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ringly; but he shrugged. "It will be a hard bargain for you, my girl," he told her. "I believe you will agree to it," she said quickly, "seeing that of my own will I have remained here. I will let you kill me as you please--on a condition." "Name your condition," said Esteban. "I will only say now that it is my wish to strangle you with my hands." She put both hers to her throat. "Good," she said. "That shall be your affair. But let the caballero go free. He has done you no harm." "On the contrary," said Esteban, "I shall certainly kill him when he returns. Have no doubt of that. Then I shall have his horse." Immediately, without fear, she went up to him where he sat his donkey. She saw the knife in his _faja_, but had no fear at all. She came quite close to him, with an ardent face, with eyes alight. She stretched out her arms like a man on a cross. "Kill, kill, Esteban! But listen first. You shall spare that gentleman's life, for he has done you no wrong." He laughed her down. "Wrong! And you come to me to swear that on the Cross of Christ? Daughter of swine, you lie." Tears were in her eyes, which made her blink and shake her head--but she came closer yet in a passion of entreaty. She was so close that her bosom touched him. "Kill, Esteban, kill--but love me first!" Her arms were about him now, as if she must have love of him or die. "Esteban, Esteban!" she was whispering as if she hungered and thirsted for him. He shivered at a memory. "Love me once, love me once, Esteban!" Closer and closer she clung to him; her eyes implored a kiss. "Loose me, you jade," he said, less sharply, but she clove the closer to him, and one hand crept downwards from his shoulder, as if she would embrace him by the middle. "Too late, Manuelita, too late," he said again, but he was plainly softening. She drew his face towards hers as if to kiss him, then whipped the long knife out of his girdle and drove it with all her sobbing force into his neck. Esteban uttered a thick groan, threw his head up and rocked twice. Then his head dropped, and he fell sideways off his donkey. She stood staring at what she had done. CHAPTER VII THE SLEEPER AWAKENED Manvers returned whistling from his bath, at peace with all the world of Spain, in a large mood of benevolence and charitable judgment. His mind dwelt pleasantly on Manuela, but pity mixed with his thought; and he added some prudence on h
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