The Beetle Richard Marsh (most romantic novels TXT) đ
- Author: Richard Marsh
Book online «The Beetle Richard Marsh (most romantic novels TXT) đ». Author Richard Marsh
Sydney moved forward to put his threat into execution. As he did so, a strange alteration took place in Mr. Holtâs demeanour.
XXX The Singular Behaviour of Mr. HoltI was standing in the middle of the room, Sydney was between the door and me; Mr. Holt was in the hall, just outside the doorway, in which he, so to speak, was framed. As Sydney advanced towards him he was seized with a kind of convulsionâ âhe had to lean against the side of the door to save himself from falling. Sydney paused, and watched. The spasm went as suddenly as it cameâ âMr. Holt became as motionless as he had just now been the other way. He stood in an attitude of febrile expectancyâ âhis chin raised, his head thrown back, his eyes glancing upwardsâ âwith the dreadful fixed glare which had come into them ever since we had entered the house. He looked to me as if his every faculty was strained in the act of listeningâ ânot a muscle in his body seemed to move; he was as rigid as a figure carved in stone. Presently the rigidity gave place to what, to an onlooker, seemed causeless agitation.
âI hear!â he exclaimed, in the most curious voice I had ever heard. âI come!â
It was as though he was speaking to someone who was far away. Turning, he walked down the passage to the front door.
âHollo!â cried Sydney. âWhere are you off to?â
We both of us hastened to see. He was fumbling with the latch; before we could reach him, the door was open, and he was through it. Sydney, rushing after him, caught him on the step and held him by the arm.
âWhatâs the meaning of this little caper?â âWhere do you think youâre going now?â
Mr. Holt did not condescend to turn and look at him. He said, in the same dreamy, faraway, unnatural tone of voiceâ âand he kept his unwavering gaze fixed on what was apparently some distant object which was visible only to himself.
âI am going to him. He calls me.â
âWho calls you?â
âThe Lord of the Beetle.â
Whether Sydney released his arm or not I cannot say. As he spoke, he seemed to me to slip away from Sydneyâs grasp. Passing through the gateway, turning to the right, he commenced to retrace his steps in the direction we had come. Sydney stared after him in unequivocal amazement. Then he looked at me.
âWell!â âthis is a pretty fix!â ânow whatâs to be done?â
âWhatâs the matter with him?â I inquired. âIs he mad?â
âThereâs method in his madness if he is. Heâs in the same condition in which he was that night I saw him come out of the Apostleâs window.â Sydney has a horrible habit of calling Paul âthe Apostleâ; I have spoken to him about it over and over againâ âbut my words have not made much impression. âHe ought to be followedâ âhe may be sailing off to that mysterious friend of his this instant.â âBut, on the other hand, he maynât, and it may be nothing but a trick of our friend the conjurerâs to get us away from this elegant abode of his. Heâs done me twice already, I donât want to be done againâ âand I distinctly do not want him to return and find me missing. Heâs quite capable of taking the hint, and removing himself into the Ewigkeitâ âwhen the clue to as pretty a mystery as ever I came across will have vanished.â
âI can stay,â I said.
âYou?â âAlone?â
He eyed me doubtinglyâ âevidently not altogether relishing the proposition.
âWhy not? You might send the first person you meetâ âpoliceman, cabman, or whoever it isâ âto keep me company. It seems a pity now that we dismissed that cab.â
âYes, it does seem a pity.â Sydney was biting his lip. âConfound that fellow! how fast he moves.â
Mr. Holt was already nearing the end of the road.
âIf you think it necessary, by all means follow to see where he goesâ âyou are sure to meet somebody whom you will be able to send before you have gone very far.â
âI suppose I shall.â âYou wonât mind being left alone?â
âWhy should I?â âIâm not a child.â
Mr. Holt, reaching the corner, turned it, and vanished out of sight. Sydney gave an exclamation of impatience.
âIf I donât make haste I shall lose him. Iâll do as you suggestâ âdispatch the first individual I come across to hold watch and ward with you.â
âThatâll be all right.â
He started off at a runâ âshouting to me as he went.
âIt wonât be five minutes before somebody comes!â
I waved my hand to him. I watched him till he reached the end of the road. Turning, he waved his hand to me. Then he vanished, as Mr. Holt had done.
And I was alone.
XXXI The Terror by DayMy first impulse, after Sydneyâs disappearance, was to laugh. Why should he display anxiety on my behalf merely because I was to be the sole occupant of an otherwise empty house for a few minutes more or lessâ âand in broad daylight too! To say the least, the anxiety seemed unwarranted.
I lingered at the gate, for a moment or two, wondering what was at the bottom of Mr. Holtâs singular proceedings, and what Sydney really proposed to gain by acting as a spy upon his wanderings. Then I turned to re-enter the house. As I did so, another problem suggested itself to my mindâ âwhat connection, of the slightest importance, could a man in Paul Lessinghamâs position have with the eccentric being who had established himself in such an unsatisfactory dwelling-place? Mr. Holtâs story I had only dimly understoodâ âit struck me that it would require a deal of understanding. It was more like a farrago of nonsense, an outcome of delirium, than a plain statement of solid facts. To tell the truth, Sydney had taken it more seriously than I expected. He seemed to see something in it which I emphatically did not. What was double Dutch to me, seemed clear as print
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