A Double Barrelled Detective Story eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 76 pages of information about A Double Barrelled Detective Story.

A Double Barrelled Detective Story eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 76 pages of information about A Double Barrelled Detective Story.

She set him in his small chair, and said: 

“Wait a little till I come, dear; then we will talk about the matter.”

She went up to her room and took from her dressing-table several small articles and put them out of sight:  a nail-file on the floor under the bed; a pair of nail-scissors under the bureau; a small ivory paper-knife under the wardrobe.  Then she returned, and said: 

“There!  I have left some things which I ought to have brought down.”  She named them, and said, “Run up and bring them, dear.”

The child hurried away on his errand and was soon back again with the things.

“Did you have any difficulty, dear?”

“No, mamma; I only went where you went.”

During his absence she had stepped to the bookcase, taken several books from the bottom shelf, opened each, passed her hand over a page, noting its number in her memory, then restored them to their places.  Now she said: 

“I have been doing something while you have been gone, Archy.  Do you think you can find out what it was?”

The boy went to the bookcase and got out the books that had been touched, and opened them at the pages which had been stroked.

The mother took him in her lap, and said: 

“I will answer your question now, dear.  I have found out that in one way you are quite different from other people.  You can see in the dark, you can smell what other people cannot, you have the talents of a bloodhound.  They are good and valuable things to have, but you must keep the matter a secret.  If people found it out, they would speak of you as an odd child, a strange child, and children would be disagreeable to you, and give you nicknames.  In this world one must be like everybody else if he doesn’t want to provoke scorn or envy or jealousy.  It is a great and fine distinction which has been born to you, and I am glad; but you will keep it a secret, for mamma’s sake, won’t you?”

The child promised, without understanding.

All the rest of the day the mother’s brain was busy with excited thinkings; with plans, projects, schemes, each and all of them uncanny, grim, and dark.  Yet they lit up her face; lit it with a fell light of their own; lit it with vague fires of hell.  She was in a fever of unrest; she could not sit, stand, read, sew; there was no relief for her but in movement.  She tested her boy’s gift in twenty ways, and kept saying to herself all the time, with her mind in the past:  “He broke my father’s heart, and night and day all these years I have tried, and all in vain, to think out a way to break his.  I have found it now—­I have found it now.”

When night fell, the demon of unrest still possessed her.  She went on with her tests; with a candle she traversed the house from garret to cellar, hiding pins, needles, thimbles, spools, under pillows, under carpets, in cracks in the walls, under the coal in the bin; then sent the little fellow in the dark to find them; which he did, and was happy and proud when she praised him and smothered him with caresses.

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A Double Barrelled Detective Story from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.