shrubbery upon the mainland, suddenly
putting an end to Doom's conversation. Count Victor, sure that the
Macfarlanes were there again, ran to the window and looked out, while
his host in the rear bit his lip with every sign of annoyance. As
Montaiglon looked he saw Mungo emerge from the shrubbery with a rabbit
in his hand and push off hurriedly in a little boat, which apparently
was in use for communication with the shore under such circumstances.
"And now," said the Count, without comment upon what he had seen, "I
think, with your kind permission, I shall change my boots before eating.
"There's plenty of time for that, I jalouse," said Doom, smiling
somewhat guiltily, and he showed his guest to a room in the turret. It
was up a flight of corkscrew stairs, and lit with singular poverty by an
orifice more of the nature of a porthole for a piece than a window, and
this port or window, well out in the angle of the turret, commanded a
view of the southward wall or curtain of the castle.
Montaiglon, left to himself, opened the bag that Mungo had placed in
readiness for him in what was evidently the guest-room of the castle,
transformed the travelling half of himself into something that was more
in conformity with the gay nature of his upper costume, complacently
surveyed the result when finished, and hummed a _chanson_ of Pierre
Gringoire's, altogether unremembering the encounter in the wood, the
dead robber, and the stern nature of his embassy here so far from
France.
He bent to close the valise, and with a start abruptly concluded his
song at the sight of a miniature with the portrait of a woman looking at
him from the bottom of the bag.
"_Mort de ma vie!_ what a fool I am; what a forgetful _vengeur_, to be
chanting Gringoire in the house of Doom and my quarry still to hunt!"
His voice had of a sudden gained a sterner accent; the pleasantness
of his aspect became clouded by a frown. Looking round the constricted
room, and realising how like a prison-cell it was compared with what
he had expected, he felt oppressed as with the want of air. He sought
vainly about the window for latch or hinge to open it, and as he did so
glanced along the castle wall painted yellow by the declining sun. He
noticed idly that some one was putting out upon the sill of a window on
a lower stage what might have been a green kerchief had not the richness
of its fabric and design suggested more a pennon or banneret. It was
carefully place
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