The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales.

The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales.

“Very good, but keep your seat.  Drink another glass of wine.”

“Sabugal is twenty miles off, and when I arrive I have yet to discover how to get into it,” I protested.

“That is just what am going to tell you.”

“Ah,” said I, “so you have already been making arrangements?”

He nodded while he poured out the wine.  “You come opportunely, for I was about to rely on a far less ruse hand.  The plan, which is my own, I submit to your judgment, but I think you will allow some merit in it.”

Well, I was not well-disposed to approve of any plan of his.  In truth he had managed to offend me seriously.  Had an English gentleman committed my recent error of supposing him to hint at assassination, General Trant (who can doubt it?) would have flamed out in wrath; but me he had set right with a curt carelessness which said as plain as words that the dishonouring suspicion no doubt came natural enough to a Spaniard.  He had entertained me with a familiarity which I had not asked for, and which became insulting the moment he allowed me to see that it came from cold condescension.  I have known a dozen combinations spoilt by English commanders who in this way have combined extreme offensiveness with conscious affability; and I have watched their allies—­Spaniards and Portuguese of the first nobility—­raging inwardly, while ludicrously impotent to discover a peg on which to hang their resentment.

I listened coldly, therefore, leaving the general’s wine untasted and ignoring his complimentary deference to my judgment.  Yet the neatness and originality of his scheme surprised me.  He certainly had talent.

He had found (it seemed) an old vine-dresser at Bellomonte, whose brother kept a small shop in Sabugal, where he shaved chins, sold drugs, drew teeth, and on occasion practised a little bone-setting.  This barber-surgeon or apothecary had shut up his shop on the approach of the French and escaped out of the town to his brother’s roof.  As a matter of fact he would have been safer in Sabugal, for the excesses of the French army were all committed by the marauding parties scattered up and down the country-side and out of the reach of discipline, whereas Marmont (to his credit) sternly discouraged looting, paid the inhabitants fairly for what he took, and altogether treated them with uncommon humanity.

It was likely enough, therefore, that the barber-surgeon’s shop stood as he had left it.  And General Trant proposed no less than that I should boldly enter the town, take down the shutters, and open business, either personating the old man or (if I could persuade him to return) going with him as his assistant.  In either case the danger of detection was more apparent than real, for so violently did the Portuguese hate their invaders that scarcely an instance of treachery occurred during the whole of this campaign.  The chance of the neighbours betraying me was small enough, at any rate, to justify the risk, and I told the General promptly that I would take it.

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The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.