He began the abominable4 campaign the next evening after dinner. He had been absent all day, on the vague plea of business. In reality he had walked through London and wandered about the docks, Ratcliffe Highway, the Isle5 of Dogs. He had returned physically6 and spiritually worn out. Her solicitude7 smote8 him. It was nothing. A little worry which the sight of her would dispel9. They dined and went into the drawing-room. She sat on the arm of his chair.
“And now the worry, poor boy. Anything I can do?”
He stared into the fire. “It’s our trip.”
“Why, what has gone wrong?”
“But, darling!” She gripped his shoulder. “What do you mean?”
“I’m afraid it’s a beautiful dream, my dear. We must call it off.”
She uttered a breathless “Why?”
“It’s far beyond our means.”
She broke into her gay laugh and hugged him and called him a silly fellow. Hadn’t they settled all that side of it long ago? Her fingers were itching11 to draw cheques. She had scarcely put pen to pink paper since their marriage. Hadn’t he insisted on supporting her?
“And I’ll go on insisting,” said he. “I’m not the man to live on my wife’s money. No, no——” with uplifted hand he checked her generous outburst. “I know what you’re going to say, sweetheart, but it can’t be done. I was willing for you to advance a certain amount. But I would have paid it back—well, I would have accepted it if it gave you pleasure. Anyhow, things are different now. Suddenly different.”
He writhed12 under the half-truths, the half-sincerities he was speaking. In marrying her his conscience absolved13 him of fortune seeking. It had been the pride of his Northumbrian blood to maintain his wife as she should be maintained, out of his earnings—this draft on her fortune for the jaunt14 he had made up a Tyneside mind to repay. Given the passport, the whole thing was as simple as signing a cheque. But no passports to be given, he had to lie. How else, in God’s name, to explain?
“My dear,” said he, in answer to her natural question, “there’s one thing about myself I’ve not told you. It has seemed quite unimportant. In fact, I had practically forgotten it. But this is the story. During my last flight through Russia a friend, one of the old Russian nobility, gave me shelter. He was in hiding, dressed as a peasant. His wife and children had escaped the Revolution and were, he was assured, in England. He entrusted16 me with a thousand pounds in English bank-notes which he had hidden in a scapulary hanging round his neck, and which I was to give to his family on my arrival. I followed his example and hung the few paper roubles I had left, together with his money, round my neck. As you know, I was torpedoed17. I was hauled out of the water in shirt and drawers, and landed penniless. The string of the scapulary had broken, and all the money was at the bottom of the North Sea. I went to every conceivable Russian agency in London to get information about the Vronsky family. There was no trace of them. I came to the conclusion that they had never landed in England, and to-day I found I was right. They hadn’t. They had disappeared off the face of the earth.”
“This morning. I had a letter from Vronsky forwarded by the publishers.”
“Why didn’t you tell me?” cried Olivia. “I had an idea you weren’t quite yourself.”
“I didn’t want to worry you without due reason,” he explained, “and I was upset. It was like a message from the dead. For, not having heard of him all this time, I concluded he had perished, like so many others, at the hands of the Bolsheviks. Anyhow, there he was alive in a little hotel in Bloomsbury. Of course, I had to go and rout19 him out.”
“Naturally,” said Olivia.
“Well, I found him. He had managed to escape, with the usual difficulties, and was now about to search Europe for his family.”
“Yes. It’s awful, isn’t it?” replied Triona in a voice of deep feeling—already half beginning himself to believe in the genuineness of his story—“I spent a heart-rending day with him. He had expected to find his family in England.”
“But you wrote to him——”
“Of course. But how many letters to Russia reach their destination? Their letters, too, have miscarried or been seized. He hadn’t had news of them since they left Petrograd.”
Carried away by the tragedy of this Wandering Jew hunt for a lost family, Olivia forgot the reason for its recital21. She questioned, Triona responded, his picturesque22 invention in excited working. He etched in details. Vronsky’s declension from the ruddy, plethoric23 gentleman, with good-humoured Tartar face, to the gaunt, hollow-eyed grey-beard, with skinny fingers on which the nails grew long. The gentle charm of the lost Madame Vronsky and the beauty of her two young daughters, Vera and Sonia. The faithful moujik who had accompanied them on their way and reported that they had sailed on the Olger Danske from Copenhagen for London. He related their visit to Lloyds, where they had learned that no such ship was known. Certainly at the time of the supposed voyage it had put into no British port. Vronsky was half mad. No wonder.
“Why did you leave him? Why didn’t you bring him here?” asked Olivia, her eyes all pity and her lips parted.
“I asked him. He wouldn’t come. He must begin his search at once—take ship for Denmark. . . . Meanwhile, dearest,” he said after a pause, “being practically without resources, he referred to his thousand pounds. That’s where you and I come in. He entrusted me with the money and the accident of losing it could not relieve me of the responsibility—could it?”
He glanced a challenge. Her uprightness waved it aside.
“Good heavens, no!”
“Well, I took him to my bank and gave him the thousand pounds in Bank of England notes. So, my dear, we’re all that to the bad on our balance sheet. We’re nearly broke—and we’ll have to put off our trip round the world to more prosperous times.”
Although, womanlike, she tried at first to kick against the pricks24, parading the foolish fortune lying idle at the bank, that was the end of the romantic project. Her common sense asserted itself. A thousand pounds, for folks in their position, was a vast sum of money. She resigned herself with laughing grace to the inevitable25, and poured on her husband all the consolation26 for disappointment that her heart could devise. Their pleasant life went on. Deeply interested in Vronsky, she questioned him from time to time. Had he no news of the tragic27 wanderer? At last, in February, he succumbed28 to the temptation to finish for ever with these Frankenstein monsters. He came home one afternoon, and after kissing her said with a gay air:
“I found a letter at Decies Street”—the house of his publishers—“from whom do you think? From Vronsky. Just a few lines. He tracked his family to Palermo and they’re all as happy as can be. How he did it he doesn’t say, which is disconcerting, for one would like to know the ins and outs of his journeyings. But there’s the fact, and now we can wipe Vronsky off our slate29.”
The freshness of subject, outlook, and treatment appealed to the vastly superior youth, the disappointed old, and the scholarly and conscientious31 few, who write literary criticism. The great firm of publishers smiled urbanely32. Repeat orders on a gratifying scale poured in every day. Triona took Olivia to Decies Street to hear from publishing lips the splendid story. They went home in a taxi-cab, their arms around each other, intoxicated33 with the pride of success and the certainty of their love. And the next day Olivia said:
“If we can’t go round the world, at any rate let us have a holiday. Let us go to Paris. We can afford it.”
And Triona, who for months had foreseen such a reasonable proposal, replied:
“I wish we could. I’ve been dreaming of it for a long time. In fact—I didn’t tell you—but I went to the Foreign Office a fortnight ago.”
She wrinkled her brow.
“What’s the Foreign Office got to do with it?”
“They happen to regard me as an exceptional man, my dearest,” said he. “I’m still in the Secret Service. I tried last summer to get out of it—but they overpersuaded me, promising34 not to worry me unduly35. One can’t refuse to serve one’s country at a pinch, can one?”
“No. But why didn’t you tell me?”
She felt hurt at being left out in the cold. She also had a sudden fear of the elusiveness36 of this husband of hers, hero of so many strange adventures and interests that years would not suffice for their complete revelation. She remembered the dug-up Vronsky romance, in itself one that might supply the ordinary human being with picturesque talk for a lifetime. And now she resented this continued association with the Foreign Office which he thought he had severed37 on his return from Finland.
“I never imagined they would want me again, after what I told them. But it seems they do. You know the state of things in Russia. Well—they may send me or they may not. At any rate, for the next few months I am not to leave the country.”
“I call that idiotic,” cried Olivia indignantly. “They could get at you in Paris just as easily as they could in London.”
“They’ve got the whip hand, confound them,” replied Triona. “They grant or refuse passports.”
“The Foreign Office is a beast!” said Olivia. “I’d like to tell them what I think of them.”
“Do,” said he with a laugh, “but don’t tell anybody else.”
She believed him. He breathed again. The difficulty was over for the present. Meanwhile he called himself a fool for not having given her this simple explanation months ago. Why had he racked his conscience with the outrageous38 fiction of the Vronskys?
About this time, too, in her innocence39, she raised the question of his technical nationality. It was absurd for him to continue to be a Russian subject. A son of English parents, surely he could easily be naturalized. He groaned inwardly at this fresh complication, and cursed the name of Triona. He put her off with vague intentions. One of these days . . . there was no great hurry. She persisted.
“I must have some sort of papers establishing my identity,” he explained. “My word won’t do. We must wait till there’s a settled government in Russia to which I can apply. I know it’s an unsatisfactory position for both; but it can’t be helped.” He smiled wearily. “You mustn’t reproach me.”
“Reproach you—my dearest——?”
The idea shocked her. She only had grown impatient of the intangible Russian influences that checked his freedom of action. Sometimes she dreaded them, not knowing how deep or how sinister41 they might be. Secret agents were sometimes mysteriously assassinated42. He laughed at her fears. But what else, she asked herself, could he do but laugh? She was not reassured43.
The naturalization question settled for an indefinite time, he felt once more in clear water. Easter came and went.
“If I don’t move about a little, I shall die,” he said.
“Let us move about a lot,” said Olivia. “Let us hire a car and race about Great Britain.”
He waxed instantly enthusiastic. She was splendid. Always the audacious one. A car—a little high-powered two-seater. Just they two together. Free of the high road! If they could find no lodgings44 at inns they could sleep beneath the hedges. They would drive anywhere, losing their way, hitting on towns with delicious unexpectancy. The maddest motor tour that was ever unplanned.
In the excitement of the new idea, the disappointment over the prohibited foreign travel vanished from their hearts. Once more they contemplated45 their vagabondage, with the single-mindedness of children.
“We’ll start to-morrow,” he declared.
“To-morrow evening is the Rowingtons’ dinner-party,” Olivia reminded him.
He confounded Rowington and his dinner-party. Why not send a telegram saying he was down with smallpox46? He hated literary dinner-parties. Why should he make an ass1 of himself in a lion’s skin—just to gratify the vanity of a publisher? Olivia administered the required corrective.
“Isn’t it rather a case of the lion putting on an ass’s skin, my dear? Of course we must go.”
He laughed. “I suppose we must. Anyway, we’ll start the day after. I’ll see about the car in the morning.”
He went out immediately after breakfast, and in a couple of hours returned radiant. He was in luck, having found the high-powered two-seater of his dreams. He overwhelmed her with enthusiastic technicalities.
“You beloved infant,” said Olivia.
But before they could set out in this chariot of force and speed, something happened. It happened at the dinner-party given by Rowington, the active partner in the great publishing house, in honour of their twice-proved successful author.
The Rowingtons lived in a mansion47 at the southern end of Portland Place. It had belonged to his father and grandfather before him and the house was filled with inherited and acquired treasures. On entering, Triona had the same sense of luxurious48 comfort as on that far-off day of the first interview in Decies Street, when his advancing foot stepped so softly on the thick Turkey carpet. A manservant relieved him of his coat and hat, a maid took Olivia for an instant into a side-room whence she reappeared bare-necked, bare-armed, garbed49, as her husband whispered, in cobweb swept from Heaven’s rafters. A manservant at the top of the stairs announced them. Mrs. Rowington, thin, angular, pince-nez’d, and Rowington, middle-aged50, regarding the world benevolently51 through gold spectacles, received them and made the necessary introduction to those already present. There was a judge of the High Court, a well-known novelist, a beautiful and gracious woman whom Olivia, with a little catch of the heart, recognized as the Lady Aintree who had addressed a passing word of apology to her in the outgoing theatre crush in the first week of her emancipation53. She envied Alexis who stood in talk with her. She herself was trying to correlate the young and modern bishop54, in plum-coloured evening dress, with the billow of lawn semi-humanized by a gaunt staring head and a pair of waxen hands which had gone through the dimly comprehended ritual of her confirmation55.
He explained his presence in this brilliant assembly on the ground that once he had written an obscure book of travels in Asia Minor56. St. Paul’s steps retraced57. He had fought with beasts at Ephesus—but not of the kind to which the apostle was presumed to refer; disgusting little beasts! He also swore “By Jove!” which she was sure her confirming bishop would never have done.
A while later, as the room was filling up, she found herself talking to a Colonel Onslow, an authority on Kurdistan, said her hostess, who was anxious to meet her husband. She glanced around, her instinctive58 habit, to place Alexis. He had been torn from Lady Aintree and was standing59 just behind her by the chimney-piece in conversation with a couple of men. His eyes caught the message of love in hers and telegraphed back again.
He no longer confounded Rowington. The central figure of this distinguished60 gathering61, he glowed with the divine fire of success. He was talking to two elderly men on Russian folk literature. On that he was an authority. He knew the inner poignancy62 of every song, the bitter humour of every tale. Speaking sober truth about Russia he forgot that he had ever lied.
Suddenly into the little open space about the hearth63 emerged from the throng64, a brisk, wiry man with a keen, clean-shaven, weather-beaten face, who, on catching65 sight of Triona, paused for a startled second and then darted66 up to him with outstretched hand; and Triona, taken off his guard, made an eager step to meet him.
If, for two days, you have faced death alone with a man who has given every proof of indomitable courage and cheerfulness, your heart has an abominable way of leaping when suddenly, years afterwards, you are brought with him face to face.
“You are Briggs! I knew I was right. Fancy running up against you here!”
Triona’s cheeks burned hot. The buried name seemed to be shrieked67 to the listening universe. At any rate, Olivia heard; and instinctively68 she drifted from the side of Colonel Onslow towards Alexis.
“It’s a far cry from Russia,” he said.
“Yes, and a far cry from the lower deck of an armoured car,” laughed the other. “Well, I am glad to see you. God knows what has happened to the rest of us. I’ve been one of the lucky ones. Got a ship soon afterwards. Retired69 now. Farming. Living on three pigs and a bee. And you”—he clapped him on the shoulder—“you look flourishing. I used to have an idea there was something behind you.”
It was then that Triona became conscious of Olivia at his elbow. He put on a bold face and laughed in his careless way.
“I have my wife behind me. My dear—this is Captain Wedderburn. We met in Russia.”
“We did more than meet, by George!” cried Wedderburn breezily. “We were months together in the Column——”
“What Column?” asked Olivia, puzzled.
“The Armoured Car Column. I forget what the humour of war rated him as. Able Seaman70, I think. I was Lieutenant71 then. It was a picnic, I assure you. And there were the days—he and I alone together—I’ll never forget ’em—we got cut off—but he has told you all about it.”
“No.”
“My dear Mrs. Briggs——”
“Pardon me,” Alexis interrupted hastily. “But that’s not my name. It was literally72 a nom de guerre. My real name is Triona.”
“Eh?” Wedderburn put his hands on his narrow hips73 and stared at him. “The famous chap I was asked to meet to-night? Mrs. Triona, your husband is a wonderful fellow. The months that were the most exciting time in my life, anyhow, he hasn’t thought it worth while mentioning in his book. And yet”—his keen eyes swept like searchlights over the other’s face—“you were knocked out. I remember the day. And you must have been a long time in hospital. How the deuce did you manage to work everything in?”
“I was only scratched,” said Triona. “A week or two afterwards I was back in the Russian service.”
“I see,” said Wedderburn with unexpected frostiness.
He turned to greet a woman of his acquaintance standing near, and husband and wife were left for a few seconds alone.
“You never told me about serving with the British forces.”
“It was just an interlude,” said he.
The hostess came up and man?uvred them apart. Dinner was announced. The company swept downstairs. Olivia sat between her host and Colonel Onslow, Lady Aintree opposite, and next her, Captain Wedderburn. For the first time in her married life Olivia suffered vague disquiet74 as to her husband’s antecedents. The rugged-faced, bright-eyed man on the other side of the table seemed to hold the key to a phase of his life which she had never heard. She wished that he were seated elsewhere, out of sight. It was with a conscious effort that she brought herself to listen intelligently to her host who was describing his first meeting with the now famous Alexis Triona, then valiantly75 driving hireling motor-cars under the sobriquet76 of John Briggs. She felt a touch of ice at her heart. For the second time that night she had heard the unfamiliar77 name. Alexis had told her, it is true, of his early struggles in London while writing Through Blood and Snow, but of John Briggs he had breathed no word.
The talk drifted into other channels until she turned to her neighbour, Colonel Onslow, who after a while said pleasantly:
“I’m looking for an opportunity of a chat with your husband, Mrs. Triona. From his book, he seems to have covered a great deal of my ground—and it must have been about the same time. It’s strange I never came across him.”
“I don’t think so,” she replied. “His Secret Service work rather depended on his avoidance of other European agents.”
Colonel Onslow yielded laughingly to the argument. Of course, that was quite understandable. Every man had his own methods. No game in the world had more elastic79 rules.
“On the other hand, I knew a Russian on exactly the same lay as your husband, a fellow Krilov, a fine chap—I ran into him several times—who was rather keen on taking me into his confidence. And one or two of the things he told me were so identical with your husband’s experiences, that it seems they must have hunted in couples.”
“Oh, no, he was on his own, I assure you,” said Olivia.
“Anyhow, I’m keen to meet him,” said Onslow, unaware80 of the growing fear behind the girl’s dark eyes. “I only came home a month ago. Somebody gave me the book. When I read it I went to my friend Rowington and asked about Alexis Triona. That’s how I’m here.”
Presently, noticing her air of constraint81, he said apologetically, “You must be fed up with all this ancient history. A wanderer like myself is apt to forget that the world is supposed to be at peace and is even rather bored with making good the damage of war.”
Olivia answered as well as she could, and for the rest of the interminable meal strove to exhibit her usual gay interest in the talk around.
But her heart was heavy with she knew not what forebodings. She could not see Alexis, who was seated on the same side and at the other end of the long table. She felt as though the benevolent52 gold-spectacled man had deliberately82 convened83 an assembly of Alexis’s enemies. It was a blessed relief when the ladies rose and left the men; but in the drawing-room, although she was talking to Lady Aintree, most winningly gracious of women, her glance continuously sought the door by which the men would enter. And when they came in his glance, for the first time in their married life, did not seek or meet hers. She scanned his face anxiously. It was pale and drawn84, she thought, and into his eyes had crept the furtive85 look of a year ago which happiness, she thought, had dispelled86 for ever. He did not come near her; nor did Wedderburn and Onslow; nor did the two latter talk to him; he was swallowed up in a little group at the further end of the room. Meanwhile, the most up-to-date thing in bishops87 sank smilingly into a chair by her side, and ridden by some ironical88 Imp15 of the Inapposite described to her a visit, in the years past, to the Castle of Schw?bbe in Hanover, where dwelt the Baron89 von Munchausen, the lineal descendant of the famous liar78. A mythical90 personage? Not a bit. Munchausen was one of Frederick the Great’s generals. He had seen his full-length portrait in the Rittersaal of the old Schloss. Thence he began to discourse91 on the great liars92 of travel. Herodotus, who was coming more and more into his own as a faithful historian; John Mandeville; Fernando Mendez Pinto, a name now forgotten, but for a couple of centuries a byword of mendacity; Gemelli Carreri, the bed-ridden Neapolitan author of a Voyage Round the World; the Rabbi Benjamin of Tudela who claimed to have ridden a hippogriff to the tomb of Ezekiel; George Psalmanazar, who captivated all London (including so level-headed a man as Samuel Johnson) with his history of the Island of Formosa and his grammar of the Formosan language; de Rougemont, the turtle-riding impostor of recent years; and the later unfortunate gentleman whose claim to have discovered the North Pole was so shockingly discredited93. The bishop seemed to have made a hobby of these perverters of truth and to look on them (as in theological duty bound), wriggling94 through the lake of fire and brimstone, in the light of Izaak Walton’s counsel concerning the worms threaded on the hook, as if he loved them. Then there were the notorious Blank and Dash and Dot, still living. Types, said he, of the defective95 criminal mind, by mere96 chance skirting round the commonly recognized area of crime.
“My dear Bishop, I want to introduce you——”
He rose, made a courtly bow to Olivia.
“I’ll read your lordship’s next book of travel with great interest,” she said.
As the home-bound taxi drove off:
“Thank goodness that’s over,” said Triona.
She echoed with a sigh: “Yes, thank goodness.”
“All the bores of the earth.”
“Did you have a talk with Colonel Onslow?” she asked.
“The biggest of the lot. I’m sick to death of the Caucasus,” he added with unusual irritation98. “I wish I had never been near it. I hate these specially99 selected dinner parties of people you don’t want to meet and will never meet again.” He took her hand, which was limp and unresponsive. “Did you have a rotten time, too?”
“I wish we hadn’t gone,” she replied, withdrawing her hand under the pretext100 of pulling her cloak closer round her shoulders.
He rolled and lit a cigarette and smoked gloomily. At last he said with some impatience101:
“Of course, I didn’t mention the little episode with the British Force. It would have been out of the picture. Besides, nothing very much happened. It was a stupid thing to do—I had no right. That’s why I took an assumed name—John Briggs.”
“And you used it when you landed in England. Mr. Rowington told me.”
“Of course, dear. Alexis Triona, chauffeur102, would have been absurd, wouldn’t it?” He turned to her with the old eagerness.
This time it was she who thrust out a caressing103 hand, suddenly feeling a guilty horror of the doubts that had beset104 her.
“I wish you would tell me everything about yourself—the details you think so unimportant. Then I wouldn’t be so taken aback as I was this evening, when Captain Wedderburn called me Mrs. Briggs.”
“I’ll write you a supplementary105 volume,” said he, “and it shall be entitled Through Love and Sunshine.”
The ring in his voice consoled her. He drew her close to him and they spoke106 little till they reached their house. There, in the dining-room, he poured out a stiff whisky-and-soda107 and drank it off at a gulp108. She uttered a startled, “My dear!” at the unusual breach109 of abstemious110 habit.
“I’m dog-tired,” said he. “And I’ve things to do before I go to bed. Don’t wait for me.”
“What things?”
“To-night has given me an idea for a story. I must get it, dear, and put it down; otherwise—you know—I shan’t sleep.”
She protested. His brain would be fresher in the morning. Such untimely artistic111 accouchment had, indeed, happened several times before, and, unless given its natural chances had occasioned a night of unrest; but never before had there been this haggardness in his face and eyes. Again the doubts assailed112 her. Something that evening had occurred to throw him off his balance.
“If anything’s worrying you, dear, do tell me,” she urged, her clasp on the lapels of his dress-coat and her eyes searching his.
He took her wrists, kissed her, and laughed, as she thought, uneasily. Worries? He hadn’t an anxiety in the world. But this idea—it was the germ of something big. He must tackle it then and there. Led, his arm around her body, to the door, she allowed herself to be convinced.
“Don’t be too long.”
“And you go to sleep. You must be tired.”
Left alone, Triona poured himself out another whisky and soda. In one evening he had suffered two shocks, for neither of which his easy nature had prepared him. The Wedderburn incident he could explain away. But from the blind alley113 into which he was pinned by Colonel Onslow, there had been but a horrible wriggling escape. It was a matter, too, more spiritual even than material. He felt as though he had crawled through a sewer114.
He went to his desk by the window, and from a drawer took out his despatch115 case, which he unlocked with the key that never left his person; and from it he drew the little black book. There, half-erased, in pencil on the reverse of the cover, was the word, in Russian characters, “Krilov.” Hitherto he had regarded this as some unimportant memorandum116 of name or place. It had never occurred to him that it was the name of the owner of the diary. But now, it stared at him accusingly as the signature of the dead man whose soul, as it were, he had robbed.
Krilov. There was no doubt about it. Onslow had known him, that fine-featured grizzled-haired dead man, in his vehement117 life. He had heard from his lips the wild adventures which he had set down with such official phlegm in the little black book, and which he, Alexis Triona, had credited to himself, and had invested with the wealth of his poet’s imagination. Of course, he had lied, on his basis of truth, to Colonel Onslow, disclaimed118 all knowledge of Krilov. It had been the essence of the old Russian régime that secret agents should have no acquaintance one with another. It was a common thing for two men, unsuspectingly, to be employed on an identical mission. The old Imperial service depended on this system of checks. If the missions were identical, the various incidents were bound to be similar. He had defended his position with every sophistical argument his alert brain could devise. He drew, as red herrings across the track, the names of obscure chieftains known to Colonel Onslow, whom he had not mentioned in his book; described them—one long-nosed, foxy, pitted with smallpox; another obese119 and oily; to Colonel Onslow’s mind irrefutable evidence of his acquaintance with the country. But as to narrated120 incidents he had seen puzzled incredulity behind the Colonel’s eyes and had felt his semi-accusing coldness of manner when their conversation came to an end.
He replenished121 a dying fire and sat down in an arm-chair, the despatch case by his side, the book in his hands—the little shabby black book that had been his Bible, his mascot122, the fount of all his fortunes. His fingers shook with fear as he turned over the familiar pages. The dead man had come to life, and terrifyingly claimed his own. The room was very still. The creak of a piece of furniture caused him to swing round with a start, as though apprehensive123 of Krilov’s ghostly presence. He must burn the book, the material evidence of his fraud. But the fire was sulky. He must wait for the blaze, so that there should be no doubt of the book’s destruction. Meanwhile his nerves were playing him insane tricks. His ordeal124 had shaken him. He sought the steadying effect of another whisky.
He leaned back in his chair. It had been an accursed evening. Once more he had to lie to Olivia, and this time she appeared to be struggling with uncertainty125. There had been an unprecedented126 aloofness127 in her attitude. Yes. He spoke the words aloud, “an unprecedented aloofness,” at first with strange unsuccess and then with solemn deliberation; and his voice sounded strange to his ears. If she suspected—but, no, she could not suspect. His head grew heavy, his thoughts confused. The fire was taking a devil of a time to burn up. Still, he was beginning to see his way clearer. The whisky was a wonderful help to accurate thinking. What an ass he had been not to recognize the fact before! Besides—the roof of his mouth was parched128 with thirst.
The diabolical129 notebook had to be destroyed. But first there must be flame in the grate. That little red glow would do the trick. It was only a question of patience.
“Just a matter of patience, old man,” said he.
A couple of hours afterwards, Olivia, in nightdress and wrapper, entered the room. The fire had gone out under its too heavy load of coal. Before it sprawled130 Alexis, asleep. On the small table beside him stood the whisky decanter, whose depleted131 contents caused Olivia to start with a gasp132 of dismay. His drunken sleep became obvious. She made an instinctive vain effort to arouse him. But the first pang133 of horror was lost in agonized134 search for the reason of this amazing debauch135. He, the most temperate136 of men, by choice practically a drinker of water, to have done this! Could the reason lie in the events of the evening which had kept her staringly awake? She cowered137 under the new storm of doubt.
On the floor lay open a little dirty-paged book which must have fallen from his hand. She picked it up, glanced through it, could make nothing of it, for it was all in tiny Russian script. The horrible relation between this derelict book and the almost emptied whisky decanter occurred to her oversensitive brain. Then came suddenly the memory of a stupid argument of months ago at The Point and his justification138 of the plagiarist139. Further, his putting of a hypothetical case—the finding on the body of a dead man a notebook with leaves of the thinnest paper. . . . She held in her hand such a notebook. It dropped from her nerveless fingers. Suddenly she sprang with a low cry to her husband and shook him by the shoulders.
“Alexis. Alexis. Wake up. For God’s sake.”
“Alexis, wake up and tell me what I think isn’t true.”
At last she realized that he would lie there until the effect of the whisky had worn off. Mechanically, she put a cushion behind his head and adjusted his limbs to a position of comfort. Mechanically, too, she put the stopper in the decanter and replaced the siphon on the silver tray, and with her scrap141 of a handkerchief tried to remove the ring which the wet siphon had made on the table. Then she looked hopelessly round the otherwise undisturbed and beloved room. What could be done until Alexis should awaken142?
She would go to bed. Perhaps she might sleep. She felt as though she had been beaten from head to foot.
The despatch box lay open on the hearthrug, the key in the lock. Its secrecy143 had hitherto been a jest with her. She had sworn it contained locks of hair of Bluebeard victims. He had given out a legend of Secret Service documents of vast importance. Now it was obvious that, at any rate, it was the repository of the little black book.
She hesitated on the threshold. Her instinct of order forbade her to leave the despatch box open and the book trailing about the floor. She would lock the book up in it and put the key in one of Alexis’s pockets. But when, having picked up the small leather box and carried it to the desk, she prepared to do this, a name written on a common piece of paper half in print—an official form—stared brutally144 at her. And there were others underneath145. And reading them she learned the complete official history of John Briggs, Able Seaman, from the time of his joining the Armoured Column in Russia to his discharge, after his mine-sweeper had been torpedoed in the North Sea.
Olivia, her dark hair falling about the shoulders of her heliotrope146 wrap, sat in her husband’s writing-chair, staring at him with tragic eyes as he slept, his brown hair carelessly sweeping147 his pale brow, and kept a ghastly vigil.
点击收听单词发音
1 ass | |
n.驴;傻瓜,蠢笨的人 | |
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2 quagmire | |
n.沼地 | |
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3 dreaded | |
adj.令人畏惧的;害怕的v.害怕,恐惧,担心( dread的过去式和过去分词) | |
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4 abominable | |
adj.可厌的,令人憎恶的 | |
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5 isle | |
n.小岛,岛 | |
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6 physically | |
adj.物质上,体格上,身体上,按自然规律 | |
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7 solicitude | |
n.焦虑 | |
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8 smote | |
v.猛打,重击,打击( smite的过去式 ) | |
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9 dispel | |
vt.驱走,驱散,消除 | |
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10 groaned | |
v.呻吟( groan的过去式和过去分词 );发牢骚;抱怨;受苦 | |
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11 itching | |
adj.贪得的,痒的,渴望的v.发痒( itch的现在分词 ) | |
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12 writhed | |
(因极度痛苦而)扭动或翻滚( writhe的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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13 absolved | |
宣告…无罪,赦免…的罪行,宽恕…的罪行( absolve的过去式和过去分词 ); 不受责难,免除责任 [义务] ,开脱(罪责) | |
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14 jaunt | |
v.短程旅游;n.游览 | |
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15 imp | |
n.顽童 | |
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16 entrusted | |
v.委托,托付( entrust的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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17 torpedoed | |
用鱼雷袭击(torpedo的过去式与过去分词形式) | |
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18 queried | |
v.质疑,对…表示疑问( query的过去式和过去分词 );询问 | |
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19 rout | |
n.溃退,溃败;v.击溃,打垮 | |
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20 shudder | |
v.战粟,震动,剧烈地摇晃;n.战粟,抖动 | |
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21 recital | |
n.朗诵,独奏会,独唱会 | |
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22 picturesque | |
adj.美丽如画的,(语言)生动的,绘声绘色的 | |
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23 plethoric | |
adj.过多的,多血症的 | |
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24 pricks | |
刺痛( prick的名词复数 ); 刺孔; 刺痕; 植物的刺 | |
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25 inevitable | |
adj.不可避免的,必然发生的 | |
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26 consolation | |
n.安慰,慰问 | |
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27 tragic | |
adj.悲剧的,悲剧性的,悲惨的 | |
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28 succumbed | |
不再抵抗(诱惑、疾病、攻击等)( succumb的过去式和过去分词 ); 屈从; 被压垮; 死 | |
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29 slate | |
n.板岩,石板,石片,石板色,候选人名单;adj.暗蓝灰色的,含板岩的;vt.用石板覆盖,痛打,提名,预订 | |
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30 lauded | |
v.称赞,赞美( laud的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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31 conscientious | |
adj.审慎正直的,认真的,本着良心的 | |
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32 urbanely | |
adv.都市化地,彬彬有礼地,温文尔雅地 | |
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33 intoxicated | |
喝醉的,极其兴奋的 | |
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34 promising | |
adj.有希望的,有前途的 | |
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35 unduly | |
adv.过度地,不适当地 | |
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36 elusiveness | |
狡诈 | |
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37 severed | |
v.切断,断绝( sever的过去式和过去分词 );断,裂 | |
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38 outrageous | |
adj.无理的,令人不能容忍的 | |
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39 innocence | |
n.无罪;天真;无害 | |
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40 vividly | |
adv.清楚地,鲜明地,生动地 | |
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41 sinister | |
adj.不吉利的,凶恶的,左边的 | |
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42 assassinated | |
v.暗杀( assassinate的过去式和过去分词 );中伤;诋毁;破坏 | |
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43 reassured | |
adj.使消除疑虑的;使放心的v.再保证,恢复信心( reassure的过去式和过去分词) | |
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44 lodgings | |
n. 出租的房舍, 寄宿舍 | |
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45 contemplated | |
adj. 预期的 动词contemplate的过去分词形式 | |
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46 smallpox | |
n.天花 | |
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47 mansion | |
n.大厦,大楼;宅第 | |
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48 luxurious | |
adj.精美而昂贵的;豪华的 | |
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49 garbed | |
v.(尤指某类人穿的特定)服装,衣服,制服( garb的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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50 middle-aged | |
adj.中年的 | |
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51 benevolently | |
adv.仁慈地,行善地 | |
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52 benevolent | |
adj.仁慈的,乐善好施的 | |
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53 emancipation | |
n.(从束缚、支配下)解放 | |
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54 bishop | |
n.主教,(国际象棋)象 | |
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55 confirmation | |
n.证实,确认,批准 | |
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56 minor | |
adj.较小(少)的,较次要的;n.辅修学科;vi.辅修 | |
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57 retraced | |
v.折回( retrace的过去式和过去分词 );回忆;回顾;追溯 | |
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58 instinctive | |
adj.(出于)本能的;直觉的;(出于)天性的 | |
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59 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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60 distinguished | |
adj.卓越的,杰出的,著名的 | |
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61 gathering | |
n.集会,聚会,聚集 | |
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62 poignancy | |
n.辛酸事,尖锐 | |
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63 hearth | |
n.壁炉炉床,壁炉地面 | |
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64 throng | |
n.人群,群众;v.拥挤,群集 | |
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65 catching | |
adj.易传染的,有魅力的,迷人的,接住 | |
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66 darted | |
v.投掷,投射( dart的过去式和过去分词 );向前冲,飞奔 | |
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67 shrieked | |
v.尖叫( shriek的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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68 instinctively | |
adv.本能地 | |
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69 retired | |
adj.隐退的,退休的,退役的 | |
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70 seaman | |
n.海员,水手,水兵 | |
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71 lieutenant | |
n.陆军中尉,海军上尉;代理官员,副职官员 | |
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72 literally | |
adv.照字面意义,逐字地;确实 | |
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73 hips | |
abbr.high impact polystyrene 高冲击强度聚苯乙烯,耐冲性聚苯乙烯n.臀部( hip的名词复数 );[建筑学]屋脊;臀围(尺寸);臀部…的 | |
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74 disquiet | |
n.担心,焦虑 | |
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75 valiantly | |
adv.勇敢地,英勇地;雄赳赳 | |
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76 sobriquet | |
n.绰号 | |
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77 unfamiliar | |
adj.陌生的,不熟悉的 | |
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78 liar | |
n.说谎的人 | |
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79 elastic | |
n.橡皮圈,松紧带;adj.有弹性的;灵活的 | |
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80 unaware | |
a.不知道的,未意识到的 | |
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81 constraint | |
n.(on)约束,限制;限制(或约束)性的事物 | |
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82 deliberately | |
adv.审慎地;蓄意地;故意地 | |
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83 convened | |
召开( convene的过去式 ); 召集; (为正式会议而)聚集; 集合 | |
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84 drawn | |
v.拖,拉,拔出;adj.憔悴的,紧张的 | |
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85 furtive | |
adj.鬼鬼崇崇的,偷偷摸摸的 | |
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86 dispelled | |
v.驱散,赶跑( dispel的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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87 bishops | |
(基督教某些教派管辖大教区的)主教( bishop的名词复数 ); (国际象棋的)象 | |
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88 ironical | |
adj.讽刺的,冷嘲的 | |
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89 baron | |
n.男爵;(商业界等)巨头,大王 | |
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90 mythical | |
adj.神话的;虚构的;想像的 | |
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91 discourse | |
n.论文,演说;谈话;话语;vi.讲述,著述 | |
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92 liars | |
说谎者( liar的名词复数 ) | |
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93 discredited | |
不足信的,不名誉的 | |
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94 wriggling | |
v.扭动,蠕动,蜿蜒行进( wriggle的现在分词 );(使身体某一部位)扭动;耍滑不做,逃避(应做的事等);蠕蠕 | |
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95 defective | |
adj.有毛病的,有问题的,有瑕疵的 | |
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96 mere | |
adj.纯粹的;仅仅,只不过 | |
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97 swoop | |
n.俯冲,攫取;v.抓取,突然袭击 | |
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98 irritation | |
n.激怒,恼怒,生气 | |
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99 specially | |
adv.特定地;特殊地;明确地 | |
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100 pretext | |
n.借口,托词 | |
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101 impatience | |
n.不耐烦,急躁 | |
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102 chauffeur | |
n.(受雇于私人或公司的)司机;v.为…开车 | |
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103 caressing | |
爱抚的,表现爱情的,亲切的 | |
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104 beset | |
v.镶嵌;困扰,包围 | |
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105 supplementary | |
adj.补充的,附加的 | |
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106 spoke | |
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说 | |
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107 soda | |
n.苏打水;汽水 | |
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108 gulp | |
vt.吞咽,大口地吸(气);vi.哽住;n.吞咽 | |
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109 breach | |
n.违反,不履行;破裂;vt.冲破,攻破 | |
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110 abstemious | |
adj.有节制的,节俭的 | |
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111 artistic | |
adj.艺术(家)的,美术(家)的;善于艺术创作的 | |
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112 assailed | |
v.攻击( assail的过去式和过去分词 );困扰;质问;毅然应对 | |
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113 alley | |
n.小巷,胡同;小径,小路 | |
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114 sewer | |
n.排水沟,下水道 | |
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115 despatch | |
n./v.(dispatch)派遣;发送;n.急件;新闻报道 | |
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116 memorandum | |
n.备忘录,便笺 | |
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117 vehement | |
adj.感情强烈的;热烈的;(人)有强烈感情的 | |
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118 disclaimed | |
v.否认( disclaim的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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119 obese | |
adj.过度肥胖的,肥大的 | |
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120 narrated | |
v.故事( narrate的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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121 replenished | |
补充( replenish的过去式和过去分词 ); 重新装满 | |
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122 mascot | |
n.福神,吉祥的东西 | |
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123 apprehensive | |
adj.担心的,恐惧的,善于领会的 | |
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124 ordeal | |
n.苦难经历,(尤指对品格、耐力的)严峻考验 | |
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125 uncertainty | |
n.易变,靠不住,不确知,不确定的事物 | |
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126 unprecedented | |
adj.无前例的,新奇的 | |
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127 aloofness | |
超然态度 | |
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128 parched | |
adj.焦干的;极渴的;v.(使)焦干 | |
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129 diabolical | |
adj.恶魔似的,凶暴的 | |
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130 sprawled | |
v.伸开四肢坐[躺]( sprawl的过去式和过去分词);蔓延;杂乱无序地拓展;四肢伸展坐着(或躺着) | |
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131 depleted | |
adj. 枯竭的, 废弃的 动词deplete的过去式和过去分词 | |
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132 gasp | |
n.喘息,气喘;v.喘息;气吁吁他说 | |
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133 pang | |
n.剧痛,悲痛,苦闷 | |
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134 agonized | |
v.使(极度)痛苦,折磨( agonize的过去式和过去分词 );苦斗;苦苦思索;感到极度痛苦 | |
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135 debauch | |
v.使堕落,放纵 | |
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136 temperate | |
adj.温和的,温带的,自我克制的,不过分的 | |
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137 cowered | |
v.畏缩,抖缩( cower的过去式 ) | |
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138 justification | |
n.正当的理由;辩解的理由 | |
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139 plagiarist | |
n.剽窃者,文抄公 | |
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140 stupor | |
v.昏迷;不省人事 | |
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141 scrap | |
n.碎片;废料;v.废弃,报废 | |
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142 awaken | |
vi.醒,觉醒;vt.唤醒,使觉醒,唤起,激起 | |
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143 secrecy | |
n.秘密,保密,隐蔽 | |
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144 brutally | |
adv.残忍地,野蛮地,冷酷无情地 | |
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145 underneath | |
adj.在...下面,在...底下;adv.在下面 | |
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146 heliotrope | |
n.天芥菜;淡紫色 | |
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147 sweeping | |
adj.范围广大的,一扫无遗的 | |
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