[The Elusive Pimpernel by Baroness Emmuska Orczy]@TWC D-Link book
The Elusive Pimpernel

CHAPTER XXIV: Colleagues
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Collot made no secret of his hatred for Chauvelin, and the latter disguised it but thinly under the veneer of contemptuous indifference.
"As for that dammed Englishman," added Collot now, after a slight pause, and with another savage oath, "if 'tis my good fortune to lay hands on him, I'd shoot him then and there like a mad dog, and rid France once and forever of this accursed spy." "And think you, Citizen Collot," rejoined Chauvelin with a shrug of the shoulders, "that France would be rid of all English adventurers by the summary death of this one man ?" "He is the ringleader, at any rate..." "And has at least nineteen disciples to continue his traditions of conspiracy and intrigue.

None perhaps so ingenuous as himself, none with the same daring and good luck perhaps, but still a number of ardent fools only too ready to follow in the footsteps of their chief.

Then there's the halo of martyrdom around the murdered hero, the enthusiasm created by his noble death...

Nay! nay, Citizen, you have not lived among these English people, you do not understand them, or you would not talk of sending their popular hero to an honoured grave." But Collot d'Herbois only shook his powerful frame like some big, sulky dog, and spat upon the floor to express his contempt of this wild talk which seemed to have no real tangible purpose.
"You have not caught your Scarlet Pimpernel yet, Citizen," he said with a snort.
"No, but I will, after sundown to-morrow." "How do you know ?" "I have ordered the Angelus to be rung at one of the closed churches, and he agreed to fight a duel with me on the southern ramparts at that hour and on that day," said Chauvelin simply.
"You take him for a fool ?" sneered Collot.
"No, only for a foolhardy adventurer." "You imagine that with his wife as hostage in our hands, and the whole city of Boulogne on the lookout for him for the sake of the amnesty, that the man would be fool enough to walk on those ramparts at a given hour, for the express purpose of getting himself caught by you and your men ?" "I am quite sure that if we do not lay hands on him before that given hour, that he will be on the ramparts at the Angelus to-morrow," said Chauvelin emphatically.
Collot shrugged his broad shoulders.
"Is the man mad ?" he asked with an incredulous laugh.
"Yes, I think so," rejoined the other with a smile.
"And having caught your hare," queried Collot, "how do you propose to cook him ?" "Twelve picked men will be on the ramparts ready to seize him the moment he appears." "And to shoot him at sight, I hope." "Only as a last resource, for the Englishman is powerful and may cause our half-famished men a good deal of trouble.

But I want him alive, if possible..." "Why?
a dead lion is safer than a live one any day." "Oh! we'll kill him right enough, Citizen.


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