登陆注册
20042400000077

第77章 CHAPTER XXII(4)

And in the morning they met, as she had promised him. Both pale, although from different causes, and both showing signs of having slept but little. They broke their fast together and in silence, which at last he ended by asking her whether the night had brought her reflection, and whether such reflection had made her appreciate their position and the need to set out at once.

"It needed no reflection to make me realise our position better than I did yesterday," she answered. "I had hoped that it would have brought you to a different frame of mind. But I am afraid that it has not done so."

"I fail to see what change my frame of mind admits of," he answered testily.

"Have you thought," she asked at last, and her voice was cold and concentrated, "that this man is giving his life for you?"

"I have feared," he answered, with incredible callousness, "that to save his craven skin he might elect to do differently at the last moment."

She looked at him in a mighty wonder, her dark eyes open to their widest, and looking black by the extreme dilation of the pupils.

So vast was her amazement at this unbounded egotism that it almost overruled her disgust.

"You cast epithets about you and bestow titles with a magnificent unconsciousness of how well they might fit you."

"Ah? For example?"

"In calling this man a craven, you take no thought for the cowardice that actuates you into hiding while he dies for you?"

"Cowardice?" he ejaculated. Then a flush spread on his face. "Ma foi, Mademoiselle," said he, in a quivering voice, "your words betray thoughts that would be scarcely becoming in the Vicomtesse d'Ombreval."

"That, Monsieur, is a point that need give you little thought. I am not likely to become the Vicomtesse."

He bestowed her a look of mingling wonder and anger. Had he, indeed, heard her aright? Did her words imply that she disdained the honour?

"Surely," he gasped, voicing those doubts of his, "you do not mean that you would violate your betrothal contract? You do not - "

"I mean, Monsieur," she cut in, "that I will give myself to no man I do not love."

"Your immodesty," said he, "falls in nothing short of the extraordinary frame of mind that you appear to be developing in connection with other matters. We shall have you beating a drum and screeching the Ca ira in the streets of Paris presently, like Mademoiselle de Mericourt."

She rose from the table, her face very white, her hand pressing upon her corsage. A moment she looked at him. Then:

"Do not let us talk of ourselves," she exclaimed at last. "There is a man in the Conciergerie who dies at noon unless you are forthcoming before then to save him. He himself will not betray you because he - No matter why, he will not. Tell me, Monsieur, how do you, who account yourself a man of honour above everything, intend to deal with this situation?"

He shrugged his shoulders.

"Once he is dead and done with - provided that he does not first betray me - I trust that, no longer having this subject to harp upon, you will consent to avail yourself of our passport, and accompany me out of France."

"Honour does not for instance, suggest to you that you should repair to the Conciergerie and take the place that belongs to you, and which another is filling?"

A sudden light of comprehension swept now into his face.

"At last I understand what has been in your mind since yesterday, what has made you so odd in your words and manner. You have thought that it was perhaps my duty as a man of honour to go and effect the rescue of this fellow. But, my dear child, bethink you of what he is, and of what I am. Were he a gentleman - my equal - my course would stand clearly defined. I should not have hesitated a moment.

But this canaille! Ma foi! let me beg of you to come to your senses.

The very thought is unworthy in you."

"I understand you," she answered him, very coldly. "You use a coward's arguments, and you have the effrontery to consider yourself a man of honour - a nobleman. I no longer marvel that there is a revolution in France."

She stood surveying him for a moment, then she quietly left the room.

He stared after her.

"Woman, woman!" he sighed, as he set down his napkin and rose in his turn.

His humour was one of pitying patience for a girl that had not the wit to see that to ask him - the most noble d'Ombreval - to die that La Boulaye might live was very much like asking him to sacrifice his life to save a dog's.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 最强战神

    最强战神

    来自昆仑山身世成谜的少年,狂踩大少,横扫腐女,独霸蓝海,左拥右抱,嚣张跋扈。
  • 颜倾天下:间谍王妃

    颜倾天下:间谍王妃

    为复仇嫁给北海王的她,在北海王的后宫里,步步为营,仅凭她一已之力,竟然颠覆整个北海王朝,使得大仇终报,父母冤死之屈得以昭雪。
  • 逆乱苍穹

    逆乱苍穹

    一个少年逆世而出,冲天而起。斩邪魔,诛恶灵。身染万族血,与天抗,与人争。打破长空,逆乱苍穹!
  • 一贱下天山

    一贱下天山

    这只是一本充满逗比欢乐项的小说~“我婚书呢?”毛戈问。“婚书?没有!”老者回答。“别骗我,主角都有的!给我!我要退婚!”毛戈再一次强调!“可是真的没有!”老者无奈,“来来来,不信你搜身!”然后毛戈就愤怒了……
  • 异界之绝世高手

    异界之绝世高手

    “没有赚不到的金币只有花不完的金币,没有得不到的权利只有看不起的权利,没有不敢做的事情只有想不到的事情。我命由我不由天楚天一个平凡的人如何逍遥奥亚大陆,玩转人魔神三界活出自己精彩的人生。”
  • 重生之我成了自己的妹妹

    重生之我成了自己的妹妹

    普通版:重生成自己妹妹的故事,她有个伪娘哥哥……糟了!说漏嘴了!文艺版:真金不怕火炼,除非加把焦炭,就算是成了自妹妹也要妹控…大概……二13版:作者就是个没下限的幼女控!就是要从幼儿园开始重生的故事!打打杀杀恩恩怨怨多没意思!米娜我们从小学就是朋友哦~我今天没!吃!药!感觉自己萌!哒!哒!!!
  • 官运之左右逢源

    官运之左右逢源

    苏扬车祸后拥有可观人气运吉凶的双眼,官场的美丑,人心的善恶,魅力四射的官场生涯,每一次面临抉择和困境,每一次对抗贪官和恶势,苏扬利用他的神奇之眼逢凶化吉、左右逢源、除贪官、杀恶人,凶狠的手段令敌人颤抖,飞扬的激情令爱人们败服,随着级别的提升,主角将手握重权、指点江山、扭转乾坤、大杀四方,展开双翼冲上云宵,YY原来也可以有内涵!(情节虚构,如有雷同,实属巧合)
  • 寒极无双

    寒极无双

    那个世界的终结成为他来到这个世界的契机。只可惜一般的套路都是男主前期废物被欺负成狗,这次当然也不例外。最终别人都看不起的他还被人被冤枉赶出了这个家族,走之时他在心中暗暗许诺来日若成强者回来之时必定要将今日之辱万倍偿还。偶入山洞遇恩师,得传承,捡灵兽,就这样从万年雪上走下来的一个少年开始了一段在这个世界的强者之路。“漫漫强者路,少年独自闯,前途莫难料,谁又能知晓。”
  • 内经药瀹

    内经药瀹

    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。
  • 胭脂色

    胭脂色

    初试短篇,大概讲述了一位女子的感情经历。文中男主只是侧面描写居多,站在女性的视角短短四千字,描写了凤温澜的爱与决绝。