s which might interest Mr. Breitmann."
"_Croyez-vous qu'il pleuve? Il fait bien du vent_," adjusting his
spectacles and viewing the clear sky and the serene bosom of the
Mediterranean. Then M. Ferraud turned round with: "Ah, Mr. Fitzgerald,
this man Breitmann is what you call 'poor devil,' is it not? At dinner
to-night I shall tell a story, at once marvelous past belief and
pathetic. I shall tell this story against my best convictions because
I wish him no harm, because I should like to save him from black ruin.
But, attend me; my efforts shall be as wind blowing upon stone; and I
shall not save him. An alienist would tell you better than I can.
Listen. You have watched him, have you not? To you he seems like any
other man? Yes? Keen-witted, gifted, a bit of a musician, a good deal
of a scholar? Well, had I found that paper first, there would have
been no treasure hunt. I should have torn it into one thousand pieces;
I should have saved him in spite of himself and have done my duty also.
He is mad, mad as a whirlwind, as a tempest, as a fire, as a sandstorm."
"About what?"
"To-night, to-night!"
And the wiry little man released himself and bustled away to his chair
where he became buried in rugs and magazines.
CHAPTER XX
AN OLD SCANDAL
"Corsica to-morrow," said the admiral.
"Napoleon," said Laura.
"Romance," said Cathewe.
"Treasures," said M. Ferraud.
Hildegarde felt uneasy. Breitmann toyed with the bread crumbs. He was
inattentive besides.
"Napoleon. There is an old scandal," mused M. Ferraud. "I don't think
that any of you have heard it."
"That will interest me," Fitzgerald cried. "Tell it."
M. Ferraud cleared his throat with a sharp ahem and proceeded to
burnish his crystals. Specks and motes were ever adhering to them. He
held them up to the light and pretended to look through them: he saw
nothing but the secretary's abstraction.
"We were talking about treasures the other night," began the Frenchman,
"and I came near telling it then. It is a story of Napoleon."
"Never a better moment to tell it," said the admiral, rubbing his hands
in pleasurable anticipation.
"I say to you at once that the tale is known to few, and has never had
any publicity, and must never have any. Remember that, if you please,
Mr. Fitzgerald, and you also, Mr. Breitmann."
"I beg your pardon," said Breitmann. "I was not listening."
M. Ferraud repeated his request clearly.
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