"Have patience, sweet bird, whom I shall soon take to an eery nest. To

be sure I shall save you!" From behind a clumb of hazel the vicomte

came forth, a sword in his hand.

It was the tone, not the words, which enveloped madame's heart in a

film of ice. One way or the other, it did not matter, she was lost.

"Guard the Chevalier, men!" cried D'Hérouville, wheeling. "We shall

wipe out all bad debts while we are at it. D'Halluys, look to

yourself!"

"You fat head!" laughed the vicomte, parrying in a circle. "Did I not

tell you that I should kill you?"

Had he been alone the Chevalier would have rushed his opponents. God

help madame when he fell, for he could not kill all these men; sooner

or later he must fall. The men made no attempt to engage him. They

merely held ready in case he should make a rush.

With the fury of a maddened bull, D'Hérouville engaged the vicomte. He

was the vicomte's equal in all save generalship. The vicomte loved,

next to madame, the game of fence, and he loved it so thoroughly that

his coolness never fell below the level of his superb courage.

Physically, there was scarce a hair's difference in the weight of the

two men. But a parried stroke, or a nicely balked assault, stirred

D'Hérouville's heat; if repeated the blood surged into his head, and he

was often like to throw caution to the winds. Once his point scratched

the vicomte's jaw.

"Very good," the vicomte admitted, lunging in flanconade. His blade

grated harshly against D'Hérouville's hilt. It was close work.

They disengaged. D'Hérouville's weapon flashed in a circle. The

vicomte's parry was so fine that his own blade lay flat against his

side.

"Count, you would be wonderful if you could keep cool that fat head of

yours. That is as close as I ever expect to come and pull out."

Presently the end came. D'Hérouville feinted and thrust for the

throat. Quick as a wind-driven shadow the vicomte dropped on a knee;

his blade taking an acute angle, glided under D'Hérouville's arm and

slid noiselessly into the broad chest of his opponent, who opened his

mouth as if to speak, gasped, stumbled and fell upon his face, dead.

The vicomte sank his blade into the earth to cleanse it.

Madame had covered her eyes. The Chevalier, however, had watched the

contest, but without any sign of emotion on his face. He had nothing

to do but wait. He had gained some advantage; one of these men would

be tired.

The vicomte came within a yard of the hut, and stopped. He smiled

evilly and twisted his mustache. By the attitude of the men, the

Chevalier could see that the vicomte had outplanned D'Hérouville.




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