Helmet of Navarre by Bertha Runkle
page 54 of 476 (11%)
page 54 of 476 (11%)
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"It is a risk. If he betrays--" "What is life without risks?" cried Yeux-gris. "I thought you too good a gambler, Gervais, to falter before a risk." "Well," Gervais consented, "I leave it to you. Do as you like." Yeux-gris said at once to me: "This Lucas, as I told you, is too cowardly to meet my cousin in open fight. Since he got the challenge he has never stuck his nose out of doors without two or three of the duke's guard about him. Therefore we have the right to get at him as we can. We have paid a man in the house to tell of his movements. He is to fare out secretly at night on a mission for M. le Duc, with one comrade only. M. Gervais and I will interrupt that little journey." "Very good, monsieur. And I?" "You will meet our spy and learn the hour of the expedition. Last night, when he told us of the plan, it had not been decided." "Then he will be the other man I saw in the window? I shall know him." "You have sharp eyes and a sharp brain, youngster. But he will not know you. Therefore you can say you come from the shuttered house in the Rue Coupejarrets. You will meet him in the little alley to the north of the Hôtel St. Quentin. Do you know your way to the hôtel? Well, then, you are to go down the passageway between the house and M. de Portreuse's |
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