The Mysteries of Detective Ashton-Kirk (Complete Series). John T. McIntyre
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Название: The Mysteries of Detective Ashton-Kirk (Complete Series)

Автор: John T. McIntyre

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Языкознание

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isbn: 4064066309596

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      "Who are you? What is your errand?"

      "We were sent to you by Dr. Mercer,"replied Ashton-Kirk with flying pencil. "Our business is to secure the admission of a new pupil."

      Locke read this and regarded them for a moment, doubtfully.

      "Why did you not press the button at the door?"he demanded in writing.

      "I hardly expected you to have such a thing as a bell,"answered Ashton-Kirk, on the pad. "And so, seeing you, I attracted your attention as best I could."

      Professor Locke read this and stood with his pencil poised, when the buzzer sounded harshly; he went at once into the hall; they heard him open the door; and in a few moments he returned, followed by Haines.

      The fingers of the two flashed their signals back and forth; then a look of relief came into Locke's face; he even smiled, and nodded understandingly at the two young men.

      "I beg pardon, gentlemen,"said Haines. "But when I got back to the hall, Dr. Mercer made me return and make sure that you had got to see the Professor."

      "Thanks,"replied the investigator. "We had not the slightest difficulty."

      "I'm glad to hear it, sir,"said the man. "Good-night to you."

      He flashed the same wish to the mute, who answered readily; then he went out and through the window they saw his light again go bobbing away in the darkness. Then the professor began to write once more.

      "I beg your pardon,"was his message in long-hand. "The man tells me that it was quite as you say. But I must confess I was a trifle startled."

      "The lady,"wrote Ashton-Kirk, "seemed startled, too."

      For the fraction of a moment the mute halted in his reply. Then the pencil with much assurance formed the following:

      "It was my niece. She was about to go just as you came; so do not reproach yourself for having driven her away."

      For some time the penciled conversation continued between the two; but as it was all based upon the fanciful pupil whom the investigator stated he desired to place in Dr. Mercer's care, Pendleton paid little heed to it. At last, however, they bid the Professor good-by, and left him upon the threshold, his massive head nodding his adieus, his frail little body sharply outlined by the glow from the hall.

      The two had reached their own car around on the other road before Pendleton spoke. Then he inquired:

      "Well, have you learned anything from him?"

      "I think I can say 'yes' to that,"answered the other. "But I'm not yet sure. I'll have to put it to the proof first, according to the formula which I gave you a half hour ago. If it succeeds, I'll tell you what it is; if it does not, I'll say nothing, and it will go upon the scrap heap devoted to broken fancies. And now, Dixon,"to the chauffeur, "we'll go home."

      CHAPTER XVI

       STEEL AGAINST STEEL

       Table of Contents

      Shortly before noon next day, Ashton-Kirk, in an immaculate morning suit, was ushered into the presence of Miss Edyth Vale. If he expected confusion, embarrassment or anything of that sort, he was disappointed; for she greeted him eagerly and with outstretched hand.

      "This is a surprise,"she said.

      He held her hand and looked meaningly at her.

      "My appearances are sometimes surprising,"he said. "But I usually select the night for them; the effect is better then, you see."

      She smiled into his eyes.

      "I have no doubt but that you are dreadfully mysterious,"she said. "But please sit down."

      She seated herself near the window; holding a book in her hand, she fluttered the leaves to and fro.

      "The composure,"thought the investigator, as he sat down, "is somewhat overdone."

      "I wonder,"said Miss Vale, looking at the book, "if you are an admirer of Ibsen."And as he nodded, she proceeded with a slight smile. "I know that he is scarcely the usual thing for a spring morning. But there are times when I simply can't resist him."

      "He's a strong draught at any time,"said Ashton-Kirk. "But his tonic quality is undoubted."

      "His disciples claim that for him, at any rate,"she answered. "But sometimes I question its truth. Where is the tonic effect of 'Rosmersholm?' I think it full of terrors."She shuddered and added: "The White Horses will haunt me for weeks."

      "It's the atmosphere of crime,"said he. "That quiet home on the western fiords reeks with it."

      She made a gesture of repulsion.

      "It's ghastly!"she exclaimed. "And, somehow, one feels it from the very first—before a word is spoken. Imagine Rebecca at the window, watching through the plants to see if Rosmer uses the footbridge from which his wife once leaped to her death."She paused a moment, her eyes upon the open pages; then lifting her head, she asked: "What do you think of Rebecca?"

      "A tremendous character—of wonderful strength. It was just such proud, dark, purposeful souls that Byron delighted to draw; but the only one in literature to whom I can fully liken her is the wife of Macbeth. There was the same ambition—the same ruthless will—the same disregard of everything that stood in her way. And, like Cawdor's wife, she weakened in the end."

      She regarded him fixedly.

      "Would you call it weakness?"she asked.

      "She fell in love with Johannes, did she not? That was weakness—for her. She herself recognized it as such."

      The girl looked at him thoughtfully for a moment.

      "That is true,"she said.

      "Some of the world's most daring and accomplished criminals have been women,"he went on. "But Nature never intended woman to be the bearer of burdens; there is a weakness in her soul structure somewhere; she usually sinks under the consciousness of guilt."

      "More so than men, do you think?"

      "As a rule—yes."

      She put down the book and clasped her hands in her lap.

      "There is no need to sympathize with Rebecca,"she said. "She was brave and strong, even in her love for Johannes. But he,"and there was a note in her voice that recalled the night he had listened to it over the telephone, "he was different. There is no more dreadful thing in the play, to me, than the character of Rosmer. To think of him sitting quietly in that charnel house, prospering in soul, growing sleek in thought, becoming stored with high ideas. Perfect peace came to him in spite of the stern-faced portraits which shrieked murder from the walls. He dreamed of freeing and ennobling mankind, and all the time Fate was weaving a net about him that was to drag him from the mill bridge after his dead wife."

      "Kroll knew him,"said the investigator. "And he said Rosmer was easily influenced. СКАЧАТЬ