In the Library eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 14 pages of information about In the Library.

In the Library eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 14 pages of information about In the Library.

Or suppose he went to the sea?  Who would look for him in flannels, bathing and boating with ordinary happy mortals?  He sat and pondered.  One might mean life, and the other death.  Which?

His face burned as he thought of the responsibility of the choice.  So many people went to the sea at that time of year that he would surely pass unnoticed.  But at the sea one might meet acquaintances.  He got up and nervously paced the room again.  It was not so simple, now that it meant so much, as he had thought.

The sharp little clock on the mantel-piece rang out “one,” followed immediately by the deeper note of that in the library.  He thought of the clock, it seemed the only live thing in that room, and shuddered.  He wondered whether the thing lying by the far side of the table heard it.  He wondered——­

He started and held his breath with fear.  Somewhere down stairs a board creaked loudly, then another.  He went to the door, and opening it a little way, but without looking out, listened.  The house was so still that he could hear the ticking of the old clock in the kitchen below.  He opened the door a little wider and peeped out.  As he did so there was a sudden sharp outcry on the stairs, and he drew back into the room and stood trembling before he had quite realized that the noise had been made by the cat.  The cry was unmistakable; but what had disturbed it?

There was silence again, and he drew near the door once more.  He became certain that something was moving stealthily on the stairs.  He heard the boards creak again, and once the rails of the balustrade rattled.  The silence and suspense were frightful.  Suppose that the something which had been Fletcher waited for him in the darkness outside?

He fought his fears down, and opening the door, determined to see what was beyond.  The light from his room streamed out on to the landing, and he peered about fearfully.  Was it fancy, or did the door of Fletcher’s room opposite close as he looked?  Was it fancy, or did the handle of the door really turn?

In perfect silence, and watching the door as he moved, to see that nothing came out and followed him, he proceeded slowly down the dark stairs.  Then his jaw fell, and he turned sick and faint again.  The library door, which he distinctly remembered closing, and which, moreover, he had seen was closed when he went up stairs to his room, now stood open some four or five inches.  He fancied that there was a rustling inside, but his brain refused to be certain.  Then plainly and unmistakably he heard a chair pushed against the wall.

He crept to the door, hoping to pass it before the thing inside became aware of his presence.  Something crept stealthily about the room.  With a sudden impulse he caught the handle of the door, and, closing it violently, turned the key in the lock, and ran madly down the stairs.

A fearful cry sounded from the room, and a heavy hand beat upon the panels of the door.  The house rang with the blows, but above them sounded the loud hoarse cries of human fear.  Burleigh, half-way down to the hall, stopped with his hand on the balustrade and listened.  The beating ceased, and a man’s voice cried out loudly for God’s sake to let him out.

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In the Library from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.