The Secret Of The Night(Fiscle Part 3), Gaston Leroux [best pdf ebook reader TXT] 📗
- Author: Gaston Leroux
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By Ideas And Sentiments Which Held Her Without Respite Between The
Wildest Inquietude And The Most Imprudent Audacity.
Part 1 Chapter 4 ("The Youth Of Moscow Is Dead") Pg 34Rouletabille Let Himself Be Led By Matrena Through The Night, But
He Stumbled And His Awkward Hands Struck Against Various Things.
The Ascent To The First Floor Was Accomplished In Profound Silence.
Nothing Broke It Except That Restless Moaning Which Had So Affected
The Young Man Just Before.
The Tepid Warmth, The Perfume Of A Woman's Boudoir, Then, Beyond,
Through Two Doors Opening Upon The Dressing-Room Which Lay Between
Matrena's Chamber And Feodor's, The Dim Luster Of A Night-Lamp
Showed The Bed Where Was Stretched The Sleeping Tyrant Of Moscow.
Ah, He Was Frightening To See, With The Play Of Faint Yellow Light
And Diffused Shadows Upon Him. Such Heavy-Arched Eyebrows, Such
An Aspect Of Pain And Menace, The Massive Jaw Of A Savage Come From
The Plains Of Tartary To Be The Scourge Of God, The Stiff, Thick,
Spreading Beard. This Was A Form Akin To The Gallery Of Old Nobles
At Kasan, And Young Rouletabille Imagined Him As None Other Than
Ivan The Terrible Himself. Thus Appeared As He Slept The Excellent
Feodor Feodorovitch, The Easy, Spoiled Father Of The Family Table,
The Friend Of The Advocate Celebrated For His Feats With Knife And
Fork And Of The Bantering Timber-Merchant And Amiable Bear-Hunter,
The Joyous Thaddeus And Athanase; Feodor, The Faithful Spouse Of
Matrena Petrovna And The Adored Papa Of Natacha, A Brave Man Who
Was So Unfortunate As To Have Nights Of Cruel Sleeplessness Or
Dreams More Frightful Still.
At That Moment A Hoarse Sigh Heaved His Huge Chest In An Uneven
Rhythm, And Rouletabille, Leaning In The Doorway Of The
Dressing-Room, Watched - But It Was No Longer The General That He
Watched, It Was Something Else, Lower Down, Beside The Wall, Near
The Door, And It Was That Which Set Him Tiptoeing So Lightly Across
The Floor That It Gave No Sound. There Was No Slightest Sound In
The Chamber, Except The Heavy Breathing Lifting The Rough Chest.
Behind Rouletabille Matrena Raised Her Arms, As Though She Wished
To Hold Him Back, Because She Did Not Know Where He Was Going.
What Was He Doing? Why Did He Stoop Thus Beside The Door And Why
Did He Press His Thumb All Along The Floor At The Doorway? He Rose
Again And Returned. He Passed Again Before The Bed, Where Rumbled
Now, Like The Bellows Of A Forge, The Respiration Of The Sleeper.
Matrena Grasped Rouletabille By The Hand. And She Had Already
Hurried Him Into The Dressing-Room When A Moan Stopped Them.
Part 1 Chapter 4 ("The Youth Of Moscow Is Dead") Pg 35
"The Youth Of Moscow Is Dead!"
It Was The Sleeper Speaking. The Mouth Which Had Given The
Stringent Orders Moaned. And The Lamentation Was Still A Menace.
In The Haunted Sleep Thrust Upon That Man By The Inadequate Narcotic
The Words Feodor Feodorovitch Spoke Were Words Of Mourning And Pity.
This Perfect Fiend Of A Soldier, Whom Neither Bullets Nor Bombs
Could Intimidate, Had A Way Of Saying Words Which Transformed Their
Meaning As They Came From His Terrible Mouth. The Listeners Could
Not But Feel Absorbed In The Tones Of The Brutal Victor.
Matrena Petrovna And Rouletabille Had Leant Their Two Shadows,
Blended One Into The Other, Against The Open Doorway Just Beyond
The Gleam Of The Night-Lamp, And They Heard With Horror:
"The Youth Of Moscow Is Dead! They Have Cleared
Away The Corpses. There Is Nothing But Ruin Left. The Kremlin
Itself Has Shut Its Gates - That It May Not See. The Youth Of
Moscow Is Dead!"
Feodor Feodorovitch's Fist Shook Above His Bed; It Seemed That He
Was About To Strike, To Kill Again, And Rouletabille Felt Matrena
Trembling Against Him, While He Trembled As Well Before The
Fearful Vision Of The Killer In The Red Week!
Feodor Heaved An Immense Sigh And His Breast Descended Under The
Bed-Clothes, The Fist Relaxed And Fell, The Great Head Lay Over On
Its Ear. There Was Silence. Had He Repose At Last? No, No. He
Sighed, He Choked Anew, He Tossed On His Couch Like The Damned In
Torment, And The Words Written By His Daughter - By His Daughter
- Blazed In His Eyes, Which Now Were Wide Open - Words Written On
The Wall, That He Read On The Wall, Written In Blood.
"The Youth Of Moscow Is Dead! They Had Gone So Young Into The
Fields And Into The Mines,
And They Had Not Found A Single Corner Of The Russian Land Where
There Were Not Moanings.
Now The Youth Of Moscow Is Dead And No More Moanings Are Heard,
Because Those For Whom All Youth Died Do Not Dare Even To Moan
Any More.
But - What? The Voice Of Feodor Lost Its Threatening Tone. His
Breath Came As From A Weeping Child. And It Was With Sobs In His
Throat That He Said The Last Verse, The Verse Written By His
Daughter In The Album, In Red Letters:
"The Last Barricade Had Standing There The Girl Of Eighteen
Winters, The Virgin Of Moscow, Flower Of The Snow.
Who Gave Her Kisses To The Workmen Struck By The Bullets
From The Soldiers Of The Czar;
"She Aroused The Admiration Of The Very Soldiers Who, Weeping,
Killed Her:
"What Killing! All The Houses Shuttered, The Windows With Heavy
Eyelids Of Plank In Order Not To See! -
Part 1 Chapter 4 ("The Youth Of Moscow Is Dead") Pg 36"And The Kremlin Itself Has Closed Its Gates - That It May
Not See.
"The Youth Of Moscow Is Dead!"
"Feodor! Feodor!"
She Had Caught Him In Her Arms, Holding Him Fast, Comforting Him
While Still He Raved, "The Youth Of Moscow Is Dead," And Appeared
To Thrust Away With Insensate Gestures A Crowd Of Phantoms. She
Crushed Him To Her Breast, She Put Her Hands Over His Mouth To Make
Him Stop, But He, Saying, "Do You Hear? Do You Hear? What Do They
Say? They Say Nothing, Now. What A Tangle Of Bodies Under The
Sleigh, Matrena! Look At Those Frozen Legs Of Those Poor Girls We
Pass, Sticking Out In All Directions, Like Logs, From Under Their
Icy, Blooded Skirts. Look, Matrena!"
And Then Came Further Delirium Uttered In Russian, Which Was All The
More Terrible To Rouletabille Because He Could Not Comprehend It.
Then, Suddenly, Feodor Became Silent And Thrust Away Matrena
Petrovna.
"It Is That Abominable Narcotic," He Said With An Immense Sigh.
"I'll Drink No More Of It. I Do Not Wish To Drink It."
With One Hand He Pointed To A Large Glass On The Table Beside Him,
Still Half Full Of A Soporific Mixture With Which He Moistened His
Lips Each Time He Woke; With The Other Hand He Wiped The Perspiration
From His Face. Matrena Petrovna Stayed Trembling Near Him, Suddenly
Overpowered By The Idea That He Might Discover There Was Someone
There Behind The Door, Who Had Seen And Heard The Sleep Of General
Trebassof! Ah, If He Learned That, Everything Was Over. She Might
Say Her Prayers; She Should Die.
But Rouletabille Was Careful To Give No Sign. He Barely Breathed.
What A Nightmare! He Understood Now The Emotion Of The General's
Friends When Natacha Had Sung In Her Low, Sweet Voice, "Good-Night.
May Your Eyes Have Rest From Tears And Calm Re-Enter Your Heart
Oppressed." The Friends Had Certainly Been Made Aware, By Matrena's
Anxious Talking, Of The General's Insomnia, And They Could Not
Repress Their Tears As They Listened To The Poetic Wish Of Charming
Natacha. "All The Same," Thought Rouletabille, "No One Could
Imagine What I Have Just Seen. They Are Not Dead For Everyone In
The World, The Youths Of Moscow, And Every Night I Know Now A
Chamber Where In The Glow Of The Night-Lamp They Rise - They Rise
- They Rise!" And The Young Man Frankly, Naively Regretted To Have
Intruded Where He Was; To Have Penetrated, However Unintentionally,
Into An Affair Which, After All, Concerned Only The Many Dead And
The One Living. Why Had He Come To Put Himself Between The Dead And
The Living? It Might Be Said To Him: "The Living Has Done His Whole
Heroic Duty," But The Dead, What Else Was It That They Had Done?
Ah, Rouletabille Cursed His Curiosity, For - He Saw It Now - It Was
The Desire To Approach The Mystery Revealed By Koupriane And To
Part 1 Chapter 4 ("The Youth Of Moscow Is Dead") Pg 37Penetrate Once More, Through All The Besetting Dangers, An Astounding
And Perhaps Monstrous Enigma, That Had Brought Him To The Threshold
Of The Datcha Des Iles, Which Had Placed Him In The Trembling Hands
Of Matrena Petrovna In Promising Her His Help. He Had Shown Pity,
Certainly, Pity For The Delirious Distress Of That Heroic Woman.
But There Had Been More Curiosity Than Pity In His Motives. And
Now He Must Pay, Because It Was Too Late Now To Withdraw, To Say
Casually, "I Wash My Hands Of It." He
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