Poison Island eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about Poison Island.

Poison Island eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about Poison Island.

It was borne in upon me later that during this interval of anarchy in the Stimcoe establishment—­it lasted two days, and may have lasted longer for aught I know—­I wasted little wonder on the continued absence of Captain Branscome.  I was indeed kept anxious by my own fears, which did not decrease as the hours dragged by.  From the window of Mr. Stimcoe’s sickroom I watched the St. Mawes packet plying to and fro.  I had a mind to steal down to the Market Strand and interrogate her skipper.  I had a mind—­and laid more than one plan for it—­to follow up my first impulse of bolting for home, to discover if Captain Coffin had arrived there.  But Mrs. Stimcoe, misinterpreting my eagerness to be employed, had by this time enlisted me into full service in the sick-room.  After the first hint of surprised gratitude, she betrayed no feeling at all, but bound me severely to my task.  We took the watching turn and turn about, in spells of three hours’ duration.  I was held committed, and could not desert without a brand on my conscience.  The disgusting feature of this is that I was almost glad of it, at the same time longing to run, and feeling that this, in a way, exonerated me.

At about seven o’clock on the evening of the second day, while I sat by Mr. Stimcoe’s bedside, there came a knock at the front door, and, looking out of the window—­for Mrs. Stimcoe had gone to bully another sedative out of the doctor, and there was no one in the house to admit a visitor—­I saw Captain Branscome below me on the doorstep.

“Hallo!” said I, as cheerfully as I might, for Mr. Stimcoe was awake and listening.

“Is—­is that Harry Brooks?” asked Captain Branscome, stepping back and feeling for his gold-rimmed glasses.  But by some chance he was not wearing them.  After fumbling for a moment, he gazed up towards the window, blinking.  Folk who habitually wear glasses look unnatural without them.  Captain Branscome’s face looked unnatural somehow.  It was pale, and for the moment it seemed to me to be almost a face of fright; but a moment later I set down its pallor to weariness.

“Mrs. Stimcoe has gone off to the doctor,” said I, “and Mr. Stimcoe is sick, and I am up here nursing him.  There is no one to open, but you can give me a message.”

“I just came up to make sure you were all right.”

“If you mean Stim—­Mr. Stimcoe, he’s better, though the doctor says he won’t be able to leave his bed for days.  How did you come to hear about it?”

“I’ve heard nothing about Mr. Stimcoe,” answered Captain Branscome, after a hesitating pause.  “I’ve been away—­on a holiday.  Nothing wrong with you at all?” he asked.

I could not understand Captain Branscome.  Why on earth should he be troubling himself about my state of health?

“Nothing happened to upset you?” he asked.

I looked down at him sharply.  As a matter of fact, and as the reader knows, a great deal had happened to upset me, but that any hint of it should have reached Captain Branscome was in the highest degree unlikely, and in any case I could not discuss it with him from an upstairs window and in my patient’s hearing.  So I contented myself with asking him where he had spent his holiday.

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Poison Island from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.