The Heads of Cerberus. Francis Stevens
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Название: The Heads of Cerberus

Автор: Francis Stevens

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Языкознание

Серия:

isbn: 9788027224913

isbn:

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      Gertrude Barrows Bennett, Francis Stevens

      The Heads of Cerberus

      The First Sci-Fi to use the Idea of Parallel Worlds and Alternate Time

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2017 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-272-2491-3

      Table of Contents

       I. “Welcome, However You Come!”

       II. Dust of Purgatory

       III. Arrivals and Departures

       IV. Where the Gray Dust Led

       V. The Weaver of the Years

       VI. A Matter of Buttons

       VII. A Few Small Changes

       VIII. Legal Procedure Expedited

       IX. The Pit of the Past

       X. The Fourth Victim

       XI. Mine and Countermine

       XII. The New City

       XIII. Penn Service

       XIV. The Threat of Penn

       XV. The Justice of Penn Service

       XVI. Disaster

       XVII. Their Last Chance

       XVIII. The Sword and the Bell

       XIX. Trenmore Strikes

       XX. Transferred Home

       XXI. The Last of the Gray Dust

      Chapter I.

       “Welcome, However You Come!”

       Table of Contents

      Upon a walnut bed in a small, plainly furnished room which dawn had just begun grayly to illuminate, a man lay unconscious.

      His thin face, indefinably boyish for all its gauntness, wore that placid, uncaring look which death shares with complete insensibility. Under him his right arm was doubled in an uncomfortable, strained position, while the left hand, slender and well cared for, trailed limp to the floor by the bedside. On his right temple there showed an ugly wound, evidently made by some blunt, heavy instrument, for the skin was burst rather than cut. His fair hair was plastered with blood from the wound, and a good deal of blood had also run down over the side of the face, lending a sinister and tragic aspect to his otherwise not unpleasant countenance. Fully dressed in a rather shabby blue serge, both appearance and attitude suggested that the man had been flung down here and left brutally to die or revive, as he might.

      The dawn light grew brighter, and as if in sympathy with its brightening, the face of the man on the bed began to take on a look more akin to that of life. That alien, wax-like placidity of one who is done with pain slowly softened and changed. The features twitched; the lips which had fallen slightly apart, closed firmly. With a sudden contraction of the brows the man opened his eyes.

      For several minutes he lay quiet, staring upward. Then he attempted to withdraw his right hand from beneath him, groaned, and by a considerable effort at last raised himself on one elbow. Gazing about the room with bewildered, pain-stricken eyes, he raised his hand to his head and afterward stared stupidly at the blood on his fingers. He seemed like one who, having fallen victim to some powerful drug, awakens in unfamiliar and inexplicable surroundings.

      As he again looked about him, however, the expression changed. What he saw, it seemed, had revived some memory that mingled with a new and different bewilderment.

      In a corner of the room, near the one window, stood a small, old-fashioned, black steel safe. The door of it was swung wide open, while scattered on the floor before it lay a mass of papers. From between loose pages and folded, elastic-bound documents gleamed a few small articles of jewelry. Two or three empty morocco cases had been carelessly tossed on top of the pile.

      With eyes fixed on this heap, the man swung his legs over the side of the bed, and, staggering across to the safe, dropped on his knees beside it. He ran his hand through the papers, uncovered a small brooch which he picked up and examined with a curious frowning intentness; then let it fall and again raised a hand to his head.

      In another corner of the room was a doorway through which he glimpsed a porcelain washbowl. Toward this the man dragged himself. Wetting a towel that hung there, he began bathing the wound on his temple. The cold water seemed to relieve the dizziness or nausea from which he suffered. Presently he was able to draw himself erect, and having contemplated his disheveled countenance in the small mirror above the bowl, he proceeded with some care to remove the more obvious traces of disaster. The blood fortunately had clotted and ceased to flow. Having washed, he sought about the room, found his hat, a worn, soft gray felt, on the floor near the bed, and, returning to the mirror, adjusted it with the apparent intent to conceal his wound.

      The effort, though attended by a grimace СКАЧАТЬ