Tales for Young and Old eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 230 pages of information about Tales for Young and Old.

Tales for Young and Old eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 230 pages of information about Tales for Young and Old.
The night was passed at a post-house, where there were so few rooms, that Adelaide had to sleep in the same apartment with the daughter of the owner:  so here was nothing to be done either.  The Italians began to grow impatient at these difficulties, and Mazzuolo proposed a change in their tactics.  On the previous evening, the weather being very cold, Madame Louison had ordered a fire in her chamber.  She would doubtless do the same on the ensuing night; and all they had to do was to fill the stove with charcoal, and her death would follow in the most natural way in the world.  They were to pass the night at Nuremburg; and, as soon as they arrived, Karl was sent out to procure the charcoal; but, after remaining away a long time, he came back saying the shops were all shut, and he could not get any; and as the inn at Nuremburg was not a fit place for any other kind of attack, Adelaide was respited for another four-and-twenty hours.

On the following day, in order to avoid such another contretemps, the charcoal was secured in the morning whilst they were changing horses, and placed in a sack under the seat of the carriage.

It happened on this day that the road was very hilly, and as the horses slowly dragged the carriage up the ascents, Madame Louison proposed walking to warm themselves.  They all descended; but Tina, being stout, and heavy on her feet, was soon tired, and got in again; whilst Mazzuolo, with a view to his design against Adelaide, fell into conversation with the driver about the different stations they would have to stop at.  He wanted to extract all the information he could—­so he walked beside the carriage, whilst Madame Louison and Karl, who were very cold, walked on as fast as they could.

‘You look quite chilled, Karl,’ said she; ’let us see who will be at the top of the hill first—­a race will warm us.’

The youth strode on without saying anything; but as she was the more active, she got before him; and when she reached the top, she turned round, and playfully clapping her hands, said, ’Karl, I’ve beaten you!’ Karl said he had had an illness lately, and was not so strong as he used to be; he had gone into the water when he was very warm, and had nearly died of the consequences.  This led her to observe how thinly he was clad; and when the carriage overtook them, she proposed that, as there was plenty of room, he should go inside; to which the others, as they did not want him to fall ill upon their hands, consented.  With the glasses up, and the furs that the party were wrapped in, the inside of the carriage was very different to the out; and Karl’s nose and cheeks, which had before been blue, resumed their original hues.

It was late when they reached their night-station, and, whilst the ladies went up stairs to look at their rooms, Earl received his orders, which were, that he should fill the stove with charcoal, and set fire to it, whilst the others were at table.  The lad answered composedly that he would.  ‘And when you have done it,’ said Mazzuolo, ’give me a wink, and I will step out and see that all is right before she goes to her room.’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Tales for Young and Old from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.