第 5 节
作者:博搏      更新:2024-04-07 21:07      字数:9322
  Slowly      she    advanced;     her    face   pale   and    drawn     with    a   frightful
  apprehension; her   eyes   fixed   and   staring;  her terrified   gaze   riveted  upon
  the dark figure on the floor。
  〃You have killed him!〃 she muttered。             〃Oh; Dio mio; you have killed
  him!〃     Then I heard a sudden sharp intake of her breath; and she sprang
  into the air with a cry of joy。        Round and round the room she danced; her
  hands   clapping;   her   dark   eyes   gleaming   with   delighted   wonder;   and   a
  thousand      pretty   Italian   exclamations      pouring    from    her  lips。   It   was
  terrible and amazing to see such a woman so convulsed with joy at such a
  sight。    Suddenly she stopped and gazed at us all with a questioning stare。
  〃But you!      You are police; are you not?            You have killed Giuseppe
  Gorgiano。      Is it not so?〃
  〃We are police; madam。〃
  She looked round into the shadows of the room。
  〃But    where;    then;   is  Gennaro?〃     she   asked。    〃He     is  my   husband;
  Gennaro   Lucca。       I   am   Emilia   Lucca;   and   we   are   both   from   New York。
  Where is Gennaro?          He called me this moment from this window; and I
  ran with all my speed。〃
  〃It was I who called;〃 said Holmes。
  〃You!     How could you call?〃
  〃Your     cipher   was   not   difficult;  madam。      Your     presence    here   was
  desirable。   I   knew   that   I   had   only   to   flash   'Vieni'   and   you   would   surely
  come。〃
  16
  … Page 17…
  The Adventure of the Red Circle
  The   beautiful   Italian   looked   with   awe   at   my   companion。     〃I   do   not
  understand how you know these things;〃 she said。 〃Giuseppe Gorgiano
  how did he〃        She paused; and then suddenly her face lit up with pride
  and    delight。    〃Now     I  see   it!  My    Gennaro!      My     splendid;    beautiful
  Gennaro; who has guarded me safe from all harm; he did it; with his own
  strong hand he killed the monster!           Oh; Gennaro; how wonderful you are!
  What woman could every be worthy of such a man?〃
  〃Well; Mrs。 Lucca;〃 said the prosaic Gregson; laying his hand upon the
  lady's sleeve with as little sentiment as if she were a Notting Hill hooligan;
  〃I   am   not   very   clear   yet   who   you   are   or   what   you   are;   but   you've   said
  enough to make it very clear that we shall want you at the Yard。〃
  〃One moment; Gregson;〃 said Holmes。                 〃I rather fancy that this lady
  may  be   as   anxious   to   give   us   information   as   we   can   be   to   get   it。 You
  understand;  madam;  that   your   husband   will   be   arrested   and   tried   for   the
  death   of   the   man   who   lies   before   us?   What   you   say   may   be   used   in
  evidence。      But if you think that he has acted from motives which are not
  criminal; and which he would wish to have known; then you cannot serve
  him better than by telling us the whole story。〃
  〃Now that Gorgiano is dead we fear nothing;〃 said the lady。                  〃He was
  a devil and a monster; and there can be no judge in the world who would
  punish my husband for having killed him。〃
  〃In that case;〃 said Holmes; 〃my suggestion is that we lock this door;
  leave things as we found them; go with this lady to her room ;and form our
  opinion after we have heard what it is that she has to say to us。〃
  Half an hour later we were seated; all four; in the small sitting…room of
  Signora     Lucca;    listening   to  her   remarkable     narrative    of  those   sinister
  events;   the   ending   of   which   we   had   chanced   to   witness。   She   spoke   in
  rapid and fluent but very unconventional English; which; for the sake of
  clearness; I will make grammatical。
  〃I was born in Posilippo; near Naples;〃 said she; 〃and was the daughter
  of Augusto Barelli; who was the chief lawyer and once the deputy of that
  part。    Gennaro was in my father's employment; and I came to love him;
  as any woman must。          He had neither money nor positionnothing but his
  beauty and strength and energyso my father forbade the match。                   We fled
  17
  … Page 18…
  The Adventure of the Red Circle
  together;   were   married   at   Bari;   and   sold   my   jewels   to   gain   the   money
  which would take us to America。              This was four years ago; and we have
  been in New York ever since。
  〃Fortune   was   very   good   to   us   at   first。  Gennaro   was   able   to   do   a
  service to   an Italian gentlemanhe saved him  from  some ruffians in   the
  place   called   the   Bowery;   and   so   made   a   powerful   friend。   His   name   was
  Tito    Castalotte;    and   he   was    the   senior   partner    of  the   great   firm   of
  Castalotte   and   Zamba;   who   are   the   chief   fruit   importers   of   New   York。
  Signor Zamba is an invalid; and our new friend Castalotte has all power
  within the firm; which employs more than three hundred men。                        He took
  my   husband   into   his   employment;   made   him   head   of   a   department;   and
  showed his good… will towards him in every way。                   Signor Castalotte was
  a bachelor; and I believe that he felt as if Gennaro was his son; and both
  my husband and I loved him as if he were our father。                   We had taken and
  furnished a little house in Brooklyn; and our whole future seemed assured
  when that black cloud appeared which was soon to overspread our sky。
  〃One     night;   when    Gennaro      returned    from   his   work;   he   brought    a
  fellow…countryman back with him。               His name was Gorgiano; and he had
  come   also   from  Posilippo。       He   was   a   huge   man;   as   you   can   testify;   for
  you have looked upon his corpse。              Not only was his body that of a giant
  but   everything   about   him   was   grotesque;   gigantic;   and   terrifying。        His
  voice was like thunder in our little house。            There was scarce room for the
  whirl   of   his   great   arms   as   he   talked。 His   thoughts;   his   emotions;   his
  passions;     all  were    exaggerated      and   monstrous。      He     talked;   or  rather
  roared; with such energy that others could but sit and listen; cowed with
  the mighty stream of words。            His eyes blazed at you and held you at his
  mercy。     He   was   a   terrible   and   wonderful   man。     I   thank   God   that   he   is
  dead!
  〃He   came   again   and   again。      Yet   I   was   aware   that   Gennaro   was   no
  more happy than I was in his presence。               My poor husband would sit pale
  and listless; listening to the endless raving upon politics and upon social
  questions which made up or visitor's conversation。                Gennaro said nothing;
  but I; who knew him so well; could read in his face some emotion which I
  had never seen there before。           At first I thought that it was dislike。          And
  18
  … Page 19…
  The Adventure of the Red Circle
  then; gradually; I understood that it was more than dislike。                 It was feara
  deep; secret; shrinking fear。         That nightthe night that I read his terrorI
  put my arms round him and I implored him by his love for me and by all
  that he held dear to hold nothing from me; and to tell me why this huge
  man overshadowed him so。
  〃He told me; and   my own heart grew cold as ice as I listened。                      My
  poor   Gennaro;   in   his   wild   and   fiery   days;   when   all   the   world   seemed
  against him and his mind was driven half mad by the injustices of life; had
  joint   a   Neapolitan   society;   the   Red   Circle;   which   was   allied   to   the   old
  Carbonari。       The oaths and secrets of this brotherhood were frightful; but
  once     within    its  rule  no   escape   was    possible。    When      we    had   fled  to
  America Gennaro thought that he had cast it all off forever。 What was his
  horror one evening to meet in the streets the very man who had initiated
  him   in   Naples;   the   giant   Gorgiano;   a   man   who   had   earned   the   name   of
  'Death' in the south of Italy; for he was red to the elbow in murder!                     He
  had   come   to   New   York   to   avoid   the   Italian   police;   and   he   had   already
  planted     a   branch   of  this  dreadful    society   in   his  new   home。      All   this
  Gennaro told me and showed me a summons which he had received that
  very day; a Red Circle drawn upon the head of it telling hi