登陆注册
19684300000038

第38章 CHAPTER IX(3)

I liked the thought so little that I hesitated. Yet it seemed too late to retreat. The Captain and the Lieutenant were waiting for me in a little open space fifty yards from the house, where a narrower path crossed the broad walk, down which I had first seen Mademoiselle and her sister pacing. The Captain had removed his doublet, and stood in his shirt leaning against the sundial, his head bare and his sinewy throat uncovered. He had drawn his rapier and stood pricking the ground impatiently. I marked his strong and nervous frame and his sanguine air: and twenty years earlier the sight might have damped me. But no thought of the kind entered my head now, and though I felt with each moment greater reluctance to engage, doubt of the issue had no place in my calculations.

I made ready slowly, and would gladly, to gain time, have found some fault with the place. But the sun was sufficiently high to give no advantage to either. The ground was good, the spot well chosen. I could find no excuse to put off the man, and I was about to salute him and fall to work when a thought crossed my mind.

'One moment!' I said. 'Supposing I kill you, M. le Capitaine, what becomes of your errand here?'

'Don't trouble yourself;' he answered with a sneer he had misread my slowness and hesitation. 'It will not happen, Monsieur. And in any case the thought need not harass you. I have a Lieutenant.'

'Yes, but what of my mission?' I replied bluntly. 'I have no lieutenant.'

'You should have thought of that before you interfered with my boots,' he retorted with contempt.

'True,' I said overlooking his manner. 'But better late than never. I am not sure, now I think of it, that my duty to Monseigneur will let me fight.'

'You will swallow the blow?' he cried, spitting on the ground offensively. 'DIABLE!' And the Lieutenant, standing on one side with his hands behind him and his shoulders squared, laughed grimly.

'I have not made up my mind,' I answered irresolutely.

'Well, NOM DE DIEU! make it up,' the Captain replied, with an ugly sneer. He took a swaggering step this way and that, playing his weapon. 'I am afraid, Lieutenant, that there will be no sport to-day,' he continued in a loud aside. 'Our cock has but a chicken heart.'

'Well, I said coolly,'I do not know what to do. Certainly it is a fine day, and a fair piece of ground. And the sun stands well.

But I have not much to gain by killing you, M. le Capitaine, and it might get me into an awkward fix. On the other hand, it would not hurt me to let you go.'

'Indeed!' he said contemptuously, looking at me as I should look at a lackey.

'No!' I replied. 'For if you were to say that you had struck Gil de Berault and left the ground with a whole skin, no one would believe you.'

'Gil de Berault!' he exclaimed frowning.

'Yes, Monsieur,' I replied suavely. 'At your service. You did not know my name?'

'I thought that your name was De Barthe,' he said. His voice sounded queerly; and he waited for the answer with parted lips, and a shadow in his eyes which I had seen in men's eyes before.

'No,' I said; 'that was my mother's name. I took it for this occasion only.'

His florid cheek lost a shade of its colour, and he bit his lips as he glanced at the Lieutenant, trouble in his eyes. I had seen these signs before, and knew them, and I might have cried 'Chicken-heart!' in my turn; but I had not made a way of escape for him--before I declared myself--for nothing, and I held to my purpose.

'I think you will allow now,' I said grimly, 'that it will not harm me even if I put up with a blow!'

'M. de Berault's courage is known,' he muttered.

'And with reason,' I said. 'That being so suppose that we say this day three months, M. le Capitaine? The postponement to be for my convenience.'

He caught the Lieutenant's eye and looked down sullenly, the conflict in his mind as plain as daylight. He had only to insist that I must fight; and if by luck or skill he could master me his fame as a duellist would run, like a ripple over water, through every garrison town in France and make him a name even in Paris.

On the other side were the imminent peril of death, the gleam of cold steel already in fancy at his breast, the loss of life and sunshine, and the possibility of a retreat with honour, if without glory. I read his face, and knew before he spoke what he would do.

'It appears to me that the burden is with you,' he said huskily;

'but for my part I am satisfied.'

'Very well,' I said, 'I take the burden. Permit me to apologise for having caused you to strip unnecessarily. Fortunately the sun is shining.'

'Yes,' he said gloomily. And he took his clothes from the sundial and began to put them on. He had expressed himself satisfied, but I knew that he was feeling very ill-satisfied, indeed, with himself; and I was not surprised when he presently said abruptly and almost rudely, 'There is one thing that I think we must settle here.'

'Yes?' I said. 'What is that?'

'Our positions,' he blurted out, 'Or we shall cross one another again within the hour.'

'Umph! I am not quite sure that I understand,' I said.

'That is precisely what I don't do--understand!' he retorted, in a tone of surly triumph. 'Before I came on this duty, I was told that there was a gentleman here, bearing sealed orders from the Cardinal to arrest M. de Cocheforet; and I was instructed to avoid collision with him so far as might be possible. At first I took you for the gentleman. But the plague take me if I understand the matter now.'

'Why not?' I said coldly.

'Because--well, the question is in a nutshell!' he answered impetuously. 'Are you here on behalf of Madame de Cocheforet, to shield her husband? Or are you here to arrest him? That is what I do not understand, M. de Berault.'

'If you mean, am I the Cardinal's agent--I am!' I answered sternly.

'To arrest M. de Cocheforet?'

'To arrest M. de Cocheforet.'

'Well--you surprise me,' he said.

Only that; but he spoke so drily that I felt the blood rush to my face.

'Take care, Monsieur,' I said severely. 'Do not presume too far on the inconvenience to which your death might put me.'

He shrugged his shoulders.

同类推荐
  • 金针诗格

    金针诗格

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 庚溪诗话

    庚溪诗话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 太上灵宝净明院真师密诰

    太上灵宝净明院真师密诰

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 摩邓女经

    摩邓女经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 石田诗选

    石田诗选

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 鬼喘气

    鬼喘气

    2013年,我意外破产,女友弃我而去,无奈之下,我走上了一条挖坟盗墓的路,一个离奇诡异的世界,就这样展现在了我的眼前。沉没于水底,千年不腐的美貌女尸;传说中仙人的埋尸之所;源远流长的鬼神文化中,神秘莫测的千年墓葬下,一半是盗墓人,一半是……
  • 嫡女倾城:腹黑王爷逆袭妃

    嫡女倾城:腹黑王爷逆袭妃

    一朝穿越,她成了侯府一无是处备受欺凌的草包嫡女,懦弱好欺?哼,我命由我不由天,凡是欺我、辱我、害我者,我必淡然轻笑,看准时机整死他!她手握逆天功德系统,建产业,治瘟疫,他是尊贵的世子殿下,严重洁癖,厌恶女人,强大背景的求婚人选。但是——世人皆知瑾世子宠妻入骨,是个怕老婆的,某女实在忍无可忍翻白眼,她怎么就看上这黑心男人,节操何在啊……
  • 一本书读懂互联网营销推广

    一本书读懂互联网营销推广

    本书顺互联网的发展潮流,应互联网营销推广的需求,从传统营销模式与互联网营销模式的对比、互联网营销模式的特点和优势、新兴互联网营销模式以及实战策略等几方面,系统、详细、多角度、多渠道地阐述了互联网营销推广的意识、概念、方法和案例,并着重从微博营销、App营销、微信营销、O2O营销、内容策略、粉丝策略和互动策略等七大主流互联网营销策略分析了各个策略的适用领域、运用方法、注意要点,以及成功案例,让你一本书读懂互联网营销推广。
  • 我的都市三国日常

    我的都市三国日常

    你见过脾气火爆,经常拿着大刀示威的关羽妹子么?你见过温文尔雅,风度翩翩的帅哥张飞么?你见过八岁腹黑神童诸葛亮么?如果没有的话,请尽请期待这不一样的三国。孙尚香轻轻拉扯着手中的皮鞭,嘴角划过一道诡异的笑容。刘备,“今天晚上。。。不可以。”
  • 断魂琴

    断魂琴

    我是个不能轮回往生之人,因为我只怕一入了轮回,来世再认不出你。
  • 俏皮公主与拽王子

    俏皮公主与拽王子

    她是一个俏皮可爱的公主,从小就是万千宠爱于一身,但她并没有因为这样而盛世凌人。有一天,她来到了……………………………………………………
  • 白朴元曲集

    白朴元曲集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 夙鸢传说

    夙鸢传说

    传说云山之巅住着一位千羽仙人,他挥手便能呼风唤雨撒豆成兵。他不食五谷杂粮人间烟火,却永葆青春仙身不死不灭。当我还是一只拥有灵气的白鹤时遇见了他,我愿为他化身成人修炼成仙。原以为化身成仙就能与他在一起,却没想到越离越远。“千羽,你可知你背后永远都有一个追逐你脚步的小小仙鹤,可愿回头与我一起白头偕老像人类一样永结同心!”“栖舞,你可知仙妖永远都不可能在一起”你说仙妖永远都不可能在一起,那我化身成仙你是否就能回头看我一眼呢?
  • 哥布林王高格回忆录

    哥布林王高格回忆录

    我是一个小小的职工,平时比较爱玩毒奶粉,一次带徒弟刷异界的时候爆出了一个任务用品,几次查询之后,我竟然发现了一个隐藏在毒奶粉官网深处的日记。一个不被毒奶粉正史承认的日记,关于神秘且强大的种族,哥布林一族辉煌的过去。(本书取材自著名网络游戏dnf中创奇一般的怪物,哥布林。)
  • 醉妃太倾城

    醉妃太倾城

    穿越到古代能做些什么?她,以酒为乐,无其他嗜好。因此到这个陌生的国度,只有用酒来攒银子,勾美男!最后被封为酒妃,只是这深宫之中,斗争不断,她能否全身而退?携手最心爱之人游走江湖?情节虚构,请勿模仿!