登陆注册
34933100000036

第36章

"Well, I will," the girl returned. And she swept round into the library, where she encountered the phantom with a little whoop as it started into sight before her. "I'm not going to be scared out of it!" she said, defiantly. "It's simply this: Did the person I suspect really take the ring."

The answer came, "Look on the floor under your dressing-table!"

"Well, if I find it there," the girl addressed the company, "I'm a spiritualist from this time forth." And she came back to her place, where she remained for some time explaining to those near how she had lately lost her ring and suspected her maid, whom she had dismissed.

Upon the whole, the effect was serious. The women, having once started, needed no more urging. One after another they confronted and questioned the oracle with increasing sincerity.

Miss Macroyd asked Verrian, "Hadn't you better take your chance and stop this flow of fatuity, Mr. Verrian?"

"I'm afraid I should be fatuous, too," he said. "But you?"

"Oh, thank you, I don't believe in ghosts, though this seems to be a very pretty one--very graceful, I mean. I suppose a graceful woman would be graceful even when a disembodied spirit. I should think she would be getting a little tried with all this questioning; but perhaps we're only reading the fatigue into her. The ghost may be merely overdone."

"It might easily be that," Verrian assented.

"Oh, may I ask it something now?" a girl's voice appealed to Bushwick.

It was the voice of that Miss Andrews who had spoken first, and first refused to question the ghost. She was the youngest of Mrs. Westangle's guests, and Verrian had liked her, with a sense of something precious in the prolongation of a child's unconsciousness into the consciousness of girlhood which he found in her. She was always likelier than not to say the thing she thought and felt, whether it was silly and absurd, or whether, as also happened, there was a touch of inspired significance in it, as there is apt to be in the talk of children. She was laughed at, but she was liked, and the freshness of her soul was pleasant to the girls who were putting on the world as hard as they could. She could be trusted to do and say the unexpected. But she was considered a little morbid, and certainly she had an exaltation of the nerves that was at times almost beyond her control.

"Oh, dear!" Miss Macroyd whispered. "What is that strange ******ton going to do, I wonder?"

Verrian did not feel obliged to answer a question not addressed to him, but he, too, wondered and doubted.

The girl, having got her courage together, fluttered with it from her place round to the ghost's in a haste that expressed a fear that it might escape her if she delayed to put it to the test. The phantom was already there, as if it had waited her in the curiosity that followed her. They were taking each other seriously, the girl and the ghost, and if the ghost had been a veridical phantom, in which she could have believed with her whole soul, the girl could not have entreated it more earnestly, more simply.

She bent forward, in her slim, tall figure, with her hands outstretched, and with her tender voice breaking at times in her entreaty. "Oh, I don't know how to begin," she said, quite as if she and the phantom were alone together, and she had forgotten its supernatural awfulness in a sense of its human quality. "But you will understand, won't you! You'll think it very strange, and it is very unlike the others; but if I'm going to be serious--"

The white figure stood motionless; but Verrian interpreted its quiet as a kindly intelligence, and the girl made a fresh start in a note a little more piteous than before. "It's about the--the truth. Do you think if sometimes we don't tell it exactly, but we wish we had very, very much, it will come round somehow the same as if we had told it?"

"I don't understand," the phantom answered. "Say it again--or differently."

"Can our repentance undo it, or make the falsehood over into the truth?"

"Never!" the ghost answered, with a passion that thrilled to Verrian's heart.

"Oh, dear!" the girl said; and then, as if she had been going to continue, she stopped.

"You've still got your half-question, Miss Andrews," Bushwick interposed.

"Even if we didn't mean it to deceive harmfully?" the girl pursued.

"If it was just on impulse, something we couldn't seem to help, and we didn't see it in its true light at the time--"

The ghost made no answer. It stood motionless.

"It is offended," Bushwick said, without knowing the Shakespearian words.

"You've asked it three times half a question, Miss Andrews. Now, Mr. Verrian, it's your turn. You can ask it just one-quarter of a question.

Miss Andrews has used up the rest of your share."

Verrian rose awkwardly and stood a long moment before his chair. Then he dropped back again, saying, dryly, "I don't think I want to ask it anything."

The phantom sank straight down as if sinking through the floor, but lay there like a white shawl trailed along the bottom of the dark curtain.

"And is that all?" Miss Macroyd asked Verrian. "I was just getting up my courage to go forward. But now, I suppose--"

"Oh, dear!" Miss Andrews called out. "Perhaps it's fainted. Hadn't we better--"

There were formless cries from the women, and the men made a crooked rush forward, in which Verrian did not join. He remained where he had risen, with Miss Macroyd beside him.

"Perhaps it's only a coup de theatre!" she said, with her laugh. "Better wait."

Bushwick was gathering the prostrate figure up. "She has fainted!" he called. "Get some water, somebody!"

同类推荐
  • 尚论篇

    尚论篇

    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。
  • 紫微诗话

    紫微诗话

    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。
  • 指瑞篇

    指瑞篇

    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。
  • 玉清无上灵宝自然北斗本生真经

    玉清无上灵宝自然北斗本生真经

    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。
  • 内绍种禅师语录

    内绍种禅师语录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 快穿系统:五星好评哟,亲

    快穿系统:五星好评哟,亲

    系统:姐姐,你应该让他爱上你,不是爱……上你。慕容雪眨巴着眼睛:两者有差么?系统:……没差,没差,您老高兴就好! 时隔几月,我又回来了,发现有几章和谐了,我都差点接不上,你们只能脑补那些画面了,嘿嘿
  • 阴车夜行

    阴车夜行

    我买了一辆二手车,跑滴滴打车,没想到这辆车给我带来了厄运,把我带上了鬼途......
  • 晨光神隐

    晨光神隐

    那一片火光中,她为守护心中的美好献上自己的一切;那一片晨光中,她倒在高高的祭台上;意料之外的重生,让她再次回到三年前。再不甘心做个废物,不愿前世的悲剧重演……于是,她选择将过去的骄傲找回!~杀戮、变强、只为在他们面前拥有话语权,只为守护心中的那一座城堡和那一片白色的花海……PS:国庆长假也结束了,从今天开始两天写完一章!新手很多不懂,卡文很厉害!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 落日鸦啼

    落日鸦啼

    没有过去与现在,他的未来更是充满未知,乌鸦总在黄昏时降临带来审判,事后留下的是一个个谜团
  • 原子弹之父奥本海默

    原子弹之父奥本海默

    本套作品荟萃了古今中外各行各业最具有代表性的名人,阅读这些名人的成长故事,探知他们的人生追求,感悟他们的思想力量,会使我们从中受到启迪和教育,让我们更好地把握人生的关键,让我们的人生更加精彩,生命更有意义。伟大人物的成长也具有其平凡性。正如日本著名歌人吉田兼好所说:“天下所有伟大人物,起初都是很幼稚且有严重缺点的,但他们遵守规则,重视规律,不自以为是,因此才成为名家并进而获得人们的崇敬。”所以,名人成长也具有其非凡之处,这才是我们应该学习的地方。
  • 金刚秘密善门陀罗尼经

    金刚秘密善门陀罗尼经

    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。
  • 幸福女人的小诡计

    幸福女人的小诡计

    对于现代女性来说,每一个女人都在设计自己的人生,都想实现自己的梦想。然而,幸福需要自己把握。人生就是一种修炼,是寻找幸福的过程。只有当你懂得了人生的诡计,你才会发现,获得幸福并不如你想象的那么困难。正如哲学家萨特所说:“人的命运就握在自己的手里。”世界上从来都没有救世主,一切只能靠自己,必须靠自己。而要想让自己找到一条幸福的捷径,女人必须懂得这些人生诡计。
  • 千万别问我是谁

    千万别问我是谁

    千道流:你到底是谁?君逸:我只是一个路过的假面骑士。说着从卡包里掏出一张卡“终极攻击驾驭”千道流:卒君逸:下一个世界是哪呢? 刑天—?—?—n个?—斗罗
  • 终极斗罗之时空盛世

    终极斗罗之时空盛世

    天灾现,万物凋零,时空荤乱,一生碌碌无为的三无少年被时空乱流卷走,意外来到斗罗大陆,在这片未知的世界,他该何处何从?(主角单武魂,前期基本不涉及原著,不喜误入,女主大部分是原创,喜欢原著的女主的,误入。)