登陆注册
19594200000146

第146章

`There is something in a treasure that fastens upon a man's mind. He will pray and blaspheme and still persevere, and will curse the day he ever heard of it, and will let his last hour come upon him unawares, still believing that he missed it only by a foot. He will see it every time he closes his eyes. He will never forget it till he is dead -- and even then--Doctor, did you ever hear of the miserable gringos on Azuera, that cannot die? Ha! ha! Sailors like myself. There is no getting away from a treasure that once fastens upon your mind.'

`You are a devil of a man, Capataz. It is the most plausible thing.'

Nostromo pressed his arm.

`It will be worse for him than thirst at sea or hunger in a town full of people. Do you know what that is? He shall suffer greater torments than he inflicted upon that terrified wretch who had no invention. None! none!

Not like me. I could have told Sotillo a deadly tale for very little pain.'

He laughed wildly and turned in the doorway towards the body of the late Senor Hirsch, an opaque long blotch in the semi-transparent obscurity of the room between the two tall parallelograms of the windows full of stars.

`You man of fear!' he cried. `You shall be avenged by me -- Nostromo.

Out of my way, doctor! Stand aside -- or, by the suffering soul of a woman dead without confession, I will strangle you with my two hands.'

He bounded downwards into the black, smoky hall. With a grunt of astonishment, Dr Monygham threw himself recklessly into the pursuit. At the bottom of the charred stairs he had a fall, pitching forward on his face with a force that would have stunned a spirit less intent upon a task of love and devotion.

He was up in a moment, jarred, shaken, with a queer impression of the terrestrial globe having been flung at his head in the dark. But it wanted more than that to stop Dr Monygham's body, possessed by the exaltation of self-sacrifice;a reasonable exaltation, determined not to lose whatever advantage chance put into its way. He ran with headlong, tottering swiftness, his arms going like a windmill in his effort to keep his balance on his crippled feet.

He lost his hat; the tails of his open gaberdine flew behind him. He had no mind to lose sight of the indispensable man. But it was a long time, and a long way from the Custom House, before he managed to seize his arm from behind, roughly, out of breath.

`Stop! Are you mad?'

Already Nostromo was walking slowly, his head dropping, as if checked in his pace by the weariness of irresolution.

`What is that to you? Ah! I forgot you want me for something. Always. Siempre Nostromo .'

`What do you mean by talking of strangling me?' panted the doctor.

`What do I mean? I mean that the king of the devils himself has sent you out of this town of cowards and talkers to meet me tonight of all the nights of my life.'

Under the starry sky the Albergo d'Italia Una emerged, black and low, breaking the dark level of the plain. Nostromo stopped altogether.

`The priests say he is a tempter, do they not?' he added, through his clenched teeth.

`My good man, you drivel. The devil has nothing to do with this. Neither has the town, which you may call by what name you please. But Don Carlos Gould is neither a coward nor an empty talker. You will admit that?' He waited. `Well?'

`Could I see Don Carlos?'

`Great heavens! No! Why? What for?' exclaimed the doctor in agitation.

`I tell you it is madness. I will not let you go into the town for anything.'

`I must.'

`You must not!' hissed the doctor, fiercely, almost beside himself with the fear of the man doing away with his usefulness for an imbecile whim of some sort. `I tell you you shall not. I would rather--'

He stopped at a loss for words, feeling fagged out, powerless, holding on to Nostromo's sleeve, absolutely for support after his run.

`I am betrayed!' muttered the Capataz to himself; and the doctor, who overheard the last word, made an effort to speak calmly.

`That is exactly what would happen to you. You would be betrayed.'

He thought with a sickening dread that the man was so well known that he could not escape recognition. The house of the Senor Administrador was beset by spies, no doubt. And even the very servants of the casa were not to be trusted. `Reflect, Capataz,' he said, impressively. . .

. `What are you laughing at?'

`I am laughing to think that if somebody that did not approve of my presence in town, for instance -- you understand, senor doctor --if somebody were to give me up to Pedrito, it would not be beyond my power to make friends even with him. It is true. What do you think of that?'

`You are a man of infinite resource, Capataz,' said Dr Monygham, dismally.

`I recognize that. But the town is full of talk about you; and those few cargadores that are not in hiding with the railway people have been shouting " Viva Montero! " on the Plaza all day.'

`My poor cargadores !' muttered Nostromo. `Betrayed! Betrayed!'

`I understand that on the wharf you were pretty free in laying about you with a stick amongst your poor cargadores ,' the doctor said in a grim tone, which showed that he was recovering from his exertions.

`Make no mistake. Pedrito is furious at Senor Ribiera's rescue, and at having lost the pleasure of shooting Decoud. Already there are rumours in the town of the treasure having been spirited away. To have missed that does not please Pedrito either; but let me tell you that if you had all the silver in your hand for your ransom it would not save you.'

Turning swiftly, and catching the doctor by the shoulders, Nostromo thrust his face close to his.

` Maladetta! You follow me speaking of the treasure. You have sworn my ruin. You were the last man who looked upon me before I went out with it. And Sidoni the engine-driver says you have an evil eye.'

同类推荐
  • 黄金策

    黄金策

    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。
  • 解蔽

    解蔽

    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。
  • The Guardian Angel

    The Guardian Angel

    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。
  • 蟋蟀轩草

    蟋蟀轩草

    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。
  • 佛说四无所畏经

    佛说四无所畏经

    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。
热门推荐
  • TFBOYS之那片满天星

    TFBOYS之那片满天星

    遇上败类人渣后又遇见大明星,这是上天打了她一巴掌又给个甜枣吗?她害怕……小心翼翼的爱她,他要给她一份安心的爱情,不让她惊慌,不让她伤心……本文略渣主王俊凯会有千玺和王源不喜勿喷
  • 庄子翼附录

    庄子翼附录

    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。
  • 瘟神日记

    瘟神日记

    温厚道的朋友很多,可没人愿意接近他!温厚道的情人很多,可一个个躲他远远的!即使是温厚道的父母,亦常对他说:“厚道啊,我们身体很好,你要是没什么事,不用回来!温厚道的敌人常常感叹:“能成为他的敌人,太幸福了!虽然报不了仇,可一生远离他,简直是上天最大的恩赐!”无它,温厚道太瘟了,就是人间一瘟神!
  • 长沙会战

    长沙会战

    1939年9月至1942年1月,驻武汉的日军第11军向以长沙为指挥中心的中国第九战区发起了三次大规模的进攻作战,三作战统称长沙会战,本书详细记录了1939~1941年的长沙会战,内容包括战前态势、战况总览、湘北狼烟和汨水悲歌。
  • 古龙文集:绝代双骄1

    古龙文集:绝代双骄1

    书中栩栩如生刻画出小鱼儿、花无缺、铁心兰、江玉郎、燕南天、江别鹤、移花宫主、十二星相、苏樱等众多典型人物,是古龙所有小说中篇幅最长,情节最丰富的小说。《绝代双骄》也是一个关于仇恨和宽恕的故事,以仇恨开始,以宽恕结尾,充满了人性的光辉。全书高潮迭起,诙谐斗智,充满幽默,让人笑中带泪。小说问世以来,被改编无数,梁朝伟、刘德华、林青霞、林志颖、苏有朋等明星先后参与演出,陪一代又一代人度过了人生的美好时光。
  • CF新手成长之路

    CF新手成长之路

    一名平凡的CF玩家在一个网吧打CF,那时候人很多就剩1台机子了,可以很多人排队他们也不坐那个机子,他就上去玩了,旁边的一位人说这可是凶机,凡是坐过的人都离奇死亡了,打着打着,他屏幕显示了你选择生还是死,他选择了死,于是他就被吸进了CF世界,想要了解更多的信息吗,那就开始阅读吧
  • 绝世狂妃:巧弄残暴帝君

    绝世狂妃:巧弄残暴帝君

    深宫争斗,无数罪恶暗自滋生。她本是父亲办案的小助手,却为爱阴错阳差踏入宫墙,尔虞我诈、明枪暗箭,令她深陷其中。真理,正义,还是一个情字?两难三难的选择,身不由己还是情非得已?曾经的敌人转而携手微笑,曾经的好友却又冷目相对,引为倚靠的他的爱情亦岌岌可危,究竟还有什么等待着她?身世纠葛,命运捉弄,刀光剑影,她以为在斗争中生存是不可能的任务,却原来,当所有真相谜底解开之时,不仅不是解脱,反而令她面临一生最困难的抉择……
  • 低调为人强势做事

    低调为人强势做事

    本书分十章,告诉读者:低调,是一种品格、一种姿态、一种风度、一种修养、一种胸襟,是为人的最佳姿态。强势,是一种能力、一种气魄、一种战术、一种技巧、一种策略,是做事的最佳智慧。低调为人和强势做事,两者不但相辅相成,而且互为表里,是为人处世的必修课程。
  • 用耳朵听最优美的散文

    用耳朵听最优美的散文

    这本《用耳朵听最优美的散文》以“用耳听”为学习理念,精选了130多篇精致散文,均用词精准简洁,语句流畅优美,将引领学习者进入趣、情、爱与理的博大世界,使其更加充满信心地去追求梦想。每篇文章并配有导读语、词汇注释、长难句解析、背诵指数及外教精心录制的录音。本书将为学习者展现一个美丽新世界并使其英语学习更上层楼。
  • 早泄的药膳疗法

    早泄的药膳疗法

    本书以介绍药膳为主,对某些临床效果确切的食疗方也一并收入,是处于水深火热中广大男性的福星,是家庭和睦,妻子颜开的必备精品。