Sir John Constantine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 502 pages of information about Sir John Constantine.

Sir John Constantine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 502 pages of information about Sir John Constantine.

I dropped on my knees for a grip on the creepers, swung myself down the face of the crag, and within ten seconds was lost in the macchia again, fighting my way through it to the spot where Nat lay.  Wherever the scrub parted and allowed me a glimpse I kept my eye on the bush above the chine; and so, with torn clothes and face and hands bleeding, crossed the dip, mounted the slope and emerged upon a ferny hollow ringed about on three sides with the macchia.  There face-downward in the fern lay Nat, shot through the lungs.

I lifted him against one knee.  His eyelids flickered and his lips moved to speak, but a rush of blood choked him.  Still resting him against my knee, I felt behind me for my musket.  The flint was gone from the lock, dislodged no doubt by a blow against the crags.  With one hand I groped on the ground for a stone to replace it.  My fingers found only a tangle of dry fern, and glancing up at the ridge, I stared straight along the barrel of a musket.  At the same moment a second barrel glimmered out between the bushes on my left. “Signore, favorisca di rendersi,” said a voice, very quiet and polite.  I stared around me, hopeless, at bay:  and while I stared and clutched my useless gun, from behind a rock some twenty paces up the slope a girl stepped forward, halted, rested the butt of her musket on the stone, and, crossing her hands above the nozzle of it, calmly regarded us.

Even in my rage her extraordinary wild beauty held me at gaze for a moment.  She wore over a loose white shirt a short waist-tunic of faded green velvet, with a petticoat or kilt of the same reaching a little below her knees, from which to the ankles her legs were cased in tight-fitting leathern gaiters.  Her stout boots shone with toe-plates of silver or polished steel.  A sad-coloured handkerchief protected her head, its edge drawn straight across her brow in a fashion that would have disfigured ninety-nine women in a hundred.  But no head-dress availed to disfigure that brow or the young imperious eyes beneath it.

“Are you a friend of this man?” she asked in Italian.

“He is my best friend,” I answered her, in the same language.  “Why have you done this to him?”

She seemed to consider for a moment, thoughtfully, without pity.

“I can talk to you in French if you find it easier,” she said, after a pause.

“You may use Italian,” I answered angrily.  “I can understand it more easily than you will use it to explain why you have done this wickedness.”

“He was very foolish,” she said.  “He tried to run away.  And you were all very foolish to come as you did.  We saw your ship while you were yet four leagues at sea.  How have you come here?”

“I came here,” answered I, “being led by your hogs, and after shooting an assassin in disguise of a hog.”

“You have killed Giuseppe?”

“I did my best,” said I, turning and addressing myself to three Corsicans who had stepped from the bushes around me.  “But whatever your purpose may be, you have shot my friend here, and he is dying.  If you have hearts, deal tenderly with him, and afterwards we can talk.”

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Project Gutenberg
Sir John Constantine from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.