[The Trampling of the Lilies by Rafael Sabatini]@TWC D-Link bookThe Trampling of the Lilies CHAPTER X 13/24
If you would have him well to-morrow, remember that it is of the first importance that he should have utter rest tonight." With that he went in quest of Dame Capoulade to ascertain whether she possessed any potion that would induce sleep.
He told her that the Captain was seriously injured, and that unless he slept he might die, and, quickened by the terror of what might befall her in such a case, the woman presently produced a small phial full of a brown, viscous fluid.
What it might be he had no notion, being all unversed in the mysteries of the pharmacopoeia; but she told him that it had belonged to her now defunct husband, who had always said that ten drops of it would make a man sleep the clock round. He experimented on the Captain with ten drops, and within a quarter of an hour of taking the draught of red wine in which it was administered, Charlot's deep breathing proclaimed him fast asleep. That done, La Boulaye sent Guyot below to his post once more, and returning to the room in which they had supped, he paced up and down for a full hour, revolving in his mind the matter of saving Mademoiselle and her mother.
At last, towards ten o'clock, he opened the casement, and calling down to Guyot, as Charlot had done, he bade him bring the women up again.
Now Guyot knew of the high position which Caron occupied in the Convention, and he had seen the intimate relations in which he stood to Tardivet, so that unhesitatingly he now obeyed him. La Boulaye closed the window, and crossed slowly to the fire.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|