Uncle Bernac - A Memory of the Empire by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
page 43 of 213 (20%)
page 43 of 213 (20%)
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'Silence. Listen!' For a minute or more we all stayed with straining ears while the wind still whimpered in the chimney or rattled the crazy window. 'It was nothing,' said Lesage at last, with a nervous laugh. 'The storm makes curious sounds sometimes.' 'I heard nothing,' said Toussac. 'Hush!' cried the other. 'There it is again!' A clear rising cry floated high above the wailing of the storm; a wild, musical cry, beginning on a low note, and thrilling swiftly up to a keen, sharp-edged howl. 'A hound!' 'They are following us!' Lesage dashed to the fireplace, and I saw him thrust his papers into the blaze and grind them down with his heel. Toussac seized the wood-axe which leaned against the wall. The thin man dragged the pile of decayed netting from the corner, and opened a small wooden screen, which shut off a low recess. 'In here,' he whispered, 'quick!' |
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