FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133  
134   135   136   137   138   139   140   >>  
harmless for the moment, but she may recover and break out again. So I can't leave to get help. You must go. You have fainted, but I am sure you can walk quite well. Go up the stairs here, and walk along the hall till you come to the front door; it is not fastened. Go out into the street, and bring back two gendarmes--two, mind--and a cab, if you can. Do you understand?" "Yes, but how--" "Now, please go at once!" I insisted grimly and coldly. "We can talk afterwards. Just do as you're told." Cowed by the roughness of my tone, she rose and went. I heard her light, hesitating step pass through the hall, and so out of the house. In a few minutes I had done all that could be done for Sir Cyril, as he lay there. The wound was deep, having regard to the small size of the dagger, and I could only partially stop the extravasation of blood, which was profuse. I doubted if he would recover. It was not long, however, before he regained his senses. He spoke, and I remember vividly now how pathetic to me was the wagging of his short gray beard as his jaw moved. "Foster," he said--"your name is Foster, isn't it? Where did you find that dagger?" "You must keep quiet," I said. "I have sent for assistance." "Don't be a fool, man. You know I'm done for. Tell me how you got the dagger." So I told him. "Ah!" he murmured. "It's my luck!" he sighed. Then in little detached sentences, with many pauses, he began to relate a history of what happened after Rosa and I had left him on the night of Sullivan's reception. Much of it was incomprehensible to me; sometimes I could not make out the words. But it seemed that he had followed us in his carriage, had somehow met Rosa again, and then, in a sudden frenzy of remorse, had attempted to kill himself with the dagger in the street. His reason for this I did not gather. His coachman and footman had taken him home, and the affair had been kept quiet. Remorse for what? I burned to ask a hundred questions, but, fearing to excite him, I shut my lips. "You are in love with her?" he asked. I nodded. It was a reply as abrupt as his demand. At that moment Deschamps laughed quietly behind me. I turned round quickly, but she lay still; though she had come to, the fire in her eyes was quenched, and I anticipated no immediate difficulty with her. "I knew that night that you were in love with her," Sir Cyril continued. "Has she told you about--about me?" "No," I said. "I have d
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133  
134   135   136   137   138   139   140   >>  



Top keywords:
dagger
 

street

 

moment

 

recover

 

Foster

 

carriage

 

incomprehensible

 
detached
 

murmured

 
sighed

sentences

 

Sullivan

 

reception

 

happened

 

pauses

 
relate
 

history

 
quietly
 

turned

 

quickly


laughed

 
Deschamps
 

nodded

 

abrupt

 

demand

 

continued

 

difficulty

 
quenched
 

anticipated

 

reason


gather
 

coachman

 
footman
 

sudden

 

frenzy

 

remorse

 

attempted

 

fearing

 

questions

 

excite


hundred

 

affair

 

Remorse

 
burned
 
regained
 

grimly

 
insisted
 

coldly

 

understand

 

hesitating