Clementina eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about Clementina.

Clementina eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about Clementina.

On the third afternoon M. Chateaudoux found the hawker seated in the middle of the avenue and over against the door of the guarded villa.  M. Chateaudoux, when his timidity slept, was capable of good nature.  There was a soldier with a loaded musket in full view.  The hawker, besides, had not pestered him.  He determined to buy some small thing,—­a mirror, perhaps, which was always useful,—­and he approached the hawker, who for his part wearily flicked the gravel with his stick and drew a curve here and a line there until, as M. Chateaudoux stopped before the bench, there lay sketched at his feet the rude semblance of a crown.  The stick swept over it the next instant and left the gravel smooth.

But M. Chateaudoux had seen, and his heart fluttered and sank.  For here were plots, possibly dangers, most certainly trepidations.  He turned his back as though he had seen nothing, and constraining himself to a slow pace walked towards the door of the villa.  But the hawker was now at his side, whining in execrable German and a strong French accent the remarkable value of his wares.  There were samplers most exquisitely worked, jewels for the most noble gentleman’s honoured sweetheart, and purses which emperors would give a deal to buy.  Chateaudoux was urged to take notice that emperors would give sums to lay a hand on the hawker’s purses.

M. Chateaudoux pretended not to hear.

“I want nothing,” he said, “nothing in the world;” and he repeated the statement in order to drown the other’s voice.

“A purse, good gentleman,” persisted the hawker, and he dangled one before Chateaudoux’s eyes.  Not for anything would Chateaudoux take that purse.

“Go away,” he cried; “I have a sufficiency of purses, and I will not be plagued by you.”

They were now at the steps of the villa, and the sentry, lifting the butt of his musket, roughly thrust the hawker back.

“What have you there?  Bring your basket here,” said he; and to Chateaudoux’s consternation the hawker immediately offered the purse to the sentinel.

“It is only the poor who have kind hearts,” he said; “here’s the proper purse for a soldier.  It is so hard to get the money out that a man is saved an ocean of drink.”

The hawker’s readiness destroyed any suspicions the sentinel may have felt.

“Go away,” he said, “quick!”

“You will buy the purse?”

The sentinel raised his musket again.

“Then the kind gentleman will,” said the hawker, and he thrust the purse into M. Chateaudoux’s reluctant hand.  Chateaudoux could feel within the purse a folded paper.  He was committed now without a doubt, and in an extreme alarm he flung a coin into the roadway and got him into the house.  The sentinel carelessly dropped the butt of his musket on the coin.

“Go,” said he, and with a sudden kick he lifted the hawker half across the road.  The hawker happened to be Charles Wogan, who took a little matter like that with the necessary philosophy.  He picked himself up and limped off.

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Project Gutenberg
Clementina from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.