故事会怎样发展呢?
  • 魅力三公主vs冰山三王子

    魅力三公主vs冰山三王子

    冷漠的她与冷漠的他温柔的她与温柔的他可爱的她与花心的他会有什么故事发生呢?中间会有第三者出现吗?他们之间的爱情会稳定吗?让我们来看一下吧!文章开始啦,~(≧▽≦)/~啦啦啦。
  • 糊涂学的智慧

    糊涂学的智慧

    《糊涂学的智慧》讲述了:刘玄德的“巧借闻雷来掩饰”、诸葛亮的“空城计”、兵法中的“浑水摸鱼”,以及儒家的“中庸”、道家的“无为无不为”……都有力地说明了“难得糊涂”作为一种处事方法和技巧对成就一件事情或达到一种目的的重要作用。糊涂不难,难就难在如何做到把握糊涂的尺度,每个人糊涂的路数不同,心态也未必一致。以自己特有的大智慧去拥抱人生,以自己固有的方法去展开生命,这就是糊涂的智慧。