登陆注册
5166300000055

第55章

Suddenly, in the midst of his narrative, Johann put his leg stiffly between his enemy's and gave a mighty jerk with his arm, with the result that Maurice, wholly unprepared, went sprawling to the pavement.He was on his feet in an instant, but Johann was free and flying up the alley.Maurice gave chase, but uselessly.Johann had disappeared.The alley was a cul de sac, but was lined with doors; and these Maurice hammered to ease his conscience.No one answered.Deeply disgusted with his lack of caution, Maurice regained the street, where he brushed the dust from his knees.

"I'll take it out of his hide the next time we meet.He wasn't worth the trouble, anyway."A sybil might have whispered in his ear that a very large fish had escaped his net, but Maurice continued, conscious of nothing save chagrin and a bruised knee.He resumed the piecing together of events, or rather he attempted to; very few pieces could be brought together.If Beauvais had the certificates, what was his object in lying to Madame? What benefit would accrue to him?

After all, it was a labyrinth of paths which always brought him up to the beginning.He drooped his shoulders dejectedly.There was nothing left for him to do but return to the Red Chateau and inform them of the fruitlessness of his errand.He would start on the morrow.Tonight he wanted once more to hear the band, to wander about the park, to row around the rear of the archbishop's garden.

"A fine thing to be born in purple--sometimes," he mused."Inever knew till now the inconveniences of the common mold."He tramped on, building chateaux en Espagne.That they tumbled down did not matter; he could rebuild in the space of a second, and each castle an improvement on its predecessor.

His attention was suddenly drawn away from this idle but pleasant pursuit.In a side street he saw twenty or thirty students surging back and forth, laughing and shouting and jostling.In the center of this swaying mass canes rose and fell.

It was a fight, and as he loved a fight, Maurice pressed his hat firmly on his head and veered into the side street.He looked around guiltily, and was thankful that no feminine eyes were near to offer him their reproaches.He jostled among the outer circle, but could see nothing.He stooped.Something white flashed this way and that, accompanied by the sound of low growls.A dog fight was his first impression, and he was on the point of leaving, for, while he secretly enjoyed the sight of two physically perfect men waging battle, he had not the heart to see two brutes pitted against each other, goaded on by brutes of a lower caste.But even as he turned the crowd opened and closed, and the brief picture was enough for him.

Her dog! And the students were beating it because they knew it to be defenseless.Her dog! toothless and old, who could not hold when his jaws closed on an arm or leg, but who, with that indomitable courage of his race, fought on and on, hopelessly and stubbornly.

He was covered with blood, one of his legs was hurt, but still the spirit burned.It was cowardly.Maurice's jaws assumed a particularly ferocious angle.Her dog! Rage choked him.With an oath he flung this student aside and that, fought his way to the center.A burly student, armed with a stout cane, was the principal aggressor.

Maurice doubled his fist and swung a blow which had one hundred and sixty pounds behind it, and it landed squarely on the cheek of the student, who dropped face downward and lay still.This onslaught was so sudden and unexpected that the students were confounded.But Maurice, whose plans crystallized in moments like these, picked up the cane and laid it about him.

The students swore and yelled and stumbled over one another in their wild efforts to dodge the vindictive cane.Maurice cleared a wide circle.The dog, half blinded by his blood and not fully comprehending this new phase in the tide of events, lunged at Maurice, who nimbly eluded him.Finally the opportunity came.He flung the cane into the yelling pack, with his left arm caught the dog about the middle, and leaped back into the nearest doorway.The muscles of his left arm were sorely tried; the dog considered his part in the fray by no means ended, and he tugged and yelped huskily.With his right hand Maurice sought his revolver, cocked and leveled it.There came a respite.The students had not fully recovered from their surprise, and the yells sank into murmurs.

"You curs!" said Maurice, panting."Shame on you! and an old dog that can't defend himself! You knew he had no teeth.""God save your Excellency!" laughed a student in the rear, who had not tasted the cane; "you may be sure we knew he had no teeth or we wouldn't have risked our precious calves.Don't let him scare you with the popgun, comrades.At him, my brave ones;he will be more sport than the dog! Down with the Osians, dogs, followers and all!""Come on, then," said Maurice, whose fighting blood was at heat.

"Come on, if you think it isn't over.There are six bullets in this popgun, and I don't give a particular damn where they go.

Come on!"

Whether or not this challenge would have been accepted remains unwritten.There now came on the air the welcome sound of galloping hoofs, and presently two cuirassiers wheeled into the street.What Maurice had left undone with the cane the cuirassiers completed with the flat of their sabers.They had had a brush with the students the night before, and they went at them as if determined to take both interest and principal.The students dispersed like leaves in the wind--all save one.He rose to his feet, his hands covering his jaw and a dazed expression in his eyes.He saw Maurice with the revolver, the cuirassiers with their sabers, and the remnant of his army flying to cover, and he decided to follow their example.The scene had changed somewhat since he last saw it.He slunk off at a zigzag trot.

One of the cuirassiers dismounted, his face red from his exertions.

同类推荐
  • A Century of Roundels

    A Century of Roundels

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 月令

    月令

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 正宗心印后续联芳

    正宗心印后续联芳

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 孝感天

    孝感天

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 甲申朝事小纪

    甲申朝事小纪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 鹤林天树植禅师语录

    鹤林天树植禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 何夕兰烬落

    何夕兰烬落

    她是名臣之后,轻柔如水、灵秀聪颖。她生在帝王家,兰心蕙质、豪迈爽朗。两个不同身份的女孩子,相识在森严的紫禁城。在这里既有宫闱惊变、兄弟阋墙的惊心动魄。也有良辰美景、春花秋月的妩媚清新。有她们深爱的人,也有她们无法化解的仇恨。几许痴情、几段苦恋,往事已成空,满腹相思都沉默。几番风雨、几度秋凉,繁华终落尽,一身憔悴在风里。政治斗争的风雨中,一切都可能改变,唯一不变的是彼此之间的友情,始终温暖着对方……
  • 第一神婆

    第一神婆

    什么是易师?易师就是——算卦的!她本是中国古代哲学研究生,精通周易八卦,奇门遁甲。布阵时意外穿越到贫贱之家,家徒四壁,食不果腹;无良的爹爹为了钱财竟然要将12岁的她“嫁”给得了痨病的老汉冲喜!饿着肚子逃婚,改头换面,更名换姓……她靠着精准的易数,卖卦求生,终于在异世生存下来。本想安稳度日,却因一枚前世带来的铜钱,卷入朝堂纷争、江湖厮杀!人不犯我我不犯人,既然你们不让本姑娘过安稳的小日子,本姑娘就搅和你个天翻地覆、家破人亡!谁叫你得罪了易师呢?所以说,宁可得罪小人,不要得罪女人,尤其是会易理术数的——女易师!
  • 骷髅夜都市第一季

    骷髅夜都市第一季

    一桩桩离奇的惨案,一缕缕游荡的怨灵!神秘的夜行者究竟为何诡异重重?连续发生的灵异案件与冥界是否又有莫大关联?阎王叫人三更死,绝不留人到五更!化身为牵魂使者的梦轩郎,如何面对阴阳两界的爱恨情仇?恩怨宿命?
  • 六韬·三略(中华国学经典)

    六韬·三略(中华国学经典)

    《六韬》和《黄石公三略》是我国古代著名的军事著作。在宋代,与《孙子》《吴子》《司马法》《尉缭子》《李卫公问对》合称“武经七书”。宋神宗举办“武学”,培养军队的高级将领,即以“武经七书”作为军事教科书。《六韬》和《黄石公三略》从此成为军事将领的必读书,流传很广。对当代和后代的军事理论和实践有很大的影响。人们形容兵家谋略,往往以精通“六韬三略”归之,或经称谋略为“韬略”,揆其本源,即出于此。
  • 玄帝归来

    玄帝归来

    高考之后,林玄突然失踪,生不见人,死不见尸,没人知道他其实是被人沉入龙湖,从而意外穿越到了一个妖魔横行、仙魔林立、万族共存的玄幻世界,然而三十天后,他又从湖里爬了出来!
  • 冷刀夜雨听风录

    冷刀夜雨听风录

    忘哥儿要去哪儿,圆圆就要去那儿。(ps:简单温情版)一把冷刀,半壶浊酒;少年热血,波谲江湖;拂晓刀尖喉头血,夜雨琴端听风雨。剑邪宗少主‘楚忘’被迫走入波谲云诡的江湖,一点点揭开自己的身世,以及三十年前‘父辈’参与的那场大屠杀。麒麟再现,风云必会,得麒麟兽元七者,可号令武林!(ps:复杂版)设定是玄幻武侠,类似于《风云》《魔界之龙珠》,文风略秦时明月之感,人物众多,不要被前三章带偏……
  • 圣魂神尊

    圣魂神尊

    战魂大陆,强者生存!主角风恒,强势崛起!
  • 你若盛开

    你若盛开

    七七是苏牧之的最后一个七,天气竟然那么好。她照例祭祀完毕,开始读那封信。她今天格外伤感,也许过了这个七,她会有段时间不能来看他了。而且照旧俗的说法,七七过后,人的灵魂就不能在人间随意游荡了。梅芸今天读信很慢,读着读着,突然有一片枯叶掉在信纸上,吓她一跳。梅芸抬头,看见头上的苹果树,树上落着许多积雪。那些积雪太厚了,甚至连树皮的罅隙里都钻满了,让人怀疑是否去年冬天的积雪仍旧在那里——那么,那么,梅芸知道自己今后会很少再来了,她不知怎么,突然想起了往日曾经产生的那个想法,那个去医院看他的长发女子是谁?那个和他在街上走路的长发女子又是谁呢?
  • 佛说施一切无畏陀罗尼经

    佛说施一切无畏陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。