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E. W. Hornung: Dead Men Tell No TalesCHAPTER 19: MY GREAT HOUR (continued)And he walked through the house, and out the back way, at the officer's heels; meanwhile the man with the wounded arm was swaying where he sat from loss of blood, and I had to help him into the open air before at last I was free to return to poor Eva in her place of loathsome safety. I had been so long, however, that her patience was exhausted, and as I returned to the library by one door, she entered by the other. "I could bear it no longer. Tell me - the worst!" "Three of them are dead." "Which three?" She had crossed to the other door, and would not have me shut it. So I stood between her and the hearth, on which lay the captain's corpse, with the hearthrug turned up on either side to cover it. "Harris for one," said I. "Outside lie Jose and - " "Quick! Quick!" "Senhor Santos." Her face was as though the name meant nothing to her. "And Mr. Rattray?" she cried. "And Mr. Rattray -" "Has escaped for the present. He seems to have cut his way through the police and got over the wall by a ladder they left behind them. They are scouring the country - Miss Denison! Eva! My poor love!" She had broken down utterly in a second fit of violent weeping; and a second time I took her in my arms, and stood trying in my clumsy way to comfort her, as though she were a little child. A lamp was burning in the library, and I recognized the arm-chair which Rattray had drawn thence for me on the night of our dinner - the very night before! I led Eva back into the room, and I closed both doors. I supported my poor girl to the chair, and once more I knelt before her and took her hands in mine. My great hour was come at last: surely a happy omen that it was also the hour before the dawn. This is page 148 of 166. [Mark this Page] Mark any page to add this title to Your Bookshelf. (0 / 10 books on shelf) Buy a copy of Dead Men Tell No Tales at Amazon.com
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