登陆注册
5605100000168

第168章

Old Mrs.Hutchinson's letter had supplied much detail, but when her son and grand-daughter arrived in the village of Temple Barholm they heard much more, the greater part of it not in the least to be relied upon.

"The most of it's lies, as folks enjoys theirsels pretendin' to believe," the grand- mother commented."It's servants'-hall talk and cottage gossip, and plenty made itself up out o' beer drunk in th'

tap-room at th' Wool Park.In a place where naught much happens, people get into th' way 'o springin' on a bit o' news, and shakin' and worryin' it like a terrier does a rat.It's nature.That lad's given 'em lots to talk about ever since he coom.He's been a blessin' to 'em.If he'd been gentry, he'd not ha' been nigh as lively.Th'

village lads tries to talk through their noses like him.Little Tummas Hibblethwaite does it i' broad Lancashire."The only facts fairly authenticated were that the mysterious stranger had been taken away very late one night, some time before the interview between Mr.Temple Barholm and Captain Palliser, of which Burrill knew so much because he had "happened to be about." When a domestic magnate of Burrill's type "happens to be about" at a crisis, he is not unlikely to hear a great deal.Burrill, it was believed, knew much more than he deigned to make public.The entire truth was that Captain Palliser himself, in one of his hasty appearances in the neighborhood of Temple Barholm, had bestowed a few words of cold caution on him.

"Don't talk too much," he had said."Proof is required before talk is safe.The American was sharp enough to say that to me himself.He was sharp enough, too, to keep his man hidden.I was the only person that saw him who could have recognized him, and I saw him by chance.

Palford & Grimby require proof.We are in search of it.Servants will talk; but if you don't want to run the risk of getting yourself into trouble, don't make absolute statements."This had been a disappointment to Burrill, who had seen himself developing in magnitude; but he was a timid man, and therefore felt it wise to convey his knowledge merely through the conviction carried by a dignified silence after his first indiscreet revelation of having "happened to be about" had been made.It would have been some solace to him to intimate to Miss Alicia by his bearing and the manner of his services that she had been discovered, so to speak, in the character of a sort of accomplice; that her position was a perilously uncertain one, which would probably end in utter downfall, leaving her in her old and proper place as an elderly, insignificant, and unattractive poor relation, without a feature to recommend her.But being, as before remarked, a timid man, and recalling the interview between himself and his employer held outside the dining-room door, and having also a disturbing memory of the sharp, cool, boyish eye and the tone of the casual remark that he had "a head on his shoulders" and that it was "up to him to make the others understand," it seemed as well to restrain his inclinations until the proof Palford & Grimby required was forthcoming.

It was perhaps the moderate and precautionary attitude of Palford &Grimby, during their first somewhat startled though reserved interview with Captain Palliser, which had prevented the vaguely wild rumors from being regarded as more than villagers' exaggerated talk among themselves.The "gentry," indeed, knew much less of the cottagers than the cottagers knew of the gentry; consequently events furnishing much excitement among the village people not infrequently remained unheard-of by those in the class above them.A story less incredible might have been more considered; but the highly colored reasons given for the absence of the owner of Temple Barholm would, if heard of, have been more than likely to be received and passed over with a smile.

The manner of Mr.Palford and also of Mr.Grimby during the deliberately unmelodramatic and carefully connected relation of Captain Palliser's singular story, was that of professional gentlemen who for reasons of good breeding were engaged in restraining outward expression of conviction that they were listening to utter nonsense.

Palliser himself was aware of this, and upon the whole did not wonder at it in entirely unimaginative persons of extremely sober lives.In fact, he had begun by giving them some warning as to what they might expect in the way of unusualness.

"You will, no doubt, think what I am about to tell you absurd and incredible," he had prefaced his statements."I thought the same myself when my first suspicions were aroused.I was, in fact, inclined to laugh at my own idea until one link connected itself with another."Neither Mr.Grimby nor Mr.Palford was inclined to laugh.On the contrary, they were extremely grave, and continued to find it necessary to restrain their united tendency to indicate facially that the thing must be nonsense.It transcended all bounds, as it were.The delicacy with which they managed to convey this did them much credit.

This delicacy was equaled by the moderation with which Captain Palliser drew their attention to the fact that it was not the thing likely-to-happen on which were founded the celebrated criminal cases of legal history; it was the incredible and almost impossible events, the ordinarily unbelievable duplicities, moral obliquities and coincidences, which made them what they were and attracted the attention of the world.This, Mr.Palford and his partner were obviously obliged to admit.What they did not admit was that such things never having occurred in one's own world, they had been mentally relegated to the world of newspaper and criminal record as things that could not happen to oneself.Mr.Palford cleared his throat in a seriously cautionary way.

"This is, of course, a matter suggesting too serious an accusation not to be approached in the most conservative manner," he remarked.

同类推荐
  • 未轩文集

    未轩文集

    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。
  • 陈氏幼科秘诀

    陈氏幼科秘诀

    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。
  • 雷法议玄篇

    雷法议玄篇

    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。
  • 仙授理伤续断秘方

    仙授理伤续断秘方

    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。
  • 读医随笔

    读医随笔

    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
  • 南柯扰梦

    南柯扰梦

    软萌高梦,温雅南柯。一个狡诈腹黑少女,一个安静温雅少年!扇南柯,他温柔绅士很安静。高梦,她软萌撒娇时是猫,刁蛮霸道时是妖。她本想瞧瞧自家高老师上课时是什么样子,骗一少年说手疼,却不曾想被少年拨弄了心弦。她拆穿他暗恋她,他惊慌失措到逃离现场,一个在爱中偷偷试探小心翼翼,一个在被爱中张牙舞爪肆无忌惮······
  • 掌控神罚

    掌控神罚

    修炼界小屌丝因为不小心看到了仙子洗澡,从而被惩罚为假太监……除非修炼到了最强境界才能恢复能力……易庭很受伤他发誓一定要成为三界六道最强大的假太监,拥有神界女王!
  • 好想告诉你的深情

    好想告诉你的深情

    你有没有遇见过这样的一个人,他携着清晖而来,到达过的每一个地方,都会有着碎碎的光芒,他惊艳了疾苦人间,最后……死于人间
  • 改变你自己

    改变你自己

    格登·史密斯说过,他曾经见过的最幸福的人就是在德兰德斯的防御工事上劳动的一个奴隶——他仅有一条腿,相貌极其丑陋,身上还戴着沉重的锁链。
  • 替身天后:总裁大人求放过

    替身天后:总裁大人求放过

    婚礼当日,她一个电话司慕言像疯了一样冲出礼堂,留下她一个人交换戒指、宣告誓言。一时间,她成了整个娱乐圈的笑柄。本以为走到今天拥有的一切,都是自己争取而来,没想到都是因为和她长得相似。爱情,事业,都是她的替代品?结婚纪念日,他送随手在花店买一束花送给她。“给你,你喜欢的香水百合。”沈初棠坐在沙发上平静的说:“喜欢百合的人,是何芮晴。”本以为这几年在他身边陪伴,可到头来还是比不过她的一句...“慕言,我们和好吧。”我沈初棠,不是任何人的替代品。
  • 余雪荷之千年缘

    余雪荷之千年缘

    凡事都是有因有果,她是来自二十一世纪的女人,余雪荷因一次意外雷劈穿越到大宋朝。一个遗失的空间,平凡的人要如何演绎出惊天的传奇。步步惊心步步情,前世的守候,一生的守望。一把双剑的回归,坎坷不平的人生。缘分的捉弄让她何去何从?还是淹没在历史的长河之中……
  • 封神2观星宗

    封神2观星宗

    一个世俗的大陆,却崇尚强者为尊,何为修仙,是有情还是无情!大陆的神秘面纱掀起!群英争雄,颠覆高峰!
  • 好兵帅克

    好兵帅克

    《好兵帅克》的主人公帅克原本是一个生活在底层的卖狗人,后来因为战争成为一个传令兵。他总是遵循着帝国军队的陈词滥调办事,因此一贯合法,不给人以把柄。但是不知为什么,他越是服从长官的命令,就越是会惹出更大的麻烦。他的长官们都骂他是傻瓜、笨蛋。实际上帅克性情憨厚耿直,喜欢直话直说,而且非常机智、勇敢,每次闯祸时,他都能机智地应对,勇敢地把实话说出来。就这样,帅克做到了别人无法做到的大事,他用民间谚语、笑话,接过上司的口号,伺机巧妙地同反动统治者作斗争。
  • 上清高上玉真众道综监宝讳

    上清高上玉真众道综监宝讳

    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。
  • 穿越农家之行商种田

    穿越农家之行商种田

    云袖,现代商业女强人,单身三十多年,逃过了相亲,没逃过继母的暗害。一朝穿越,玩转古代,轻烟弥漫,唯你而已。