登陆注册
19555300000057

第57章 THE FASCINATION(22)

Wildeve was a nervous and excitable man, and the game was beginning to tell upon his temper.He writhed, fumed, shifted his seat, and the beating of his heart was almost audible.Venn sat with lips impassively closed and eyes reduced to a pair of unimportant twinkles;he scarcely appeared to breathe.He might have been an Arab, or an automaton; he would have been like a red sandstone statue but for the motion of his arm with the dice-box.

The game fluctuated, now in favour of one, now in favour of the other, without any great advantage on the side of either.Nearly twenty minutes were passed thus.

The light of the candle had by this time attracted heath-flies, moths, and other winged creatures of night, which floated round the lantern, flew into the flame, or beat about the faces of the two players.

But neither of the men paid much attention to these things, their eyes being concentrated upon the little flat stone, which to them was an arena vast and important as a battlefield.

By this time a change had come over the game; the reddleman won continually.At length sixty guineas--Thomasin's fifty, and ten of Clym's--had passed into his hands.

Wildeve was reckless, frantic, exasperated.

"'Won back his coat,'" said Venn slily.

Another throw, and the money went the same way.

"'Won back his hat,'" continued Venn.

"Oh, oh!" said Wildeve.

"'Won back his watch, won back his money, and went out of the door a rich man,'" added Venn sentence by sentence, as stake after stake passed over to him.

"Five more!" shouted Wildeve, dashing down the money.

"And three casts be hanged--one shall decide."The red automaton opposite lapsed into silence, nodded, and followed his example.Wildeve rattled the box, and threw a pair of sixes and five points.He clapped his hands; "I have done it this time--hurrah!""There are two playing, and only one has thrown,"said the reddleman, quietly bringing down the box.

The eyes of each were then so intently converged upon the stone that one could fancy their beams were visible, like rays in a fog.

Venn lifted the box, and behold a triplet of sixes was disclosed.

Wildeve was full of fury.While the reddleman was grasping the stakes Wildeve seized the dice and hurled them, box and all, into the darkness, uttering a fearful imprecation.

Then he arose and began stamping up and down like a madman.

"It is all over, then?" said Venn.

"No, no!" cried Wildeve."I mean to have another chance yet.

I must!"

"But, my good man, what have you done with the dice?""I threw them away--it was a momentary irritation.

What a fool I am! Here--come and help me to look for them--we must find them again."Wildeve snatched up the lantern and began anxiously prowling among the furze and fern.

"You are not likely to find them there,"

said Venn, following."What did you do such a crazy thing as that for? Here's the box.The dice can't be far off."Wildeve turned the light eagerly upon the spot where Venn had found the box, and mauled the herbage right and left.

In the course of a few minutes one of the dice was found.

They searched on for some time, but no other was to be seen.

"Never mind," said Wildeve; "let's play with one.""Agreed," said Venn.

Down they sat again, and recommenced with single guinea stakes;and the play went on smartly.But Fortune had unmistakably fallen in love with the reddleman tonight.He won steadily, till he was the owner of fourteen more of the gold pieces.

Seventy-nine of the hundred guineas were his, Wildeve possessing only twenty-one.The aspect of the two opponents was now singular.Apart from motions, a complete diorama of the fluctuations of the game went on in their eyes.

A diminutive candle-flame was mirrored in each pupil, and it would have been possible to distinguish therein between the moods of hope and the moods of abandonment, even as regards the reddleman, though his facial muscles betrayed nothing at all.Wildeve played on with the recklessness of despair.

"What's that?" he suddenly exclaimed, hearing a rustle;and they both looked up.

They were surrounded by dusky forms between four and five feet high, standing a few paces beyond the rays of the lantern.A moment's inspection revealed that the encircling figures were heath-croppers, their heads being all towards the players, at whom they gazed intently.

"Hoosh!" said Wildeve, and the whole forty or fifty animals at once turned and galloped away.Play was again resumed.

Ten minutes passed away.Then a large death's head moth advanced from the obscure outer air, wheeled twice round the lantern, flew straight at the candle, and extinguished it by the force of the blow.Wildeve had just thrown, but had not lifted the box to see what he had cast;and now it was impossible.

"What the infernal!" he shrieked."Now, what shall we do? Perhaps I have thrown six--have you any matches?""None," said Venn.

"Christian had some--I wonder where he is.Christian!"But there was no reply to Wildeve's shout, save a mournful whining from the herons which were nesting lower down the vale.Both men looked blankly round without rising.

As their eyes grew accustomed to the darkness they perceived faint greenish points of light among the grass and fern.These lights dotted the hillside like stars of a low magnitude.

"Ah--glowworms," said Wildeve."Wait a minute.

We can continue the game."

Venn sat still, and his companion went hither and thither till he had gathered thirteen glowworms--as many as he could find in a space of four or five minutes--upon a fox-glove leaf which he pulled for the purpose.The reddleman vented a low humorous laugh when he saw his adversary return with these."Determined to go on, then?" he said drily.

同类推荐
  • 筠廊偶笔

    筠廊偶笔

    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。
  • 火龙神器阵法

    火龙神器阵法

    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。
  • 历代词话

    历代词话

    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。
  • 佛说圣最胜陀罗尼经

    佛说圣最胜陀罗尼经

    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。
  • 邵兰荪医案

    邵兰荪医案

    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。
热门推荐
  • 冲冠一怒为君颜

    冲冠一怒为君颜

    她东郡四大家族之一的嫡女,当世奇才,拥有倾城容颜,绝世修为。一场异变,经脉尽断,容貌被毁。但却遇到了值得托付终生的男人!老婆大人!有人欺负我。某男可怜兮兮的说道。放肆!取本王刀来,我去砍了他!
  • 中国古典文学荟萃(梦溪笔谈)

    中国古典文学荟萃(梦溪笔谈)

    中国古典文学是中国文学史上闪烁着灿烂光辉的经典性作品或优秀作品,它是世界文学宝库中令人瞩目的瑰宝。几千年来,中国传统文化养育了中国古典文学,中国古典文学又大大丰富了中国传统文化,使传统文化更具有深刻的影响力。
  • 中国哲学史大纲

    中国哲学史大纲

    是胡适先生于20世纪初在北京大学教授中国哲学史时期写成的著作。被誉为“用现代学术方法系统研究中国古代哲学史的第一部著作。它的出版被视为中国哲学史学科成立的标志,虽然只有上卷,但是它的成就和特色足以为后世哲学史家开出全新的境界。”写法上摒弃了中国哲学史从三皇五帝的传说开始写起的传统,直接从《诗经》、老子、孔子讲起。考证先哲生存年代,辩识古人著作真伪,还原先秦诸子本来面目。既不随意藏否,也不轻薄评议古人,言必有据,不作无谓的意气之争,显出作者平和的大家风范。此外,本书考证先秦各家流派的师承、变迁痕迹及递次演进的脉络,可谓“一本书读懂诸子百家”之作。
  • 你是我的红太狼

    你是我的红太狼

    于娉婷还以为自己进入了一段真正的恋情,没料到这一切都是源于一场有预谋的策划……讲述灰太狼如何步步为营,将红太狼哄回家的故事。
  • 最强火影在异界

    最强火影在异界

    碎元大陆只有武者,武者生来就有属性之分,分别有风,雷,土,水,火,五大属性。少年穿越到异界,凭借着火影系统一路成长。当地爆天星对上武技禁术,当八门遁甲对上至尊武神,当多重影分身对上千军万马,当九尾对上传说圣兽,到底谁才是最强?
  • 老狐狸说话心经(大全集)

    老狐狸说话心经(大全集)

    子日:“巧言令色,鲜矣仁!”老狐狸却说:“巧言令色,助你成功。”须知,成功者的故事里,从来都没有侥幸。狮子把羊叫来,问他能不能闻到自己嘴里发出的臭味。羊说:“能闻到”,狮子咬掉了这个傻瓜蛋的头。接着,他又把狼召来,用同样的问题问狼。狼说:“闻不到。”狮子把这个阿谀奉承的家伙咬得鲜血淋漓。最后,狐狸被召来了,狮子也用同样的问题问他,狐狸看看周围的情形,说: “大王,我患了感冒,闻不到什么味。”于是活了下来。马雅可夫斯基曾说: “语言是人的力量的统帅。"一个人想获得成功,必须具有能够应付一切的口才。
  • 列侠风云录

    列侠风云录

    剑是冷的,血是热的,可愿以脖颈试之。血与剑相触,有能溅出怎样的故事?是断肠悔恨,还是热血江湖?相传;一枭,二缺,三城,四绝,五名侠。又有怎样的故事?大宋的江山有该何去何从?是飘摇还是稳固?列侠风云录会为你一一道出。目前武侠小说已进入固定的模式:血仇—奇遇—报仇,当然还有艳遇。不管是新派还是传统,都避不过。所以很少人在涉及武侠,因为你写的再好,也无法超越;金古梁三大宗师。当然我更不行,我只是试图改变,也许无法跳出。这是我的尝试之作,仅此一部,成功与否都不在涉及。本书严格说来,已经不能算作纯正武侠,我给他定义为‘轻武侠'.
  • 数学教学的趣味知识设计

    数学教学的趣味知识设计

    本书针对学生在学习数独中出现的问题,有步骤、有梯度地引导学生学会从不同的角度去分析问题和解答题目,增强学生“举一反三”的意识,激发学生学习数独的兴趣,增强学生学好数独的信心。
  • 36招解除3M魔咒

    36招解除3M魔咒

    本书着力解决职场中最难处理的人际关系问题,让您在面对各种类型的要求、请求、苛求时,都可以找到有效的拒绝方法,从而摆脱困境,建立良好的工作关系。《次贷风暴下的中国牌局》充满了轻松的睿智。为了能让您解除3M魔咒、面带微笑地轻松工作,让您每天的生活变得幸福、愉快,《次贷风暴下的中国牌局》不仅讲述如何规避3M魔咒,而且蕴涵了丰富的人生哲理,可以帮助您尽快树立起在职场中取得成功的正确的观念、心态与思维方式。《36招解除3M魔咒》让您投入最少的时间,获得最大的帮助,它为您提供了36招简单可行的解决方案,让您驰骋职场,无往不利。
  • 我和我上司

    我和我上司

    作者以幽默诙谐的笔调,略富有童话色彩的叙述,喜剧的形式,上演了一幕现代版的青蛙与公主的浪漫爱情。然而,尽管时代在变化,但是中国婚姻的门当户对观念,始终烙印在中国人的骨子里。或许现实终究是现实,终究是残酷的。那么,青蛙又能否与公主相结合?真爱又能否摆脱观念的束约?有情人又能否终成眷属?