登陆注册
5697500000024

第24章 SOLOMON'S ROAD(1)

Outside the cave we halted,feeling rather foolish.

"I am going back,"said Sir Henry."Why?"asked Good."Because it has struck me that -what we saw -may be my brother."This was a new idea,and we reentered the cave to put it to the proof,After the bright light outside our eyes,weak as they were with stating at the snow,could not for a while pierce the gloom of the cave.

Presently,however,we grew accustomed to the semi-darkness,and advanced on to the dead form.

Sir Henry knelt down and peered into its face.

"Thank God,"he said,with a sigh of relief,"it is not my brother."Then I went and looked.The corpse was that of a tall man in middle life,with aquiline features,grizzled hair,and a long black mustache.

The skin was perfectly yellow,and stretched tightly over the bones.Its clothing,with the exception of what seemed to be the remains of a pair of woollen hose,had been removed,leaving the skeleton-like frame naked.

Round the neck hung a yellow ivory crucifix.The corpse was frozen perfectly stiff.

"Who on earth can it be?"said I.

"Can't you guess?"asked Good.

I shook my head.

"Why,the old don,Joséda Silvestra,of course -who else?""Impossible,"I gasped,"he died three hundred years ago.""And what is there to prevent his lasting for three thousand years in this atmosphere I should like to know?"asked Good."If only the air is cold enough flesh and blood will keep as fresh as New Zealand mutton forever,and Heaven knows it is cold enough here.The sun never gets in here;no animal comes here to tear or destroy.No doubt his slave,of whom he speaks on the map,took off his clothes and left him.He could not have buried him alone.Look here,"he went.on,stooping down and picking up a queer-shaped bone scraped at the end into a sharp point,"here is the `cleft-bone'that he used to draw the map with."We gazed astonished for a moment,forgetting our own miseries in the extraordinary and,as it seemed to us,semi-miraculous sight.

"Ay,"said "Sir Henry,"and here is where he got his ink from,"and he pointed to a small wound on the dead man's left arm."Did ever man see such a thing before?"There was no longer any doubt about the matter,which I confess,for my own part,perfectly appalled me.There he sat,the dead man,whose directions,written some ten generations ago,bad led us to this spot.

There in my own hand was the rude pen with which he had written them,and there round his neck was the crucifix his dying lips had kissed.Gazing at him my imagination could reconstruct the whole scene:the traveller dying of cold and starvation,and yet striving to convey the great secret he had discovered to the world;the awful loneliness of his death,of which the evidence sat before us.It even seemed to me that I could trace in his strongly-marked features a likeness to those of my poor friend Silvestre,his descendant,who had died twenty years ago in my arms,but perhaps that was fancy.At any rate,there he sat,a sad memento of the fate that so often overtakes those who would penetrate into the unknown;and there probably he will still sit,crowned with the dread majesty of death,for centuries yet unborn,to startle the eyes of wanderers like ourselves,if any such should ever come again to invade his loneliness.The thing overpowered us,already nearly done to death as we were with cold and hunger.

"Let us go,"said Sir Henry,in a low voice;"stay,we will give him a companion,"and,lifting up the dead body of the Hottentot Ventv?gel,he placed it near that of the old don.Then he stooped down and with a jerk broke the rotten string of the crucifix round his neck,for his fingers were too cold to attempt to unfasten it.I believe that he still has it.

I took the pen,and it is before me as I write -sometimes I sign my name with it.

Then,leaving those two,the proud white man of a past age and the poor Hottentot,to keep their eternal vigil in the midst of the eternal snows,we crept out of the cave into the welcome sunshine and resumed our path,wondering in our hearts how many hours it would be before we were even as they are.

When we had gone about half a mile we came to the edge of the plateau,for the nipple of the mountain did not rise out of its exact centre,though from the desert side it seemed to do so.What lay below us we could not see,for the landscape was wreathed in billows of morning mist.Presently,however,the higher layers of mist cleared a little,and revealed,some five hundred yards beneath us,at the end of a long slope of snow,a patch of green grass,through which a stream was running.Nor was this all.By the stream,basking in the morning sun,stood and lay a group of from ten to fifteen large antelopes at that distance we could not see what they were.

The sight filled us with an unreasoning joy.There was food in plenty if only we could get it.But the question was how to get it.The beasts were fully six hundred yards off,a very long shot,and one not to be depended on when one's life hung on the results.

Rapidly we discussed the advisability of trying to stalk the game,but finally reluctantly dismissed it.To begin with,the wind was not favorable,and further,we should be certain to be perceived,however careful we were,against the blinding background of snow which we should be obliged to traverse.

"Well,we must have a try from where we are,"said Sir Henry.

"Which shall it be,Quatermain,the repeating rifles or the expresses?"Here again was a question.The Winchester repeaters --of which we had two,Umbopa carrying poor Ventv?gel's as well as his own -were sighted up to a thousand yards,whereas the expresses were only sighted to three hundred and fifty,beyond which distance shooting with them was more or less guess-work.On the other hand,if they did hit,the express bullets,being expanding,were much more likely to bring the game down.

It was a knotty point,but I made up my mind that we must risk it and use the expresses.

同类推荐
  • The Essays of Montaigne

    The Essays of Montaigne

    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。
  • 词林正韵

    词林正韵

    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。
  • The Magic of Oz

    The Magic of Oz

    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。
  • 佛说玄师颰陀所说神咒经

    佛说玄师颰陀所说神咒经

    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。
  • 赠三惠大师

    赠三惠大师

    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
  • 摆脱死亡

    摆脱死亡

    白雪深埋着大草原。胶轮拖拉机在银色的世界里吼着,向塔利花嘎查(嘎查:村)艰难地挺进。塔利花是边境线上的一个弹丸之地。这片草地与毗邻的蒙古。国山水相连,因为远离边防哨所,所以虽然有庄严的界碑林立着,虽然也偶有边防军人驱车来去,但是牲畜不懂国界,对方的牛马骆驼羊常常因为贪吃或者呼啸北风的驱赶而进入我国境内。还常常有对方牧民或者牧场工人毫无顾忌地越境放牧、打草,蚕食我方巴彦塔拉苏木的牧场。
  • 洪荒之太初封神

    洪荒之太初封神

    大风起,乱世终群星聚,盛世现冥族弃子叶飞,势必修仙问鼎苍穹
  • 思维模式决定成败:影响一生的20种思维

    思维模式决定成败:影响一生的20种思维

    本书将人类的思维模式分为两大类:有利于成功的思维模式和倾向于失败的思维模式,透过对“成功模式”和“失败模式”的系统性对比,论述了成功与失败的深层次原因,如同绿灯行(油门)、红灯停(刹车)的交通指令(操控系统),指导着我们启动“生产成功的流水线”以创造成功,提醒着我们关闭“生产失败的流水线”以规避失败。
  • 这个世界有你的时候时间短

    这个世界有你的时候时间短

    这是阿福的中短篇小说自选集。作者的目力所及,笔力所至,多为当代都市生活。但偶尔也涉及偏远题材,如“荒原之夜”写遥远的知青生活,“大凤小凤”写更遥远的民国生活,“国权老爹”和“小村的故事”写的是乡村人物,“闵介生和他的高个妻子”和“一个做姐姐的老姑娘”写的是文化大革命时期的普通人的生活,“尘封的记忆”写睡梦中的潜意识,“一封遗书”写同性恋者的心理活动等等。本自选集的最后一篇“这个世界有你的时候时间短”,以意识及颠覆意识的多角度表达,并以集中的和散点的意识流互为结构,描述现代生活的复杂斑斓。
  • 金国虎啸

    金国虎啸

    金国是中国历史的一部分,女真人是中华民族先民的一支,这是教科书上说的。但绝大多数中国人现在对金国和女真人都还存有误解。
  • 丑女大翻身:爱情180磅

    丑女大翻身:爱情180磅

    肥肉……粗腿……这些在帅哥男友驾到之前统统都是浮云啦,瓦滴瘦身计划现在才刚刚开始捏!神秘富家少爷pk180磅贪吃没耐心的小肥妹,瓦滴“人参”不要“杯具”!
  • 我吃我自己的醋

    我吃我自己的醋

    〔本书1V1,坑品保证,请放心入坑〕面临破产即将走投无路的季家小姐季凝,同时还拥有着另一个身份法医蓝雪舒,只有与可以继承家业却偏偏要自己奋斗当警察的钱家公子钱煜联姻才能保住季家。季凝:“钱煜,你为什么不回家住要去外面找别的女人?”钱煜:“我在外面找的是蓝雪舒。看吧,你吃醋了,还不承认喜欢我?”季凝:我为什么吃我自己的醋,上了老狐狸的当……特别提示:本书虽然提及破案情节,但绝对不是恐怖小说,许多情节需要提到,要推动后面的剧情,各位读者朋友们不用害怕哦。
  • 隐少房东

    隐少房东

    这本书讲述的就是他们之间那些感动温暖的故事。
  • 友会谈丛

    友会谈丛

    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。
  • 华娱小明星

    华娱小明星

    一纸价值1000万的中奖彩票直接将群众演员岳华捧上人生巅峰!究竟是福还是祸!