登陆注册
14824800000010

第10章

My poor mother found this to interfere with her after-dinner nap, and no wonder; for if a cohort of ghosts had been "shrieking and squealing," as Calpurnia puts it, in our back garden, or it had been fitted up as a creche for a nursery of goblin infants in the agonies of teething, the noise could not possibly have been more unearthly.

We sought for some means of getting rid of the nuisance: there was poison, of course; but we thought it would have an invidious appearance, and even lead to legal difficulties, if each dawn were to discover an assortment of cats expiring in hideous convulsions in various parts of the same garden.

Firearms too were open to objection, and would scarcely assist my mother's slumbers; so for some time we were at a loss for a remedy. At last, one day, walking down the Strand, I chanced to see (in an evil hour) what struck me as the very thing: it was an air-gun of superior construction, displayed in a gunsmith's window. I went in at once, purchased it, and took it home in triumph; it would be noiseless, and would reduce the local average of cats without scandal,--one or two examples,--and feline fashion would soon migrate to a more secluded spot.

I lost no time in putting this to the proof. That same evening I lay in wait after dusk at the study window, protecting my mother's repose.

As soon as I heard the long-drawn wail, the preliminary sputter, and the wild stampede that followed, I let fly in the direction of the sound. I suppose I must have something of the national sporting instinct in me, for my blood was tingling with excitement; but the feline constitution assimilates lead without serious inconvenience, and I began to fear that no trophy would remain to bear witness to my marksmanship.

But all at once I made out a dark, indistinct form slinking in from behind the bushes. I waited till it crossed a belt of light which streamed from the back kitchen below me, and then I took careful aim and pulled the trigger.

This time at least I had not failed; there was a smothered yell, a rustle, and then silence again. I ran out with the calm pride of a successful revenge to bring in the body of my victim, and I found underneath a laurel no predatory tom-cat, but (as the discerning reader will no doubt have foreseen long since) the quivering carcass of the colonel's black poodle!

I intend to set down here the exact unvarnished truth, and I confess that at first, when I knew what I had done, I was /not/ sorry. I was quite innocent of any intention of doing it, but I felt no regret. I even laughed--madman that I was--at the thought that there was the end of Bingo, at all events; that impediment was removed; my weary task of conciliation was over for ever!

But soon the reaction came; I realised the tremendous nature of my deed, and shuddered. I had done that which might banish me from Lilian's side for ever! All unwittingly I had slaughtered a kind of sacred beast, the animal around which the Currie household had wreathed their choicest affections! How was I to break it to them?

Should I send Bingo in, with a card tied to his neck and my regrets and compliments? That was too much like a present of game. Ought I not to carry him in myself? I would wreathe him in the best crape, I would put on black for him; the Curries would hardly consider a taper and a white sheet, or sack-cloth and ashes, an excessive form of atonement, but I could not grovel to quite such an abject extent.

I wondered what the colonel would say. Simple and hearty, as a general rule, he had a hot temper on occasions, and it made me ill as I thought, would he and, worse still, would /Lilian/ believe it was really an accident? They knew what an interest I had in silencing the deceased poodle--would they believe the simple truth?

I vowed that they /should/ believe me. My genuine remorse and the absence of all concealment on my part would speak powerfully for me. I would choose a favourable time for my confession; that very evening I would tell all.

Still I shrank from the duty before me, and, as I knelt down sorrowfully by the dead form and respectfully composed his stiffening limbs, I thought that it was unjust of fate to place a well-meaning man, whose nerves were not of iron, in such a position.

Then, to my horror, I heard a well-known ringing tramp on the road outside, and smelled the peculiar fragrance of a Burmese cheroot. It was the colonel himself, who had been taking out the doomed Bingo for his usual evening run.

I don't know how it was, exactly, but a sudden panic came over me. I held my breath, and tried to crouch down unseen behind the laurels; but he had seen me, and came over at once to speak to me across the hedge.

He stood there, not two yards from his favourite's body! Fortunately it was unusually dark that evening.

"Ha, there you are, eh!" he began, heartily; "don't rise, my boy, don't rise."

I was trying to put myself in front of the poodle, and did not rise-- at least, only my hair did.

"You're out late, ain't you?" he went on; "laying out your garden, hey?"

I could not tell him that I was laying out his poodle! My voice shook as, with a guilty confusion that was veiled by the dusk, I said it was a fine evening--which it was not.

"Cloudy, sir," said the colonel, "cloudy; rain before morning, I think. By the way, have you seen anything of Bingo in here?"

This was the turning-point. What I /ought/ to have done was to say mournfully, "Yes, I'm sorry to say I've had a most unfortunate accident with him. Here he is; the fact is, I'm afraid I've /shot/ him!"

But I couldn't. I could have told him at my own time, in a prepared form of words--but not then. I felt I must use all my wits to gain time, and fence with the questions.

"Why," I said, with a leaden airiness, "he hasn't given you the slip, has he?"

"Never did such a thing in his life!" said the colonel, warmly; "he rushed off after a rat or a frog or something a few minutes ago, and as I stopped to light another cheroot I lost sight of him. I thought I saw him slip in under your gate, but I've been calling him from the front there and he won't come out."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 大漠残阳绝对较量

    大漠残阳绝对较量

    这是一个全新的故事,男主角是叶开之子叶心和傅红雪之子傅释新,分别独立写了叶心和傅释新两人的两段故事,通过这两段故事勾勒出两大男主角的性格、人生经历等,以引申出两人最后的一场较量。古龙是世之公认的武侠大师,也是我的偶像,他的“小李飞刀”系列是最精彩的作品,看完之后感到有一点遗憾,就是叶开和傅红雪并没有真正较量过,两人只在《边城浪子》中同时出现。而很多古龙书迷也为这一点感到遗憾,故做了此作,以了却大家的心愿。但是两大男主角的较量并非最重要,而是要通过他们的较量、经历可以读到一些更深层次的东西。【特将此小说敬上,希望大家多多支持。只有大家的支持,作者才会有创作的动力!(^.^)】
  • 燏你相爱

    燏你相爱

    谁说我们善燏娇弱的,人家在自己的女朋友面前可是男友力爆棚!来看看wuli善燏的男友力是如何爆棚的吧!
  • 神女遮天

    神女遮天

    “练武不行、打怪不行、讨好人心不行、上下拉关系也不行……肖浅你除了吃,究竟还能干什么?”肖浅指着白圈里自己的影子狠狠地骂道。那黑色的影子似乎在缓缓道:“我能扫地、做饭等等啊!”肖浅心里恶狠狠地盯着它,噢!废物!
  • 穿越之唐家嫡女

    穿越之唐家嫡女

    她本是堂堂的唐家大小姐,却因家族要守护的云手镯惨遭灭门,为报家族之仇,学习各种技术。在夺回手镯时,不幸穿越架空的王国,遇到腹黑九王爷。她是否能够征服腹黑王爷呢?
  • 纵龙天下

    纵龙天下

    尚武风行之纵龙大陆一名门望族子弟,与母被弃。流落他乡受尽世间冷暖,为报母仇,毅然踏上修真路。几许风雨几许情,五属五强五圣者,逆天振人族,弹笑傲视天下。
  • 理瀹骈文

    理瀹骈文

    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。
  • 死灵附身

    死灵附身

    原本生机勃勃的城市,却因为一个精神病人的研究,而陷入了前所未有的危机之中,梦境与现实已经模糊了界限,真实与虚幻已经难以分辨,在这个世界里信任已经不复存在,连最亲近的人都可能随时背叛你,人类所能相信的大概只剩下自己的灵魂……
  • 神道不孤

    神道不孤

    武道算什么我走的是神道紫霄俯视这万界淡淡的说到
  • 死亡手稿

    死亡手稿

    如果再给我一次机会,我绝对不会选择做法医。跟尸体打交道多了,人是会变的……五年前我进入重案组,大大小小的案件参与了百余起。可是这些年我心中形成了挥之不去的阴影,因为总有一些案件,藏着你永远解释不了的真相!“圆顶礼帽”、“猫脸色魔”、“食尸老太”……我不知道该如何去陈述这些被列为绝密的案件,但是如果再不说出来,我要疯了……
  • 废柴向上实录

    废柴向上实录

    小时候他梦想当明星,后来在一次照镜子时毅然的放弃了,并且“理直气壮”的说道:“吾乃一届书生,岂可为伶人!”大学时,一部《中国合伙人》让他热血沸腾,渴望着有朝一日也能成为霸道总裁,然而计划还没构思一半,却早已毕业半年。他在现实面前,放弃了不切实际的理想,加入了一家会计师事务所。小助理披荆斩棘最终考取会计师,面对职场,他游刃有余,他是妇女之友,但面对爱情,又尽显青涩。欲知其中事,且待笔者娓娓道来···