登陆注册
27059300000036

第36章 PART I(35)

Later in the day,our doubts of the doctor were confirmed.He betrayed his own perplexity in arriving at a true "diagnosis"of the patient's case,by bringing with him,at his second visit,a brother-physician,whom he introduced as Doctor Dormann,and with whom he asked leave to consult at the bedside.

The new doctor was the younger,and evidently the firmer person of the two.

His examination of the sick man was patient and careful in the extreme.

He questioned us minutely about the period at which the illness had begun;the state of Mr.Keller's health immediately before it;the first symptoms noticed;what he had eaten,and what he had drunk;and so on.

Next,he desired to see all the inmates of the house who had access to the bed-chamber;looking with steady scrutiny at the housekeeper,the footman,and the maid,as they followed each other into the room--and dismissing them again without remark.Lastly,he astounded his old colleague by proposing to administer an emetic.There was no prevailing on him to give his reasons."If I prove to be right,you shall hear my reasons.If I prove to be wrong,I have only to say so,and no reasons will be required.Clear the room,administer the emetic,and keep the door locked till I come back."With those parting directions he hurried out of the house.

"What _can_he mean?"said Mr.Engelman,leading the way out of the bedchamber.

The elder doctor left in charge heard the words,and answered them,addressing himself,not to Mr.Engelman,but to me.He caught me by the arm,as I was leaving the room in my turn.

"Poison!"the doctor whispered in my ear."Keep it a secret;that's what he means."I ran to my own bedchamber and bolted myself in.At that one word,"Poison,"the atrocious suggestion of Frau Meyer,when she had referred to Doctor Fontaine's lost medicine-chest,instantly associated itself in my memory with Madame Fontaine's suspicious intrusion into Mr.Keller's room.Good God!had I not surprised her standing close by the table on which the night-drink was set?and had I not heard Doctor Dormann say,"That's unlucky,"when he was told that the barley-water had been all drunk by the patient,and the jug and glass washed as usual?For the first few moments,I really think I must have been beside myself,so completely was I overpowered by the horror of my own suspicions.I had just sense enough to keep out of Mr.Engelman's way until I felt my mind restored in some degree to its customary balance.

Recovering the power of thinking connectedly,I began to feel ashamed of the panic which had seized on me.

What conceivable object had the widow to gain by Mr.Keller's death?Her whole interest in her daughter's future centered,on the contrary,in his living long enough to be made ashamed of his prejudices,and to give his consent to the marriage.To kill him for the purpose of removing Fritz from the influence of his father's authority would be so atrocious an act in itself,and would so certainly separate Minna and Fritz for ever,in the perfectly possible event of a discovery,that I really recoiled from the contemplation of this contingency as I might have recoiled from deliberately disgracing myself.Doctor Dormann had rashly rushed at a false conclusion--that was the one comforting reflection that occurred to me.I threw open my door again in a frenzy of impatience to hear the decision,whichever way it might turn.

The experiment had been tried in my absence.Mr.Keller had fallen into a broken slumber.Doctor Dormann was just closing the little bag in which he had brought his testing apparatus from his own house.Even now there was no prevailing on him to state his suspicions plainly.

"It's curious,"he said,"to see how all mortal speculations on events,generally resolve themselves into threes.Have we given the emetic too late?Are my tests insufficient?Or have I made a complete mistake?"He turned to his elder colleague."My dear doctor,I see you want a positive answer.No need to leave the room,Mr.Engelman!You and the young English gentleman,your friend,must not be deceived for a single moment so far as I am concerned.I see in the patient a mysterious wasting of the vital powers,which is not accompanied by the symptoms of any disease known to me to which I can point as a cause.In plain words,I tell you,I don't understand Mr.Keller's illness."It was perhaps through a motive of delicacy that he persisted in ****** a needless mystery of his suspicions.In any case he was evidently a man who despised all quackery from the bottom of his heart.The old doctor looked at him with a frown of disapproval,as if his frank confession had violated the unwritten laws of medical etiquette.

"If you will allow me to watch the case,"he resumed,"under the superintendence of my respected colleague,I shall be happy to submit to approval any palliative treatment which may occur to me.My respected colleague knows that I am always ready to learn."His respected colleague made a formal bow,looked at his watch,and hastened away to another patient.Doctor Dormann,taking up his hat,stopped to look at Mother Barbara,fast asleep in her easy chair by the bedside.

"I must find you a competent nurse to-morrow,"he said."No,not one of the hospital women--we want someone with finer feelings and tenderer hands than theirs.In the meantime,one of you must sit up with Mr.

Keller to-night.If I am not wanted before,I will be with you to-morrow morning."I volunteered to keep watch;promising to call Mr.Engelman if any alarming symptoms showed themselves.The old housekeeper,waking after her first sleep,characteristically insisted on sending me to bed,and taking my place.I was too anxious and uneasy (if I may say it of myself)to be as compliant as usual.Mother Barbara,for once,found that she had a resolute person to deal with.At a less distressing time,there would have been something irresistibly comical in her rage and astonishment,when I settled the dispute by locking her out of the room.

同类推荐
  • 月令七十二候集解

    月令七十二候集解

    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。
  • 战守

    战守

    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。
  • 明伦汇编人事典投胎部

    明伦汇编人事典投胎部

    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。
  • 办案要略

    办案要略

    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。
  • 养性延命录

    养性延命录

    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
  • 八一童鞋回忆录

    八一童鞋回忆录

    八一携手,共创辉煌,花开不败,wecanfly。这句话代表着所有八一童鞋的心声,即使以后要分离,也不会忘记彼此。
  • 我们是天生一对

    我们是天生一对

    “你觉得我喜欢你?别想了,我根本不喜欢你。”莫尘逸甩开她的手,头也不回地走。可又是谁,对谁的爱持续了六年。“我讨厌你,我永远也不想见到你!”可一天之后,又是谁抱住他的腰不让他走“对不起,都是我不好,我不该说那样的话”
  • 16节职业素质课(下)

    16节职业素质课(下)

    人,是国家的关键,提高人们的素质是国家兴旺发达的根本。人,也是企业的关键,提高员工的素质是企业发展的关键。本书作者一直在职业素质教育的第一线工作,累积了大量的职业素质教育经验,从而创作出这本本土化、适合中国企业的职业素质教育培训读本。书中对中国人职业素质的缺失做出了深入的剖析,更总结出了一套提高个人职业素质的理念与方法,是每一个职业人士的素质提升读本。
  • 祐山杂说

    祐山杂说

    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。
  • 倏忽间

    倏忽间

    什么鬼,一位白发苍苍的神秘龟仙人告诉她另一个时空因为一个人的死去而将要时空错乱,让她前去挽救可是,她根本就不知道发生了什么,莫名其妙的穿越到了一个小胖子身上。她根本就没有关于那个时空和那个她的记忆啊。。。此刻她的心里有一万匹马奔过。1897年到2016年一百多年时间,两个时空两个人的记忆,她应该如何适应现代生活呢,她又该如何结束这段闹剧呢,一场青春校园剧就此展开。(女主真实年龄只有14岁)
  • 离别亦悲伤

    离别亦悲伤

    也许,早就注定了吧!终究还是爱他的,终究还是放不下,像掉进了一个漩涡,逃离只会陷得更深!怎么无数次的放手也没办法忘了他。对与否也不该是个人决定的吧!
  • 校园进行时:竹马校草戏青梅

    校园进行时:竹马校草戏青梅

    袁依澜脸色阴沉,心里简直想骂娘,到底是谁手贱举报她,还在这个时候举报她,最好别让她找到,否则……某男黑着一张脸,看着已经被霸道病毒入侵的宝贝电脑,谁TM做的!!!他绝对不会放过她!!!一步步的深入,一步步的沦陷,一步步……那到底是情深,还是阴谋……【由于作者的懒癌症>O<,以及正在打暑假工T^T,导致此书并没有存稿,所以不定期更新!请看书的亲们见谅,不过偶保证暑假完后一定会更新,要是没有更,尼萌就拿鸡蛋砸偶吧!T^T先遁了~】
  • 上古世纪之战神无敌

    上古世纪之战神无敌

    宅男洛飞,在玩游戏上古世纪时,无意中打翻泡面碗,魂穿游戏世界中,重生在同名同姓的哈里兰族废材少年身上。哈里兰人族,因曾经信奉破坏神基里奥斯,而被自封为神之后裔的诺亚人驱逐到东大陆,并称之为罪恶的神弃一族。当末日预言应验之日,当邪恶的力量苏醒之时,洛飞带着上古战神系统,来到这上古世纪,掀起了惊天的波澜!
  • 黎明即起

    黎明即起

    曾近的我一无所有,但现在的我得到了可贵友情和一生一世的爱情。甜文!无虐!
  • 重生之音乐全才

    重生之音乐全才

    身怀音乐软件重生在一个似是而非的世界,做一个作词、编曲、演唱于一体的音乐全才。