登陆注册
26433500000319

第319章

THE NIGHT HAD NOW COME, when the old clerk was to be delivered over to his keepers. In the midst of his guilty distractions, Jonas had not forgotten it.

It was a part of his guilty state of mind to remember it; for on his persistence in the scheme depended one of his precautions for his own safety.

A hint, a word, from the old man, uttered at such a moment in attentive ears, might fire the train of suspicion, and destroy him. His watchfulness of every avenue by which the discovery of his guilt might be approached, sharpened with his sense of the danger by which he was encompassed. With murder on his soul, and its innumerable alarms and terrors dragging at him night and day, he would have repeated the crime, if he had seen a path of safety stretching out beyond. It was in his punishment; it was in his guilty condition. The very deed which his fears rendered insupportable, his fears would have impelled him to commit again.

But keeping the old man close, according to his design, would serve his turn. His purpose was to escape, when the first alarm and wonder had subsided: and when he could make the attempt without awakening instant suspicion. In the meanwhile these women would keep him quiet; and if the talking humour came upon him, would not be easily startled. He knew their trade.

Nor had he spoken idly when he said the old man should be gagged. He had resolved to ensure his silence; and he looked to the end, not the means.

He had been rough and rude and cruel to the old man all his life; and violence was natural to his mind in connexion with him. `He shall be gagged if he speaks, and pinioned if he writes' said Jonas, looking at him; for they sat alone together. `He is mad enough for that; I'll go through with it!'

Hush!

Still listening! To every sound. He had listened ever since, and it had not come yet. The exposure of the Assurance office; the flight of Crimple and Bullamy with the plunder, and among the rest, as he feared, with his own bill, which he had not found in the pocket-book of the murdered man, and which with Mr. Pecksniff's money had probably been remitted to one or other of those trusty friends for safe deposit at the banker's; his immense losses, and peril of being still called to account as a partner in the broken firm; all these things rose in his mind at one time and always, but he could not contemplate them. He was aware of their presence, and of the rage, discomfiture, and despair, they brought along with them; but he thought--of his own controlling power and direction he thought of the one dread question only. When they would find the body in the wood.

He tried--he had never left off trying--not to forget it was there, for that was impossible, but to forget to weary himself by drawing vivid pictures of it in his fancy: by going softly about it and about it among the leaves, approaching it nearer and nearer through a gap in the boughs, and startling the very flies that were thickly sprinkled all over it, like heaps of dried currants. His mind was fixed and fastened on the discovery, for intelligence of which he listened intently to every cry and shout; listened when any one came in or went out; watched from the window- the people who passed up and down the street; mistrusted his own looks and words. And the more his thoughts were set upon the discovery, the stronger was the fascination which attracted them to the thing itself: lying alone in the wood. He was for ever showing and presenting it, as it were, to every creature whom he saw. `Look here! Do you know of this? Is it found?

Do you suspect me ?' If he had been condemned to bear the body in his arms, and lay it down for recognition at the feet of every one he met, it could not have been more constantly with him, or a cause of more monotonous and dismal occupation than it was in this state of his mind.

Still he was not sorry. It was no contrition or remorse for what he had done that moved him; it was nothing but alarm for his own security.

The vague consciousness he possessed of having wrecked his fortune in the murderous venture, intensified his hatred and revenge, and made him set the greater store by what he had gained The man was dead; nothing could undo that. He felt a triumph yet, in the reflection.

He had kept a jealous watch on Chuffey ever since the deed; seldom leaving him but on compulsion, and then for as short intervals as possible. They were alone together now. It was twilight, and the appointed time drew near at hand. Jonas walked up and down the room. The old man sat in his accustomed corner.

The slightest circumstance was matter of disquiet to the murderer, and he was made uneasy at this time by the absence of his wife, who had left home early in the afternoon, and had not returned yet. No tenderness for her was at the bottom of this; but he had a misgiving that she might have been waylaid, and tempted into saying something that would criminate him when the news came. For anything he knew, she might have knocked at the door of his room, while he was away, and discovered his plot. Confound her, it was like her pale face to be wandering up and down the house! Where was she now?

`She went to her good friend, Mrs. Todgers,' said the old man, when he asked the question with an angry oath.

Aye! To be sure! Always stealing away into the company of that woman.

She was no friend of his. Who could tell what devil's mischief they might hatch together! Let her be fetched home directly.

The old man, muttering some words softly, rose as if he would have gone himself, but Jonas thrust him back into his chair with an impatient imprecation, and sent a servant-girl to fetch her. When he had charged her with her errand he walked to and fro again, and never stopped till she came back, which she did pretty soon: the way being short, and the woman having made good haste.

Well! Where was she? Had she come?

No. She had left there, full three hours.

`Left there! Alone?'

The messenger had not asked; taking that for granted.

`Curse you for a fool. Bring candles!'

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 重生之大明皇朝

    重生之大明皇朝

    明,天启年间,阉党越来越嚣张跋扈,政治极度黑暗。山海关外,女真势力慢慢壮大,叛乱也越发的严重。年轻的天子尚不知人间疾苦依旧躲在深宫大院里做着自己的木工活,随着魏忠贤肆意的发号施令,鱼肉百姓,荼毒百官。千言万语,都是苍天的不幸啊!
  • 妃倾城:逆天大小姐

    妃倾城:逆天大小姐

    哼,最珍贵的九星玄天兽是吧?不好意思,我一手几百只!传说中的幻神诀是吧?哎呀,我背会了~白泽神兽对吧?对不起啊~他是我的契约兽!你又要闹哪样?小心我分分钟秒杀你!
  • 相逢在夕阳里的秋风

    相逢在夕阳里的秋风

    郎骑竹马来,绕床弄青梅。她生命里的温暖就那么多,她全部给了他。两个人的约定,两个人都遵守,他爱着她,她更爱这他,爱与恨的交集,爱情路上因挫而固,又将擦出什么样的火花。。。
  • They and I

    They and I

    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。
  • 转身爱只增不减

    转身爱只增不减

    她用四年时间完成了蜕变,以为早以物是人非,却发现那倔强的他依然站在原地等她转身,发现他一直在守护的爱
  • 邪王的囚宠

    邪王的囚宠

    她始终无法忘记那张温和的笑脸,那漫天黄沙中一个掌心的温暖,然而,他却在消失在她面前九年后,狠心将她霸为床奴!忘君若是一切都已破碎,那么可否容我将记忆驱逐?她最终决定,自己从来不曾从有过所谓的过去。当破碎的过往,如同风中的飘絮,在时光中凋零,我该拿出怎样去抵挡心痛的侵袭?
  • 穿越之苏堇终极

    穿越之苏堇终极

    苏堇,她是现代普通的高中生,还是一个孤儿,除了她从小就连的跆拳道,有的只剩下属于她的某种特殊技能。丁小雨,他是雨龙唯一的儿子,他拥有八千点的战力指数,如果有了阿瑞斯之手,他便可突破万点。而在平常,他只是个普通的男孩子。不同的时空,因为那一条线紧紧地牵在一起,突破时空……
  • 华音系列-彼岸天都

    华音系列-彼岸天都

    四天令传说为诸神遗落人间的神器,有开天辟地的力量。图谋远大的吴越王从怪人曰曜处得知这个传说,亲往苗疆。吴越王抓走苗疆首领的女儿吉娜,以换取上古神器四天令,却引来更多人的争夺。嵩山之巅,卓王孙与武林盟主杨逸之一战,天下震动。日曜借预言之力,推断出相思是一位异族女神转世,她用相思的心血将四天令熔铸成湿婆之箭。吴越王得到日曜的帮助,一心搜集上古神器四天令,以获取一统天下的力量。被奉为武林砥柱的武当三老莫名陨命,陈尸少林寺门口。杨逸之为避免天下浩劫,独闯华音,与卓王孙约定三月之内查明真相。杨逸之追踪线索却被吴越王偷袭成重伤,失去仗以纵横天下的风月之力。与公主交换了身份的相思从井底现身。
  • EXO之失

    EXO之失

    “晨晨,不许叫我哥哥,还有你应该清楚你除了待在我身边,其余别无去处。”鹿晗扬起温和笑容,将讽刺的话语刺入她的心扉。“世间本没有什么温柔,记住,温柔的假象可不要轻易相信,包括我。”张艺兴捏住她的脸,唇中吐出的每个字都掷地有声。“我说过不会再放开你。”吴亦凡将她一把按在床上,冷冷说道。“凌晨,你愿意留在我身边么?”边伯贤用那介于乖巧与魅惑之间的眸子,深深地看向她。“我不许你靠近那些危险的人!你真的了解他们吗?”吴世勋抓住她的肩膀,不顾她惊恐的目光,恨恨地说。为什么……要在最后失去的时候,才发现,你如此重要……
  • 无极道法

    无极道法

    老子为何写下《道德经》?老子写下《道德经》去哪了?本书只是一本轻松诙谐搞笑的书。