登陆注册
6242100000040

第40章

WHAT SHAKESPEARE'S COMEDIES REVEALED

In a very depressed frame of mind, Desmond turned into the library. As he crossed the hall, he noticed how cheerless the house was. Again there came to him that odor of mustiness--of all smells the most eerie and drear--which he had noticed on his arrival. Somehow, as long as Nur-el-Din had been there, he had not remarked the appalling loneliness of the place.

A big log fire was blazing cheerfully in the grate, throwing out a bright glow into the room which, despite the early hour, was already wreathed in shadows. Wearily Desmond pulled a big armchair up to the blaze and sat down. He told himself that he must devote every minute of his spare time to going over in his mind the particulars he had memorized of Mr. Bellward's habits and acquaintanceships. He took the list of Bellward's friends from his pocket-book.

But this afternoon he found it difficult to concentrate his attention. His gaze kept wandering back to the fire, in whose glowing depths he fancied he could see a perfect oval face with pleading eyes and dazzling teeth looking appealingly at him.

Nur-el-Din! What an entrancing creature she was! What passion lurked in those black eyes of hers, in her moods, swiftly changing from gusts of fierce imperiousness to gentle airs of feminine charm! What a frail little thing she was to have fought her way alone up the ladder from the lowest rung to the very top!

She must have character and grit, Desmond decided, for he was a young man who adored efficiency: to him efficiency spelled success.

But a spy needs grit, he reflected, and Nur-el-Din had many qualities which would enable her to win the confidence of men.

Hadn't she half-captivated him, the would-be spy-catcher, already?

Desmond laughed ruefully to himself. Indeed, he mused, things looked that way. What would the Chief say if he could see his prize young man, his white-headed boy, sitting sentimentalizing by the fire over a woman who was, by her own confession, practically an accredited German agent? Desmond thrust his chin out and shook himself together. He would put the feminine side of Nur-el-Din out of his head. He must think of her henceforth only as a member of the band that was spotting targets for those sneaking, callous brutes of U-boat commanders.

He went back to the study of the list of Mr. Bellward's friends.

But he found it impossible to focus his mind upon it. Do what he would, he could not rid himself of the sensation that he had failed at the very outset of his mission. He was, indeed, he told himself, the veriest tyro at the game. Here he had had under his hand in turn Nur-el-Din and Mortimer (who, he made no doubt, was the leader of the gang which was so sorely troubling the Chief), and he had let both get away without eliciting from either even as much as their address. By the use of a little tact, he had counted on penetrating something of the mystery enveloping the dancer and her relationship with the gang; for he thought he divined that Nur-el-Din was inclined to make him her confidant.

With the information thus procured, he had hoped to get on to the track of the leader of the band.

But that ugly brute; Mortimer, with his goggle eyes, had spoiled everything. His appearance had taken Desmond completely by surprise: to tell the truth, it had thrown our young man rather off his guard. " If only I might have had a little longer acquaintance with my part," he reflected bitterly as $e sat by the fire, "I should have been better able to deal with that pompous ass!"Afterwards, when thinking over the opening events of this extraordinary episode of his career, Desmond rather wondered why he had not followed Mortimer out of the house that afternoon and tracked him down to his hiding place. But, as a matter of fact, the idea did not occur to him at the time. His orders were positive not to leave the house, and he never even thought of breaking them--at any rate, not then.

His orders, also, it is true, were to report to headquarters any communication that might be made to him; but these instructions, at least as far as Nur-el-Din's and Mortimer's visits were concerned, he resolved to ignore.

For one thing, he felt angry with the Chief who, he argued rather irrationally, ought to have foreseen and prevented Mortimer thus taking him by surprise. The Chief liked secrets--well, for a change, he should be kept in the dark and the laugh would be on Desmond's side. For a few minutes after Mortimer's departure, Desmond had felt strongly inclined to go to the telephone which stood on the desk in the library and ring up Mr. Elias, as he should have done, but he resisted this impulse. Now, thinking things over in the firelight, he was glad he had refrained. He would ferret out for himself the exact part that Nur-el-Din and Mortimer were playing in this band of spies. Nothing definite had come of his interviews with them as yet. It would be time enough to communicate with Headquarters when he had something positive to report.

Then Desmond thrust the paper he had been studying back in his pocket-book and jumped up. He felt that the inaction was stifling him. He determined to go for a walk round the garden. That, at least, was in the spirit of his orders.

Remembering that he was supposed to be suffering from a chill he donned a heavy Ulster of Bellward's which was hanging in the hall and wound a muffler round his neck. Then cramming a soft cap on his head (he noted with satisfaction that Bellward's hats fitted him remarkably well) he opened the front door and stepped outside.

The rain had stopped, but the whole atmosphere reeled of moisture. Angry-looking, dirty-brown clouds chased each other across the lowering sky, and there was a constant sound of water, trickling and gurgling and splashing, in his ears.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 不死存在

    不死存在

    漫长岁月里,身边的一切都早已化作黄土.千载时光只为红尘寻你而来
  • 礼仪全书(第一册)

    礼仪全书(第一册)

    在现代社会,礼仪可以有效地展现施礼者和受礼者的教养、风度与魅力,它体现着一个人对他人和社会的认知水平、尊重程度,是一个人的学识、修养和价值的外在表现。《礼仪全书》归纳、介绍了大量最新的交际技巧和礼仪规则,有针对性地分析、解答了生活、工作、交际中经常遇到的种种具体问题,内容涉及社交场合的礼仪礼节、招待宾客的要领、职场中的人际关系、商业营销中的礼仪、与外国人交往的礼仪知识等等。在社会变化日益快速的今天,许多经久不变的社会习俗和礼仪,已经发生微妙的改变。本书多层次、多方位、多侧面地反映了这种变化。
  • 绝代异皇

    绝代异皇

    2050年,地球地壳剧烈运动,无数人丧生。幸运活下来的人发现自己的身体素质大大提升,智力,体力远超以往。活下来的人中甚至有一小部分掌握了超越自然的能力。我们称这些人为――异能者!
  • 幻神王

    幻神王

    卡片的世界!这里有千奇百怪的神奇卡片。绚丽多彩的元素卡,威猛的武技卡,召唤奇异生灵的通灵卡,治愈伤势的医疗卡。还有增强个人力量、速度的属性卡,更有可以让人变身的融合卡,魂将卡,魔神卡……加热卡可以取代微波炉,冰冻卡可以取代冰箱,影像卡可以取代电视,通讯卡可以取代手机,能量卡可以取代电能……一场巨变,地球面积巨增百倍,元素之力涌现。妖兽横行,危及人类,灾难降临!一张幻神卡。高考失利,穷苦少年,从此崛起!我努力,是为了考上好大学!我努力,是为了让父母过上好日子!我努力,是为了弟弟尽早康复!我努力,也是为了掌控自己的命运,爱我所爱,护我所爱,携我所爱,共度此生!——尘羽。
  • 未来观察日记

    未来观察日记

    海风开始了她的旅途,这次旅途是来到名为蓝星的22世纪,她所要做的工作是整理并记录这个年代的风土人情,并与21世纪作为对比,好完成母星对于蓝星的记录。
  • 霍格沃茨的爆破鬼才

    霍格沃茨的爆破鬼才

    一个21世纪的五好青年到了哈利波特世界,成为了西莫斐尼甘,从此走上了使命必达的道路。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 武林丛谈

    武林丛谈

    本书介绍了武林行当、武林习俗、江湖特征、江湖规矩、江湖习气追溯了武林形成的原因,探讨了武术流派发展成武术门派、武术门派和江湖帮派割舍不断的联系,以及武术从民间走向殿堂的历程反映了民间对武术的见解和理解记述了以良莠混杂的江湖文化为特点的武术文化现象,还原给读者一个真实的武林。
  • 逸天记

    逸天记

    一个普通书生小子,偶然进入修真门派,成了一名记名弟子。他以这样身份,如何在门派中立足,如何在修仙的路上不断的前进,踏往巅峰,从而笑傲三界之中!一切尽在逸天记!
  • 重生想做大佬的太子又失败了

    重生想做大佬的太子又失败了

    “生而为魔,从未抱歉”司白死于太康十五年,在祸害算计了他爹所有的儿子,唯剩他这么一个病秧子可以承储时,他从容的跃下城楼。只是一睁眼,却重回十五年前!!!不慌,大不了他就按着前世的路子,再安排他们一遍!只是当他又祸害了一遍他爹的几个儿子,再次跃下城楼后,又回到了十五年前……百里:“还跳么?”司白:“不了不了,怕了怕了。”这一世,他看着身边的冷面煞神,不敢再重复前两世的路子了。-暗卫:“殿下,您已经跪坏十张搓衣板了,再跪就得出府采购新的了。”司白:“她原谅我了么?”暗卫:“不,国师大人她已经去暹罗给您买特产水果了。”司白:“她果然还是爱我的!”暗卫:“不,国师大人只是觉得跪榴莲更适合您。”司白:“……”本书又名『家有母老虎求生指南』『我老婆拳头太硬了』『娘子她又不做人了』『重生想做掉大佬的太子又失败了』-本书避雷指南:男强vs女强强强强强,男主女主皆反派,坏不坏,歪不歪的不知道,反正不是啥好人,介意勿入。【可甜可虐,1V1,双重生,架空】