Devereux โ Complete by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (best interesting books to read txt) ๐
Read free book ยซDevereux โ Complete by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (best interesting books to read txt) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
Read book online ยซDevereux โ Complete by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (best interesting books to read txt) ๐ยป. Author - Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton
Morton, hitherto I have written as if my veins were filled with water, instead of the raging fire that flows through them until it reaches my brain, and there it stops, and eats away all things,โeven memory, that once seemed eternal! Now I feel as I approach the consummation ofโhaโof whatโay, of what? Brother, did you ever, when you thought yourself quite alone, at night, not a breath stirring,โdid you ever raise your eyes, and see exactly opposite to you a devil?โa dread thing, that moves not, speaks not, but glares upon you with a fixed, dead, unrelenting eye?โthat thing is before me now and witnesses every word I write. But it deters me not! no, nor terrifies me. I have said that I would fulfil this task, and I have nearly done it; though at times the gray cavern yawned, and I saw its rugged walls stretchโstretch away, on either side, until they reached hell; and there I beheldโbut I will not tell you till we meet there! Now I am calm again: read on.
We could not discover Isora nor her home: perhaps the priest took care that it should be so; for, at that time, what with his devilish whispers and my own heart, I often scarcely knew what I was or what I desired; and I sat for hours and gazed upon the air, and it seemed so soft and still that I longed to make an opening in my forehead that it might enter there, and so cool and quiet the dull, throbbing, scorching anguish that lay like molten lead in my brain; at length we found the house. โTo-morrow,โ said the Abbe, and he shed tears over me,โfor there were times when that hard man did feel,โโto-morrow, my child, thou shalt see her; but be soft and calm.โ To-morrow came; but Montreuil was pale, paler than I had ever seen him, and he gazed upon me and said, โNot to-day, Son, not to-day; she has gone out, and will not return till nightfall.โ My brother, the evening came, and with it came Desmarais; he came in terror and alarm. โThe villain Oswald,โ he said, โhas betrayed all; he drew me aside and told me so. โHark ye, Jean,โ he whispered, โhark ye: your master has my brotherโs written confession and the real will; but I have provided for your safety, and if he pleases it, for Montreuilโs. The packet is not to be opened till the seventh day; fly before then. But I know,โ added Desmarais, โwhere the packet is placed;โ and he took Montreuil aside, and for a while I heard not what they said; but I did overhear Desmarais at last, and I learned that it was your bridal night.
What felt I then? The same tempestuous fury,โthe same whirlwind and storm of heart that I had felt before, at the mere anticipation of such an event? No; I felt a bright ray of joy flash through me. Yes, joy; but it was that joy which a conqueror feels when he knows his mortal foe is in his power and when he dooms that enemy to death. โThey shall perish, and on this night,โ I said inly. โI have sworn it; I swore to Isora that the bridal couch should be stained with blood, and I will keep the oath!โ I approached the pair; they were discussing the means for obtaining the packet. Montreuil urged Desmarais to purloin it from the place where you had deposited it, and then to abscond; but to this plan Desmarais was vehemently opposed. He insisted that there would be no possible chance of his escape from a search so scrutinizing as that which would necessarily ensue, and he evidently resolved not alone to incur the danger of the theft. โThe Count,โ said he, โsaw that I was present when he put away the packet. Suspicion will fall solely on me. Whither should I fly? No: I will serve you with my talents, but not with my life.โ โWretch,โ said Montreuil, โif that packet is opened, thy life is already gone.โ โYes,โ said Desmarais; โbut we may yet purloin the papers, and throw the guilt upon some other quarter. What if I admit you when the Count is abroad? What if you steal the packet, and carry away other articles of more seeming value? What, too, if you wound me in the arm or the breast, and I coin some terrible tale of robbers, and of my resistance, could we not manage then to throw suspicion upon common housebreakers,โnay, could we not throw it upon Oswald himself? Let us silence that traitor by death, and who shall contradict our tale? No danger shall attend this plan. I will give you the key of the escritoire: the theft will not be the work of a moment.โ Montreuil at first demurred to this proposal, but Desmarais was, I repeat, resolved not to incur the danger of the theft alone; the stake was great, and it was not in Montreuilโs nature to shrink from peril, when once it became necessary to confront it. โBe it so,โ he said, at last, โthough the scheme is full of difficulty and of danger: be it so. We have not a day to lose. To-morrow the Count will place the document in some place of greater safety, and unknown to us: the deed shall be done to-night. Procure the key of the escritoire; admit me this night; I will steal disguised into the chamber; I will commit the act from which you, who alone could commit it with safety, shrink. Instruct me exactly as to the place where the articles you speak of are placed. I will abstract them also. See that if the Count wake, he has no weapon at hand. Wound yourself, as you say, in some place not dangerous to life, and to-morrow, or within an hour after my escape, tell what tale you will. I will go, meanwhile, at once to Oswald; I will either bribe his silenceโay, and his immediate absence from Englandโor he shall die. A death that secures our own self-preservation is excusable in the reading of all law, divine or human.โ I heard, but they deemed me insensible: they had already begun to grow unheeding of my presence. Montreuil saw me, and his countenance grew soft. โI know all,โ I said, as I caught his eye which looked on me in pity, โI know all: they are married. Enough!โwith my hope ceases my love: care not for me.โ
Montreuil embraced and spoke to me in kindness and in praise. He assured me that you had kept your wedding so close a secret that he knew it not, nor did even Desmarais, till the evening before,โtill after he had proposed that I should visit Isora that very day. I know not, I care not, whether he was sincere in this. In whatever way one line in the dread scroll of his conduct be read, the scroll was written in guile, and in blood was it sealed. I appeared not to notice Montreuil or his accomplice any more. The latter left the house first. Montreuil stole forth, as he thought, unobserved; he was masked, and in complete disguise. I, too, went forth. I hastened to a shop where such things were procured; I purchased a mask and cloak similar to the priestโs. I had heard Montreuil agree with Desmarais that the door of the house should be left ajar, in order to give greater facility to the escape of the former; I repaired to the house in time to see Montreuil enter it. A strange, sharp sort of cunning, which I had never known before, ran through the dark confusion of my mind. I waited for a minute, till it was likely that Montreuil had gained your chamber; I then pushed open the door, and ascended the stairs. I met no
Comments (0)