第 2 节
作者:孤独半圆      更新:2021-02-24 22:24      字数:9320
  and Cleggett; picking up as he did so a long pair of shears。
  〃Put down the scissors;〃 said Cleggett; with a wave of his hand。                〃I do
  not propose to attack you now。〃
  And he turned and left the managing editor's little office; closing the
  door behind him。
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  The   managing   editor   tiptoed   over   to   the   door   and;   with   the   scissors
  still grasped in one hand; opened it about a quarter of an inch。                   Through
  this crack Wharton saw Cleggett walk jauntily towards the corner where
  his   hat   and   coat   were   hanging。  Cleggett took   off his   worn office   jacket;
  rolled it into a ball; and flung it into a waste paper basket。 He put on his
  street   coat   and   hat   and   picked   up   the   drab…colored   cane。   Swinging   the
  stick he moved towards the door into the hall。               In the doorway he paused;
  cocked his hat a trifle; turned towards the managing editor's door; raised
  his hand with his pipe in it with the manner of one who points a dueling
  pistol;   took   careful   aim   at   the   second   button   of   the   managing   editor's
  waistcoat;   and   clucked。       At   the   cluck   the   managing   editor   drew   back
  hastily; as if Cleggett had actually presented a firearm; Cleggett's manner
  was so rapt and fatal that it carried conviction。               Then Cleggett laughed;
  cocked his hat on the other side of his head and went out into the corridor
  whistling。      Whistling;   and;   since   faults   as   well   as   virtues   must   be   told;
  swaggering just a little。
  When the managing editor had heard the elevator come up; pause; and
  go down again; he went out of his room and said to the city editor:
  〃Mr。   Herbert;   don't   ever   let   that   man   Cleggett   into   this   office   again。
  He is offoff mentally。 He's a dangerous man。                He's a homicidal maniac。
  More'n   likely   he's   been   a   quiet;   steady   drinker   for   years;   and   now   it's
  begun to show on him。〃
  But nothing was further from Cleggett than the wish ever to go into the
  Enterprise   office   again。      As   he   left   the   elevator   on   the   ground   floor   he
  stabbed the astonished elevator boy under the left arm with his cane as a
  bayonet; cut him harmlessly over the head with his cane as a saber; tossed
  him a dollar; and left the building humming:
  〃Oh;   the   Beau   Sabreur   of   the   Grande   Armee                       Was   the
  Captain Tarjeanterre!〃
  It is thus; with a single twitch of her playful              fingers; that Fate will
  sometimes pluck from a man the mask that has obscured his real identity
  for many years。        It is thus that Destiny will suddenly draw a bright blade
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  from a rusty scabbard!
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  CHAPTER II
  THE ROOM OF ILLUSION
  That part of Brooklyn in which Cleggett lived overlooks a wide sweep
  of   water   where   the   East   River   merges   with   New   York   Bay。 From   his
  windows   he   could   gaze   out   upon   the   bustling   harbor   craft   and   see   the
  ships going forth to the great mysterious sea。
  He walked home across the Brooklyn Bridge; and as he walked he still
  hummed tunes。        Occasionally; still with the rapt and fatal manner which
  had daunted the managing editor; he would pause and flex his wrist; and
  then suddenly deliver a ferocious thrust with his walking…stick。
  The fifth of these lunges had an unexpected result。            Cleggett directed
  it toward the door of an unpainted toolhouse; a temporary structure near
  one of the immense stone pillars from which the bridge is swung。               But; as
  he lunged; the toolhouse door opened; and a policeman; who was coming
  out wiping his mouth on the back of his hand; received a jab in the pit of a
  somewhat protuberant stomach。
  The   officer   grunted   and stepped   backward;   then   he   came   on;   raising
  his night…stick。
  〃Why; it'sit's McCarthy!〃 exclaimed   Cleggett; who had also   sprung
  back; as the light fell on the other's face。
  〃Mr。 Cleggett; by the powers!〃 said the officer; pausing and lowering
  his lifted club。    〃Are ye soused; man?         Or is it your way of sayin' good
  avenin' to your frinds?〃
  Cleggett smiled。      He had first known McCarthy years before when he
  was   a   reporter;   and   more   recently   had   renewed   the   acquaintance   in   his
  walks across the bridge。
  〃I didn't know you were there; McCarthy;〃 he said。
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  〃No?〃 said the officer。        〃And who were ye jabbin' at; thin?〃
  〃I was just limbering up my wrist;〃 said Cleggett。
  〃'Tis a quare thing to do;〃 persisted McCarthy; albeit good…humoredly。
  〃And now I mind I've seen ye do the same before; Mr。 Cleggett。                       You're
  foriver grinnin' to yersilf an' makin' thim funny jabs at nothin' as ye cross
  the bridge。 Are ye subjict to stiffness in the wrists; Mr。 Cleggett?〃
  〃Perhaps      it's  writer's  cramp;〃    said  Cleggett;    indulging    the   pleasant
  humor that was on him。 He was really thinking that; with 500;000 of his
  own;     he  had    written   his  last  headline;    edited    his  last  piece   of  copy;
  sharpened his last pencil。
  〃Writer's   cramp?      Is   it   so?〃   mused   McCarthy。   〃Newspapers   is   great
  things;   ain't   they   now?    And   so's   writin'   and   readin'。  Gr…r…reat   things!
  But if ye'll take my advise; Mr。 Cleggett; ye'll kape that writin' and readin'
  within bounds。       Too much av thim rots the brains。〃
  〃I'll  remember      that;〃   said  Cleggett。     And     he  playfully    jabbed    the
  officer again as he turned away。
  〃G'wan wid ye!〃 protested McCarthy。                〃Ye're soused!       The scent av
  it's in the air。    If I'm compilled to run yez in f'r assaultin' an officer ye'll
  get   the   cramps   out   av   thim   wrists   breakin'   stone;   maybe。   Cr…r…r…amps;
  indade!〃
  Cramps; indeed!         Oh; Clement J。 Cleggett; you liar!            And yet; who
  does     not  lie  in  order    to  veil  his   inmost;    sweetest    thoughts    from    an
  unsympathetic world?
  That was not an ordinary jab with an ordinary cane which Cleggett had
  directed towards the toolhouse door。            It was a thrust en carte; the thrust of
  a   brilliant   swordsman;   the   thrust   of   a   master;   a   terrible   thrust。 It   was
  meant   for   as   pernicious   a   bravo   as   ever   infested   the   pages   of   romantic
  fiction。    Cleggett had been slaying these gentry a dozen times a day for
  years。    He had pinked four of them on the way across the bridge; before
  McCarthy; with his stomach and his realism; stopped the lunge intended
  for the fifth。     But this is not exactly the sort of thing one finds it easy to
  confide to a policeman; be he ever so friendly a policeman。
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  CleggettOld   Clegg;   the   copyreaderClegg; the   commonplaceC。   J。
  Cleggett; the Brooklynite…this person whom young reporters conceived of
  as the staid; dry prophet of the dusty Factwas secretly a mighty reservoir
  of unwritten; unacted; unlived; unspoken romance。                 He ate it; he drank it;
  he breathed it; he dreamed it。          The usual copyreader; when he closes his
  eyes   and   smiles   upon   a   pleasant   inward   vision;   is   thinking   of   starting   a
  chicken…farm   in   New   Jersey。       But   Cleggettwith   gray   sprinkled   in   his
  hair; sober of face and precise of manner; as the world knew himlived a
  hidden life which was one long; wild adventure。
  Nobody had ever suspected it。            But his room might have given to the
  discerning   a   clue   to   the   real   man   behind   the   mask   which   he   assumed
  which he had been forced to assume in order to earn a living。                    When he
  reached   the   apartment;   a   few   minutes   after   his   encounter   on   the   bridge;
  and   switched   the   electric   light   on;   the   gleams   fell   upon   an   astonishing
  clutter of books and arms。 。 。 。
  Stevenson; cavalry sabers; W。 Clark Russell; pistols; and Dumas; Jack
  London;