登陆注册
20005000000009

第9章

They drew near and sat upon the substitutes for seats in a circle--and the fire threw up flame and made a glow in the fog hanging in the black hole of a room.

It was Glad who set the battered kettle on and when it boiled made tea.The other two watched her, being under her spell.She handed out slices of bread and sausage and pudding on bits of paper.Polly fed with tremulous haste; Glad herself with rejoicing and exulting in flavors.

Antony Dart ate bread and meat as he had eaten the bread and dripping at the stall--accepting his normal hunger as part of the dream.

Suddenly Glad paused in the midst of a huge bite.

"Mister," she said, "p'raps that cove's waitin' fer yer.Let's 'ave 'im in.I'll go and fetch 'im."She was getting up, but Dart was on his feet first.

"I must go," he said."He is expecting me and--""Aw," said Glad, "lemme go along o' yer, mister--jest to show there's no ill feelin'.""Very well," he answered.

It was she who led, and he who followed.At the door she stopped and looked round with a grin.

"Keep up the fire, Polly," she threw back."Ain't it warm and cheerful? It'll do the cove good to see it."She led the way down the black, unsafe stairway.She always led.

Outside the fog had thickened again, but she went through it as if she could see her way.

At the entrance to the court the thief was standing, leaning against the wall with fevered, unhopeful waiting in his eyes.He moved miserably when he saw the girl, and she called out to reassure him.

"I ain't up to no 'arm," she said; "I on'y come with the gent."Antony Dart spoke to him.

"Did you get food?"

The man shook his head.

"I turned faint after you left me, and when I came to I was afraid Imight miss you," he answered."I daren't lose my chance.I bought some bread and stuffed it in my pocket.I've been eating it while I've stood here.""Come back with us," said Dart.

"We are in a place where we have some food."He spoke mechanically, and was aware that he did so.He was a pawn pushed about upon the board of this day's life.

"Come on," said the girl."Yer can get enough to last fer three days."She guided them back through the fog until they entered the murky doorway again.Then she almost ran up the staircase to the room they had left.

When the door opened the thief fell back a pace as before an unex-pected thing.It was the flare of firelight which struck upon his eyes.

He passed his hand over them.

"A fire!" he said."I haven't seen one for a week.Coming out of the blackness it gives a man a start."Improvident joy gleamed in Glad's eyes.

"We 'll be warm onct," she chuckled, "if we ain't never warm agaen."She drew her circle about the hearth again.The thief took the place next to her and she handed out food to him--a big slice of meat, bread, a thick slice of pudding.

"Fill yerself up," she said."Then ye'll feel like yer can talk."The man tried to eat his food with decorum, some recollection of the habits of better days restraining him, but starved nature was too much for him.His hands shook, his eyes filled, his teeth tore.The rest of the circle tried not to look at him.

Glad and Polly occupied themselves with their own food.

Antony Dart gazed at the fire.

Here he sat warming himself in a loft with a beggar, a thief, and a helpless thing of the street.He had come out to buy a pistol--its weight still hung in his overcoat pocket--and he had reached this place of whose existence he had an hour ago not dreamed.Each step which had led him had seemed a simple, inevitable thing, for which he had apparently been responsible, but which he knew--yes, somehow he KNEW--he had of his own volition neither planned nor meant.Yet here he sat --a part of the lives of the beggar, the thief, and the poor thing of the street.What did it mean?

"Tell me," he said to the thief, "how you came here."By this time the young fellow had fed himself and looked less like a wolf.It was to be seen now that he had blue-gray eyes which were dreamy and young.

"I have always been inventing things," he said a little huskily."Idid it when I was a child.I always seemed to see there might be a way of doing a thing better--getting more power.When other boys were playing games I was sitting in corners trying to build models out of wire and string, and old boxes and tin cans.I often thought I saw the way to things, but I was always too poor to get what was needed to work them out.Twice I heard of men making great names and for tunes because they had been able to finish what I could have finished if Ihad had a few pounds.It used to drive me mad and break my heart."His hands clenched themselves and his huskiness grew thicker."There was a man," catching his breath, "who leaped to the top of the ladder and set the whole world talking and writing--and I had done the thing FIRST--I swear I had! It was all clear in my brain, and I was half mad with joy over it, but I could not afford to work it out.He could, so to the end of time it will be HIS." He struck his fist upon his knee.

"Aw!" The deep little drawl was a groan from Glad.

"I got a place in an office at last.

I worked hard, and they began to trust me.I--had a new idea.It was a big one.I needed money to work it out.I--I remembered what had happened before.I felt like a poor fellow running a race for his life.I KNEW I could pay back ten times--a hundred times--what I took.""You took money?" said Dart.

The thief's head dropped.

"No.I was caught when I was taking it.I wasn't sharp enough.

Someone came in and saw me, and there was a crazy row.I was sent to prison.There was no more trying after that.It's nearly two years since, and I've been hanging about the streets and falling lower and lower.I've run miles panting after cabs with luggage in them and not had strength to carry in the boxes when they stopped.I've starved and slept out of doors.But the thing I wanted to work out is in my mind all the time--like some machine tearing round.It wants to be finished.It never will be.

That's all."

Glad was leaning forward staring at him, her roughened hands with the smeared cracks on them clasped round her knees.

同类推荐
  • 林登州集

    林登州集

    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。
  • 正一敕坛仪

    正一敕坛仪

    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。
  • 净土生无生论会集

    净土生无生论会集

    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。
  • 太上洞玄灵宝三元玉京玄都大献经

    太上洞玄灵宝三元玉京玄都大献经

    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。
  • 武林旧事

    武林旧事

    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
  • 老公太怪:萌妻,深深爱

    老公太怪:萌妻,深深爱

    “我永远也想不到,故事的结局会是这样……”“想不到,就不用想了。”“呃……”某日,有记者采访,问:“顾先生,您身旁这位童助理——您和她到底是什么关系?”顾先生淡淡的答:“也没有什么关系,她不过是我两个孩子的妈而已。”
  • 蛮骨

    蛮骨

    在冰冷而又黑暗的宇宙,一抹巨大的身影出现在这个漫无边际的星空,显得诡异而又凛冽。一颗暗淡的星光在那里呆滞的沿着其轨迹滑行。其周围,出现片片时空的碎片,有上古,有蛮荒,还有那未知的光怪陆离,这一切,都预示着一个浩大的仙侠世界就此形成。
  • 魔祖一起名真难

    魔祖一起名真难

    林洛被选为新一代的魔子,该如何带着渐渐式微的魔宗重新站在世界之巅,又该在正与邪之间如何选择?欢迎进来看看。看我笔名了吗?不过不用怕!我是个靠谱的人,只要有一个人在看,在书评里说一声,我就会写下去!给自己加油哈!
  • 极品纹身

    极品纹身

    叶承,父母皆著名医生,望其承继家族医业,却因纹上极品纹身而改变命运,走上异术超能之路,从骨瘦如材的废材少年成为风魔万千少女的极品天才!
  • 灭帝传

    灭帝传

    强大的战者,神秘操控者,恐怖的魔兽,不同的绝地..无奇不有的世界,这是一个广博的魔幻世界。强者可以翱翔天际,而弱者注定庸俗一世,魔兽的争斗,绝地的宝物,无尽恢弘的世界。一个不能修炼战气的少年,如何能够在大陆中站稳,成为强者。这不但是一个大陆,更是一个强者为尊的大陆,远古神兽,远古战士,一个腾飞的时代,通向战争的黑暗漩涡,不同位面的争夺。林坦·贝亚特,一个懦弱少年,在逐渐转变。人生的转折便是那么简单,他带着自己的负担,背负着家族的重担。普通的林坦,拥有毅力与奋斗和自己的倔强,崛起在这个奇异的时代。
  • 天荒囚

    天荒囚

    小村少年,跟随族叔上山猎兽,惨遭猛兽攻袭。少年欲走出大山。走出村子的少年有何奇遇,是否成为强者。
  • 生化技能

    生化技能

    世界莫名其妙地爆发一场生化危机,在生化危机中,竟有神秘人,神秘人竟然能让普通人获得异于常人的技能!他是谁?他为什么策划这次生化危机?那些幸存者究竟该如何生存下来?
  • 校花的特工保镖

    校花的特工保镖

    曾经的一个特工小队---阴魂,无人不知,站在特工界的顶峰。如今他们的首领来到了都市,却变成了一个插班生,保护校花!
  • 我的皇后(上)

    我的皇后(上)

    当朝首辅的女儿凌苍苍嫁于皇帝萧焕成为皇后,却因女真族的叛乱而被掳成为叛军首领的宠姬。为了救凌,萧深入敌穴,最终与女真签订休战和约并救出凌。回到皇宫后,两人在暗流汹涌的政治斗争下情意日笃,生活暂时平静,但这一切又被打破……而凌最终决定独自离开京城,行走江湖。
  • 天书师

    天书师

    异界大陆,这儿最强大的职业是天书师,他们拥有神秘而强大的能力,转世而来的赵真则拥有着强大的异变天书,他发誓要成为最强大的天书师,而这一切视乎并不遥远。新人求收藏,求点击,至于推荐票则是可遇不可求的,先谢谢了。