登陆注册
26270500000042

第42章 CHAPTER X(4)

"I do," snapped Samoval, to make an instant recovery: "at least so far as the matter is concerned." And he elaborated: "I assure you, sirs, it will be an evil day for the nobility of any country when its Government enacts against the satisfaction that one gentleman has the right to demand from another who offends him."

"Isn't the conversation rather too bloodthirsty for a luncheon-table?" wondered Lady O'Moy. And tactlessly she added, thinking with flattery to mollify Samoval and cool his obvious heat: "You are yourself such a famous swordsman, Count."

And then Tremayne's dislike of the man betrayed him into his deplorable phrase.

"At the present time Portugal is in urgent need of her famous swordsmen to go against the French and not to increase the disorders at home."

A silence complete and ominous followed the rash words, and Samoval, white to the lips, pondered the imperturbable captain with a baleful eye.

"I think," he said at last, speaking slowly and softly, and picking his words with care, "I think that is innuendo. I should be relieved, Captain Tremayne, to hear you say that it is not."

Tremayne was prompt to give him the assurance. "No innuendo at all.

A plain statement of fact."

"The innuendo I suggested lay in the application of the phrase. Do you make it personal to myself?"

"Of course not," said Sir Terence, cutting in and speaking sharply.

"What an assumption!"

"I am asking Captain Tremayne," the Count insisted, with grim firmness, notwithstanding his deferential smile to Sir Terence.

"I spoke quite generally, sir," Tremayne assured him, partly under the suasion of Sir Terence's interposition, partly out of consideration for the ladies, who were looking scared. "Of course, if you choose to take it to yourself, sir, that is a matter for your own discretion. I think," he added, also with a smile, "that the ladies find the topic tiresome."

"Perhaps we may have the pleasure of continuing it when they are no longer present."

"Oh, as you please," was the indifferent answer. "Carruthers, may I trouble you to pass the salt? Lady O'Callaghan was complaining the other night of the abuse of salt in Portuguese cookery. It is an abuse I have never yet detected."

"I can't conceive Lady O'Callaghan complaining of too much salt in anything, begad," quoth O'Moy, with a laugh. "If you had heard the story she told me about - "

"Terence, my dear!" his wife checked him, her fine brows raised, her stare frigid.

"Faith, we go from bad to worse," said Carruthers. "Will you try to improve the tone of the conversation, Miss Armytage? It stands in urgent need of it."

With a general laugh, breaking the ice of the restraint that was in danger of settling about the table, a semblance of ease was restored, and this was maintained until the end of the repast. At last the ladies rose, and, leaving the men at table, they sauntered off towards the terrace. But under the archway Sylvia checked her cousin.

"Una," she said gravely, "you had better call Captain Tremayne and take him away for the present."

Una's eyes opened wide. "Why?" she inquired.

Miss Armytage was almost impatient with her. "Didn't you see?

Resentment is only slumbering between those men. It will break out again now that we have left them unless you can get Captain Tremayne away."

Una continued to look at her cousin, and then, her mind fastening ever upon the trivial to the exclusion of the important, her glance became arch. "For whom is your concern? For Count Samoval or Ned?" she inquired, and added with a laugh: "You needn't answer me. It is Ned you are afraid for."

"I am certainly not afraid for him," was the reply on a faint note of indignation. She had reddened slightly. "But I should not like to see Captain Tremayne or any other British officer embroiled in a duel. You forget Lord Wellington's order which they were discussing, and the consequences of infringing it."

Lady O'Moy became scared.

"You don't imagine - "

Sylvia spoke quickly: "I am certain that unless you take Captain Tremayne away, and at once, there will! be serious trouble."

And now behold Lady O'Moy thrown into a state of alarm that bordered upon terror. She had more reason than Sylvia could dream, more reason she conceived than Sylvia herself, to wish to keep Captain Tremayne out of trouble just at present. Instantly, agitatedly, she turned and called to him.

"Ned!" floated her silvery voice across the enclosed garden. And again: "Ned! I want you at once, please."

Captain Tremayne rose. Grant was talking briskly at the time, his intention being to cover Tremayne's retreat, which he himself desired. Count Samoval's smouldering eyes were upon the captain, and full of menace. But he could not be guilty of the rudeness of interrupting Grant or of detaining Captain Tremayne when a lady called him.

同类推荐
  • 王氏谈録

    王氏谈録

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Ban and Arriere Ban

    Ban and Arriere Ban

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 绝岸可湘禅师语录

    绝岸可湘禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • WHAT IS MAN

    WHAT IS MAN

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 玉笑零音

    玉笑零音

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 复仇恋人

    复仇恋人

    她看着身边的人都莫名死去,这到底是是什么回事,在一场都市危机里,她和他怎么去度过。。。。。。
  • 中国式管理的智源

    中国式管理的智源

    本书挑选了最能代表中国管理文化的18部典籍,包括《周易》、《论语》、《道德经》、《孙子兵法》、《鬼谷子》、《淮南子》、《战国策》等,来论述中国文化与管理的关系。
  • 天山之阴阳鬼符

    天山之阴阳鬼符

    一个传说的门派,那里面流传了一种符,统称鬼命符或者称鬼符。天山上下来的天师,拿着鬼符斩妖杀魔!
  • 冒险者笔录

    冒险者笔录

    千年前魔王与冒险者的纠葛,千年以后再次上演。他用计杀死他的亲生母亲,他便用剑亲手杀死他最心爱的女人。他抱着心爱的她的尸体在雨夜嚎啕大哭,他持剑坐在母亲的坟前变得痴痴傻傻。他让全天下的人都与他为敌,他便屠尽天下只为活!昔日的兄弟反目成仇,昔日保护队友后背的刀与剑,一次次交锋直逼喉咙,剑刺入他的腹部,他无限苍凉地看着他,“我们,怎么会走到今天这步,我们不是最好的伙伴吗?”
  • 一把魔剑走天下

    一把魔剑走天下

    女主是魔修,绝不圣母白莲花,拒绝撒娇发嗲,升级流。不靠男人,因为我,就是男人!【艾玛不对】因为我,要比男人更厉害!只愿问鼎大道,执我魔剑,但求问心无愧。
  • 守护甜心之甜蜜的你

    守护甜心之甜蜜的你

    她原本一名学生,每天都和朋友们一起玩,可是好景不长,因为一个转学生他们不相信她,她从此变得冰冷了,她发誓她要报仇回到家她的父母告诉她她不是她们的孩子这让她很是伤心,她面对这重重打击,会变成什么样呢?……(还请大多多支持我)
  • 假面真神

    假面真神

    真假虚幻,证道真神!曾经挥斥方遒的王者,数不尽苦鳖的小主播,异世界的疯狂,一曲嬉笑怒骂,一路高歌猛进…杨羽带着‘英雄变’穿越了。以大脑为核心处理器,气海为数据分析库,身体为硬件载体…在风语大陆,这个被神明遗弃诅咒的大陆,如何打破天道证道真神。是有意而为,还是无意的巧合?真亦是假,假亦是真。真真假假,亦要证道真神!!
  • 《金匮要略增补》师承课堂实录

    《金匮要略增补》师承课堂实录

    金匮要略一名金匮玉函要略方,乃东汉张仲景撰于3世纪初,是中医经典古籍,作者为将这本书考证补完,精考脉经及千金要方,并教导带领他的学生们浸淫其中,研究探讨这部仲景大论,并应验于临床。长久下来后,将他多年的金匮研习心得,加以条理,编集成书。
  • 竞聘演讲轻松过关

    竞聘演讲轻松过关

    本书从竞聘演讲的四大难点入手,各个击破。作者文若河倾心传授一套实用易学的方法,帮助竞聘者轻松突破演讲的四大难关——心理关、讲稿撰写关、语言表达关和控场关。本书教你运用转移注意法、充足准备法、劣势利用法、群体回归法、自我暗示法和厚黑无敌法来克服竞聘演讲的紧张心理;学会撰写开场白的四种方法、主题内容的“三个一”和精彩结尾的三句话,从而获得出奇制胜、语出惊人的讲稿;利用令文字飞扬的有声语言和让激情绽放的态势语,使你的演讲一鸣惊人;培养良好的心态和有效的技巧,使你更好地“hold”住全场。面临竞聘演讲的各行业、各岗位的朋友们,读完《竞聘演讲轻松过关》一定会找到有效的竞聘演讲方法。
  • 便宜十六策

    便宜十六策

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。