The Scarlet Pimpernel Baroness Orczy (book recommendations website .TXT) đ
- Author: Baroness Orczy
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âTwenty-four hours after our marriage, Madame, the Marquis de St. Cyr and all his family perished on the guillotine, and the popular rumour reached me that it was the wife of Sir Percy Blakeney who helped to send them there.â
âNay! I myself told you the truth of that odious tale.â
âNot till after it had been recounted to me by strangers, with all its horrible details.â
âAnd you believed them then and there,â she said with great vehemence, âwithout a proof or questionâ âyou believed that I, whom you vowed you loved more than life, whom you professed you worshipped, that I could do a thing so base as these strangers chose to recount. You thought I meant to deceive you about it allâ âthat I ought to have spoken before I married you: yet, had you listened, I would have told you that up to the very morning on which St. Cyr went to the guillotine, I was straining every nerve, using every influence I possessed, to save him and his family. But my pride sealed my lips, when your love seemed to perish, as if under the knife of that same guillotine. Yet I would have told you how I was duped! Aye! I, whom that same popular rumour had endowed with the sharpest wits in France! I was tricked into doing this thing, by men who knew how to play upon my love for an only brother, and my desire for revenge. Was it unnatural?â
Her voice became choked with tears. She paused for a moment or two, trying to regain some sort of composure. She looked appealingly at him, almost as if he were her judge. He had allowed her to speak on in her own vehement, impassioned way, offering no comment, no word of sympathy: and now, while she paused, trying to swallow down the hot tears that gushed to her eyes, he waited, impassive and still. The dim, grey light of early dawn seemed to make his tall form look taller and more rigid. The lazy, good-natured face looked strangely altered. Marguerite, excited, as she was, could see that the eyes were no longer languid, the mouth no longer good-humoured and inane. A curious look of intense passion seemed to glow from beneath his drooping lids, the mouth was tightly closed, the lips compressed, as if the will alone held that surging passion in check.
Marguerite Blakeney was, above all, a woman, with all a womanâs fascinating foibles, all a womanâs most lovable sins. She knew in a moment that for the past few months she had been mistaken: that this man who stood here before her, cold as a statue, when her musical voice struck upon his ear, loved her, as he had loved her a year ago: that his passion might have been dormant, but that it was there, as strong, as intense, as overwhelming, as when first her lips met his in one long, maddening kiss.
Pride had kept him from her, and, womanlike, she meant to win back that conquest which had been hers before. Suddenly it seemed to her that the only happiness life could ever hold for her again would be in feeling that manâs kiss once more upon her lips.
âListen to the tale, Sir Percy,â she said, and her voice was low, sweet, infinitely tender. âArmand was all in all to me! We had no parents, and brought one another up. He was my little father, and I, his tiny mother; we loved one another so. Then one dayâ âdo you mind me, Sir Percy? the Marquis de St. Cyr had my brother Armand thrashedâ âthrashed by his lackeysâ âthat brother whom I loved better than all the world! And his offence? That he, a plebeian, had dared to love the daughter of the aristocrat; for that he was waylaid and thrashedâ ââ ⊠thrashed like a dog within an inch of his life! Oh, how I suffered! his humiliation had eaten into my very soul! When the opportunity occurred, and I was able to take my revenge, I took it. But I only thought to bring that proud marquis to trouble and humiliation. He plotted with Austria against his own country. Chance gave me knowledge of this; I spoke of it, but I did not knowâ âhow could I guess?â âthey trapped and duped me. When I realised what I had done, it was too late.â
âIt is perhaps a little difficult, Madame,â said Sir Percy, after a moment of silence between them, âto go back over the past. I have confessed to you that my memory is short, but the thought certainly lingered in my mind that, at the time of the Marquisâ death, I entreated you for an explanation of those same noisome popular rumours. If that same memory does not, even now, play me a trick, I fancy that you refused me all explanation then, and demanded of my love a humiliating allegiance it was not prepared to give.â
âI wished to test your love for me, and it did not bear the test. You used to tell me that you drew the very breath of life but for me, and for love of me.â
âAnd to probe that love, you demanded that I should forfeit mine honour,â he said, whilst gradually his impassiveness seemed to leave him, his rigidity to relax; âthat I should accept without murmur or question, as a dumb and submissive slave, every action of my mistress. My heart overflowing with love and passion, I asked for no explanationâ âI waited for one, not doubtingâ âonly hoping. Had you spoken but one word, from you I would have accepted any explanation and believed it. But you left me without a word, beyond a bald confession of the actual horrible facts; proudly you returned to your brotherâs house, and left me aloneâ ââ ⊠for weeksâ ââ ⊠not knowing, now, in whom to believe, since the shrine, which contained my one illusion,
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