[The House of the Wolf by Stanley Weyman]@TWC D-Link bookThe House of the Wolf CHAPTER VII 31/46
I sprang forward and seizing the captain by the clasp of his cloak, shook him violently, and flung him off with all my force, so that he reeled. "Dog!" I exclaimed, advancing, as if I would seize him again.
"Learn how to speak to your betters! Am I to be stopped by such sweepings as you? Hark ye, I am on the King's service!" He fairly spluttered with rage.
"More like the devil's!" he exclaimed, pronouncing his words abominably, and fumbling vainly for his weapon.
"King's service or no service you do not insult Andrea Pallavicini!" I could only vindicate my daring by greater daring, and I saw this even as, death staring me in the face, my heart seemed to stop.
The man had his mouth open and his hand raised to give an order which would certainly have sent Anne de Caylus from the world, when I cried passionately--it was my last chance, and I never wished to live more strongly than at that moment--I cried passionately, "Andrea Pallavicini, if such be your name, look at that! Look at that!" I repeated, shaking my open hand with the ring on it before his face, "and then hinder me if you dare! To-morrow if you have quarterings enough, I will see to your quarrel! Now send me on my way, or your fate be on your own head! Disobey--ay, do but hesitate--and I will call on these very men of yours to cut you down!" It was a bold throw, for I staked all on a talisman of which I did not know the value! To me it was the turn of a die, for I had had no leisure to look at the ring, and knew no more than a babe whose it was. But the venture was as happy as desperate. Andrea Pallavicini's expression--no pleasant one at the best of times--changed on the instant.
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