The Vultures eBook

Hugh Stowell Scott
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 346 pages of information about The Vultures.

The Vultures eBook

Hugh Stowell Scott
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 346 pages of information about The Vultures.

For he knew—­indeed, Wanda had told him—­the dangers that surrounded him.  He knew also that these dangers were infinitely greater for Martin and the prince.

“It is only what you foresaw,” she said, “when—­when we first understood.”

“No, it is worse than I foresaw,” he answered.

So they parted, with the knowledge that they must not meet again in Poland when their meeting must mean such imminent risk to others.  They could not even write to each other while Wanda should be within the circle of the Russian postal service.  There was but the one link between them—­Paul Deulin; and to him neither would impart a confidence.  Deulin had brought about this meeting to-day.  Warned by telegram, he had met Cartoner at Warsaw Station, and had counselled him not to go out into the streets.  Since he was only waiting a few hours in Warsaw for the St. Petersburg train, he must either sit in the station or take a horse and go for a ride into the country.  The Bukatys, by-the-way, were not in town, but at their country house.

“Go and see them,” he added.  “A man living on a volcano may surely play with firearms if he wants to.  And you are all on the volcano together.  Pah!  I know the smell of it.  The very streets, my friend, reek of catastrophe.”

Wanda was gay and light-hearted to the end.  There was French blood in her veins—­that gay, good blood which stained the streets of Paris a hundred years ago, and raised a standard of courage against adversity for all the world to imitate so long as history shall exist.

Cartoner turned once in his saddle and saw her standing in the sunlight waving him a farewell, with her eyes smiling and her lips hard pressed.  Then he rode on, with that small, small hope to help him through his solitary wanderings which he knew to be identical with the hope of Poland, for which the time was not yet ripe.  He was the watcher who sees most of the game, and knew that the time might never ripen till years after Wanda and he had gone hence and were no more seen.

XXIX

IN A BY-WAY

There are few roads in Poland.  Sooner or later, Cartoner must needs join the great highway that enters Warsaw from the west, passing by the gates of the cemetery.

Deulin, no doubt, knew this, for Cartoner found him, riding leisurely away from the city, just beyond the cemetery.  The Frenchman sat his horse with a straight leg and arm which made Cartoner think of those days ten years earlier, to which Deulin seldom referred, when this white-haired dandy was a cavalry soldier, engaged in the painful business of killing Germans.

Deulin did not think it necessary to refer to the object of Cartoner’s ride.  Neither did he mention the fact that he knew that this was not the direct way to St. Petersburg.

“I hired a horse and rode out to meet you,” he said, gayly—­he was singularly gay this morning, and there was a light in his eye—­“to intercept you.  Kosmaroff is back in Warsaw.  I saw him in the streets—­and he saw me.  I think that man is the god in the machine.  He is not a nonentity.  I wonder who he is.  There is blood there, my friend.”

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The Vultures from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.