登陆注册
5454200000045

第45章 CHAPTER IX THE PASTEUR CONQUERS(1)

Meanwhile, following a short cut through the snowy woods that ran over the shoulder of the intervening hill, the pair were wending their way towards Lucerne. Godfrey, a fixed and vacant look upon his face, went first; the Pasteur clinging to his arm like a limpet to a rock, puffed along beside him.

"Heaven!" he gasped, "but this attraction of yours must be strong that it makes you walk so fast immediately after dinner."

"It is, it is!" said Godfrey, in a kind of agony. "I feel as though my inside were being drawn out, and I must follow it. Please hold my arm tight or I shall run."

"Ah! the witch. The great witch!" puffed the Pasteur, "and up this hill too, over snow. Well, it will be better on the down grade. Give me your hand, my boy, for your coat is slipping, and if once you got away how should I catch you?"

They accomplished the walk into Lucerne in absolutely record time.

Fortunately, at this after-dinner hour few people were about, but some of those whom they met stared at them, and one called:

"Do you take him to the police-station? Shall I summon the /gens-@@d'arme/?"

"No, no," replied the Pasteur, "he goes to keep an assignation, and is in a hurry."

"Then why does he take you with him? Surely a clergyman will make a bad third at such an affair?" ejaculated an outspoken lady who was standing at her house door.

"Where is the street? I do not know it," asked the Pasteur.

"Nor do I," answered Godfrey, "but we shall come there all right. To the left now."

"Oh! the influence! The strong influence!" muttered Monsieur Boiset.

"Behold! it leads him."

Truly it did lead him. Round corners and across squares they went into an old part of the town with which neither of them was acquainted, till at length Godfrey, diving beneath an archway, pulled up in front of an antique doorway, saying:

"I think this is the place."

"Look at the writing and make sure," said the Pasteur, "for it seems ridiculous----"

At that moment the door opened mysteriously, and Godfrey disappeared into the passage beyond. Scarcely had the Pasteur time to follow him when it shut again, although he could see no /concierge/.

"Doubtless it is one of those that works with a wire," he thought to himself, but he had no time to stop to look, for already Godfrey was climbing the stairs. Up he went, three floors, and up after him scrambled the Pasteur. Suddenly Godfrey stopped at a door and not waiting to ring the bell, knocked with his hand. Immediately it opened and Godfrey, with his companion, passed into a very dark hall round which were several other doors. Here in the gloom the Pasteur lost him. Godfrey had gone through one of the doors, but which he could not see. He stood still, listening, and presently heard a deep peculiar voice speaking English with a very foreign accent, say:

"So you have come to see your godmamma, my dear little clever boy.

Well, I thought you would, and last night I sent you a pretty messenger to give you remembrance."

Then the Pasteur found the handle of the door and entered the room. It was a curious place draped, not without taste of a bizarre kind, in vivid colours, wherein purple dominated, and it gave an idea of mingled magnificence and squalor. Some of the furniture was very good, as were one or two of the pictures, though all of it was of an odd and unusual make. Thus, the sideboard was shaped like a sarcophagus, and supported on solid sphinxes with gilded faces. In a corner of the room also stood an unwrapped mummy in a glass case.

In the midst of all this stood a common deal table, whereon were a black bottle, and the remains of Madame's meal, which seemed to have consisted of large supplies of underdone meat. In front of the fire was a large, well-worn couch, and by it a small stout table such as spiritualists use, on which gleamed a ball of glass or crystal. On this couch was seated Madame clad in a kind of black dressing-gown and a wide gold scarf tied about her ample waist. Her fat, massive face was painted and powdered; on her head she wore a kind of mantilla also gold-coloured, and about her neck a string of old Egyptian amulets.

Anything more unwholesome or uncanny than were her general appearance and surroundings as the bright flames of the fire showed them in this stuffy, shadowed room, it would be impossible to imagine.

"Sit down here by my side, my little son in the speerit, where I have made a place ready for you, and let me hold your hand while you tell me all that you have been doing and if you have been thinking much of me and that beautiful Eleanor whom I sent to see you last night," went on Madame Riennes in her ogreish, purring voice, patting the sofa.

Just then she looked up and caught sight of the Pasteur standing in the shadow. Staring at him with her fierce, prominent eyes, she started violently as though at last she had seen something of which she was afraid.

"Say, my Godfrey," she exclaimed in a rather doubtful voice, "what is this that you have brought with you? Is it a scarecrow from the fields? Or is it a speerit of your own? If so, I should have thought that a young man would have liked better the lovely Eleanor than this old devil."

"Yes, Madame Jezebel," said the Pasteur striding forward, speaking in a loud, high voice and waving a large umbrella, which had come partly unfolded in his hurried walk. "It is a scarecrow--one that scares the crows of hell who seek to pick out the souls of the innocent, like /you/, Madame Jezebel."

Madame uttered a voluminous oath in some strange tongue, and sprang to her feet with an agility surprising in one so stout.

"Say, who are you?" she ejaculated in French, confronting him.

"I am the Pasteur Boiset who accompany my ward to pay this little call, Madame."

"Oh! indeed. That thief of a clergyman, who got his finger into the pie of dead Mademoiselle, eh? Well, there are no more pickings here, Pasteur, but perhaps you come to have your fortune told. Shall I look in the crystal for you and tell you nice things about--what shall we say? About the past of that handsome Madame of yours, for instance?

同类推荐
  • Five Children and It

    Five Children and It

    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。
  • 洛阳记

    洛阳记

    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。
  • 华夷译语

    华夷译语

    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。
  • 三身梵赞

    三身梵赞

    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。
  • 浴佛功德经

    浴佛功德经

    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
  • 画灵卷

    画灵卷

    盛逢阎王生辰,整个冥府大庆三日。阎王饮至酣畅,便开始放赏,但凡在今日子夜之前走上奈何桥的人,都可以提一个往生要求,若是合理,自当应允,便算作为自身积福了。现首便是子夜之前最后一个人,他站在那里,抬头看忘川旁边的一棵菩提树,目不转晴,看了许久,直到孟婆招手叫他。他才微微回神,问:“我可以不喝孟婆汤吗?”孟婆摇摇头,对面前这个看起来忧郁得实在让人心疼的男子客气地笑了笑,补充说道:“这是六界的规矩,不可以破。不过你真是幸运,待会走到往生口时,可以对判官提一个要求。”
  • 电饭锅煮饭做菜煲汤

    电饭锅煮饭做菜煲汤

    本书内容丰富,实用性强,通俗易懂,是普通大众的有益参考书。轻松快乐入厨房,美味营养又健康。材料简单,方法易学,就地取材,为你呈上飘香扑鼻的美食。
  • 龙玉初生之时光茶馆

    龙玉初生之时光茶馆

    她本是仙界公主,下凡来历劫时却因为一次意外导致魂魄不全而混沌一生。如今重活一世,她找回魂魄重得异能,才发现梦境都是事实。修修仙,种种田,逗逗小老公,悠闲自在过一生!啥米?让我拯救世界?臣妾做不到啊!!!!本文集修仙种田一体,傻白与甜宠齐飞,坑品保证!请放心跳坑。
  • 神州轶闻录系列:大戏台

    神州轶闻录系列:大戏台

    本书作者是著名文史作家、专栏作家。早年生活在北京数十年,交游广阔,熟读前贤文章,博物强记,广泛涉猎北京的文史掌故、艺苑趣闻、名人轶事和文物珍宝,对风土民情了如指掌。1976年定居香港后,来往于香港和北京之间。自二十世纪八十年代开始,以周续端、周彬、司马庵等笔名,在香港《华侨日报》《大公报》、台湾《世界论坛报》等多家报纸开设“京华感旧录”“九州逸趣”“神州拾趣”等专栏,琐谈社会轶闻和文史掌故,深受读者欢迎;之后谈及内容遍及全国各地,专栏易名为“神州轶闻录”。《大戏台》是神州轶闻录的一本,结集成册的梨园故事。
  • 夏夜司寒归去来

    夏夜司寒归去来

    他是执念生成的灵无意闯进了她的世界,一句我愿意与他共享生命,便要决定护她一生一世。她只不过是一个丢在人群中能够淹没的女孩子,却因为一条项链与他的生命紧紧相连。一见钟情也好,见色起意也罢。我愿意与你共享我的生命,从来都不后悔。平静的生活被打破,不可思议的世界,不可思议的人,还有莫名其妙的任务,感叹他人命运之时自己的命运也在变化。
  • 风云司

    风云司

    一朝风云一朝录,一人一剑一江湖。原来一场赌博无论输赢死的只有一人而已。
  • 我眼中的你如诗如画

    我眼中的你如诗如画

    小爷我一笑,如春风荡漾开来,十里春风皆不如意,纷纷朝小爷要个说法
  • 重生之嫡妃要休夫

    重生之嫡妃要休夫

    風家嫡外孙女,体弱胆小的哑巴,全能废物,被耻辱退婚,遭陷害致死。她,21世纪顶级杀手,死在十八国特务围攻下,一朝穿越成为东大陆風家废物嫡小姐。废物?那她将要他们见识一下什么才做叫真正的废物。全能七系?那她来个逆天的独特存在。八系召唤师+天才炼药师+奇宝异。且看她如何从废物变成天才,踏上这异世巅峰!
  • 末世之萌宝乖乖才

    末世之萌宝乖乖才

    这是一个末世来临,带娃在末世修仙打怪的故事
  • 逍遥不死身

    逍遥不死身

    超出三界六道,不在五行之中,我,永生不死!