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

CHAPTER XXXI: Final Dispositions
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The tide is high at half-past seven, and he will be in haste for his wife to be aboard his yacht, ere the turn, even if he..." He paused, savouring the thoughts which had suddenly flashed across his mind, and a look of intense hatred and cruel satisfaction for a moment chased away the studied impassiveness of his face.
"What do you mean, Citizen ?" queried Collot anxiously, "even if he...
what ?..." "Oh! nothing, nothing! I was only trying to make vague guesses as to what the Englishman will do AFTER he has written the letter," quoth Chauvelin reflectively.
"Morbleu! he'll return to his own accursed country...

glad enough to have escaped with his skin....

I suppose," added Collot with sudden anxiety, "you have no fear that he will refuse at the last moment to write that letter ?" The two men were sitting in the large room, out of which opened the one which was now occupied by Marguerite.

They were talking at the further end of it, close to the window, and though Chauvelin had mostly spoken in a whisper, Collot had ofttimes shouted, and the ex-ambassador was wondering how much Marguerite had heard.
Now at Collot's anxious query he gave a quick furtive glance in the direction of the further room wherein she sat, so silent and so still, that it seemed almost as if she must be sleeping.
"You don't think that the Englishman will refuse to write the letter ?" insisted Collot with angry impatience.
"No!" replied Chauvelin quietly.
"But if he does ?" persisted the other.
"If he does, I send the woman to Paris to-night and have him hanged as a spy in this prison yard without further formality or trial..." replied Chauvelin firmly; "so either way, you see, Citizen," he added in a whisper, "the Scarlet Pimpernel is done for....

But I think that he will write the letter." "Parbleu! so do I!..." rejoined Collot with a coarse laugh..


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