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in front of it. He said he was anxious to send a reproduction of it to a great
antiquary who had written on the antiquities of the house; but the others knew
that this was an excuse covering much deeper things. It was, if not exactly a
spiritual duel between Darnaway and the demoniac picture, at least a duel
between Darnaway and his own doubts. He wanted to bring the daylight of
photography face to face with that dark masterpiece of painting; and to see
whether the sunshine of the new art would not drive out the shadows of the
old.
Perhaps this was why he preferred to do it by himself, even if some of the
details seemed to take longer and involve more than normal delay. Anyhow, he
rather discouraged the few who visited his studio during the day of the
experiment, and who found him focusing and fussing about in a very isolated
and impenetrable fashion. The steward had left a meal for him, as he refused
to come down; the old gentleman also returned some hours afterwards and found
the meal more or less normally disposed of; but when he brought it he got no
more gratitude than a grunt. Payne went up once to see how he was getting on,
but finding the photographer disinclined for conversation came down again.
Father Brown had wandered that way in an unobtrusive style to take Darnaway a
letter from the expert to whom the photograph was to be sent. But he left the
letter on a tray, and whatever he thought of that great glasshouse full of
daylight and devotion to a hobby, a world he had himself in some sense
created, he kept it to himself and came down. He had reason to remember very
soon that he was the last to come down the solitary staircase connecting the
floors, leaving a lonely man and an empty room behind him. The others were
standing in the salon that led into the library, just under the great black
ebony clock that looked like a titanic coffin.
 How was Darnaway getting on, asked Payne, a little later,  when you last
went up?
The priest passed a hand over his forehead.  Don t tell me I m getting
psychic, he said with a sad smile.  I believe I m quite dazzled with daylight
up in that room and couldn t see things straight. Honestly, I felt for a flash
as if there were something uncanny about Darnaway s figure standing before
that portrait.
 Oh, that s the lame leg, said Barnet promptly.  We know all about that.
 Do you know, said Payne abruptly, but lowering his voice,  l don t think we
do know all about it or anything about it. What s the matter with his leg?
What was the matter with his ancestor s leg?
 Oh, there s something about that in the book I was reading in there, in the
family archives, said Wood;  I ll fetch it for you. And he stepped into the
library just beyond.
 I think, said Father Brown quietly,  Mr. Payne must have some particular
reason for asking that.
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ABC Amber Palm Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcpalm.html
 I may as well blurt it out once and for all, said Payne, but in a yet lower
voice.  After all, there is a rational explanation. A man from anywhere might
have made up to look like the portrait. What do we know about Darnaway? He is
behaving rather oddly 
The others were staring at him in a rather startled fashion; but the priest
seemed to take it very calmly.
 I don t think the old portrait s ever been photographed, he said.  That s
why he wants to do it. I don t think there s anything odd about that.
 Quite an ordinary state of things, in fact, said Wood with a smile; he had
just returned with the book in his hand. And even as he spoke there was a stir
in the clockwork of the great dark clock behind him and successive strokes
thrilled through the room up to the number of seven. With the last stroke
there came a crash from the floor above that shook the house like a
thunderbolt; and Father Brown was already two steps up the winding staircase
before the sound had ceased.
 My God! cried Payne involuntarily;  he is alone up there.
 Yes, said Father Brown without turning, as he vanished up the stairway.  We
shall find him alone.
When the rest recovered from their first paralysis and ran helter-skelter up
the stone steps and found their way to the new studio, it was true in that
sense that they found him alone. They found him lying in a wreck of his tall
camera, with its long splintered legs standing out grotesquely at three
different angles; and Darnaway had fallen on top of it with one black crooked
leg lying at a fourth angle along the floor. For the moment the dark heap
looked as if he were entangled with some huge and horrible spider. Little more
than a glance and a touch were needed to tell them that he was dead. Only the
portrait stood untouched upon the easel, and one could fancy the smiling eyes
shone.
An hour afterwards Father Brown in helping to calm the confusion of the
stricken household, came upon the old steward muttering almost as mechanically
as the clock had ticked and struck the terrible hour. Almost without hearing [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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