[The Long Night by Stanley Weyman]@TWC D-Link book
The Long Night

CHAPTER XXV
1/29

CHAPTER XXV.
BASTERGA AT ARGOS.
The fear that Blandano might postpone the night-round, to a time which would involve discovery, haunted Blondel; and late on this eventful evening he despatched Louis, as we have seen, to the Porte Neuve to remind the Captain of his orders.

That done--it was all he could do--the Syndic sat down in his great chair, and prepared himself to wait.

He knew that he had before him some hours of uncertainty almost intolerable; and a peril, a hundred times more hard to face, because in the pinch of it he must play two parts; he must run with the hare and hunt with the hounds, and, a traitor standing forward for the city he had betrayed, he must have an eye to his reputation as well as his life.
He had no doubt of the success of Savoy, the walls once passed.
Moreover, the genius of Basterga had imposed itself upon him as that of a man unlikely to fail.

But some resistance there must be, some bloodshed--for the town held many devoted men; one hour at least of butchery, and that followed, he shuddered to think it, by more than one hour of excess, of cruelty, of rapine.

From such things the captured cities of that day rarely escaped.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books