Brood of the Witch-Queen Sax Rohmer (read 50 shades of grey TXT) đ
- Author: Sax Rohmer
Book online «Brood of the Witch-Queen Sax Rohmer (read 50 shades of grey TXT) đ». Author Sax Rohmer
âQuite so,â answered Dr. Cairn, watching his son closely, and, by his own collected manner, endeavouring to check the otherâs growing excitement. âI am prepared at any personal risk to crush Antony Ferrara as I would crush a scorpion; but where is he?â
Robert Cairn groaned, dropping into the big red-leathern armchair, and burying his face in his hands.
âOur position is maddening,â continued the elder man. âWe know that Antony Ferrara visits Mr. Saundersonâs house; we know that he is laughing at our vain attempts to trap him. Crowning comedy of all, Saunderson does not know the truth; he is not the type of man who could ever understand; in fact we dare not tell himâ âand we dare not tell Myra. The result is that those whom we would protect, unwittingly are working against us, and against themselves.â
âThat perfume!â burst out Robert Cairn; âthat hellâs incense which loads the atmosphere of Saundersonâs house! To think that we know what it meansâ âthat we know what it means!â
âPerhaps I know even better than you do, Rob. The occult uses of perfume are not understood nowadays; but you, from experience, know that certain perfumes have occult uses. At the Pyramid of MĂ©ydĂ»m in Egypt, Antony Ferrara daredâ âand the just God did not strike him deadâ âto make a certain incense. It was often made in the remote past, and a portion of it, probably in a jar hermetically sealed, had come into his possession. I once detected its dreadful odour in his rooms in London. Had you asked me prior to that occasion if any of the hellish stuff had survived to the present day, I should most emphatically have said no; I should have been wrong. Ferrara had some. He used it allâ âand went to the MĂ©ydĂ»m pyramid to renew his stock.â
Robert Cairn was listening intently.
âAll this brings me back to a point which I have touched upon before, sir,â he said: âTo my certain knowledge, the late Sir Michael and yourself have delved into the black mysteries of Egypt more deeply than any men of the present century. Yet Antony Ferrara, little more than a boy, has mastered secrets which you, after years of research, have failed to grasp. What does this mean, sir?â
Dr. Cairn, again locking his hands behind him, stared out of the window.
âHe is not an ordinary mortal,â continued his son. âHe is supernormalâ âand supernaturally wicked. You have admittedâ âindeed it was evidentâ âthat he is merely the adopted son of the late Sir Michael. Now that we have entered upon the final struggleâ âfor I feel that this is soâ âI will ask you again: Who is Antony Ferrara?â
Dr. Cairn spun around upon the speaker; his grey eyes were very bright.
âThere is one little obstacle,â he answered, âwhich has deterred me from telling you what you have asked so often. Althoughâ âand you have had dreadful opportunities to peer behind the veilâ âyou will find it hard to believe, I hope very shortly to be able to answer that question, and to tell you who Antony Ferrara really is.â
Robert Cairn beat his fist upon the arm of the chair.
âI sometimes wonder,â he said, âthat either of us has remained sane. Oh! what does it mean? What can we do? What can we do?â
âWe must watch, Rob. To enlist the services of Saunderson, would be almost impossible; he lives in his orchid houses; they are his world. In matters of ordinary life I can trust him above most men, but in thisâ ââ
He shrugged his shoulders.
âCould we suggest to him a reasonâ âany reason but the real oneâ âwhy he should refuse to receive Ferrara?â
âIt might destroy our last chance.â
âBut sir,â cried Robert wildly, âit amounts to this: we are using Myra as a lure!â
âIn order to save her, Robâ âsimply in order to save her,â retorted Dr. Cairn sternly.
âHow ill she looks,â groaned the other; âhow pale and worn. There are great shadows under her eyesâ âoh! I cannot bear to think about her!â
âWhen was he last there?â
âApparently some ten days ago. You may depend upon him to be aware of our return! He will not come there again, sir. But there are other ways in which he might reach herâ âdoes he not command a whole shadow army! And Mr. Saunderson is entirely unsuspiciousâ âand Myra thinks of the fiend as a brother! Yetâ âshe has never once spoken of him. I wonder.â ââ âŠâ
Dr. Cairn sat deep in reflection. Suddenly he took out his watch.
âGo around now,â he saidâ ââyou will be in time for lunchâ âand remain there until I come. From today onward, although actually your health does not permit of the strain, we must watch, watch night and day.â
XXII MyraMyra Duquesne came under an arch of roses to the wooden seat where Robert Cairn awaited her. In her plain white linen frock, with the sun in her hair and her eyes looking unnaturally large, owing to the pallor of her beautiful face, she seemed to the man who rose to greet her an ethereal creature, but lightly linked to the flesh and blood world.
An impulse, which had possessed him often enough before, but which hitherto he had suppressed, suddenly possessed him anew, set his heart beating, and filled his veins with fire. As a soft blush spread over the girlâs pale cheeks, and, with a sort of timidity, she held out her hand, he leapt to his feet, threw his arms around her, and kissed her; kissed her eyes, her hair, her lips!
There was a moment of frightened hesitancyâ ââ ⊠and then she had resigned herself to this sort of savage tenderness which was better in its very brutality than any caress she had ever known, which thrilled her with a glorious joy such as, she realised now, she had dreamt of and lacked, and wanted; which was a harbourage to which she came, blushing, confusedâ âbut glad, conquered, and happy in the thrall of that exquisite slavery.
âMyra,â he whispered, âMyra! have I frightened you? Will you forgive me?â ââ
She nodded her head quickly and nestled upon his shoulder.
âI could wait
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