登陆注册
5561300000012

第12章 IV SIGNED, VERONICA(1)

I am in some ways hypersensitive. Among my other weaknesses I have a wholesome dread of ridicule, and this is probably why I failed to press my theory on the captain when he appeared, and even forbore to mention the various small matters which had so attracted my attention. If he and the experienced men who came with him saw suicide and nothing but suicide in this lamentable shooting of a bride of two weeks, then it was not for me to suggest a deeper crime, especially as one of the latter eyed me with open scorn when I proposed to accompany them upstairs into the room where the light had been seen burning. No, I would keep my discoveries to myself or, at least, forbear to mention them till I found the captain alone, asking nothing at this juncture but permission to remain in the house till Mr. Jeffrey arrived.

I had been told that an officer had gone for this gentleman, and when I heard the sound of wheels in front I made a rush for the door, in my anxiety to catch a glimpse of him. But it was a woman who alighted.

As this woman was in a state of great agitation, one of the men hastened down to offer his arm. As she took it, I asked Hibbard, who had suddenly reappeared upon the scene, who she was.

He said that she was probably the sister of the woman who lay inside. Upon which I remembered that this lady, under the name of Miss Tuttle - she was but half-sister to Miss Moore - had been repeatedly mentioned by the reporters, in the accounts of the wedding before mentioned, as a person of superior attainments and magnificent beauty.

This did not take from my interest, and flinging decorum to the winds, I approached as near as possible to the threshold which she must soon cross. As I did so I was astonished to hear the strains of Uncle David's organ still pealing from the opposite side of the way. This at a moment so serious and while matters of apparent consequence were taking place in the house to which he had himself directed the attention of the police, struck me as carrying stoicism to the extreme. Not very favorably impressed by this display of open if not insulting indifference on the part of the sole remaining Moore, - an indifference which did not appear quite natural even in a man of his morbid eccentricity, - I resolved to know more of this old man and, above all, to make myself fully acquainted with the exact relations which had existed between him and his unhappy niece.

Meanwhile Miss Tuttle had stepped within the circle of light cast by our lanterns.

I have never seen a finer woman, nor one whose features displayed a more heart-rending emotion. This called for respect, and I, for one, endeavored to show it by withdrawing into the background. But I soon stepped forward again. My desire to understand her was too great, the impression made by her bearing too complex, to be passed over lightly by one on the lookout for a key to the remarkable tragedy before us.

Meanwhile her lips had opened with the cry:

"My sister! Where is my sister?"

The captain made a hurried movement toward the rear and then with the laudable intention, doubtless, of preparing her for the ghastly sight which awaited her, returned and opened a way for her into the drawing-room. But she was not to be turned aside from her course.

Passing him by, she made directly for the library which she entered with a bound. Struck by her daring, we all crowded up behind her, and, curious brutes that we were, grouped ourselves in a semicircle about the doorway as she faltered toward her sister's outstretched form and fell on her knees beside it. Her involuntary shriek and the fierce recoil she made as her eyes fell on the long white ribbon trailing over the floor from her sister's wrist, struck me as voicing the utmost horror of which the human soul is capable. It was as though her very soul were pierced. Something in the fact itself, something in the appearance of this snowy ribbon tied to the scarce whiter wrist, seemed to pluck at the very root of her being; and when her glance, in traveling its length, lighted on the death dealing weapon at its end, she cringed in such apparent anguish that we looked to see her fall in a swoon or break out into delirium. We were correspondingly startled when she suddenly burst forth with this word of stern command:

"Untie that knot! Why do you leave that dreadful thing fast to her?

Untie it, I say, it is killing me; I can not bear the sight." And from trembling she passed to shuddering till her whole body shook convulsively.

The captain, with much consideration, drew back the hand he had impulsively stretched toward the ribbon.

"No, no," he protested; "we can not do that; we can do nothing till the coroner comes. It is necessary that he should see her just as she was found. Besides, Mr. Jeffrey has a right to the same privilege. We expect him any moment."

The beautiful head of the woman before us shook involuntarily, but her lips made no protest. I doubt if she possessed the power of speech at that moment. A change, subtle, but quite perceptible, had taken place in her emotions at mention of her sister's husband, and, though she exerted herself to remain calm, the effort seemed too much for her strength. Anxious to hide this evidence of weakness, she rose impetuously; and then we saw how tall she was, how the long lines of her cloak became her, and what a glorious creature she was altogether.

"It will kill him," she groaned in a deep inward voice. Then, with a certain forced haste and in a tone of surprise which to my ear had not quite a natural ring, she called aloud on her who could no longer either listen or answer:

"Oh, Veronica, Veronica! What cause had you for death? And why do we find you lying here in a spot you so feared and detested?"

"Don't you know?" insinuated the captain, with a mild persuasiveness, such as he was seldom heard to use. "Do you mean that you can not account for your sister's violent end, you, who have lived with her - or so I have been told-ever since her marriage with Mr. Jeffrey?"

"Yes."

同类推荐
  • 正统北狩事迹

    正统北狩事迹

    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。
  • Love Songs

    Love Songs

    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。
  • 杂曲歌辞 盖罗缝

    杂曲歌辞 盖罗缝

    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。
  • 福建省外海战船则例

    福建省外海战船则例

    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。
  • 大方等无想经

    大方等无想经

    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
  • 明天还是大学

    明天还是大学

    生命已迂回二十多载,躲躲闪闪,来来去去。总有一些事回忆深刻,那就不妨趁着年轻记下来,不辨来路,不惧过往。
  • 恐怖漫言

    恐怖漫言

    鬼怪、科技、奇幻、道法...当这些来自无尽世界的垃圾成为某些人的斗兽场,磨砺出的是合格的士兵,还是斯巴达勇士?来自异世界的陆巡,在地球生活了二十多年,才发现自己竟然疑似有一个大佬亲爹,大佬干爹,大佬亲爹基友...那么,thisworld、thatworld...还有who?!唯一需要解决的问题...一只脚踏入清洁工,一生...都不要想逃脱!
  • 天谕天之子

    天谕天之子

    从宇宙诞生之后,万物便走上了进化之路。夏轩,这个来自地球的少年,在经历一切不顺后,来到了这个世界。这个世界,天道渴望进化,创造出了名为天谕的系统。天谕系统,连接万界,沟通万界,负责制造强者。而夏轩发现,这些世界,都是曾经的二次元……
  • 白多黑少

    白多黑少

    欧阳黔森,中国作家协会七届全委,贵州省文联副主席,贵州省作家协会主席,第十一届全国人大代表,第十一届全国青年常委,贵州省青联副主席。先后在中国中文核心朔刊《当代》、《十月》、《收获》、《人民文学》、《中国作家》、《新华文摘》等发表长、中、短篇小说四百余万字。出版有长篇小说《雄关漫道》、《非爱时间》、《绝地逢生》等。中篇小说集《白多黑少》、《水晶山谷》,短篇小说集《味道》等十部。根据其小说改编的电视连续剧《雄关漫道》、《绝地逢生》、《风雨梵净山》、《王阳明》,电影《云下的日子》、《幸存日》、《旷继勋篷遂起义》等十一部作品中,任编剧兼总制片人。曾获全国“五个一工程奖”,中国电视“金鹰奖”,全军电视“金星奖”及贵州省政府文学奖一等奖等奖项三十余次。国家一级作家,国务院津贴专家,中宣部“全国四个一人才”,中宣部、中国文联“全国德艺双馨文艺工作者”。
  • 重生医妃狠绝色

    重生医妃狠绝色

    前世惨死,重生后,看到狠心的姐姐在喂自己吃毒药,被她打脸拒绝。渣男四王爷送她礼物,被她拒绝。母亲探望,她发现母亲已经中毒,心急如焚。姐姐云贵妃在宫里不得宠爱,突然暴毙,被自己的妹妹云美人取而代之。二夫人,准备毒害主母,杀死女主。朝廷也波诡云集。居心叵测的青麟王、心狠手辣的四王爷和倾国倾城的七王爷,各怀心机。她随祖母进宫,差点被人生米煮成熟饭。她只想安安稳稳,却携仇归来。凤凰涅槃,执掌天下。一个小小的女子,是如何登上至尊皇后的宝座。
  • 舰娘之神奇提督

    舰娘之神奇提督

    白宁,虚空中的秩序化身,在一次被混乱偷袭后重伤。机缘巧合之下来到舰娘世界,于是他彻底沦陷了……“这是个天坑!进去了就出不来了!”白宁看着眼前大大小小的舰娘,在心中发出了由衷的感叹。有些慢热(各位,开头其实是铺垫啦,第三章开始就是舰娘了。)贴一下群:958022973,有空来玩
  • 有你的年少时光

    有你的年少时光

    姜颜以为,到了新学校,一切将会是新的开始,却不想,等待她的是一场意料之外的闹剧。当温暖的池南、张扬的唐宇、热情的安小晓以及美好的林素儿,依次出现在她的生命中,千辛万苦磨合出友情与爱情的轮廓时,他们却又不得不面对分离。彼时,温暖的少年、热烈的朋友,以及一路以来的欢笑与心酸,都随着年少的时光,如云起弥漫,又如风来消散。关于过去,我们若即若离。关于未来,总会光鲜亮丽。
  • 恕中无愠禅师语录

    恕中无愠禅师语录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 英国文学研究的学术历程

    英国文学研究的学术历程

    《英国文学研究的学术历程》是《中国外国文学研究的学术历程》总12卷之第5卷。本书在全面梳理英国文学研究文献的基础上,系统展示了中国的英国文学研究的脉络和主要特征,具体解读了各个时间阶段中国关于英国诗歌、小说、散文、戏剧等方面的代表性著述,指出了这些成果的学术价值与创新之处。该卷在总结英国文学研究经验的基础上,对该领域有待开拓的课题作了前瞻性概括。
  • 重生之盛宠公主

    重生之盛宠公主

    天下两分,大周国和凤羯国,两国敌对,实力均等。大周国皇帝年老,凤羯国犯边,周国皇帝派靖南王凌天领兵御敌,靖南王不敌,大败,临阵脱逃,带着家眷逃往京师,正临靖南王妃怀孕十月,路上产女,不巧路遇追兵。为了躲避追兵,焦急之下抱走了一同产女的边境勇武将军夫人的之女。此后两女分开,两女错入她府,开始了一段新的传奇之旅。