登陆注册
5434300000069

第69章 CHAPTER XV(1)

ALAN FALLS ILL

After the departure of the messengers a deep melancholy fell upon Alan, who was sure that he had now no further hope of communicating with the outside world. Bitterly did he reproach himself for his folly in having ever journeyed to this hateful place in order to secure-- what? About ā100,000 worth of gold which of course he never could secure, as it would certainly vanish or be stolen on its way to the coast. For this gold he had become involved in a dreadful complication which must cost him much misery, and sooner or later life itself, since he could not marry that beautiful savage Asika, and if he refused her she would certainly kill him in her outraged pride and fury.

Day by day she sent for him, and when he came, assumed a new character, that of a woman humbled by a sense of her own ignorance, which she was anxious to amend. So he must play the role of tutor to her, telling her of civilized peoples, their laws, customs and religions, and instructing her how to write and read. She listened and learned submissively enough, but all the while Alan felt as one might who is called upon to teach tricks to a drugged panther. The drug in this case was her passion for him, which appeared to be very genuine.

But when it passed off, or when he was obliged to refuse her, what, he wondered, would happen then?

Anxiety and confinement told on him far more than all the hardships of his journey. His health ran down, he began to fall ill. Then as bad luck would have it, walking in that damp, unwholesome cedar garden, out of which he might not stray, he contracted the germ of some kind of fever which in autumn was very common in this poisonous climate.

Three days later he became delirious, and for a week after that hung between life and death. Well was it for him that his medicine-chest still remained intact, and that recognizing his own symptoms before his head gave way, he was able to instruct Jeekie what drugs to give him at the different stages of the disease.

For the rest his memories of that dreadful illness always remained very vague. He had visions of Jeekie and of a robed woman whom he knew to be the Asika, bending over him continually. Also it seemed to him that from time to time he was talking with Barbara, which even then he knew must be absurd, for how could they talk across thousands of miles of land and sea.

At length his mind cleared suddenly, and he awoke as from a nightmare to find himself lying in the hall or room where he had always been, feeling quite cool and without pain, but so weak that it was an effort to him to lift his hand. He stared about him and was astonished to see the white head of Jeekie rolling uneasily to and fro upon the cushions of another bed near by.

"Jeekie," he said, "are you ill too, Jeekie?"

At the sound of that voice his retainer started up violently.

"What, Major, you awake?" he said. "Thanks be to all gods, white and black, yes, and yellow too, for I thought your goose cooked. No, no, Major, I not ill, only Asika say so. You go to bed, so she make me go to bed. You get worse, she treat me cruel; you seem better, she stuff me with food till I burst. All because you tell her that you and I die same day. Oh, Lord! poor Jeekie think his end very near just now, for he know quite well that she not let him breathe ten minutes after you peg out. Jeekie never pray so hard for anyone before as he pray this week for you, and by Jingo! I think he do the trick, he and that medicine stuff which make him feel very bad in stomach," and he groaned under the weight of his many miseries.

Weak as he was Alan began to laugh, and that laugh seemed to do him more good than anything that he could remember, for after it he was sure that he would recover.

Just then an agonized whisper reached him from Jeekie.

"Look out!" it said, "here come Asika. Go sleep and seem better, Major, please, or I catch it hot."

So Alan almost shut his eyes and lay still. In another moment she was standing over him and he noticed that her hair was dishevelled and her eyes were red as though with weeping. She scanned him intently for a little while, then passed round to where Jeekie lay and appeared to pinch his ear so hard that he wriggled and uttered a stifled groan.

"How is your lord, dog?" she whispered.

"Better, O Asika, I think that last medicine do us good, though it make me very sick inside. Just now he spoke to me and said that he hoped that your heart was not sad because of him and that all this time in his dreams he had seen and thought of nobody but you, O Asika."

"Did he?" asked that lady, becoming intensely interested. "Then tell me, dog, why is he ever calling upon one Bar-bar-a? Surely that is a woman's name?"

"Yes, O Asika, that is the name of his mother, also of one of his sisters, whom, after you, he loves best of anyone in the whole world.

When you are here he talks of them, but when you are not here he talks of no one but you. Although he is so sick he remembers white man's custom, which tells him that it is very wrong to say sweet things to lady's face till he is quite married to her. After that they say them always."

She looked at him suspiciously and muttering, "Here it is otherwise.

For your own sake, man, I trust that you do not lie," left him, and drawing a stool up beside Alan's bed, sat herself down and examined him carefully, touching his face and hands with her long thin fingers.

Then noting how white and wasted he was, of a sudden she began to weep, saying between her sobs:

"Oh! if you should die, Vernoon, I will die also and be born again not as Asika, as I have been for so many generations, but as a white woman that I may be with you. Only first," she added, setting her teeth, "I will sacrifice every wizard in this land, for they have brought the sickness on you by their magic, and I will burn Bonsa-town and cast its gods to melt in the flames, and the Mungana with them. And then amid their ashes I will let out my life," and again she began to weep very piteously and to call him by endearing names and pray him that he would not die.

同类推荐
  • 佛说咒魅经

    佛说咒魅经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 外科全生集

    外科全生集

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 青眉

    青眉

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 脉确

    脉确

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说法镜经

    佛说法镜经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 理财有道 投资有招

    理财有道 投资有招

    财富能带来生活安定、快乐与满足,也是许多人追求成就感的途径之一。适度地创造财富,不要被金钱所役、所累是每个人都应有的中庸之道。要认识到:“贫穷并不可耻,有钱亦非罪恶”,不要忽视理财对改善生活、管理生活的作用。
  • 龙门三少之系统

    龙门三少之系统

    他曾经是龙门废少,因得到系统,激发一直潜在身体内的潜能。江湖因他再次风云四起,因他起,因他灭!
  • 看懂世界经济的第一本书

    看懂世界经济的第一本书

    辛苦赚的钱为什么却成了泡沫?发达国家的经济危机怎么就影响了你的工作?通货膨胀又是怎么让你有钱却买不起东西的?以物美价廉畅销世界的中国货为什么国人却感受不到?为什么国家越来越富东西也越来越贵?本书从这些人们最关心的经济问题出发,让读者在最短的时间内掌握世界经济情况,了解中国在世界经济格局中的位置,发现世界经济形势与自己的关系,从而站在世界的高度挖掘致富的商机。世界经济与你有关!
  • 修仙归来在都市

    修仙归来在都市

    素来杀伐果断的修仙界第一人渡劫失败,神体炸毁,万幸之中竟重生地球。万千功法只为重造巅峰,前世情仇,今世必将雪恨!且看如何登峰造极,重登仙界巅峰!
  • 只是时光负了年华1

    只是时光负了年华1

    她,是屹立与云端的主,无情,冷血,被她演绎的完美无缺,不管是现代还是幽冥,不管是副体还是本体,可是,不是每个人天生就是那么冷血,若不是历经了那非人所能经历的痛苦,背叛与欺骗,她怎会如此。孤卿:这世界不值本尊怜悯,更不配本尊守护。可是,却有一个人,愿意不求回报,不需她的感情,不含杂质的守护她:卿儿,世人皆醉我独醒,世人不知你,我懂,就好,他们欠你的那一份柔情我来还,不需要任何誓言,我护你,不是因为那无所谓的爱,而是因为,我想守护你……【随心所欲,跟着自己心走,欢迎入坑*^O^*】
  • 重生之贵女为后

    重生之贵女为后

    欧阳墨柒努力了一辈子,到头来却落得一场空,老天念她可怜,许她重活一世。欧阳墨柒发誓一定要将所有负她的人,一个个的送入地狱。可谁知在这个过程中,前世的那个少年郎竟一步步的帮她,让她动心。他帮她,她助他,这时间最好的爱情便是,我和你有共同的愿望。
  • 周易参同契

    周易参同契

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Lyrics

    Lyrics

    Few of Richard Matheson's readers know that he had hopes for writing popular music. At a very early age, Matheson taught himself how to write sheet music, but his family could not afford art supplies and so he had to give up composition. But music never left his mind and when Matheson found a creative new outlet through his writing (cheaper than music, requiring only a pencil and paper), he quickly began composing both prose stories as well as poetry. He picked up music composition again at the age of seventeen, adding music to his poems. Here in Lyrics are the compositions that Matheson created, in publication for the very first time.
  • 坠入凡尘的星星

    坠入凡尘的星星

    我在一个偶然的机会,在一个荒野地发现了她,那时候她看起来生命垂危,可是不一会就不可思议地恢复了体力,之后就一直跟着我;她不知道吃东西要付钱;她对周围的事物显示出十足的好奇;她有超乎寻常的听力和感觉;她酒量奇大,自称不会猜拳却从没有输过;她不知道天高地厚和人心险恶;她记忆力超群,看书一目十行而且越来越聪明;她喜欢凑热闹,参加陌生人的婚礼;她喜欢现炒现卖而且似模似样;她像小孩子一样单纯而且爱和小孩子玩耍;她对我相当依恋而且很喜欢我;她喜欢观察人的行为,研究人的心理和社会现象;她热爱阳光、自然和一些诸如境界之类虚无缥缈的东西;她越来越显示出超乎寻常的逻辑归纳、演绎推理、综合分析等思维能力;她莫名其妙就会开车,她会不知道多少国语言,她的知识似乎呈爆发式增长,她身手非凡,从狂奔的汽车前将我救出……她是何方神圣?她不愿意告诉我,可是她现在成了我的恋人。
  • 《红楼梦》与诗性智慧(中国艺术研究院学术文库)

    《红楼梦》与诗性智慧(中国艺术研究院学术文库)

    《<红楼梦>与诗性智慧》宏观研究,包括观念、方法论、最新观点的评析等,作者具有扎实的理论功底和开阔的视野,能够把握历史主线展开丰富的描述。同时对《红楼梦》中人物形象分析,分析更具体,与作品的描写紧密结合,侧重于美学方法的使用,包括方法论的反思。