Essential Science Fiction Novels - Volume 5. Эдвард Бульвер-Литтон

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Essential Science Fiction Novels - Volume 5 - Эдвард Бульвер-Литтон Essential Science Fiction Novels

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they had stopped fighting. There were other faces, scores of them, staring at him with that same incredulity —though now, it seemed, shaded with terror.

      Now they were all staring at him as though over the edge of a prodigious funnel through which he had begun to drop!

      And now clutching hands had melted away from him! The faces were gone.

      "Gigi!" he called. "Sigurd! Zubran! Help me!"

      He heard the howling of winds!

      They changed into a trumpet note. The trumpeting changed. It became some familiar sound—some sound known in another life of his, ages and ages gone! What was it? Louder it grew, rasping, peremptory—

      The shriek of an auto horn!

      Shuddering, he opened his eyes.

      He looked upon his own room!

      There lay the shining jeweled ship—the ship of toys!

      And there was a knocking at the door, agitated, frantic; the murmuring of frightened voices.

      Then the voice of Jevins, faltering, panic stricken: "Mr. John! Mr. John!"

      XV

      DOWN THE ROPE OF SOUND

      Kenton fought back his faintness; reached out a trembling hand, and snapped on the electrics. "Mr. John! Mr. John!"

      The old servant's voice was sharp with terror; he rattled the door knob; beat against the panels.

      Kenton steadied himself against the table; forced himself to speak.

      "Why—Jevins—" he strove to lighten the dragging words, inject some naturalness into them—"What's the matter?"

      He heard a little gasp of relief, another murmuring from the servants and then Jevins spoke again.

      "I was passing and heard you cry out, sir. A dreadful cry! Are you ill?"

      Desperately Kenton strove against the racking weakness; managed a laugh.

      "Why, no—I fell asleep. Had a nightmare. Don't worry! Go to bed."

      "Oh—it was that?"

      The relief in Jevins' voice was greater, but the doubt was not altogether gone. He did not withdraw; stood there hesitating.

      There was a mist before Kenton's eyes, a thin veil of crimson. His knees bent suddenly; barely he saved himself from falling. He stumbled to the couch and sank upon it. A panic impulse urged him to cry out to Jevins to bring help—to break down the door. Fast upon it came warning that he must not do this; that he must fight his battle out alone—if he were to tread the ship's deck again!

      "Go, Jevins!" he cried harshly. "Hell, man—didn't I tell you I wasn't to be disturbed tonight? Get away!"

      Too late he realized that never before had he spoken so to this old servant who loved him, he knew, like a son. Had he betrayed himself— crystallized Jevins' suspicions into certainty that within that room something was wrong indeed? Fear spurred his tongue.

      "I'm all right!" He forced laughter into the words. "Of course, I'm all right!"

      Damn that mist in front of his eyes! What was it? He passed a hand over them, brought it away wet with blood. He stared at it, stupidly.

      "Oh, very well, Mr. John." There was no more doubt, nothing but affection in the voice. "But hearing you cry—"

      God! Would the man never go! His eyes traveled from his hand up his arm. Crimson it was, red with blood to the shoulder. The fingers dripped.

      "Only a nightmare," he interrupted quietly. "I won't sleep again until I'm done and go to bed—so run along."

      "Then—good night, Mr. John."

      "Good night," he answered.

      Swaying he sat until the footsteps of Jevins and the others had died away. Then he tried to rise. His weakness was too great. He slid from the couch to his knees, crawled across the floor to a low cabinet, fumbled at its doors and drew down a bottle of brandy. He raised it to his lips and drank deep. The fiery stuff raced through him, gave him strength. He arose.

      A sickening pang stabbed his side. He raised his hand to clutch the agony, covered it and felt trickle through his fingers a slow, warm stream!

      He remembered—a sword had bitten him there—the sword of one of Klaneth's men!

      Flashed before him pictures—the arrow quivering in the Viking's shield, the mace of Gigi, the staring warriors, the great net dropping over Sharane and her women, the wondering faces...

      Then—this!

      Again he lifted the bottle. Half way to his mouth he stopped, every muscle rigid, every nerve taut. Confronting him was a shape—a man splashed red from head to foot! He saw a strong, fierce face from which glared eyes filled with murderous menace; long tangled elf locks of black writhed round it down to the crimson-stained shoulders. From hair edge to ear down across the forehead was a wound, from which blood dripped. Bare to the waist was this man and from the nipple of his left breast to mid-side ran a red wide- mouthed slash, open to the ribs!

      Gory, menacing, dreadful in its red lacquer of life, a living phantom from some pirate deck of death it glared at him.

      Stop! There was something familiar about the face—the eyes! His gaze was caught by a shimmer of gold on the right arm above the elbow. It was a bracelet. And he knew that bracelet—

      The bridal gift of Sharane!

      Who was this man? He could not think clearly—how could he— with numbness in his brain, the red mists before his eyes, this weakness that was creeping back upon him?

      Sudden rage swept through him. He swung the bottle to hurl it straight at the wild fierce face.

      The left hand of the figure swung up, clutching a similar bottle—

      It was he, John Kenton, reflected in the long mirror on the wall. That ensanguined, fearfully wounded, raging shape was—himself!

      A clock chimed ten.

      As though the slow strokes had been an exorcism, a change came over Kenton. His mind cleared, purpose and will clicked back in place. He took another deep drink of the liquor, and without another look in the mirror, without a glance toward the jeweled ship, he walked to the door.

      Hand on the key he paused, considering. No, that would not do. He could not risk going out into the hallway. Jevins might still be hovering near; or some of the other servants might see him. And if he had not known himself, what would be the effect of seeing him on them?

      He could not go where water was to cleanse his hurts, wash away the blood. He must do with what was here.

      He turned back to the cabinet, stripping the table of its cloth as he passed. His foot struck something on the floor. The

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