登陆注册
34906600000158

第158章

"First, because of the state of excitement you must have been in;and next, because I doubt the wine that was left in your room. The count no doubt knew enough of drugs to put a few ghostly horrors into the decanter. But poor Miss Cameron! The horrors he has put into her mind and life! It is a sad fate--all but a sentence of insanity."Hugh sprang to his feet.

"By heaven!" he cried, "I will strangle the knave.""Stop, stop!" said Falconer. "No revenge! Leave him to the sleeping divinity within him, which will awake one day, and complete the hell that he is now building for himself--for the very fire of hell is the divine in it. Your work is to set Euphra free. If you did strangle him, how do you know if that would free her from him?""Horrible!--Have you no news of him?"

"None whatever."

"What, then, can I do for her?"

"You must teach her to foil him."

"How am I to do that? Even if I knew how, I cannot see her, Icannot speak to her."

"I have a great faith in opportunity."

"But how should she foil him?"

"She must pray to God to redeem her fettered will--to strengthen her will to redeem herself. She must resist the count, should he again claim her submission (as, for her sake, I hope he will), as she would the devil himself. She must overcome. Then she will be free--not before. This will be very hard to do. His power has been excessive and peculiar, and her submission long and complete. Even if he left her alone, she would not therefore be free. She must defy him; break his bonds; oppose his will; assert her *******; and defeat him utterly.""Oh! who will help her? I have no power. Even if I were with her, I could not help her in such a struggle. I wish David were not dead. He was the man.--You could now, Mr. Falconer.""No. Except I knew her, had known her for some time, and had a strong hold of all her nature, I could not, would not try to help her. If Providence brought this about, I would do my best; but otherwise I would not interfere. But if she pray to God, he will give her whatever help she needs, and in the best way, too.""I think it would be some comfort to her if we could find the ring--the crystal, I mean.""It would be more, I think, if we could find the diamond.""How can we find either?"

"We must find the count first. I have not given that up, of course.

I will tell you what I should like to do, if I knew the lady.""What?"

"Get her to come to London, and make herself as public as possible: go to operas and balls, and theatres; be presented at court; take a stall at every bazaar, and sell charity puff-balls--get as much into the papers as possible. 'The lovely, accomplished, fascinating Miss Cameron, &c., &c.'""What do you mean?"

"I will tell you what I mean. The count has forsaken her now; but as soon as he heard that she was somebody, that she was followed and admired, his vanity would be roused, his old sense of property in her would revive, and he would begin once more to draw her into his toils. What the result would be, it is impossible to foretell; but it would at least give us a chance of catching him, and her a chance of resisting him.""I don't think, however, that she would venture on that course herself. I should not dare to propose it to her.""No, no. It was only an invention, to deceive myself with the fancy that I was doing something. There would be many objections to such a plan, even if it were practicable. I must still try to find him, and if fresh endeavours should fail, devise fresher still.""Thank you a thousand times," said Hugh. "It is too good of you to take so much trouble.""It is my business," answered Falconer. "Is there not a soul in trouble?"Hugh went home, full of his new friend. With the clue he had given him, he was able to follow all the windings of Euphra's behaviour, and to account for almost everything that had taken place. It was quite painful to him to feel that he could be of no immediate service to her; but he could hardly doubt that, before long, Falconer would, in his wisdom and experience, excogitate some mode of procedure in which he might be able to take a part.

He sat down to his novel, which had been ****** but little progress for some time; for it is hard to write a novel when one is living in the midst of a romance. But the romance, at this time, was not very close to him. It had a past and a possible future, but no present.

That same future, however, might at any moment dawn into the present.

In the meantime, teaching the Latin grammar and the English alphabet to young aspirants after the honours of the ministry, was not work inimical to invention, from either the exhaustion of its excitement or the absorption of its interest.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 绝色兵王在都市

    绝色兵王在都市

    李笑,夜枭雇佣兵组织的组建者,一块蕴含异能的蚩尤石,让他的人生产生了翻天覆地的变化。为祖国,他甘愿血溅五尺,为兄弟,他不惜屠尽全族,为女人,他更是惜怜有加。寻找亲人的渺茫,家国仇恨的纠结,是谁?在幕后操纵着这一切,所谓的一切,究竟是天命所为,还是人事阴谋。而他又如何在这交错纷乱的事件中,找到属于他自己的王者之路?
  • 滋兰树蕙山房同心录

    滋兰树蕙山房同心录

    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。
  • 穿越之誓嫁为妃

    穿越之誓嫁为妃

    一场穿越,她成了高高在上的玉城公主,出嫁于太子,成亲当日竟是三妃同堂的局面。新婚之夜,他狠心找人验身,她冷笑应对,既然他无情无义,她也不是软柿子随便捏,就算只是个侧妃,她也要把这宫廷闹它一闹!五尺高墙,尔虞我诈,且看她如何在宫海立足!
  • 灰邪

    灰邪

    强者对决,稍纵即逝。以命作盘,众生皆为棋。面对传说子的宿命,是爱情还是大义,一切都难以抉择。本人将以诙谐的笔风为各位展示主角灰邪的一生
  • 魔鬼契书

    魔鬼契书

    现实不允许的美好,就让我们的爱情活在小说里。
  • 网游之大荒传

    网游之大荒传

    逍遥,初入游戏就经历了一场仙神大战,而他竟然为了去捡起大战中仙家遗落的神兵而跌入万丈深渊中,游戏中醒来后的他竟然一片荒无人烟的大漠中……
  • 奇怪的小说作家

    奇怪的小说作家

    这是一个善良且奇怪的小说作家,在这个善恶交织的世界上艰难前行的故事~
  • 万世剑

    万世剑

    十几年前,在霸凌大陆,血妖城派一名具有极实力的强者,单枪匹马,单挑整个萧宗青城。原本有一比之力的城主萧青成,在外力的压迫下,被迫使用秘法,只护住了他的爱人和众多长老们,城主的大儿子萧怨在记事的时候发下血誓,这一生一定要将血妖国给灭了。但由于他的天赋问题,原本13岁即可成就一阶剑武后可以掌握独门剑枪术的人却没有习成。后偶遇一机缘,从而突飞猛进,将视他弱小的人都踩在脚下,然后走向了复仇之路。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 逆袭帝王妃

    逆袭帝王妃

    一次“意外”,她来到了这个世界。一次碰巧,她遇到了他。几次事件,他们相遇了。本是人前冷漠嗜血的女王,本是冷酷无情的帝王。在彼此间却露出了反差的形象~~~~~~.