and grasping her wrist
violently with his left hand, offered the weapon at her throat with his
right--"You shall grant all, or die!"
"Never!"--she answered--"never!" looking him steadily yet softly in the
face, with her beautiful blue eyes. "To fear I will never yield, whatever
I may do, to love or passion. Strike, if you will--strike a weak woman, and
so prove your daring--it will be easier, if not so noble, as slaying
senators and consuls!"
"Perdition!" cried the fierce conspirator, "I _will_ kill her!" And with
the word he raised his arm, as if to strike; and, for a moment, the guilty
and abandoned sensualist believed that her hour was come.
Yet she shrunk not, nor quailed before his angry eye, nor uttered any cry
or supplication. She would have died that moment, as carelessly as she had
lived. She would have died, acting out her character to the last sand of
life, with the smile on her lip, and the soft languor in her melting eye,
in all things an Epicurean.
But the fierce mood of Curius changed. Irresolute, and impotent of evil,
in a scarce less degree than he was sanguinary, rash, unprincipled, and
fearless, it is not one of the least strange events, connected with a
conspiracy the whole of which is strange, and much almost inexplicable,
that a man so wise, so sagacious, so deep-sighted, as the arch traitor,
should have placed confidence in one so fickle and infirm of purpose.
His knitted brow relaxed, the hardness of his eye relented, he cast the
dagger from him.
The next moment, suffering the scarf to fall from her white and dazzling
shoulders, the beautiful but bad enchantress flung herself upon his bosom,
in the abandonment of her dishevelled beauty, winding her snowy arms about
his neck, smothering his voice with kisses.
A moment more, and she was seated on his knee, with his left arm about her
waist, drinking with eager and attentive ears, that suffered not a single
detail to escape them, the fullest revelation of that atrocious plot, the
days, the very hours of action, the numbers, names, and rank of the
conspirators!
A woman's infamy rewarded the base villain's double treason! A woman's
infamy saved Rome!
Two hours later, the crash and roar of the hurricane and earthquake cut
short their guilty pleasures. Curius rushed into the streets headlong,
almost deeming that the insurrection might have exploded prematurely, and
found it--more than half frustrated.
Fulvia, while yet the thunder
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