Prev | Current Page 276 | Next

Altsheler, Joseph A. (Joseph Alexander), 1862-1919

"The Forest of Swords A Story of Paris and the Marne"

"
Young Scott felt a sinking of the heart, but he was not one to show it.
"Prisoners may escape," he said boldly, "and what has been done once can
always be done again."
"We shall see that it does not happen a second time in your case. Von
Arnheim will dispose of you for the night, and even if you should
succeed in stealing from the chateau there is around it a ring of German
sentinels through which you could not possibly break."
Some strange kink appeared suddenly in John's brain--he was never able
to account for it afterward, though Auersperg's manner rasped him
terribly.
"I mean to escape," he said, "and I wager you two to one that I do."
Auersperg sat down and laughed, laughed in a way that made John's face
turn red. Then he beckoned to von Arnheim.
"Take him away," he said. "He is characteristic of his frivolous
democracy, frivolous and perhaps amusing, but it is a time for serious
not trifling things."
John was glad enough to go with von Arnheim, who was silent and
depressed. Yet the thought came to him once more that there were princes
and princes. Von Arnheim led the way to a small bare room under the
roof. John saw that there were soldiers in the upper halls as well as
the lower, and he was sorry that he had made such a boast to Auersperg.
As he now saw it his chance of escape glimmered into nothing.
"You should not have spoken so to His Highness," said von Arnheim. "I
could not help but hear.


Pages:
264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288