[I Will Repay by Baroness Emmuska Orczy]@TWC D-Link bookI Will Repay CHAPTER XXI 7/10
Then the Minister of Justice allows an advocate to defend her.
She has none in court; but think you Deroulede would not step forward, and bring all the fervour of his eloquence to bear in favour of his mistress? Can you hear his impassioned speech on her behalf ?--I can--the rope, I tell you, citizens, with which he'll hang himself.
Will he admit in open court that the burnt correspondence was another lover's letters? No!--a thousand times no!--and, in the face of his emphatic denial of the existence of another lover for Juliette, it will be for our clever Public Prosecutor to bring him down to an admission that the correspondence was his, that it was treasonable, that she burnt them to save him." He paused, exhausted at last, mopping his forehead, then drinking large gulps of brandy to ease his parched throat. A veritable chorus of enthusiasm greeted the end of his long peroration. The Machiavelian scheme, almost devilish in its cunning, in its subtle knowledge of human nature and of the heart-strings of a noble organisation like Deroulede's, commended itself to these patriots, who were thirsting for the downfall of a superior enemy. Even Tinville lost his attitude of dry sarcasm; his thin cheeks were glowing with the lust of the fight. Already for the past few months, the trials before the Committee of Public Safety had been dull, monotonous, uninteresting.
Charlotte Corday had been a happy diversion, but otherwise it had been the case of various deputies, who had held views that had become too moderate, or of the generals who had failed to subdue the towns or provinces of the south. But now this trial on the morrow--the excitement of it all, the trap laid for Deroulede, the pleasure of seeing him take the first step towards his own downfall.
Everyone there was eager and enthusiastic for the fray.
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