登陆注册
26280100000152

第152章 CHAPTER THE FORTY-FIFTH(3)

But, the instant I discover that this domestic conspiracy of yours--this personation of your brother which once quieted and comforted her--is unfavorably affecting her health of body and her peace of mind, I interfere between you in the character of her medical attendant, and stop it on medical grounds. You are producing in my patient a conflict of feeling, which--in a nervous temperament like hers--cannot go on without serious injury to her health. And serious injury to her health means serious injury to her eyes. I won't have that--I tell you plainly to pack up and go. I meddle with nothing else. After what you have yourself seen, I leave you to decide whether you will restore your brother to Miss Finch, or not. All I say is, Go. Make any excuse you like, but go before you have done more mischief. You shake your head! Is that a sign that you refuse? Take a day to think, before you make up your mind. I have patients in London to whom I am obliged to go back. But the day after to-morrow, I shall return to Ramsgate. If I find you still here, I shall tell Miss Finch you are no more Oscar Dubourg than I am. In her present state, I see less danger in giving her even that serious shock than in leaving her to the slow torment of mind which you are inflicting by your continued presence in this place. My last word is said. I go back by the next train, in an hour's time. Good morning, Mr. Nugent. If you are a wise man, you will meet me at the station."

After this, the accounts vary. Nugent's statement asserts that he accompanied Grosse on his way back to Miss Batchford's lodging, arguing the matter with him, and only leaving him at the door of the house.

Grosse's statement, on the other hand, makes no allusion to this. The disagreement between them is, however, of no consequence here. It is admitted, on either side, that the result of the interview was the same.

When Grosse took the train for London, Nugent Dubourg was not at the station. The next entry in the Journal shows that he remained that day and night, at least, at Ramsgate.

You now know, from the narrative of the surgeon's own proceedings, how seriously he thought of his patient's case, and how firmly he did his duty as a professional man. Having given you this necessary information, I again retire, and leave Lucilla to take up the next link in the chain of events.--P.]

_September_ 5th. _Six o'clock in the morning._--A few hours of restless, broken sleep--disturbed by horrid dreams, and waking over and over again with startings that seemed to shake me from head to foot. I can bear it no longer. The sun is rising. I have got up--and here I am at the writing-table, trying to finish the long story of yesterday still uncompleted in my Journal.

I have just been looking at the view from my window--and I notice one thing which has struck me. The mist this morning is the thickest mist I have yet seen here.

The sea-view is almost invisible, it is so dim and dull. Even the objects about me in my room are nothing like so plain as usual. The mist is stealing in no doubt through my open window. It gets between me and my paper, and obliges me to bend down close over the page to see what I am about. When the sun is higher, things will be clear again. In the meantime, I must do as well as I can.

Grosse came back after his walk as mysterious as ever.

He was quite peremptory in ordering me not to overtask my eyes--forbidding reading and writing, as I have already mentioned. But, when I asked for his reasons, he had, for the first time in my experience of him, no reasons to give. I have the less scruple about disobeying him, on that account. Still I am a little uneasy, I confess, when I think of his strange behavior yesterday. He looked at me, in the oddest way--as if he saw something in my face which he had never seen before. Twice he took his leave; and twice he returned, doubtful whether he would not remain at Ramsgate, and let his patients in London take care of themselves. His extraordinary indecision was put an end to at last by the arrival of a telegram which had followed him from London. An urgent message, I suppose, from one of the patients. He went away in a bad temper and a violent hurry; and told me, at the door, to expect him back on the sixth.

When Oscar came later, there was another surprise for me.

Like Grosse, he was not himself--he too behaved strangely! First, he was so cold and so silent, that I thought he was offended. Then he went straight to the other extreme, and became so loudly talkative, so obstreperously cheerful, that my aunt asked me privately whether I did not suspect (as she did) that he had been taking too much wine. It ended in his trying to sing to my accompaniment on the piano, and in his breaking down. He walked away to the other end of the room without explanation or apology. When I followed him there a little while after, he had a look that indescribably distressed me--a look as if he had been crying. Towards the end of the evening, my aunt fell asleep over her book, and gave us a chance of speaking to each other in a little second room which opens out of the drawing-room in this house. It was I who took the chance--not he. He was so incomprehensibly unwilling to go into the room and speak to me, that I had to do a very unladylike thing. I mean that I had to take his arm, and lead him in myself, and entreat him (in a whisper) to tell me what was the matter with him.

"Only the old complaint," he answered.

I made him sit down by me on a little couch that just held two.

"What do you mean by the old complaint?" I asked.

"Oh! you know!"

"I _don't_ know."

"You would know if you really loved me."

"Oscar! it is a shame to say that. It is a shame to doubt that I love you!"

"Is it? Ever since I have been here, I have doubted that you love me. It is getting to be an old complaint of mine now. I still suffer a little sometimes. Don't notice it!"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 嗜血妃子爱上我

    嗜血妃子爱上我

    前世的她,是一个杀人不眨眼的高级杀手。却阴差阳作地进入了另一个时空。陌生的环境,陌生的人,陌生的记忆,陌生的时空。一向对爱情不敏感的她,却为何又如此动心?面对艰难的选择,她,到底会爱上谁?
  • 天御临凡

    天御临凡

    天机变动,众仙临凡,众生相争,皆道:天道不予,吾自取之
  • BigBang之深海

    BigBang之深海

    (主:TOP)离家出走?收养?争斗?偶遇??排挤?求婚?入圈深似海……你还是蹚了这浑水“你好,我是夏海沫。”“女人,和我结婚吧。”“对不起,我办不到……”“夏海沫你个贱人,去死吧!”“夏海沫,这次你还忍心拒绝我吗?”“嗯?夏海沫……真是个有趣的家伙……”“女人,我会让你后悔的”“哼,得罪我的人,一个也别想好过……”更是澄澈无瑕的海,才拥有最为黑暗的深度……深海,一旦陷入那无尽的黑暗,你将万劫不复……夏海沫……你的心到底是什么颜色的………
  • 浮世梦

    浮世梦

    再一次开学回到学校,想起了很多事,也发生了很多事,不愿每天念叨着,于是,文字,成了最好的记录替代品.......
  • 神魔轮

    神魔轮

    上古传说的凶兽再现天下,九幽之河重临人间,泗水之上,九鼎闪烁着古老的气息,世间四大神兽降生,天地巨变!猎人小子,卷入这世间之中,用长剑问鼎天下,豪气面对群雄。踏天歌,对酒长歌,人生路,似苦似甜,红颜易老!
  • 邪少霸宠:契约妻

    邪少霸宠:契约妻

    一份契约,铸就一份爱情,言姝然背紧贴着墙,手里拿着契约书瞪着男子愤愤警告:“第三页第二十条规定不可以触碰对方”男子双手撑着墙,将她圈住,俯身邪邪一笑,一张俊逸的脸瞬间在她眼前放大,鼻尖与鼻尖似是只隔着一片蝉翼,一股温热的气息萦绕她脸颊。不知何时男子手里多了一红色小本子,嘴角勾勒出的弧度愈加明显,与言姝然拉开一些距离,将红色本子摊开,富有磁性的声音响起:“我有结婚证,亲爱的老婆大人”许一生之诺,承一世之情。
  • EXO之吴世勋迟来的爱

    EXO之吴世勋迟来的爱

    璇,你回来好吗?我错了,我想你了,算我求你了,你回来吧。BY吴世勋璇儿,你知道吗?当我知道我是你亲生哥哥有多痛,算我求你回来吧。我们大家都等着你回来。BY鹿晗小璇,我知道你喜欢是我弟弟,,算我求你了,回来吧,我永远是你蓝颜。BY吴亦凡汐璇我不会在让他伤害你,即使你喜欢的不是我。BY朴灿烈冷汐璇你好狠的心,为什么要一声不吭的离开,你的离开要我们悔恨一辈子吗?BY边伯贤言(璇),我不管你是否跟吴世勋有婚约,我永远都不会放弃你的。BY张艺兴
  • 异武玄道劫

    异武玄道劫

    几个身怀古武和异能的现代人,通过自己的智慧以两种途径来到了三界修仙地,他们会有什么遭遇呢?又是否可以挣脱牢笼达到自己的目的呢?
  • 仙剑蜀山劫

    仙剑蜀山劫

    蜀山之劫,魔降天下。小人物?大英雄?谁能化身救世主?修炼等级划分:丹心境,还神境,三千境,天元境,神境,道境新书求支持
  • 空接之城

    空接之城

    钱成,穿越后依然过着浑浑噩噩的日子,有一天为了自己的兄弟,在洛克公园打了10场球,爆发出无可匹敌的实力,被马刺队球探慧眼看到,从而来到了马刺。不过波波维奇并没有重视他,甚至雪藏了他,而他在那场不被看好的比赛中证明了自己......于是,凭借着无与伦比的能力,将垂垂老矣的马刺队打造成真正的——空接之城。