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
She whispered his name, very softly. What a serenity there is in such a moment, what a glow of secure happiness, of immunity from the pains and sorrows of the world!
Robert Cairn, his arms about this girl, who, from his early boyhood, had been his ideal of womanhood, of love, and of all that love meant, forgot those things which had shaken his life and brought him to the threshold of death, forgot those evidences of illness which marred the once glorious beauty of the girl, forgot the black menace of the future, forgot the wizard enemy whose hand was stretched over that house and that gardenâ âand was merely happy.
But this paroxysm of gladnessâ âwhich Eliphas LĂ©vi, last of the Adepts, has so marvellously analysed in one of his worksâ âis of short duration, as are all joys. It is needless to recount, here, the broken sentences (punctuated with those first kisses which sweeten the memory of old age) that now passed for conversation, and which lovers have believed to be conversation since the world began. As dusk creeps over a glorious landscape, so the shadow of Antony Ferrara crept over the happiness of these two.
Gradually that shadow fell between them and the sun; the grim thing which loomed big in the lives of them both, refused any longer to be ignored. Robert Cairn, his arm about the girlâs waist, broached the hated subject.
âWhen did you last seeâ âFerrara?â
Myra looked up suddenly.
âOver a weekâ ânearly a fortnight, agoâ ââ
âAh!â
Cairn noted that the girl spoke of Ferrara with an odd sort of restraint for which he was at a loss to account. Myra had always regarded her guardianâs adopted son in the light of a brother; therefore her present attitude was all the more singular.
âYou did not expect him to return to England so soon?â he asked.
âI had no idea that he was in England,â said Myra, âuntil he walked in here one day. I was glad to see himâ âthen.â
âAnd should you not be glad to see him now?â inquired Cairn eagerly.
Myra, her head lowered, deliberately pressed out a crease in her white skirt.
âOne day, last week,â she replied slowly, âheâ âcame here, andâ âacted strangelyâ ââ
âIn what way?â jerked Cairn.
âHe pointed out to me that actually weâ âhe and Iâ âwere in no way related.â
âWell?â
âYou know how I have always liked Antony? I have always thought of him as my brother.â
Again she hesitated, and a troubled expression crept over her pale face. Cairn raised his arm and clasped it about her shoulders.
âTell me all about it,â he whispered reassuringly.
âWell,â continued Myra in evident confusion, âhis behaviour becameâ âembarrassing; and suddenlyâ âhe asked me if I could ever love him, not as a brother, butâ ââ
âI understand!â said Cairn grimly. âAnd you replied?â
âFor some time I could not reply at all: I was so surprised, and soâ âhorrified. I cannot explain how I felt about it, but it seemed horribleâ âit seemed horrible!â ââ
âBut of course, you told him?â
âI told him that I could never be fond of him in any different wayâ âthat I could never think of it. And although I endeavoured to avoid hurting his feelings, heâ âtook it very badly. He said, in such a queer, choking voice, that he was going awayâ ââ
âAway!â âfrom England?â
âYes; andâ âhe made a strange request.â
âWhat was it?â
âIn the circumstancesâ âyou seeâ âI felt sorry for himâ âI did not like to refuse him; it was only a trifling thing. He asked for a lock of my hair!â
âA lock of your hair! And youâ ââ
âI told you that I did not like to refuseâ âand I let him snip off a tiny piece, with a pair of pocket scissors which he had. Are you angry?â
âOf course not! Youâ âwere almost brought up together. Youâ â?â
âThenâ ââ she pausedâ ââhe seemed to change. Suddenly, I found myself afraidâ âdreadfully afraidâ ââ
âOf Ferrara?â
âNot of Antony, exactly. But what is the good of my trying to explain! A most awful dread seized me. His face was no longer the face that I have always known; somethingâ ââ
Her voice trembled, and she seemed disposed to leave the sentence unfinished; then:
âSomething evilâ âsinister, had come into it.â
âAnd since then,â said Cairn, âyou have not seen him?â
âHe has not been here since thenâ âno.â
Cairn, his hands resting upon the girlâs shoulders, leant back in the seat, and looked into her troubled eyes with a kind of sad scrutiny.
âYou have not been fretting about him?â
Myra shook her head.
âYet you look as though something were troubling you. This houseââ âhe indicated the low-lying garden with a certain irritationâ ââis not healthily situated. This place lies in a valley; look at the rank grassâ âand there are mosquitoes everywhere. You do not look well, Myra.â
The girl smiledâ âa little wistful smile.
âBut I was so tired of Scotland,â she said. âYou do not know how I looked forward to London again. I must admit, though, that I was in better health there; I was quite ashamed of my dairymaid appearance.â
âYou have nothing to amuse you here,â said Cairn tenderly; âno company, for Mr. Saunderson only lives for his orchids.â
âThey are very fascinating,â said Myra dreamily, âI, too, have felt their glamour. I am the only member of the household whom he allows amongst his orchidsâ ââ
âPerhaps you spend too much time there,â interrupted Cairn; âthat superheated, artificial atmosphereâ ââ
Myra shook her head playfully, patting his arm.
âThere is nothing in the world the matter with me,â she said, almost in her old bright mannerâ âânow that you are backâ ââ
âI do not approve of orchids,â jerked Cairn doggedly. âThey are parodies of what a flower should be. Place an Odontoglossum beside a rose, and what a distorted unholy thing it looks!â
âUnholy?â laughed Myra.
âUnholyâ âyes!â âthey are products of feverish swamps and deathly jungles. I hate orchids. The atmosphere of an orchid-house cannot possibly be clean and healthy. One might as well spend oneâs time in a bacteriological laboratory!â
Myra shook her head with affected seriousness.
âYou must not let Mr. Saunderson hear you,â she said. âHis orchids are his children. Their very mystery enthrals himâ âand really it
Comments (0)