登陆注册
19917700000080

第80章

My companion and I had traversed woods and heaths without saying a single word; we had made a long /detour/ to avoid Gazeau Tower, which I felt I could not bear to look upon again. The sun was sinking in shrouds of gray when we passed the portcullis at Roche-Mauprat. This portcullis was broken; the drawbridge was never raised, and the only things that crossed it now were peaceful flocks and their careless shepherds. The fosses were half-filled, and the bluish osiers were already spreading out their flexible branches over the shallow waters;nettles were growing at the foot of the crumbling towers, and the traces of the fire seemed still fresh upon the walls. The farm buildings had all been repaired; and the court, full of cattle and poultry and sheep-dogs and agricultural implements, contrasted strangely with the gloomy inclosure in which I still seemed to see the red flames of the besiegers shooting up, and the black blood of the Mauprats flowing.

I was received with the quiet and somewhat chilly hospitality of the peasants of Berry. They did not lay themselves out to please me, but they let me want for nothing. Quarters were found for me in the only one of the old wings which had not been damaged in the siege, or subsequently abandoned to the ravages of time. The massive architecture of the body of the building dated from the tenth century;the door was smaller than the windows, and the windows themselves gave so little light that we had to take candles to find our way, although the sun had hardly set. The building had been restored provisionally to serve as an occasional lodging for the new seigneur or his stewards. My Uncle Hubert had often been there to see to my interests so long as his strength had allowed him; and they showed me to the room which he had reserved for himself, and which had therefore been known as the master's room. The best things that had been saved from the old furniture had been placed there; and, as it was cold and damp, in spite of all the trouble they had taken to make it habitable, the tenant's servant preceded me with a firebrand in one hand and a fagot in the other.

Blinded by the smoke which she scattered round me in clouds, and deceived by the new entrance which they had made in another part of the courtyard, and by certain corridors which they had walled up to save the trouble of looking after them, I reached the room without recognising anything; indeed, I could not have said in what part of the old buildings I was, to such an extent had the new appearance of the courtyard upset my recollections, and so little had my mind in its gloom and agitation been impressed by surrounding objects.

While the servant was lighting the fire, I threw myself into a chair, and, burying my head in my hands, fell into a melancholy train of thought. My position, however, was not without a certain charm; for the past naturally appears in an embellished or softened form to the minds of young men, those presumptuous masters of the future. When, by dint of blowing the brand, the servant had filled the room with dense smoke, she went off to fetch some embers and left me alone. Marcasse had remained in the stable to attend to our horses. Blaireau had followed me; lying down by the hearth, he glanced at me from time to time with a dissatisfied air, as if to ask me the reason of such wretched lodging and such a poor fire.

Suddenly, as I cast my eyes round the room, old memories seemed to awaken in me. The fire, after making the green wood hiss, sent a flame up the chimney, and the whole room was illumined with a bright though unsteady light, which gave all the objects a weird, ambiguous appearance. Blaireau rose, turned his back to the fire and sat down between my legs, as if he thought that something strange and unexpected was going to happen.

I then realized that this place was none other than my grandfather Tristan's bed-room, afterward occupied for several years by his eldest son, the detestable John, my cruelest oppressor, the most crafty and cowardly of the Hamstringers. I was filled with a sense of terror and disgust on recognising the furniture, even the very bed with twisted posts on which my grandfather had given up his blackened soul to God, amid all the torments of a lingering death agony. The arm-chair which I was sitting in was the one in which John the Crooked (as he was pleased to call himself in his facetious days) used to sit and think out his villainies or issue his odious orders. At this moment Ithought I saw the ghosts of all the Mauprats passing before me, with their bloody hands and their eyes dulled with wine. I got up and was about to yield to the horror I felt by taking to flight, when suddenly I saw a figure rise up in front of me, so distinct, so recognisable, so different in its vivid reality from the chimeras that had just besieged me, that I fell back in my chair, all bathed in a cold sweat.

Standing by the bed was John Mauprat. He had just got out, for he was holding the half-opened curtain in his hand. He seemed to me the same as formerly, only he was still thinner, and paler and more hideous.

His head was shaved, and his body wrapped in a dark winding-sheet. He gave me a hellish glance; a smile full of hate and contempt played on his thin, shrivelled lips. He stood motionless with his gleaming eyes fixed on me, and seemed as if about to speak. In that instant I was convinced that what I was looking on was a living being, a man of flesh and blood; it seems incredible, therefore, that I should have felt paralyzed by such childish fear. But it would be idle for me to deny it, nor have I ever yet been able to find an explanation; I was riveted to the ground with fear. The man's glance petrified me; Icould not utter a sound. Blaireau rushed at him; then he waved the folds of his funeral garment, like a shroud all foul with the dampness of the tomb, and I fainted.

When I recovered consciousness Marcasse was by my side, anxiously endeavouring to lift me. I was lying on the ground rigid as a corpse.

同类推荐
  • 梵网经忏悔行法

    梵网经忏悔行法

    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。
  • My Mark Twain

    My Mark Twain

    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。
  • 正一法文修真旨要

    正一法文修真旨要

    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。
  • 近思录集注

    近思录集注

    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。
  • 种芝草法

    种芝草法

    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
  • 穿越原始社会:野蛮酋长

    穿越原始社会:野蛮酋长

    凤君,特种部队最年轻的女上校,这个传奇,竟穿越到原始社会,她的闪亮出现,遇上的是一幅火爆场面,那真是空前绝后,原始美男出现,扛走了她,这男人简直太野蛮,于是叙写了一篇美女与野兽的篇章!
  • 豪门秘恋:大亨不离婚

    豪门秘恋:大亨不离婚

    一场金融海啸,衡量家族利弊,她高调地在六星饭店举办选夫宴会。结果却无人问津,丢尽颜面,贻笑大方。蔚海蓝——这三个字成为一时笑柄,人尽皆知。殊不知她已经嫁为人妻,成了他见不得光的妻子!十年之前,他寄人篱下,她是高高在上的富家千金。十年之后,她落魄潦倒,他却是富甲一方的政界大亨!雷绍衡,在这座城市要风得风要雨得雨。拥有一张天妒俊颜的他,身边从来不缺女人。他喜欢掌控每件事情,事业、金钱、权利……包括她!她的车坏了,会送她回家──他的司机,她生病了,会送她看病──他的秘书,她饿了,会带她吃饭──只是顺便。结婚四年,他与她见面不超过十次,说话不超过十句,形同陌路。娶她,不过是为了羞辱她!
  • 绝品教师

    绝品教师

    "他不是重生者,不是穿越者,而是惨无人道的夺舍者。,"他不是重生者,不是穿越者,而是惨无人道的夺舍者。他曾翻云覆雨,曾傲视天地,曾与巅峰强者称兄道弟。但现在,他却成为一个到处受人欺辱的书生。“是我的东西终归是我的,不是我的东西也会是我的”“为师上天入地,无所不能”“为师乃神人也,金钱美女随手可得”“为师是好人也,从不烧杀抢掠”“什么?你居然敢质疑为师?抄家伙,为师今晚就让你知道花儿为何这么红”为人师表者,必须要让自己的学生信服自己,崇拜自己,如若不然,如何成为一个绝品教师,毕竟这货是个高尚的教师,教书育人是他的本分。“什么?当我是文弱书生就好欺负?”“嘿嘿......”"
  • 修道寻真

    修道寻真

    修真,乃去假存真。孰为幻,孰为真?参透者,从此鱼跃龙门,成为真人;参不透,不过镜花水月,泡幻成空。大道三千,法术万般,吾只求长生。
  • 造神时代

    造神时代

    从零开始,占地为王!万千白骨,造神之路。一个痴迷于空间理论和机械制造的年轻科学家,因为一场谋杀穿越到一个完全陌生的平行世界,他辗转征伐于世间各种势力之间,还要应对来自传说中神灵的审视目光。他的故事,就是我们每一个人的故事。【友情提示:本书非玄幻,历史流,不喜勿喷。】
  • 异世之垂柳依依

    异世之垂柳依依

    她,一介杀手,携上一世的记忆穿越而来,成为了柳家小姐柳依依。此时正值柳家作乱,发配边疆,柳依依被被卖入青楼。看二十一世纪金牌杀手乖,如何继续柳依依的人生,如何逃出青楼获得自由,如何回应痴情王爷墨晖的情意,如何运用逍遥圣忆扭转本属于柳依依的人生。本文属于古代言情加功法因素,不喜轻拍。
  • 别跟自己过不去(大全集)

    别跟自己过不去(大全集)

    以故事和理论相结合的形式,最后再配以画龙点睛的人生感悟,让您在百忙之中,静下心来细细审视自己,沉淀自己,关爱自己,犹如夏日午后的那杯绿茶,清淡而沁人心脾。希望它能够让您重新感悟人生,发现生活的美好,面带微笑地踏上新的征途!在这个世界上,有许多事情是我们难以预料的。我们不能控制际遇,却可以掌握自己;我们无法预知未来,却可以把握现在;我们不知道自己的生命到底有多长,但我们可以安排当下的生活;我们左右不了变化无常的天气,却可以调整自己的心情。只要活着,就别跟自己过不去。
  • TFBOYS恋爱上三千金

    TFBOYS恋爱上三千金

    TFBOYS爱上了属于六大家族中的三位千金和自己有着娃娃亲
  • 擒龙门

    擒龙门

    帝者龙也。少年敛则收也。怒则尸横遍野,狂则放浪不羁。战则血海滔滔,笑则威震江湖。傲则凶威盖世。退则无人可挡。龙若犯我,我自擒之。少年擒龙,吾辈不孤。
  • 神界无敌传

    神界无敌传

    周无云天赋异凛,早在周家村就展露无遗,多年苦修,终冲关成功,成就武王,纵横天地,无敌于神界,关于他的传说亦广为流传,经久不息……