登陆注册
5655500000003

第3章

"May my soul pass from me and enter into Nicholas Snyders!" answered Jan, replacing his empty glass upon the table. And the two stood looking for a moment into one another's eyes.

And the high candles on the littered desk flickered and went out, as though a breath had blown them, first one and then the other.

"I must be getting home," came the voice of Jan from the darkness.

"Why did you blow out the candles?"

"We can light them again from the fire," answered Nicholas. He did not add that he had meant to ask that same question of Jan. He thrust them among the glowing logs, first one and then the other; and the shadows crept back into their corners.

"You will not stop and see Christina?" asked Nicholas.

"Not to-night," answered Jan.

"The paper that I signed," Nicholas reminded him--"you have it?""I had forgotten it," Jan answered.

The old man took it from the desk and handed it to him. Jan thrust it into his pocket and went out. Nicholas bolted the door behind him and returned to his desk; sat long there, his elbow resting on the open ledger.

Nicholas pushed the ledger aside and laughed. "What foolery! As if such things could be! The fellow must have bewitched me."Nicholas crossed to the fire and warmed his hands before the blaze.

"Still, I am glad he is going to marry the little lass. A good lad, a good lad."Nicholas must have fallen asleep before the fire. When he opened his eyes, it was to meet the grey dawn. He felt cold, stiff, hungry, and decidedly cross. Why had not Christina woke him up and given him his supper. Did she think he had intended to pass the night on a wooden chair? The girl was an idiot. He would go upstairs and tell her through the door just what he thought of her.

His way upstairs led through the kitchen. To his astonishment, there sat Christina, asleep before the burnt-out grate.

"Upon my word," muttered Nicholas to himself, "people in this house don't seem to know what beds are for!"But it was not Christina, so Nicholas told himself. Christina had the look of a frightened rabbit: it had always irritated him. This girl, even in her sleep, wore an impertinent expression--a delightfully impertinent expression. Besides, this girl was pretty--marvellously pretty. Indeed, so pretty a girl Nicholas had never seen in all his life before. Why had the girls, when Nicholas was young, been so entirely different! A sudden bitterness seized Nicholas: it was as though he had just learnt that long ago, without knowing it, he had been robbed.

The child must be cold. Nicholas fetched his fur-lined cloak and wrapped it about her.

There was something else he ought to do. The idea came to him while drawing the cloak around her shoulders, very gently, not to disturb her--something he wanted to do, if only he could think what it was.

The girl's lips were parted. She appeared to be speaking to him, asking him to do this thing--or telling him not to do it. Nicholas could not be sure which. Half a dozen times he turned away, and half a dozen times stole back to where she sat sleeping with that delightfully impertinent expression on her face, her lips parted. But what she wanted, or what it was he wanted, Nicholas could not think.

Perhaps Christina would know. Perhaps Christina would know who she was and how she got there. Nicholas climbed the stairs, swearing at them for creaking.

Christina's door was open. No one was in the room; the bed had not been slept upon. Nicholas descended the creaking stairs.

The girl was still asleep. Could it be Christina herself? Nicholas examined the delicious features one by one. Never before, so far as he could recollect, had he seen the girl; yet around her neck--Nicholas had not noticed it before--lay Christina's locket, rising and falling as she breathed. Nicholas knew it well; the one thing belonging to her mother Christina had insisted on keeping. The one thing about which she had ever defied him. She would never have parted with that locket. It must be Christina herself. But what had happened to her? Or to himself. Remembrance rushed in upon him. The odd pedlar! The scene with Jan! But surely all that had been a dream? Yet there upon the littered desk still stood the pedlar's silver flask, together with the twin stained glasses.

Nicholas tried to think, but his brain was in a whirl. A ray of sunshine streaming through the window fell across the dusty room.

Nicholas had never seen the sun, that he could recollect.

Involuntarily he stretched his hands towards it, felt a pang of grief when it vanished, leaving only the grey light. He drew the rusty bolts, flung open the great door. A strange world lay before him, a new world of lights and shadows, that wooed him with their beauty--a world of low, soft voices that called to him. There came to him again that bitter sense of having been robbed.

"I could have been so happy all these years," murmured old Nicholas to himself. "It is just the little town I could have loved--so quaint, so quiet, so homelike. I might have had friends, old cronies, children of my own maybe--"A vision of the sleeping Christina flashed before his eyes. She had come to him a child, feeling only gratitude towards him. Had he had eyes with which to see her, all things might have been different.

Was it too late? He is not so old--not so very old. New life is in his veins. She still loves Jan, but that was the Jan of yesterday.

In the future, Jan's every word and deed will be prompted by the evil soul that was once the soul of Nicholas Snyders--that Nicholas Snyders remembers well. Can any woman love that, let the case be as handsome as you will?

Ought he, as an honest man, to keep the soul he had won from Jan by what might be called a trick? Yes, it had been a fair bargain, and Jan had taken his price. Besides, it was not as if Jan had fashioned his own soul; these things are chance. Why should one man be given gold, and another be given parched peas? He has as much right to Jan's soul as Jan ever had. He is wiser, he can do more good with it.

同类推荐
  • 麟儿报

    麟儿报

    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。
  • 佛说稻秆经

    佛说稻秆经

    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。
  • 洞真太上道君元丹上经

    洞真太上道君元丹上经

    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。
  • 周公解梦

    周公解梦

    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。
  • 梼杌萃编

    梼杌萃编

    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
  • 无敌星国

    无敌星国

    他挥一挥手,一座星系湮灭,他眨一眨眼,一颗星球爆炸,他转过身来,整个宇宙跟着颤抖,他跺一跺脚,维持空间的弦断裂。迄今他是宇宙最大的障碍,被视为最强大的敌人。他在虚无之中与时间对抗,在时间的流逝下跨过了千万亿年。无数星辰轮转,无法磨灭他的心性。他制造了夸克武器,抬起一只手抓着它,透过四维世界,投入了二维世界。二维世界消失,宇宙进入大挤压阶段。但是……
  • 再造世界的100个奇迹(下)(世界历史回眸经典文库)

    再造世界的100个奇迹(下)(世界历史回眸经典文库)

    本书文字简洁,内容丰富,语言优美,既富有知识性又具有趣味性,是一部精彩纷呈、波澜壮阔的世界历史奇迹缩影。涉及到影响世界文明的政治、军事、外交、文化、宗教、经济等各个领域的重大历史文明。以从历史中所启迪的智慧,创造卓越的人生,创造人类历史的崭新未来。
  • 重生之千颜为凰

    重生之千颜为凰

    都说生命不可重来,却总有人能撞大运,但别人被天上掉的馅饼砸中,都是早几年重生,自带未卜先知特异功能,徐寒烟却与众不同,老天爷送她重生路上不小心多喝了二两酒,阴差阳错,重生在一年后,没有金手指,谁能告诉她这重生还有什么意义?最要命的是,前生的徐寒烟有多悍,今生的镜月千颜战斗力就有多渣,望着这走一步喘三喘弱不禁风身体,她忍不住仰天长叹,总觉得老天欠自己一个公道!罢了罢了,既来之则安之,徐寒烟想得很开,好歹还能喘气,总比灰飞烟灭万劫不复要强吧,何况,论起心计,阴谋,她可从来没有输过,面对老天爷再给的一次不怎么样的机会,照样能活得风生水起!
  • 本心斋疏食谱

    本心斋疏食谱

    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。
  • 五行剑体

    五行剑体

    叶不凡,五行之体。心地善良,聪明睿智,凭着自身坚强毅力以及成为了上天眷顾的幸运儿,经历了世间人情冷暖,风霜雨雪,一路披荆斩棘,摆脱原来平凡的命运,一步步走在了这个金字塔世界的顶峰。
  • 异界修真魔法录

    异界修真魔法录

    异族的阴谋正将整个大陆拖入战争的旋涡,等待着主角他们的究竟是荣耀,还是死亡?书群:980915883,欢迎大家加入来取名字呀~
  • 影后古代生活录

    影后古代生活录

    贺海蓝一朝穿越,一直想找到回21世纪的路,可是回家路上BOSS太多,她只能一边打怪一遍寻找回家的方法。但是祖母要她留在身边当专属厨娘?皇上想把‘他’留在身边当专属说书人?太上皇还想把她弄来当孙媳妇?某无良王爷则带着狐狸般的笑容:既然皇爷爷那么盛情,我也只能委屈一下自己如了他老人家的愿了。贺海蓝看着得了便宜还卖乖的某王爷,无语望苍天:江湖太险恶,我想回现代!
  • 罡剑三尺红

    罡剑三尺红

    羊吃草,狼吃羊,这本是天道法则。但所有的人都会痛恨狼,而怜悯羊。在人的眼里,总觉得羊是弱者,就因为它是弱者,而忽略了羊本身其实也践踏了无数草的生命。所以每个人的内心都有属于自己的江湖。不同的人性,不同的遭遇,不同的爱恨情仇,交织一起这就是最精彩的江湖……
  • 拿什么去喜欢你

    拿什么去喜欢你

    刚开学两个人闹成欢喜冤家,没想到一次交通意外后,林轩宇却慢慢发现自己喜欢上了这个自己讨厌的人……
  • 萌宝来袭:总裁爹地,太会撩

    萌宝来袭:总裁爹地,太会撩

    【娇艳俏丽女明星*鬼畜病娇忠犬男,甜宠文】“敢再离开我,你试试!”男人嗓音冷冽,语调凶戾,每晚闯进她梦中,不知疲倦地威胁她。可这位先生,我们不熟好吗?跑去试镜,不小心撞入权势滔天的齐宵怀中,被他强势扣下,成为禁脔。她恨他,怨他,想离开他。他爱她,缠她,只想要她。“齐先生,请你放过我!”他放开她,却又绊倒她,让她跌入他的怀中,“看,我放了,是你自己又回来了。”