Wilfrid turned back to him, and De Pyrmont, without altering the level of his glass, said, ’She’s as cool as a lemon-ice. That girl will be a mother of heroes. To have volcanic fire and the mastery of her nerves at the same time, is something prodigious. She is magnificent. Take a peep at her. I suspect that the rascal at her right is seizing his occasion to plant a trifle or so in her memory—the animal! It’s just the moment, and he knows it.’
De Pyrmont looked at Wilfrid’s face.
‘Have I hit you anywhere accidentally?’ he asked, for the face had grown dead-white.
‘Be my friend, for heaven’s sake!’ was the choking answer. ’Save her! Get her away! She is an old acquaintance of mine—of mine, in England. Do; or I shall have to break my sword.’
‘You know her? and you don’t go over to her?’ said De Pyrmont.
‘I—yes, she knows me.’
‘Then, why not present yourself?’
’Get her away. Talk Weisspriess down. He is for seizing her at all hazards. It ’s madness to provoke a conflict. Just listen to the house! I may be broken, but save her I will. De Pyrmont, on my honour, I will stand by you for ever if you will help me to get her away.’
‘To suggest my need in the hour of your own is not a bad notion,’ said the cool Frenchman. ‘What plan have you?’
Wilfrid struck his forehead miserably.
‘Stop Lieutenant Zettlisch. Don’t let him go up to her. Don’t—’
De Pyrmont beheld in astonishment that a speechlessness such as affects condemned wretches in the supreme last minutes of existence had come upon the Englishman.
‘I’m afraid yours is a bad case,’ he said; ’and the worst of it is, it’s just the case women have no compassion for. Here comes a parlementaire from the opposite camp. Let’s hear him.’