登陆注册
26256500000033

第33章 #Chapter I The Eye of Death; or, the Murder Charge

With an ungainly and most courageous leap, Eames sprang out on this antique bridge, as the only possible mode of escape from the maniac.

He sat astride of it, still in his academic gown, dangling his long thin legs, and considering further chances of flight.

The whitening daylight opened under as well as over him that impression of vertical infinity already remarked about the little lakes round Brakespeare. Looking down and seeing the spires and chimneys pendent in the pools, they felt alone in space.

They felt as if they were looking over the edge from the North Pole and seeing the South Pole below.

"`Hang the world, we said,' observed Smith, `and the world is hanged.

"He has hanged the world upon nothing," says the Bible. Do you like being hanged upon nothing? I'm going to be hanged upon something myself.

I'm going to swing for you... Dear, tender old phrase,' he murmured;

`never true till this moment. I am going to swing for you.

For you, dear friend. For your sake. At your express desire.'

"`Help!' cried the Warden of Brakespeare College; `help!'

"`The puppy struggles,' said the undergraduate, with an eye of pity, `the poor puppy struggles. How fortunate it is that I am wiser and kinder than he,' and he sighted his weapon so as exactly to cover the upper part of Eames's bald head.

"`Smith,' said the philosopher with a sudden change to a sort of ghastly lucidity, `I shall go mad.'

"`And so look at things from the right angle,' observed Smith, sighing gently. `Ah, but madness is only a palliative at best, a drug. The only cure is an operation--an operation that is always successful: death.'

"As he spoke the sun rose. It seemed to put colour into everything, with the rapidity of a lightning artist. A fleet of little clouds sailing across the sky changed from pigeon-gray to pink.

All over the little academic town the tops of different buildings took on different tints: here the sun would pick out the green enameled on a pinnacle, there the scarlet tiles of a villa; here the copper ornament on some artistic shop, and there the sea-blue slates of some old and steep church roof.

All these coloured crests seemed to have something oddly individual and significant about them, like crests of famous knights pointed out in a pageant or a battlefield: they each arrested the eye, especially the rolling eye of Emerson Eames as he looked round on the morning and accepted it as his last.

Through a narrow chink between a black timber tavern and a big gray college he could see a clock with gilt hands which the sunshine set on fire. He stared at it as though hypnotized; and suddenly the clock began to strike, as if in personal reply.

As if at a signal, clock after clock took up the cry: all the churches awoke like chickens at cockcrow.

The birds were already noisy in the trees behind the college.

The sun rose, gathering glory that seemed too full for the deep skies to hold, and the shallow waters beneath them seemed golden and brimming and deep enough for the thirst of the gods.

Just round the corner of the College, and visible from his crazy perch, were the brightest specks on that bright landscape, the villa with the spotted blinds which he had made his text that night.

He wondered for the first time what people lived in them.

"Suddenly he called out with mere querulous authority, as he might have called to a student to shut a door.

"`Let me come off this place,' he cried; `I can't bear it.'

"`I rather doubt if it will bear you,' said Smith critically;

`but before you break your neck, or I blow out your brains, or let you back into this room (on which complex points I am undecided) I want the metaphysical point cleared up.

Do I understand that you want to get back to life?'

"`I'd give anything to get back,' replied the unhappy professor.

"`Give anything!' cried Smith; `then, blast your impudence, give us a song!'

"`What song do you mean?' demanded the exasperated Eames; `what song?'

"`A hymn, I think, would be most appropriate,' answered the other gravely.

`I'll let you off if you'll repeat after me the words--

"`I thank the goodness and the grace That on my birth have smiled.

And perched me on this curious place, A happy English child.'

"Dr. Emerson Eames having briefly complied, his persecutor abruptly told him to hold his hands up in the air. Vaguely connecting this proceeding with the usual conduct of brigands and bushrangers, Mr. Eames held them up, very stiffly, but without marked surprise.

A bird alighting on his stone seat took no more notice of him than of a comic statue.

"`You are now engaged in public worship,' remarked Smith severely, `and before I have done with you, you shall thank God for the very ducks on the pond.'

"`The celebrated pessimist half articulately expressed his perfect readiness to thank God for the ducks on the pond.

"`Not forgetting the drakes,' said Smith sternly.

(Eames weakly conceded the drakes.) `Not forgetting anything, please.

You shall thank heaven for churches and chapels and villas and vulgar people and puddles and pots and pans and sticks and rags and bones and spotted blinds.'

"`All right, all right,' repeated the victim in despair;

`sticks and rags and bones and blinds.'

"`Spotted blinds, I think we said,' remarked Smith with a rogueish ruthlessness, and wagging the pistol-barrel at him like a long metallic finger.

"`Spotted blinds,' said Emerson Eames faintly.

"`You can't say fairer than that,' admitted the younger man, `and now I'll just tell you this to wind up with.

If you really were what you profess to be, I don't see that it would matter to snail or seraph if you broke your impious stiff neck and dashed out all your drivelling devil-worshipping brains.

But in strict biographical fact you are a very nice fellow, addicted to talking putrid nonsense, and I love you like a brother.

I shall therefore fire off all my cartridges round your head so as not to hit you (I am a good shot, you may be glad to hear), and then we will go in and have some breakfast.'

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 我家有女要休夫

    我家有女要休夫

    雁薇铃,能文能武,精灵狡猾,为父报仇,被困在无剑山庄,那个妖孽庄主,好吧,困就困吧,不愁吃穿日子过的舒服,再把那闹个天翻地覆!谁知桃花旺,一时美男纷纷上门,那个妖孽却说:“你敢扑过去试试,信不信本庄主会打断你的狗腿!于是,故事拉开了序幕!
  • 噩梦诅咒:末日颂

    噩梦诅咒:末日颂

    《噩梦诅咒-末日颂》简介:浑身是血的男人在暴雨之夜醒来,失忆带来的迷茫、诡异的定时炸弹、暗中埋伏的狙击手和日夜追杀的怪物,让他陷入一个巨大漩涡中;彩票中奖的农民工,却被亲人绑票,平凡的人生陡然间背负了惊天秘密;僵尸横行的大地上,最后的幸存者们,将用何种手段殊死一搏;富甲一方的柳府深宅大院,赫然惊现一张人脸,这究竟是妖物作祟,还是阴毒的人心?欢迎观赏中国最帅恐怖悬疑作家(青驹破夜色)作品《噩梦诅咒》三部曲之二《末日颂》:我,在末日等你……请关注作者(青驹破夜色)新浪微博,获取最新章节!
  • 闪婚:国民老公甩不掉

    闪婚:国民老公甩不掉

    一场精心设计的车祸,男友失忆,成了自己妹夫。一次乌龙任务,她却成了前男友的小婶婶。神一样的关系!一次扫黄行动,她搞乌龙惹恼了大人物,道歉不说,还被逼和大人物假结婚,名义上假结婚,可领证是货真价实啊,今后她就是个二婚的了,呜呜。虽然他很帅,国民老公级别,可……啥?他竟然是她前男友的叔叔?!这样的话,她倒是可以考虑气气那对贱人。只是,这个国民老公,怎么沾上了就甩不掉了……呃,说好的假结婚呢?
  • 异世斗神国度

    异世斗神国度

    一个弱肉强食的奇异世界,将为你打开异世之争.
  • 超级柜员

    超级柜员

    异能的真相是什么?生命的真相是什么?世界的真相是什么?为什么图书管理员爱因斯坦能提出相对论?为什么达芬奇会成为人类史上少见的全才?当异能爱上科技,会产生怎样的结晶?当无限升级遇上心想事成,会诞生怎样的奇才?一个善良的银行小职员觉醒异能,为自己选择最精彩的人生。本书平行世界文,与现实世界高度相似。该不同处自然不同,请勿较真。
  • 独行上将

    独行上将

    逆天天赋的被废武术怪才,转而成为天才武器专家,在一次敌袭当中失去性命穿越到异界
  • 邪灵鬼道

    邪灵鬼道

    “鬼”所有的人都知道,他们是生活在黑暗里的生物,与我们人类不在一个空间里,即使这样我们之后的交集依然存在,接下来请一起走进我的故事!文飞一个即将退役的军人,一次意外行动,让他加入一个神秘的组织,开始他神秘而惊悚的一生!
  • 写给你的信,来自我

    写给你的信,来自我

    也许有一天你会看到,我是否还在你身边?那时请你一定记得有这么个女孩这么爱过你。
  • 夫妻健康生活百科(现代生活知识百科)

    夫妻健康生活百科(现代生活知识百科)

    《夫妻健康生活百科》正是我们组织相关专家学者精心编写、献给丈夫和妻子共同阅读的百科读物。书中的主要内容有:夫妻两性保健知识、夫妻避孕节育知识、夫妻和谐生活与沟通知识、夫妻健康及病症治疗知识、中老年夫妻健康生活知识等。这些都是夫妻最为关注的、最需要懂得的。
  • 大叔,你好啊!

    大叔,你好啊!

    一个蠢货D3超级大逆袭,废柴兼机(sha)智(bi)为一体的炮灰魔女,在魔族战斗时误从极地法阵穿越到人类世界一名高二宅男家里,和XXX开始了一次次奇妙狗血の旅行......