The Beetle Richard Marsh (most romantic novels TXT) đ
- Author: Richard Marsh
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âWhat reason have you for suspecting that Mr. Atherton has seen this individual of whom you speakâ âhas he told you so?â
âPracticallyâ âyes.â
âI know Atherton well. In his not infrequent moments of excitement he is apt to use strong language, but it goes no further. I believe him to be the last person in the world to do anyone an intentional injustice, under any circumstances whatever. If I go to him, armed with credentials from you, when he understands the real gravity of the situationâ âwhich it will be my business to make him do, I believe that, spontaneously, of his own accord, he will tell me as much about this mysterious individual as he knows himself.â
âThen go to him at once.â
âGood. I will. The result I will communicate to you.â
I rose from my seat. As I did so, someone rushed into the outer office with a din and a clatter. Andrewsâ voice, and another, became distinctly audibleâ âAndrewsâ apparently raised in vigorous expostulation. Raised, seemingly, in vain, for presently the door of my own particular sanctum was thrown open with a crash, and Mr. Sydney Atherton himself came dashing inâ âevidently conspicuously under the influence of one of those not infrequent âmoments of excitementâ of which I had just been speaking.
XXXV A Bringer of TidingsAtherton did not wait to see who might or might not be present, but, without even pausing to take breath, he broke into full cry on the instantâ âas is occasionally his wont.
âChampnell!â âThank goodness Iâve found you in!â âI want you!â âAt once!â âDonât stop to talk, but stick your hat on, and put your best foot forwardâ âIâll tell you all about it in the cab.â
I endeavoured to call his attention to Mr. Lessinghamâs presenceâ âbut without success.
âMy dear fellowâ ââ
When I had got as far as that he cut me short.
âDonât âdear fellowâ me!â âNone of your jabber! And none of your excuses either! I donât care if youâve got an engagement with the Queen, youâll have to chuck it. Whereâs that dashed hat of yoursâ âor are you going without it? Donât I tell you that every second cut to waste may mean the difference between life and death?â âDo you want me to drag you down to the cab by the hair of your head?â
âI will try not to constrain you to quite so drastic a resourceâ âand I was coming to you at once in any case. I only want to call your attention to the fact that I am not alone.â âHere is Mr. Lessingham.â
In his harum-scarum haste Mr. Lessingham had gone unnoticed. Now that his observation was particularly directed to him, Atherton started, turned, and glared at my latest client in a fashion which was scarcely flattering.
âOh!â âItâs you, is it?â âWhat the deuce are you doing here?â
Before Lessingham could reply to this most unceremonious query, Atherton, rushing forward, gripped him by the arm.
âHave you seen her?â
Lessingham, not unnaturally nonplussed by the otherâs curious conduct, stared at him in unmistakable amazement.
âHave I seen whom?â
âMarjorie Lindon!â
âMarjorie Lindon?â
Lessingham paused. He was evidently asking himself what the inquiry meant.
âI have not seen Miss Lindon since last night. Why do you ask?â
âThen Heaven help us!â âAs Iâm a living man I believe he, she, or it has got her!â
His words were incomprehensible enough to stand in copious need of explanationâ âas Mr. Lessingham plainly thought.
âWhat is it that you mean, sir?â
âWhat I sayâ âI believe that that Oriental friend of yours has got her in her clutchesâ âif it is a âher;â goodness alone knows what the infernal conjurerâs real sex may be.â
âAtherton!â âExplain yourself!â
On a sudden Lessinghamâs tones rang out like a trumpet call.
âIf damage comes to her I shall be fit to cut my throatâ âand yours!â
Mr. Lessinghamâs next proceeding surprised meâ âI imagine it surprised Atherton still more. Springing at Sydney like a tiger, he caught him by the throat.
âYouâ âyou hound! Of what wretched folly have you been guilty? If so much as a hair of her head is injured you shall repay it me ten thousandfold!â âYou mischief-making, intermeddling, jealous fool!â
He shook Sydney as if he had been a ratâ âthen flung him from him headlong on to the floor. It reminded me of nothing so much as Othelloâs treatment of Iago. Never had I seen a man so transformed by rage. Lessingham seemed to have positively increased in stature. As he stood glowering down at the prostrate Sydney, he might have stood for a materialistic conception of human retribution.
Sydney, I take it, was rather surprised than hurt. For a moment or two he lay quite still. Then, lifting his head, he looked up his assailant. Then, raising himself to his feet, he shook himselfâ âas if with a view of learning if all his bones were whole. Putting his hands up to his neck, he rubbed it, gently.
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