Clementina by A. E. W. (Alfred Edward Woodley) Mason
page 110 of 336 (32%)
page 110 of 336 (32%)
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mother. Here is a letter he dropped in the cathedral for me to pick up."
He drew the letter from his fob and handed it to Gaydon. Gaydon read it and handed it to Misset. Misset nodded and handed it to O'Toole, who read it four times and handed it back to Gaydon with a flourish of the hand as though the matter was now quite plain to him. "Chateaudoux has a sweetheart," said he, sententiously. "Very good; I do not think the worse of him." Gaydon glanced a second time through the letter. "The Princess says that you must have the Prince Sobieski's written consent." "I went from Innspruck to Ohlau," said Wogan. "I had some trouble, and the reason of my coming leaked out. The Countess de Berg suspected it from the first. She had a friend, an Englishwoman, Lady Featherstone, who was at Ohlau to outwit me." "Lady Featherstone!" said Misset. "Who can she be?" Wogan told them of his first meeting with Lady Featherstone on the Florence road, but he knew no more about her, and not one of the three knew anything at all. "So the secret's out," said Gaydon. "But you outstripped it." "Barely," said Wogan. "Forty miles away I had last night to fight for my life." |
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