Carmen eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 91 pages of information about Carmen.

Carmen eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 91 pages of information about Carmen.

Unluckily we were soon disturbed.  The door was suddenly burst open, and a man, shrouded to the eyes in a brown cloak, entered the room, apostrophizing the gipsy in anything but gentle terms.  What he said I could not catch, but the tone of his voice revealed the fact that he was in a very evil temper.  The gipsy betrayed neither surprise nor anger at his advent, but she ran to meet him, and with a most striking volubility, she poured out several sentences in the mysterious language she had already used in my presence.  The word payllo, frequently reiterated, was the only one I understood.  I knew that the gipsies use it to describe all men not of their own race.  Concluding myself to be the subject of this discourse, I was prepared for a somewhat delicate explanation.  I had already laid my hand on the leg of one of the stools, and was studying within myself to discover the exact moment at which I had better throw it at his head, when, roughly pushing the gipsy to one side, the man advanced toward me.  Then with a step backward he cried: 

“What, sir!  Is it you?”

I looked at him in my turn and recognised my friend Don Jose.  At that moment I did feel rather sorry I had saved him from the gallows.

“What, is it you, my good fellow?” I exclaimed, with as easy a smile as I could muster.  “You have interrupted this young lady just when she was foretelling me most interesting things!”

“The same as ever.  There shall be an end to it!” he hissed between his teeth, with a savage glance at her.

Meanwhile the gitana was still talking to him in her own tongue.  She became more and more excited.  Her eyes grew fierce and bloodshot, her features contracted, she stamped her foot.  She seemed to me to be earnestly pressing him to do something he was unwilling to do.  What this was I fancied I understood only too well, by the fashion in which she kept drawing her little hand backward and forward under her chin.  I was inclined to think she wanted to have somebody’s throat cut, and I had a fair suspicion the throat in question was my own.  To all her torrent of eloquence Don Jose’s only reply was two or three shortly spoken words.  At this the gipsy cast a glance of the most utter scorn at him, then, seating herself Turkish-fashion in a corner of the room, she picked out an orange, tore off the skin, and began to eat it.

Don Jose took hold of my arm, opened the door, and led me into the street.  We walked some two hundred paces in the deepest silence.  Then he stretched out his hand.

“Go straight on,” he said, “and you’ll come to the bridge.”

That instant he turned his back on me and departed at a great pace.  I took my way back to my inn, rather crestfallen, and considerably out of temper.  The worst of all was that, when I undressed, I discovered my watch was missing.

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Project Gutenberg
Carmen from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.