登陆注册
14923600000026

第26章 THE SOUTHWEST CHAMBER.(9)

"You needn't talk to me about sleeping well," said she. "I know something queer happened in that room last night by the way you act."They all looked at Mrs. Simmons, inquiringly--the librarian with malicious curiosity and triumph, the minister with sad incredulity, Sophia Gill with fear and indignation, Amanda and the young girl with unmixed terror. The widow bore herself with dignity.

"I saw nothing nor heard nothing which I trust could not have been accounted for in some rational manner," said she.

"What was it?" persisted Eliza Lippincott.

"I do not wish to discuss the matter any further," replied Mrs.

Simmons shortly. Then she passed her plate for more creamed potato. She felt that she would die before she confessed to the ghastly absurdity of that nightcap, or to having been disturbed by the flight of peacocks off a blue field of chintz after she had scoffed at the possibility of such a thing. She left the whole matter so vague that in a fashion she came off the mistress of the situation. She at all events impressed everybody by her coolness in the face of no one knew what nightly terror.

After breakfast, with the assistance of Amanda and Flora, she moved back into her old room. Scarcely a word was spoken during the process of moving, but they all worked with trembling haste and looked guilty when they met one another's eyes, as if conscious of betraying a common fear.

That afternoon the young minister, John Dunn, went to Sophia Gill and requested permission to occupy the southwest chamber that night.

"I don't ask to have my effects moved there," said he, "for I could scarcely afford a room so much superior to the one I now occupy, but I would like, if you please, to sleep there to-night for the purpose of refuting in my own person any unfortunate superstition which may have obtained root here."Sophia Gill thanked the minister gratefully and eagerly accepted his offer.

"How anybody with common sense can believe for a minute in any such nonsense passes my comprehension," said she.

"It certainly passes mine how anybody with Christian faith can believe in ghosts," said the minister gently, and Sophia Gill felt a certain feminine contentment in hearing him. The minister was a child to her; she regarded him with no tincture of sentiment, and yet she loved to hear two other women covertly condemned by him and she herself thereby exalted.

That night about twelve o'clock the Reverend John Dunn essayed to go to his nightly slumber in the southwest chamber. He had been sitting up until that hour preparing his sermon.

He traversed the hall with a little night-lamp in his hand, opened the door of the southwest chamber, and essayed to enter. He might as well have essayed to enter the solid side of a house. He could not believe his senses. The door was certainly open; he could look into the room full of soft lights and shadows under the moonlight which streamed into the windows. He could see the bed in which he had expected to pass the night, but he could not enter. Whenever he strove to do so he had a curious sensation as if he were trying to press against an invisible person who met him with a force of opposition impossible to overcome. The minister was not an athletic man, yet he had considerable strength. He squared his elbows, set his mouth hard, and strove to push his way through into the room. The opposition which he met was as sternly and mutely terrible as the rocky fastness of a mountain in his way.

For a half hour John Dunn, doubting, raging, overwhelmed with spiritual agony as to the state of his own soul rather than fear, strove to enter that southwest chamber. He was simply powerless against this uncanny obstacle. Finally a great horror as of evil itself came over him. He was a nervous man and very young. He fairly fled to his own chamber and locked himself in like a terror-stricken girl.

The next morning he went to Miss Gill and told her frankly what had happened, and begged her to say nothing about it lest he should have injured the cause by the betrayal of such weakness, for he actually had come to believe that there was something wrong with the room.

"What it is I know not, Miss Sophia," said he, "but I firmly believe, against my will, that there is in that room some accursed evil power at work, of which modern faith and modern science know nothing."Miss Sophia Gill listened with grimly lowering face. She had an inborn respect for the clergy, but she was bound to hold that southwest chamber in the dearly beloved old house of her fathers free of blame.

"I think I will sleep in that room myself to-night," she said, when the minister had finished.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 白蚁方舟

    白蚁方舟

    和集体盲目比起来,能淹死鲨鱼的洪水实在不算什么。就像一群乘坐方舟躲避洪水的白蚁,很难想象要说服自己不去蛀食船板,需要怎样的克制;也难以想象,要挺身而出阻止贪婪的同类,需要多大的勇气。当然,克制和勇气并不代表正义。对抗的目的说穿了只有一个——为自己的意志加冕。相比起未来是否按照特定的剧本上演,究竟是面对着四面冰冷墙壁、守着方寸天空走进腐朽,还是任欲望肆意燃烧,直到被洪水吞噬……这一切,似乎都无关紧要。这是一本大星际时代的人物列传,这里有狂徒,也有叛徒;有革命者,也有阴谋家;有看客,亦有过客……
  • 斗破苍穹之逆转苍穹

    斗破苍穹之逆转苍穹

    萧炎在双帝之战中战胜了魂天帝,而战斗从未停止,也从无止境,萧炎也知道如此,为改天择命,他再次踏上路途来到了新世界,在新世界(大千世界)萧炎发现了自己的身世与各种不可思异的,惊人的现实,在这个探索过程中萧炎也遇见了新的伙伴,而新的征途才刚刚开始,未来还要与伙伴们一同探索……
  • 一世宫阙

    一世宫阙

    一场跨越时空的倾世爱恋,一段刻骨铭心的跨世纪爱情。原本只是繁华都市里的被淹没的豪门贵女,却一朝踏足到时空隧道之中,明结果却依旧义无反顾,穿越之后成就了现如今的耶律曦栎,和王爷们把酒言欢,与公主们打架斗殴,一代天骄轩辕烈赐她“拼命十三娘”之称。话虽如此,但她对待爱情却是更加的执着,两次错爱,爱她的为她而死,她爱的却一心想要她死,在这抬头只有四方天的宫墙之中她究竟该何去何从?失去了那颗赤子之心的她,又该如何自保?
  • 词尊天下

    词尊天下

    这个世界上,音律师地位超群,有大能者,一箫一琴,唇动间镇压群雄,弹指间飞灰湮灭。当北国风光,千里冰封,万里雪飘成为了一种境界。当大江东去浪淘尽化尽了一式杀招。当我最怜君中宵舞,道男儿到死心如铁。试手补了苍天。有一个腼腆的少年,背着一口古朴大钟,很是恭谨地将其放于地上,一如既往的谦和温良。只是在翻手之际,猛然拍钟,大喝一句:举头天外望,无我这般人!
  • 混沌剑灵

    混沌剑灵

    混沌剑灵弑天,被诸天联合万族尘封数百万载,天地轮回之时破封出世,转世降临依附太古大世界的亿万小世界之一玄天界。太古大世界浩瀚无边,远古仙尊,道法无边,太古神魔,崩天裂地,亿万小世界上古真仙,教化蛮荒,远古天魔,威震天下。一代混沌剑灵,一剑灭天
  • 东方暝血奇谭

    东方暝血奇谭

    “所以,你想写一个关于我的故事?”少年微笑着,橙红的烛光在他那双赤瞳之中跳动。“我想把那段历史记录下来,为此,我需要你的帮助。”帕秋莉·诺蕾姬盯着他的双眼,在那猫儿一样的眼睛里,她看见了一个血色的黄昏。“你管那叫‘历史’,我管它叫‘回忆’。”少年说道,“它始于一簇恋人的怒火,终于一场血腥的复仇。”“呼——”说到这儿,他轻轻地吹灭了桌上的蜡烛。黑暗,侵占了二人的视界。“那么,就让我们的故事,开始吧!”
  • 黑曜魔石

    黑曜魔石

    【第二部已于二十章结束】全文共三部,不定期更新前世的爱恨纠葛,令两位神灵陷入无尽的轮回;千年的利益冲突,致精灵族群使用禁忌的魔法;神秘的黑曜魔石,叫神之子们踏上命运的轨迹……
  • 全陈文

    全陈文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 转运:改变命运的7个良好习惯

    转运:改变命运的7个良好习惯

    习惯是一种条件反射。一个动作或一种行为,经过多次重复,就能进入人的潜意识,变成习惯性动作。人的知识积累、才能增长、极限突破等,都是习惯性动作、行为不断重复的结果。
  • 许是温阳茶花开

    许是温阳茶花开

    遇见尚温言的那年,盛茶十岁,胆小懦弱,一场斗殴中她自保得彻底。母亲的毒打让她在两年后与他有了第一次对话,人前的他光芒万丈,只会对一个女生很好。而盛茶就像是角落里独自生长的狗尾巴草,那么渺小低埃。是缘是劫,孰是孰非,多年后他们的相遇拉开一段尘封的往事,会让故事中的他们坠入怎样的深渊。本文小虐结局喜,码字属蜗牛,喜欢的可以收藏养肥了再看*^_^*