第 51 节
作者:想聊      更新:2021-02-19 00:37      字数:9318
  felt doubt; that he was quite dead before Mr。 Lennox discovered him and
  picked him up。 We know that the phenomena of rigor mortis had already
  set in before his body reached London。             〃Nothing; however; is new under
  the   sun。   Many   journals   related   the   fact   that   these   people   had   passed
  away without a cause; as though it were an event without a parallel。                   It is
  not。    Your   Dr。 Templeman;   in   1893;   describes   two   examples   of   sudden
  death with absolute absence of any pathological condition in any part of
  the bodies to account for it。       He describes the case of a man of forty…three;
  and   calls it   'emotional   inhibition   of the heart。' The heart   was   arrested   in
  diastole; instead of systole; as is        sually the case; the mode of death was
  syncope; the cause of death; undiscoverable。
  〃A    layman     may    be   permitted;    I  suppose;     to  describe    'emotional
  inhibition of the heart' as 'shock'; but we know; in our cases; that if a shock;
  it was not a painful one … perhaps not even an unpleasant one。                   Since all
  other emotions can be pleasant or unpleasant; why must we assume that
  the supreme emotion of death may not be pleasant also; did we know how
  to make it so?       Perhaps the Borgia; among their secrets; had discovered
  this。    At   least   the   familiar   signs   of   death   were   wholly   absent   from   the
  countenances        of  the   dead。     The     jaws    were    not   set;  the   familiar;
  expressions were not changed; as usually happens from rigidity of facial
  muscles;   their   faces   were   not   sallow;   their   temples   were   not   sunk;   their
  brows were not contracted。
  〃We   will   now   take   the   victims;   one   by   one;   and   show   how   death
  happened to each of them; yet left no sign that it had happened。 Frankly;
  the first case alone presented any difficulties to me。 For a time I despaired
  of proving how the bed had destroyed Sir Walter's ancestor; because she
  had not entered it。      But the difficulty becomes clear to one possessing our
  present knowledge; for once prove the properties of the bed; and the rest
  follows。 You will say that they were not proved; only guessed。                  That was
  true;   until   Prince   died。   His   death   crowned   my   edifice   of   theory   and
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  converted it to fact。       As to why the bed has these properties; that is for
  science to find out presently。
  〃To return; then; to the old lady; the ancient woman of your race; who
  came unexpectedly to the Christmas re…union and was put to sleep in the
  Grey Room at her own wish。              She was found dead next morning on the
  floor。     She    had    not   entered    the   bed。    The     exact   facts   have    long
  disappeared from human knowledge; and it is only possible to re…construct
  them   by   inference   and   the   support   of   those   straightforward   events   that
  followed。      I   conceive;   then;   that   though   the   old   lady   did   not   create   the
  warmth that liberated the evil spirit of the bed and so destroyed her; that
  warmth was nevertheless artificially created。              What must have happened;
  think you?       The bed   is made up   in haste and the fire lighted。             But   the
  fire   is   a   long   way  from  the   bed;   and   would   have no   effect   to   create   the
  necessary temperature。          There is; however; a hot…water bottle in the bed;
  or a hot brick wrapped in flannel。           The old lady is about to enter her bed。
  She has extinguished her candie; but the flame of the fire gives light。                 She
  has prayed; she throws off her dressing…gown and flings back the covering
  of the bed; to fall an instant victim to the miasma。               She drops backward
  and is found dead next morning; by which time the bottle and bed are also
  cold。
  〃Taken alone; I grant this explanation may fail to win your sympathy;
  but   consider   the   cumulative   evidence   in   store。      The   old   lady   may;   of
  course; have died a natural death。          She may not have turned down the bed。
  There is nobody living to tell us。          All that Sir Walter can recollect is that
  she was found on the floor of the room dead。               Exactly where; he does not
  remember。       But for my own part I have no doubt whatever that her death
  took place in that way。
  〃We are on safer ground with the other tragic happenings; though; save
  in the case of Nurse Forrester; there is nothing on the surface of events to
  connect their deaths with the accursed bed。 You will see; however; that it is
  very easy to do so。        In the lady's case all is clear enough。           She goes to
  bed   tired   and   she   sleeps   peacefully   into   death   without   waking。    She   is
  probably asleep within ten minutes; before her own warmth has penetrated
  through   sheet   and   blanket   to   the   mattress   beneath   and   so   destroyed   her。
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  Suppose that she is dead in half an hour。            She retired to rest at ten o'clock;
  she is called at seven; the room is presently broken into and she is then not
  only dead; but cold。        The demon has gone to sleep again under its lifeless
  burden。     Now had she been stout and well covered; there had hardly been
  time   for   her   to   grow   cold;   and   those   who   came   to   her   assistance   might
  even   have   perished;   too。   But   she   is   a   little;   thin   thing;   and   the   heat   has
  gone out of her。 This assured the safety of those who came to the bedside。
  One can make no laws as to the time necessary for a dead body to grow as
  cold as its surroundings。         The bodies of the old and the young cool more
  quickly   than   those   of   adult   persons。    If   the   conditions   are   favorable   a
  body may cool in six to eight hours。             Prince took but five; poor little bag
  of bones。
  〃In the case of Captain May the conditions are altogether different。 Let
  me    speak    with    all  tenderness    and   spare    you   pain。   Be     sure   that  he
  suffered no more than the others。             The bed is now no longer made; the
  mattress is bare。       That matters not to him。          Clad in his pyjamas; with a
  railway   rug   to   cover   him   and   his   dressing…gown   for   a   pillow;   he   flings
  himself     down;    and   from    his  powerful     and   sanguine     frame    warmth     is
  instantly communicated to the mattress that supports him。                  Probably but a
  few minutes were sufficient to liberate the poison。                He is not asleep; but
  on   the   edge   of   sleep   when   he   becomes   suddenly   conscious   of   physical
  sensations beyond his experience。             He had breathed death; but yet he is
  not dead。 His brain works; and can send a message to his limbs; which are
  still able to obey。      But his hour has come。          He leaps from the bed in no
  suffering; but conscious; perhaps of an oppression; or an unfamiliar odor …
  we   cannot   say   what。     We   only   know   that   he   feels   intense   surprise;   not
  pain   for   in   that   dying   moment   his   emotions   are   fixed   for   ever   by   the
  muscles of his face。        He needs air and seeks it。         He hurries to the recess;
  kneels on the cushion; and throws open the window。                  Or the window may
  have been already open … we cannot tell。              To reach it is his last conscious
  act; and in another moment he is dead。              The bed is not suspected。          Why
  should   it   be?    Who   could   prove   that   he   had   even   laid   down   upon   it?
  Indeed it was believed and reported at the inquest that he had not done so。
  Yet that is what unquestionably happened。                Otherwise his candle would
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  have   burned   to   the   socket。    He   had   blown   it   out   and   settled   to   rest;   be
  sure。
  〃We   have   now   to   deal   with   the   detective;   and   here   again   there   was
  nothing to associate his death with the bed of the Borgia。                    Yet you will
  see without   my aid   how   easily he   came   by his   death。          Peter   Hardcastle
  desires to be alone; that he may study the Grey Room and everything in it。
  He is left as he wishes; walks here and there; sketches a ground plan of the
  room   and   exhausts   its   more   obvious   peculiarities。