[The Champdoce Mystery by Emile Gaboriau]@TWC D-Link book
The Champdoce Mystery

CHAPTER VIII
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He may be timid, but he is not a coward; the thoughts of me will give him the power to resist his father's tyranny." Daumon allowed himself to fall into his great armchair as though overcome by the excitement of this interview.
"We can talk coolly enough here and with no one to threaten us; but the Marquis, on the other hand, is exposed to all his father's violence and ill treatment, moral as well as physical, without any defence for aid from a soul in the world, and in such times as these the strongest will may give way." "Yes, I see it all; Norbert may give in, he may marry another woman, and I shall be left alone, with my reputation gone, and the scorn and scoff of all the neighborhood." "But, mademoiselle, you still have--" "All I have left is life, and that life I would gladly give for vengeance." There was something so terribly determined in the young girl's voice that again Daumon started, and this time his start was sincere and not simulated.
"Yes, you are right," said he, "and there are many besides myself who have vowed to have revenge on the Duke, and their time will come, have no fear.

A quiet shot in the woods in the dusk of the evening would settle many a long account.

It has been tried, but the old man seems to have the luck of the evil one; and if the gun did not miss fire, the bullets flew wide of the mark.

A judge might take a very serious view of such a matter, and term a crime what was merely an act of justice.

Who can say whether the death of the Duke de Champdoce might not save him from the commission of many acts of tyranny and oppression and render many deserving persons happy ?" The face of Diana de Laurebourg turned deadly pale as she listened to these specious arguments.
"As things go," continued Daumon, "the Duke may go on living to a hundred; he is wealthy and influential, and to a certain degree looked up to.


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