FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   194   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   202   203   204   205   206   207   208   209   210   211   212   >>  
s peculiar bridge, which had been laid recently at her husband's orders. After they had gazed in silence a moment into the depths of the marl-pit, Camors called his wife's attention to the unique construction. "Do you intend to cross that?" she asked, briefly. "Yes, if you are not afraid," said Camors; "I shall be close beside you, you know." He saw that she hesitated, and, looking at her closely in the moonlight, he thought her face was strangely pale, and could not refrain from saying: "I believed that you had more courage." She hesitated no longer, but stepped upon the dangerous bridge. In spite of herself, she turned her head half around, in a backward glance, and her steady step faltered. Suddenly she tottered. M. de Camors sprang forward, and, in the agitation of the moment, seized her in an almost violent grasp. The unhappy woman uttered a piercing shriek, made a gesture as if to defend herself, repelling his touch; then, running wildly across the bridge, she rushed into the woods. M. de Camors, astounded, alarmed, not knowing how to interpret his wife's strange conduct, immediately followed her. He found her a short distance beyond the bridge, leaning against the first tree she had been able to reach. She turned to face him, with an expression of mingled terror and menace, and as he approached, she shot forth the single word: "Coward!" He stared at her in sheer amazement. At that moment there was a sound of hurried footsteps; a shadowy form glided toward them from the depth of the thicket, and the next instant Camors recognized Madame de Tecle. She ran, dishevelled and breathless, toward her daughter, seized her by the hand and, drawing herself up, said to Camors: "If you kill one of us, kill both!" He understood the mystery in a flash. A stifled cry escaped him; for an instant he buried his face in his hands; then; flinging out his arms in a gesture of despair, he said: "So you took me for a murderer!" There was a moment of dead silence. "Well!" he cried, stamping his foot with sudden violence, "why do you stay here, then? Run! Fly! Save yourselves from me!" Overcome with terror, the two women fled, the mother dragging her daughter. The next moment they had disappeared in the darkness of the woods. Camors remained in that lonely spot many hours, without being aware of the passage of time. At intervals he paced feverishly to and fro along the narrow strip of land between the wood
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   194   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   202   203   204   205   206   207   208   209   210   211   212   >>  



Top keywords:
Camors
 

moment

 

bridge

 

silence

 

instant

 

hesitated

 

gesture

 

daughter

 

terror

 
seized

turned

 

single

 

drawing

 

understood

 

mystery

 

shadowy

 

stared

 
glided
 
footsteps
 
amazement

hurried

 

dishevelled

 

breathless

 

Coward

 

Madame

 

stifled

 

thicket

 

recognized

 
lonely
 

remained


darkness
 
mother
 

dragging

 
disappeared
 
narrow
 
passage
 

intervals

 

feverishly

 
Overcome
 
murderer

despair
 

buried

 

escaped

 
flinging
 
approached
 

stamping

 

sudden

 

violence

 

astounded

 

thought