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The Beetle
book i. the house with the open window   Chapter VIII. The Man in the Street
Richard Marsh
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       Whether anyone pursued I cannot say. I have some dim recollection, as I came out of the room, of women being huddled against the wall upon the landing, and of their screaming as I went past. But whether any effort was made to arrest my progress I cannot tell. My own impression is that not the slightest attempt to impede my headlong flight was made by anyone.
       In what direction I was going I did not know. I was like a man flying through the phantasmagoric happenings of a dream, knowing neither how nor whither. I tore along what I suppose was a broad passage, through a door at the end into what, I fancy, was a drawing-room. Across this room I dashed, helter-skelter, bringing down, in the gloom, unseen articles of furniture, with myself sometimes on top, and sometimes under them. In a trice, each time I fell, I was on my feet again,--until I went crashing against a window which was concealed by curtains. It would not have been strange had I crashed through it,--but I was spared that. Thrusting aside the curtains, I fumbled for the fastening of the window. It was a tall French casement, extending, so far as I could judge, from floor to ceiling. When I had it open I stepped through it on to the verandah without,--to find that I was on the top of the portico which I had vainly essayed to ascend from below.
       I tried the road down which I had tried up,--proceeding with a breakneck recklessness of which now I shudder to think. It was, probably, some thirty feet above the pavement, yet I rushed at the descent with as much disregard for the safety of life and limb as if it had been only three. Over the edge of the parapet I went, obtaining, with my naked feet, a precarious foothold on the latticework,--then down I commenced to scramble. I never did get a proper hold, and when I had descended, perhaps, rather more than half the distance--scraping, as it seemed to me, every scrap of skin off my body in the process--I lost what little hold I had. Down to the bottom I went tumbling, rolling right across the pavement into the muddy road. It was a miracle I was not seriously injured,--but in that sense, certainly, that night the miracles were on my side. Hardly was I down, than I was up again,--mud and all.
       Just as I was getting on to my feet I felt a firm hand grip me by the shoulder. Turning I found myself confronted by a tall, slenderly built man, with a long, drooping moustache, and an overcoat buttoned up to the chin, who held me with a grasp of steel. He looked at me,--and I looked back at him.
       'After the ball,--eh?'
       Even then I was struck by something pleasant in his voice, and some quality as of sunshine in his handsome face.
       Seeing that I said nothing he went on,--with a curious, half mocking smile.
       'Is that the way to come slithering down the Apostle's pillar?--Is it simple burglary, or simpler murder?--Tell me the glad tidings that you've killed St Paul, and I'll let you go.'
       Whether he was mad or not I cannot say,--there was some excuse for thinking so. He did not look mad, though his words and actions alike were strange.
       'Although you have confined yourself to gentle felony, shall I not shower blessings on the head of him who has been robbing Paul?-- Away with you!'
       He removed his grip, giving me a gentle push as he did so,--and I was away. I neither stayed nor paused.
       I knew little of records, but if anyone has made a better record than I did that night between Lowndes Square and Walham Green I should like to know just what it was,--I should, too, like to have seen it done.
       In an incredibly short space of time I was once more in front of the house with the open window,--the packet of letters--which were like to have cost me so dear!--gripped tightly in my hand.
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本书目录

book i. the house with the open window
   Chapter I. Outside
   Chapter II. Inside
   Chapter III. The Man in the Bed
   Chapter IV. A Lonely Vigil
   Chapter V. An Instruction to Commit Burglary
   Chapter VI. A Singular Felony
   Chapter VII. The Great Paul Lessingham
   Chapter VIII. The Man in the Street
   Chapter IX. The Contents of the Packet
book ii. the haunted man
   Chapter X. Rejected
   Chapter XI. A Midnight Episode
   Chapter XII. A Morning Visitor
   Chapter XIII. The Picture
   Chapter XIV. The Duchess' Ball
   Chapter XV. Mr Lessingham Speaks
   Chapter XVI. Atherton's Magic Vapour
   Chapter XVII. Magic?--or Miracle?
   Chapter XVIII. The Apotheosis of the Beetle
   Chapter XIX. The Lady Rages
   Chapter XX. A Heavy Father
   Chapter XXI. The Terror in the Night
   Chapter XXII. The Haunted Man
book iii. the terror by night and the terror by day
   Chapter XXIII. The Way He Told Her
   Chapter XXIV. A Woman's View
   Chapter XXV. The Man in the Street
   Chapter XXVI. A Father's No
   Chapter XXVII. The Terror by Night
   Chapter XXVIII. The Strange Story of the Man in the Street
   Chapter XXIX. The House on the Road From the Workhouse
   Chapter XXX. The Singular Behaviour of Mr Holt
   Chapter XXXI. The Terror by Day
book iv. in pursuit
   Chapter XXXII. A New Client
   Chapter XXXIII. What Came of Looking Through a Lattice
   Chapter XXXIV. After Twenty Years
   Chapter XXXV. A Bringer of Tidings
   Chapter XXXVI. What the Tidings Were
   Chapter XXXVII. What Was Hidden Under the Floor
   Chapter XXXVIII. The Rest of the Find
   Chapter XXXIX. Miss Louisa Coleman
   Chapter XL. What Miss Coleman Saw Through the Window
   Chapter XLI. The Constable,--His Clue,--and the Cab
   Chapter XLII. The Quarry Doubles
   Chapter XLIII. The Murder at Mrs 'Enderson's
   Chapter XLIV. The Man Who Was Murdered
   Chapter XLV. All That Mrs 'Enderson Knew
   Chapter XLVI. The Sudden Stopping
   Chapter XLVII. The Contents of the Third-Class Carriage
   Chapter XLVIII. The Conclusion of the Matter