登陆注册
26521000000032

第32章 TWELFTH SCENE.(2)

There was a sound of footsteps on the gravel-walk which ran between the house wall and the garden lawn. It was followed by a tap--a single faint tap, no more--on one of the panes of glass.

They all three stood still. For a moment more nothing was audible. Then there was a heavy shock, as of something falling outside. Then a groan, then another interval of silence--a long silence, interrupted no more.

Turlington's arm dropped from Natalie. She drew back to her aunt.

Looking at him instinctively, in the natural expectation that he would take the lead in penetrating the mystery of what had happened outside the window, the two women were thunderstruck to see that he was, to all appearance, even more startled and more helpless than they were. "Richard," said Miss Lavinia, pointing to the window, "there is something wrong out there. See what it is." He stood motionless, as if he had not heard her, his eyes fixed on the window, his face livid with terror.

The silence outside was broken once more; this time by a call for help.

A cry of horror burst from Natalie. The voice outside--rising wildly, then suddenly dying away again--was not entirely strange to _her_ ears. She tore aside the curtain. With voice and hand she roused her aunt to help her. The two lifted the heavy bar from its socket; they opened the shutters and the window. The cheerful light of the room flowed out over the body of a prostrate man, lying on his face. They turned the man over.

Natalie lifted his head.

Her father!

His face was bedabbled with blood. A wound, a frightful wound, was visible on the side of his bare head, high above the ear. He looked at her, his eyes recognized her, before he fainted again in her arms. His hands and his clothes were covered with earth stains. He must have traversed some distance; in that dreadful condition he must have faltered and fallen more than once before he reached the house. His sister wiped the blood from his face.

His daughter called on him frantically to forgive her before he died--the harmless, gentle, kind-hearted father, who had never said a hard word to her! The father whom she had deceived!

The terrified servants hurried into the room. Their appearance roused their master from the extraordinary stupor that had seized him. He was at the window before the footman could get there. The two lifted Sir Joseph into the room, and laid him on the sofa.

Natalie knelt by him, supporting his head. Miss Lavinia stanched the flowing blood with her handkerchief. The women-servants brought linen and cold water. The man hurried away for the doctor, who lived on the other side of the village. Left alone again with Turlington, Natalie noticed that his eyes were fixed in immovable scrutiny on her father's head. He never said a word.

He looked, looked, looked at the wound.

The doctor arrived. Before either the daughter or the sister of the injured man could put the question, Turlington put it--"Will he live or die?"The doctor's careful finger probed the wound.

"Make your minds easy. A little lower down, or in front, the blow might have been serious. As it is, there is no harm done. Keep him quiet, and he will be all right again in two or three days."Hearing those welcome words, Natalie and her aunt sank on their knees in silent gratitude. After dressing the wound, the doctor looked round for the master of the house. Turlington, who had been so breathlessly eager but a few minutes since, seemed to have lost all interest in the case now. He stood apart, at the window, looking out toward the church-yard, thinking. The questions which it was the doctor's duty to ask were answered by the ladies. The servants assisted in examining the injured man's clothes: they discovered that his watch and purse were both missing. When it became necessary to carry him upstairs, it was the footman who assisted the doctor. The foot man's master, without a word of explanation, walked out bare headed into the back garden, on the search, as the doctor and the servants supposed, for some trace of the robber who had attempted Sir Joseph's life.

His absence was hardly noticed at the time. The difficulty of conveying the wounded man to his room absorbed the attention of all the persons present.

Sir Joseph partially recovered his senses while they were taking him up the steep and narrow stairs. Carefully as they carried the patient, the motion wrung a groan from him before they reached the top. The bedroom corridor, in the rambling, irregularly built house rose and fell on different levels. At the door of the first bedchamber the doctor asked a little anxiously if that was the room. No; there were three more stairs to go down, and a corner to turn, before they could reach it. The first room was Natalie's. She instantly offered it for her father's use. The doctor (seeing that it was the airiest as well as the nearest room) accepted the proposal. Sir Joseph had been laid comfortably in his daughter's bed; the doctor had just left them, with renewed assurances that they need feel no anxiety, when they heard a heavy step below stairs. Turlington had re-entered the house.

(He had been looking, as they had supposed, for the ruffian who had attacked Sir Joseph; with a motive, however, for the search at which it was impossible for other persons to guess. His own safety was now bound up in the safety of Thomas Wildfang. As soon as he was out of sight in the darkness, he made straight for the malt-house. The change of clothes was there untouched; not a trace of his accomplice was to be seen. Where else to look for him it was impossible to tell. Turlington had no alternative but to go back to the house, and ascertain if suspicion had been aroused in his absence.)He had only to ascend the stairs, and to see, through the open door, that Sir Joseph had been placed in his daughter's room.

"What does this mean?" he asked, roughly.

同类推荐
  • 放翁词

    放翁词

    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。
  • 漫作

    漫作

    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。
  • 佛说栴檀树经

    佛说栴檀树经

    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。
  • Life Is A Dream

    Life Is A Dream

    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。
  • 华严原人论发微录

    华严原人论发微录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 天书—

    天书—

    洪荒2756年,神州天灾不休,人间哀鸿遍野,百姓颠沛流离,十室九空,无不绝望地生活在水深火热之中。目睹如此惨状,洪荒正道领袖五族神帝蚩心痛不已,遂决定亲自率领金木水火土五族族人一十八位绝顶天才高手,东战沧海,西摄蛮荒,南伏大泽,北震诸夷,务必一举斩杀降伏为祸作乱的上古四大神兽青龙、白虎、朱雀、玄武。四大战役历时七年,前三战有惊无险,均是一战成功,唯有最后一战降服神兽玄武时,却是天崩地裂异象突生,此战后,五族神帝蚩与五族一十八位绝顶天才高手居然全部下落不明、音信全无,从此人间蒸发······
  • 暗夜并蒂莲

    暗夜并蒂莲

    暗夜的隐藏下有多少不为人知的秘密?隐秘的族群在人们中间孤独的行走着,他们隐藏着自己的一切,善良与邪恶,冷漠与温情,所有的秘密只有隐藏在少女身体里的另一个人知晓……可是当那抹隐匿许久的孤魂真真正正的出现在阳光下时,一切都偏离了轨道。到底谁说的才是真的,是那些所谓的亲人,还是那个说是自己妹妹的魔鬼?
  • 血海苍穹

    血海苍穹

    梦境成真,当年你发现做十年的恶梦成真,你是自认命运,还是奋起反抗。楚云选择了后者,带着神秘血海的他如何演绎真仙传奇!
  • 傲笑天地间

    傲笑天地间

    四地域,六遗族。八天宗,九神谷。战天抗魔,枭雄争。琥珀长剑,血染如何?琥珀色眼眸,热血之心,大道向前,血染又如何。争夺,杀戮,在强者的世界里,没有弱者的席位。度与劫,丹田为度,丹灵为劫,斗气炼度,灵气渡劫。生与死,情与恨,泪与笑,一杯酒。异灵,狂魔,凡人,天神天陨,血誓,遗迹,有缘人丹药,鬼精,神魄,魔血,焠体炼魂爱,狠,情,仇,断人肠侠,义,恩,蝉,笑人生。
  • 修真狂徒在都市

    修真狂徒在都市

    一部《魔龙诀》使小职员江枫咸鱼翻身!内含炼丹秘术,从此开办药厂发家致富;更有无上神功,为他扫平前进道路!美女高管来给我打工,世家公子来为我铺路!虽然我是小人物,但是我能走出小人物的不凡之路……
  • 花千骨之心永归你

    花千骨之心永归你

    上一世她是妖神花千骨今生今世她是神界女娲娘娘最宠爱的女儿陆雪
  • 记得和希望

    记得和希望

    随便想起的一些事,有时候是,记得和希望拥有...
  • 众域之主

    众域之主

    一枚灵戒,几口冰棺,一个坠落凡尘,背负血海深仇的少年
  • 腹黑总裁的佣兵女王

    腹黑总裁的佣兵女王

    “只有我才有资格跟哥哥站在一起”异能者纷纷来扰,靠,什么情况....大姐大成为一代佣兵,只为跟他站在一起。
  • 猎杀龙骑士

    猎杀龙骑士

    十岁孤儿先亲见父母惨死于龙骑士之手,后又被捕奴队卖作奴隶在经历七年角斗场的生死厮杀,三年权贵间的尔虞我诈后,复仇的长剑悄然抽出,奈何造化弄人被穿越众夺体重生成功,从此一个无比卑劣的冥王诞生。“龙骑士,将成为我三叉戟的祭品!”“众神,将是我脚下的奴隶!”【书友群46736179】