第 38 节
作者:津夏      更新:2021-04-30 15:57      字数:9322
  gnarled bush;  was   lying half out   of the   case;  with its   clawlike hand   and
  bony forearm resting upon the table。              Propped up against the sarcophagus
  was   an   old   yellow   scroll   of   papyrus;   and   in   front   of   it;   in   a   wooden
  armchair;   sat   the   owner   of   the   room;   his   head   thrown   back;   his   widely…
  opened eyes directed in a horrified stare to the crocodile above him; and
  his blue; thick lips puffing loudly with every expiration。
  〃My God! he's dying!〃 cried Monkhouse Lee distractedly。
  He was a slim; handsome young fellow; olive… skinned and dark…eyed;
  of   a   Spanish   rather   than   of   an   English   type;   with   a   Celtic   intensity   of
  manner which contrasted with the Saxon phlegm of Abercombie Smith。
  〃Only a faint; I think;〃 said the medical student。              〃Just give me a hand
  with   him。     You   take   his   feet。   Now   on   to   the   sofa。   Can   you   kick   all
  those little wooden devils off?             What a litter it is!       Now he will be all
  right if we undo his collar and give him some water。                    What has he been
  up to at all?〃
  〃I don't   know。      I   heard him  cry  out。      I   ran up。    I   know him  pretty
  well; you know。         It is very good of you to come down。〃
  〃His heart is going like a pair of castanets;〃 said Smith; laying his hand
  on the breast of the unconscious man。               〃He seems to me to be frightened
  all   to   pieces。  Chuck   the   water   over   him!       What   a   face   he   has   got   on
  him!〃
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  It was indeed a strange and most repellent face; for colour and outline
  were equally unnatural。         It was white; not with the ordinary pallor of fear
  but with an absolutely bloodless white; like the under side of a sole。                  He
  was    very   fat;  but   gave   the   impression     of  having    at  some    time   been
  considerably fatter; for his skin hung loosely in creases and folds; and was
  shot with a meshwork of wrinkles。             Short; stubbly brown hair bristled up
  from his scalp; with a pair of thick; wrinkled ears protruding on either side。
  His    light  grey   eyes   were    still  open;   the  pupils   dilated   and   the   balls
  projecting in a fixed and horrid stare。            It seemed to Smith as he looked
  down upon him  that he had never seen   nature's danger   signals flying   so
  plainly upon a man's countenance; and his thoughts turned more seriously
  to the warning which Hastie had given him an hour before。
  〃What the deuce can have frightened him so?〃 he asked。
  〃It's the mummy。〃
  〃The mummy?          How; then?〃
  〃I   don't   know。   It's   beastly   and   morbid。    I   wish   he   would   drop   it。
  It's   the   second   fright   he   has   given   me。 It   was   the   same   last   winter。 I
  found him just like this; with that horrid thing in front of him。〃
  〃What does he want with the mummy; then?〃
  〃Oh; he's a crank; you know。           It's his hobby。     He knows more about
  these things than any man in England。             But I wish he wouldn't!         Ah; he's
  beginning to come to。〃
  A   faint   tinge   of   colour   had   begun   to   steal   back   into   Bellingham's
  ghastly   cheeks;   and   his   eyelids   shivered   like   a   sail   after   a   calm。 He
  clasped   and   unclasped   his   hands;   drew   a   long;   thin   breath   between   his
  teeth;   and   suddenly   jerking   up   his   head;   threw   a   glance   of   recognition
  around him。       As his eyes fell upon the mummy; he sprang off the sofa;
  seized the roll of papyrus; thrust it into a drawer; turned the key; and then
  staggered back on to the sofa。
  〃What's up?〃 he asked。         〃What do you chaps want?〃
  〃You've     been    shrieking    out   and   making     no   end   of  a  fuss;〃   said
  Monkhouse Lee。          〃If our neighbour here from above hadn't come down;
  I'm sure I don't know what I should have done with you。〃
  〃Ah;   it's Abercrombie   Smith;〃   said   Bellingham;   glancing   up   at   him。
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  〃How very good of you to come in!               What a fool I am!         Oh; my God;
  what a fool I am!〃
  He   sunk   his   head   on   to   his   hands;   and   burst   into   peal   after   peal   of
  hysterical laughter。
  〃Look     here!   Drop     it!〃  cried  Smith;    shaking   him    roughly    by  the
  shoulder。
  〃Your nerves are all in a jangle。         You must drop these little midnight
  games with mummies; or you'll be going off your chump。                    You're all on
  wires now。〃
  〃I wonder;〃 said Bellingham; 〃whether you would be as cool as I am if
  you had seen〃
  〃What then?〃
  〃Oh; nothing。      I meant that I wonder if you could sit up at night with
  a mummy without trying your nerves。              I have no doubt that you are quite
  right。   I dare say that I have been taking it out of myself too much lately。
  But   I   am   all   right   now。 Please   don't   go;   though。  Just   wait   for   a   few
  minutes until I am quite myself。〃
  〃The room is very close;〃   remarked Lee; throwing open the   window
  and letting in the cool night air。
  〃It's balsamic resin;〃 said Bellingham。          He lifted up one of the dried
  palmate leaves from the table and frizzled it over the chimney of the lamp。
  It   broke   away   into   heavy   smoke   wreaths;   and   a   pungent;   biting   odour
  filled   the   chamber。    〃It's   the   sacred   plantthe   plant   of   the   priests;〃   he
  remarked。      〃Do you know anything of Eastern languages; Smith?〃
  〃Nothing at all。     Not a word。〃
  The answer seemed to lift a weight from the Egyptologist's mind。
  〃By…the…way;〃 he continued; 〃how long was it from the time that you
  ran down; until I came to my senses?〃
  〃Not long。     Some four or five minutes。〃
  〃I thought it could not be very long;〃 said he; drawing a long breath。
  〃But what a strange thing unconsciousness is!              There is no measurement
  to it。   I could not tell from my own sensations if it were seconds or weeks。
  Now that gentleman on the table was packed up in the days of the eleventh
  dynasty; some forty centuries ago; and yet if he could find his tongue he
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  would tell us that this lapse of time has been but a closing of the eyes and
  a reopening of them。         He is a singularly fine mummy; Smith。〃
  Smith stepped over to the table and looked down with a professional
  eye at the black and twisted form in front of him。                 The features; though
  horribly discoloured; were perfect; and two little nut…like eyes still lurked
  in the depths of the black; hollow sockets。             The blotched skin was drawn
  tightly   from   bone   to   bone;   and   a   tangled   wrap   of   black   coarse   hair   fell
  over the ears。       Two thin teeth; like those of a rat; overlay the shrivelled
  lower   lip。    In   its   crouching   position;   with   bent   joints   and   craned   head;
  there    was   a  suggestion     of  energy   about     the  horrid   thing   which    made
  Smith's   gorge  rise。     The gaunt   ribs;  with   their  parchment…like  covering;
  were   exposed;   and   the   sunken;   leaden…hued   abdomen;   with   the   long   slit
  where   the   embalmer   had   left   his   mark;   but   the   lower   limbs   were   wrapt
  round with coarse yellow bandages。              A number of little clove…like pieces
  of myrrh and of cassia were sprinkled over the body; and lay scattered on
  the inside of the case。
  〃I don't know his name;〃 said Bellingham; passing his hand over the
  shrivelled head。       〃You see the outer sarcophagus with the inscriptions is
  missing。      Lot 249 is all the title he has now。           You see it printed on his
  case。    That was his number in the auction at which I picked him up。〃
  〃He    has   been    a  very   pretty   sort  of  fellow    in  his  day;〃   remarked
  Abercrombie Smith。
  〃He   has   been   a   giant。  His   mummy   is   six   feet   seven   in   length;   and
  that would be a giant over there; for they were never a very robust race。
  Feel   these    great   knotted   bones;    too。   He    would    be   a  nasty   fellow   to
  tackle。〃
  〃Perhaps      these   very    hands    helped     to  build    the  stones    into   the
  pyramids;〃 suggested Monkhouse  Lee; looking   down with   disgust in   his
  eyes at