The House of the Wolf; a romance eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 212 pages of information about The House of the Wolf; a romance.

The House of the Wolf; a romance eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 212 pages of information about The House of the Wolf; a romance.

His after adventures are well-known:  for he, too, lives.  He was stopped twice after he left us.  In each case he escaped by showing his book of offices.  On reaching the college the porter refused to admit him, and he remained for some time in the open street exposed to constant danger of losing his life, and knowing not what to do.  At length he induced the gatekeeper, by the present of some small pieces of money, to call the principal of the college, and this man humanely concealed him for three days.  The massacre being then at an end, two armed men in his father’s pay sought him out and restored him to his friends.  So near was France to losing her greatest minister, the Duke de Sully.

To return to ourselves.  The lad out of sight, we instantly resumed our purpose, and trying to shut our eyes and ears to the cruelty, and ribaldry, and uproar through which we had still to pass, we counted our turnings with a desperate exactness, intent only on one thing—­to reach Louis de Pavannes, to reach the house opposite to the Head of Erasmus, as quickly as we could.  We presently entered a long, narrow street.  At the end of it the river was visible gleaming and sparkling in the sunlight.  The street was quiet; quiet and empty.  There was no living soul to be seen from end to end of it, only a prowling dog.  The noise of the tumult raging in other parts was softened here by distance and the intervening houses.  We seemed to be able to breathe more freely.

“This should be our street,” said Croisette.

I nodded.  At the same moment I espied, half-way down it, the sign we needed and pointed to it, But ah! were we in time?  Or too late?  That was the question.  By a single impulse we broke into a run, and shot down the roadway at speed.  A few yards short of the Head of Erasmus we came, one by one, Croisette first, to a full stop.  A full stop!

The house opposite the bookseller’s was sacked! gutted from top to bottom.  It was a tall house, immediately fronting the street, and every window in it was broken.  The door hung forlornly on one hinge, glaring cracks in its surface showing where the axe had splintered it.  Fragments of glass and ware, hung out and shattered in sheer wantonness, strewed the steps:  and down one corner of the latter a dark red stream trickled—­to curdle by and by in the gutter.  Whence came the stream?  Alas! there was something more to be seen yet, something our eyes instinctively sought last of all.  The body of a man.

It lay on the threshold, the head hanging back, the wide glazed eyes looking up to the summer sky whence the sweltering heat would soon pour down upon it.  We looked shuddering at the face.  It was that of a servant, a valet who had been with Louis at Caylus.  We recognised him at once for we had known and liked him.  He had carried our guns on the hills a dozen times, and told us stories of the war.  The blood crawled slowly from him.  He was dead.

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The House of the Wolf; a romance from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.