登陆注册
37863300000006

第6章 SCENE I(1)

MR. ROBERTS; MR. CAMPBELL

In Mr Roberts's dressing-room, that gentleman is discovered tragically confronting Mr. Willis Campbell, with a watch uplifted in either hand.

WILLIS: 'Well?'

ROBERTS, gasping: 'My--my watch!'

WILLIS: 'Yes. How comes there to be two of it?'

ROBERTS: 'Don't you understand? When I went out I--didn't take my watch--with me. I left it here on my bureau.'

WILLIS: 'Well?'

ROBERTS: 'Oh, merciful heavens! don't you see? Then I couldn't have been robbed!'

WILLIS: 'Well, but whose watch did you take from the fellow that didn't rob you, then?'

ROBERTS: 'His own!' He abandons himself powerlessly upon a chair.

'Yes; I left my own watch here, and when that person brushed against me in the Common, I missed it for the first time. I supposed he had robbed me, and ran after him, and--'

WILLIS: 'Robbed HIM!'

ROBERTS: 'Yes.'

WILLIS: 'Ah, ha, ha, ha! I, hi, hi, hi! O, ho, ho, ho!' He yields to a series of these gusts and paroxysms, bowing up and down, and stamping to and fro, and finally sits down exhausted, and wipes the tears from his cheeks. 'Really, this thing will kill me. What are you going to do about it, Roberts?'

ROBERTS, with profound dejection and abysmal solemnity: 'I don't know, Willis. Don't you see that it must have been--that I must have robbed--Mr. Bemis?'

WILLIS: 'Bemis!' After a moment for tasting the fact. 'Why, so it was! Oh, Lord! oh, Lord! And was poor old Bemis that burly ruffian? that bloodthirsty gang of giants? that--that--oh, Lord! oh, Lord!' He bows his head upon his chair-back in complete exhaustion, demanding, feebly, as he gets breath for the successive questions, 'What are you going to d-o-o-o? What shall you s-a-a-a-y? How can you expla-a-ain it?'

ROBERTS: 'I can do nothing. I can say nothing. I can never explain it. I must go to Mr. Bemis and make a clean breast of it; but think of the absurdity--the ridicule!'

WILLIS, after a thoughtful silence: 'Oh, it isn't THAT you've got to think of. You've got to think of the old gentleman's sense of injury and outrage. Didn't you hear what he said--that he would have handed over his dearest friend, his own brother, to the police?'

ROBERTS: 'But that was in the supposition that his dearest friend, his own brother, had intentionally robbed him. You can't imagine, Willis--'

WILLIS: 'Oh, I can imagine a great many things. It's all well enough for you to say that the robbery was a mistake; but it was a genuine case of garotting as far as the assault and taking the watch go. He's a very pudgicky old gentleman.'

ROBERTS: 'He is.'

WILLIS: 'And I don't see how you're going to satisfy him that it was all a joke. Joke? It WASN'T a joke! It was a real assault and a bona fide robbery, and Bemis can prove it.'

ROBERTS: 'But he would never insist--'

WILLIS: 'Oh, I don't know about that. He's pretty queer, Bemis is.

You can't say what an old gentleman like that will or won't do. If he should choose to carry it into court--'

ROBERTS: 'Court!'

WILLIS: 'It might be embarrassing. And anyway, it would have a very strange look in the papers.'

ROBERTS: 'The papers! Good gracious!'

WILLIS: 'Ten years from now a man that heard you mentioned would forget all about the acquittal, and say: "Roberts? Oh yes! Wasn't he the one they sent to the House of Correction for garotting an old friend of his on the Common!" You see, it wouldn't do to go and make a clean breast of it to Bemis.'

ROBERTS: 'I see.'

WILLIS: 'What will you do?'

ROBERTS: 'I must never say anything to him about it. Just let it go.'

WILLIS: 'And keep his watch? I don't see how you could manage that. What would you do with the watch? You might sell it, of course--'

ROBERTS: 'Oh no, I COULDN'T do that.'

WILLIS: 'You might give it away to some deserving person; but if it got him into trouble--'

ROBERTS: 'No, no; that wouldn't do, either.'

WILLIS: 'And you can't have it lying around; Agnes would be sure to find it, sooner or later.'

ROBERTS: 'Yes.'

WILLIS: 'Besides, there's your conscience. Your conscience wouldn't LET you keep Bemis's watch away from him. And if it would, what do you suppose Agnes's conscience would do when she came to find it out? Agnes hasn't got much of a head--the want of it seems to grow upon her; but she's got a conscience as big as the side of a house.'

ROBERTS: 'Oh, I see; I see.'

WILLIS, coming up and standing over him, with his hands in his pockets: 'I tell you what, Roberts, you're in a box.'

ROBERTS, abjectly: 'I know it, Willis; I know it. What do you suggest? You MUST know some way out of it.'

WILLIS: 'It isn't a ****** matter like telling them to start the elevator down when they couldn't start her up. I've got to think it over.' He walks to and fro, Roberts's eyes helplessly following his movements. 'How would it do to--No, that wouldn't do, either.'

ROBERTS: 'What wouldn't?'

WILLIS: 'Nothing. I was just thinking--I say, you might--Or, no, you couldn't.'

ROBERTS: 'Couldn't what?'

WILLIS: 'Nothing. But if you were to--No; up a stump that way too.'

ROBERTS: 'Which way? For mercy's sake, my dear fellow, don't seem to get a clew if you haven't it. It's more than I can bear.' He rises, and desperately confronts Willis in his promenade. 'If you see any hope at all--'

WILLIS, stopping: 'Why, if you were a different sort of fellow, Roberts, the thing would be perfectly easy.'

ROBERTS: 'Very well, then. What sort of fellow do you want me to be? I'll be any sort of fellow you like.'

WILLIS: 'Oh, but you couldn't! With that face of yours, and that confounded conscience of yours behind it, you would give away the whitest lie that was ever told.'

同类推荐
  • 六十种曲种玉记

    六十种曲种玉记

    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。
  • 续修台湾府志

    续修台湾府志

    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。
  • 佛说园生树经

    佛说园生树经

    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。
  • 金刚錍

    金刚錍

    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。
  • LAHOMA

    LAHOMA

    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。
热门推荐
  • 星缘旋灵

    星缘旋灵

    这里是强者支配的世界,不论是人还是兽只有强者才有话语权,在这里生存的方式只有两种——不断的变强或者臣服于强者……
  • 葬元劫

    葬元劫

    混沌之初,天地一般大。巨人问:“何为天?何为地?”答曰:“上为天,下为地。”阴阳轮转,劈开混沌,天地分崩离析。天有空,又名天空。地之大,涵盖无尽星辰。是毁灭?还是起源?是死亡?还是新生?返虚重来,有的人依旧碌碌无为,有的人却向往碌碌无为。“这条路,太苦,如果可以选择,我宁愿做个平庸之人。”“为了守护身边的人,即便化身修罗,我亦在所不惜。”“丫头,纵使黑云密布,我亦打破这苍穹,带你找到回家的路。”返虚少年,从绝望的毁灭,一步一步,书写一段段传奇人生。谁又能知道,他一路所经历的苦难!
  • 毒妃妖娆

    毒妃妖娆

    前世,洛夕颜被相爱二十年的竹马算计暗害,含恨惨死。一朝重生成将门千金,她誓要洗涮冤屈,报仇雪恨!她运筹帷幄,将渣男渣女拉下地狱;计谋算尽,让庶母长姐自跳火坑。只是,她是尽了浑身解数,却还是一步步掉入某男早就挖好的请妻入瓮的坑里。传说,国师大人淡漠高冷恶尽女色。洛夕颜看着自己身边那笑的狷邪的男子,心道:传说都是一派胡言!不然,是谁纠缠着她不放,还强行给她扣上了一个国师夫人的帽子?【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 等爱,遇见你

    等爱,遇见你

    不知是上天的眷顾还是命运的捉弄,让两个命运相似的两个人相遇。慢慢地走进彼此的生活,却又怕走进对方心里……
  • 治愈治郁

    治愈治郁

    你是否迷茫,是否在黑暗中寻找阳光。是情绪低落还是心灵的感冒
  • 石头的爱

    石头的爱

    或许是命运的捉弄,更可能是上天的眷顾,一张无意见到的照片,让他明白,他深爱的女人竟是他的妹妹,每天看着她笑,他也会笑,看着她开心,他也会开心,只是当他知道的这一刻,他的心乱了,他究竟该如何和这个女人相处下去,告诉她事实,允许她离开,还是瞒下事实,让她一辈子留在自己的身边,他犹豫了,他爱她,尽管他知道,她爱的不是他,但是他对她的爱已坚如磐石,他该如何选择,他无奈的笑了......
  • 那年盛凯的你

    那年盛凯的你

    故事主要讲述,她因机缘进入了娱乐圈,与其他两位女生组成了TFGirls出道。在她成名之路上她与他的关系日益加深,但是在友情,爱情和亲情面前她却不知道怎么选择。公司遇到危机她求得她爷爷帮助的代价是什么?她的梦想因为她爷爷的阻挠最终还是破灭了?一夜间的消失震惊了整个娱乐界,她到底发生了什么事?既然当初选择离开那为什么还要回到这个是非之地?每个人都说初恋的单纯的是甜蜜的,而他们的初恋更多的只有痛苦和不堪。快来看看在明星眼里的初恋到底是怎么样的!(本人第一次写小说,愿四叶草和读者不要介意!故事纯属虚构,性格也许不太符合现实还请四叶草见谅。如果大家觉得一开始不好看大家可以从第31章千玺的心事开始看)
  • 深海幽灵:潜艇与战争

    深海幽灵:潜艇与战争

    潜艇,素有“水中幽灵”之称。在当今世界武器库中,它被认为是最有威慑力的海军兵器之一。因此,世界各主要海岸国家都十分注重潜艇的发展,潜艇部队在许多国家的海军中均占据重要地位。
  • 末世从天降

    末世从天降

    末世的降临让人措不及手,残忍的活死人,险恶的人心,还有漂亮的妹子,让人们的求生之路十分艰辛,看我如何在末世闯出一片天,我赵清风将会载入史册!
  • 爱兰德岛

    爱兰德岛

    岛是孤零零的立在水的中央,隔绝了与外界的联系。跟密室小说一样,岛不过是一个更大的密室,既然有“慎独”,那么人多的时候,在一个更大的空间会有更多的故事。