登陆注册
5361900000116

第116章

To me, whose heart was haunted, the dismal wood, the charmed silence, the withdrawal of the light, were less than nothing. All day I had looked for one sight of horror; yea, had longed to come at last upon it, to fall beside it, to embrace it with my arms. There, there, though it should be some fair and sunny spot, there would be my haunted wood. As for this place of gloom and stillness, it fell in with my mood. More welcome than the mocking sunshine were this cold and solemn light, this deathlike silence, these ranged pines. It was a place in which to think of life as a slight thing and scarcely worth the while, given without the asking, spent in turmoil, strife, suffering, and longings all in vain. Easily laid down, too, - so easily laid down that the wonder was -

I looked at the ghostly wood, and at the dull stream, and at my hand upon the hilt of the sword that I had drawn halfway from the scabbard. The life within that hand I had not asked for. Why should I stand like a soldier left to guard a thing not worth the guarding; seeing his comrades march homeward, hearing a cry to him from his distant hearthstone?

I drew my sword well-nigh from its sheath; and then of a sudden I saw the matter in a truer light; knew that I was indeed the soldier, and willed to be neither coward nor deserter. The blade dropped back into the scabbard with a clang, and, straightening myself, I walked on beside the sluggish stream deep into the haunted wood.

Presently it occurred to me to glance aside at the Indian who had kept pace with me through the forest. He was not there; he walked with me no longer; save for myself there seemed no breathing creature in the dim wood. I looked to right and left, and saw only the tall, straight pines and the needle-strewn ground. How long he had been gone I could not tell. He might have left me when first we came to the pines, for my dreams had held me, and I had not looked his way.

There was that in the twilight place, or in the strangeness, the horror, and the yearning that had kept company with me that day, or in the dull weariness of a mind and body overwrought of late, which made thought impossible. I went on down the stream toward the river, because it chanced that my face was set in that direction.

How dark was the shadow of the pines, how lifeless the earth beneath, how faint and far away the blue that showed here and there through rifts in the heavy roof of foliage! The stream bending to one side I turned with it, and there before me stood the minister!

I do not know what strangled cry burst from me. The earth was rocking, all the wood a glare of light. As for him, at the sight of me and the sound of my voice he had staggered back against a tree; but now, recovering himself, he ran to me and put his great arms about me. "From the power of the dog, from the lion's mouth," he cried brokenly. "And they slew thee not, Ralph, the heathen who took thee away! Yesternight I learned that you lived, but I looked not for you here."

I scarce heard or marked what he was saying, and found no time in which to wonder at his knowledge that I had not perished. I only saw that he was alone, and that in the evening wood there was no sign of other living creature.

"Yea, they slew me not, Jeremy," I said. "I would that they had done so. And you are alone? I am glad that you died not, my friend; yes, faith, I am very glad that one escaped. Tell me about it, and I will sit here upon the bank and listen. Was it done in this wood? A gloomy deathbed, friend, for one so young and fair. She should have died to soft music, in the sunshine, with flowers about her."

With an exclamation he put me from him, but kept his hand upon my arm and his steady eyes upon my face.

"She loved laughter and sunshine and sweet songs," I continued.

"She can never know them in this wood. They are outside; they are outside the world, I think. It is sad, is it not? Faith, I think it is the saddest thing I have ever known."

He clapped his other hand upon my shoulder. "Wake, man!" he commanded. "If thou shouldst go mad now - Wake! thy brain is turning. Hold to thyself. Stand fast, as thou art soldier and Christian! Ralph, she is not dead. She will wear flowers, - thy flowers, - sing, laugh, move through the sunshine of earth for many and many a year, please God! Art listening, Ralph? Canst hear what I am saying?"

"I hear," I said at last, "but I do not well understand."

He pushed me back against a pine, and held me there with his hands upon my shoulders. "Listen," he said, speaking rapidly and keeping his eyes upon mine. "All those days that you were gone, when all the world declared you dead, she believed you living. She saw party after party come back without you, and she believed that you were left behind in the forest. Also she knew that the George waited but for the search to be quite given over, and for my Lord Carnal's recovery. She had been told that the King's command might not be defied, that the Governor had no choice but to send her from Virginia. Ralph, I watched her, and I knew that she meant not to go upon that ship. Three nights agone she stole from the Governor's house, and, passing through the gates that the sleeping warder had left unfastened, went toward the forest. I saw her and followed her, and at the edge of the forest I spoke to her. I stayed her not, I brought her not back, Ralph, because I was convinced that an I did so she would die. I knew of no great danger, and I trusted in the Lord to show me what to do, step by step, and how to guide her gently back when she was weary of wandering, - when, worn out, she was willing to give up the quest for the dead. Art following me, Ralph?"

"Yes," I answered, and took my hand from my eyes. "I was nigh mad, Jeremy, for my faith was not like hers. I have looked on Death too much of late, and yesterday all men believed that he had come to dwell in the forest and had swept clean his house before him. But you escaped, you both escaped" -

"God's hand was over us," he said reverently. "This is the way of it.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 评论与反思:发现保险法的精神

    评论与反思:发现保险法的精神

    20世纪90年代以来,保险法为规范中国保险业作出了突出贡献。由于理论研究的薄弱、实践中的保险法存在诸多瑕疵、评论现实中发生的疑难判例、反思中国保险法律制度的不足,发现保险法律制度的规律和精神,我们愿成为保险法研究的铺路石!
  • 舌人

    舌人

    你可以想想,要是有一群强盗破门而入,当爹的这时候本该护着孩子的,可是却扔下孩儿越窗跳楼地跑了,你要是那个被扔下的孩儿你咋办?就这样,当我爹——我们的政府,丢下我们这些孩儿一哄而逃后,面对破门而入、青面獠牙的日本人,我只得做了三孙子那样的顺民,当然你也可以管我叫汉奸。政府是一大早逃走的,而日本人是在后晌儿进的城。这期间,我们郑州人一看没人管了,胆子就大了起来,手脚就放了开来。先是一些人找茬儿哄抢了粮店,接着打砸抢之风很快弥漫了全城,你要在场就会看到当时局面多么混乱。这是我说什么也看不下去的。因为——至少直到这会儿,我还是郑州的警察署长。
  • 判官法则

    判官法则

    叶冰,北城市EDC负责人,一个专门破获悬案、特案的组织。越狱狂魔案、苗疆蛊术案、无头尸体案、金光佛教案,带你走进人性的最邪恶深处……人不犯我,我不犯人;人若犯我,我必犯人!
  • 寻仙少年

    寻仙少年

    杨通莫名从地球来到一处修仙的世界,这里有未知的旋律,音符,要想修炼竟然要靠杨通带着的那块螺形助听器,且看他是如何用这块东西吸收那些音符,成为一代人祖!
  • 华昭

    华昭

    天下传言,萧国皇帝爱极了一女子。颜动天下,惊才绝艳,那女子名唤……华清池。天下皆知:安国公嫡女华氏清池,出身名门,学富五车。天下又知:萧帝阿瑨,性情暴躁,胸无点墨。后来,华家嫡女入宫为帝师。合宫皆知,帝师与皇帝是天生的不对盘。可后来,太后被杀,安国公举兵谋反,他却连驳重臣十八道折子,红妆十里,笙箫百丈,六宫空置,迎她为后。可是那南方的故国,是何人在一声一声地唤着:“昭儿……昭儿……”再后来,世人只知,大婚之夜,皇帝重伤,皇后失踪。只是那楚国,有了一个新后,那女子,叫华昭……
  • 天价萌宝:娇妻宠上天

    天价萌宝:娇妻宠上天

    十八线女星池安九最大的愿望就是潜了公司大Boss,翻身成为一线女星。在池安九跟大Boss传绯闻的时候,所有人都以为她死定了。结果腹黑Boss丢给她个一张契约,“签了她,你就是我孩子的妈。”说好俩不干涉,可某Boss夜夜潜入屋是怎么回事?婚后,池安久揉着酸疼的腰:“Boss,你违约了,契约无效。”“那就睡到有效为止。”言罢,某Boss再次将她扑倒。
  • 佛说圣最上灯明如来陀罗尼经

    佛说圣最上灯明如来陀罗尼经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 媚惑少年之溺爱

    媚惑少年之溺爱

    告白前一秒,她亲眼目睹喜欢的男生拒绝了别的姑娘,本该高兴,可她却在下一秒石化,因为他的拒绝理由是:不喜欢女人!无奈放弃,可该死的家伙居然不肯放过她:不是喜欢我很久了么,怎么身边一直男人不断,还都虎视眈眈!女人,欠教育了吧!
  • 最牛主播修仙系统

    最牛主播修仙系统

    少年主播,穿越异界,亿万水友出谋划策,神秘系统硬刚异界文明,财富美女尽入怀中!千域万族听我号令!神魔奇域、诸天法界,任我遨游!
  • 神级修真农民

    神级修真农民

    种灵谷,养灵宠,玩灵鬼……乃是消遣。炼丹制药、法宝制器、布阵画符……乃是副业。逍遥修真、纵横无忌!一界秘武、天下无敌!十方百万世界、唯我独尊!可本质上,还是个农民!