[Captain Fracasse by Theophile Gautier]@TWC D-Link book
Captain Fracasse

CHAPTER VII
20/29

The figure of a man appeared, coming along the road at a brisk pace, and carrying a large bundle in his arms, enveloped in his cloak.
This he put down upon the ground when he came up with the chariot, standing directly in his way, and it proved to be a little girl about twelve years old; a child with large, dark, liquid eyes that had a feverish light in them--eyes exactly like Chiquita's.

There was a string of pearl beads round the slender neck, and an extraordinary combination of rags and tatters, held together in some mysterious way, hung about the thin, fragile little figure.

It was indeed Chiquita herself, and with her, Agostino--the ingenious rascal, whose laughable exploit with his scarecrow brigands has been already recorded--who, tired of following a profession that yielded no profits, had set out on foot for Paris--where all men of talent could find employment they said--marching by night, and lying hidden by day, like all other beasts of prey.

The poor child, overcome with fatigue and benumbed by the cold, had given out entirely that night, in spite of her valiant efforts to keep up with Agostino, and he had at last picked her up in his arms and carried her for a while--she was but a light burden--hoping to find some sort of shelter soon.
"What can be the meaning of this ?" he said to Chiquita.

"Usually we stop the vehicles, but here we are stopped by one in our turn; we must look out lest it be full of travellers, ready to demand our money or our lives." "There's nobody in it," Chiquita replied, having peeped in under the cover.
"Perhaps there may be something worth having inside there," Agostino said; "we will look and see," and he proceeded to light the little dark lantern he always had with him, for the daylight was not yet strong enough to penetrate into the dusky interior of the chariot.


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