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第31章

`Help, Tom! Save me.I won't be hanged!'

He rushed forward, groping for her mouth with a silencing hand, and the shriek died out.But in his rush he had knocked her over.He felt her now clinging round his legs, and his terror reached its culminating point, became a sort of intoxication, entertained delusions, acquired the characteristics of delirium tremens.He positively saw snakes now.He saw the woman twined round him like a snake, not to be shaken off.She was not deadly.She was death itself - the companion of life.

Mrs Verloc, as if relieved by the outburst, was very far from behaving noisily now.She was pitiful.

`Tom, you can't throw me off now,' she murmured from the floor.`Not unless you crush my head under your heel.I won't leave you.'

`Get up,' said Ossipon.

His face was so pale as to be quite visible in the profound black darkness of the shop; while Mrs Verloc, veiled, had no face, almost no discernible form.The trembling of something small and white, a flower in her hat, marked her place, her movements.

It rose in the blackness.She had got up from the floor, and Ossipon regretted not having run out at once into the street.But he perceived easily that it would not do.It would not do.She would run after him.

She would pursue him shrieking till she sent every policeman within hearing in chase.And then goodness only knew what she would say of him.He was so frightened that for a moment the insane notion of strangling her in the dark passed through his mind.And he became more frightened than ever!

She had him.He saw himself living in abject terror in some obscure hamlet in Spain or Italy; till some fine morning they found him dead, too, with a knife in his breast - like Mr Verloc.He sighed deeply.He dared not move.And Mrs Verloc waited in silence the good pleasure of her saviour, deriving comfort from his reflective silence.

Suddenly he spoke up in an almost natural voice.His reflections had come to an end.

`Let's get out, or we will lose the train.'

`Where are we going to, Tom?' she asked, timidly.Mrs Verloc was no longer a free woman.

`Let's get to Paris first, the best way we can...Go out first, and see if the way's clear.'

She obeyed.Her voice came subdued through the cautiously opened door.

`It's all right.'

Ossipon came out.Notwithstanding his endeavours to be gentle, the cracked bell clattered behind the closed door in the empty shop, as if trying in vain to warn the reposing Mr Verloc of the final departure of his wife - accompanied by his friend.

In the hansom they presently picked up, the robust anarchist became explanatory.He was still awfully pale, with eyes that seemed to have sunk a whole half-inch into his tense face.But he seemed to have thought of everything with extraordinary method.

`When we arrive,' he discoursed in a queer, monotonous tone, `you must go into the station ahead of me, as if we did not know each other.I will take the tickets, and slip yours into your hand as I pass you.Then you will go into the first-class ladies' waiting-room, and sit there till ten minutes before the train starts.Then you come out.I will be outside.

You go in first on the platform, as if you did not know me.There may be eyes watching there that know what's what.Alone you are only a woman going off by train.I am known.With me, you may be guessed at as Mrs Verloc running away.Do you understand, my dear?' he added with an effort.

`Yes,' said Mrs Verloc, sitting there against him in the hansom all rigid with the dread of the gallows and the fear of death.`Yes, Tom.And she added to herself, like an awful refrain: `The drop given was fourteen feet.'

Ossipon, not looking at her, and with a face like a fresh plaster cast of himself after a wasting illness, said: `By-the-by, I ought to have the money for the tickets now.'

Mrs Verloc, undoing some hooks of her bodice, while she went on staring ahead beyond the splashboard, handed over to him the new pigskin pocket-book.

He received it without a word, and seemed to plunge it deep somewhere into his very breast.Then he slapped his coat on the outside.

All this was done without the exchange of a single glance; they were like two people looking out for the first sight of a desired goal.It was not till the hansom swung round a corner and towards the bridge that Ossipon opened his lips again.

`Do you know how much money there is in that thing?' he asked, as if addressing slowly some hob-goblin sitting between the ears of the horse.

`No,' said Mrs Verloc.`He gave it to me.I didn't count.I thought nothing of it at the time.Afterwards--'

She moved her right hand a little.It was so expressive that little movement of that right hand which had struck the deadly blow into a man's heart less than an hour before that Ossipon could not repress a shudder.

He exaggerated it then purposely, and muttered:

`I am cold.I got chilled through.'

Mrs Verloc looked straight ahead at the perspective of her escape.Now and then, like a sable streamer blown across a road, the words `The drop given was fourteen feet' got in the way of her tense stare.Through the black veil the whites of her big eyes gleamed lustrously like the eyes of a masked woman.

Ossipon's rigidity had something businesslike, a queer official expression.

He was heard again all of a sudden, as though he had released a catch in order to speak.

`Look here! Do you know whether your - whether he kept his account at the bank in his own name or in some other name.

Mrs Verloc turned upon him her masked face and the big white gleam of her eyes.

`Other name?' she said, thoughtfully.

`Be exact in what you say,' Ossipon lectured in the swift motion of the hansom.`It's extremely important.I will explain to you.The bank has the numbers of these notes.If they were paid to him in his own name, then when his - his death becomes known, the notes may serve to track us since we have no other money.You have no ether money on you?'

She shook her head negatively.

`None whatever?' he insisted.

`A few coppers.

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