The League of the Scarlet Pimpernel eBook

Baroness Emma Orczy
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 286 pages of information about The League of the Scarlet Pimpernel.

The League of the Scarlet Pimpernel eBook

Baroness Emma Orczy
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 286 pages of information about The League of the Scarlet Pimpernel.

The whole of that night Esther remained shut up in her apartment in the Petite Rue Taranne.  All night she heard the measured tramp, the movements, the laughter and loud talking of men outside her door.  Once or twice she tried to listen to what they said.  But the doors and walls in these houses of old Paris were too stout to allow voices to filter through, save in the guise of a confused murmur.  She would have felt horribly lonely and frightened but for the fact that in one window on the third floor in the house opposite the light of a lamp appeared like a glimmer of hope.  Jack Kennard was there, on the watch.  He had the window open and sat beside it until a very late hour; and after that he kept the light in, as a beacon, to bid her be of good cheer.

In the middle of the night he made an attempt to see her, hoping to catch the sentinels asleep or absent.  But, having climbed the five stories of the house wherein she dwelt, he arrived on the landing outside her door and found there half a dozen ruffians squatting on the stone floor and engaged in playing hazard with a pack of greasy cards.  That wretched consumptive, Rateau, was with them, and made a facetious remark as Kennard, pale and haggard, almost ghostlike, with a white bandage round his head, appeared upon the landing.

“Go back to bed, citizen,” the odious creature said, with a raucous laugh.  “We are taking care of your sweetheart for you.”

Never in all his life had Jack Kennard felt so abjectly wretched as he did then, so miserably helpless.  There was nothing that he could do, save to return to the lodging, which a kind friend had lent him for the occasion, and from whence he could, at any rate, see the windows behind which his beloved was watching and suffering.

When he went a few moments ago, he had left the porte cochere ajar.  Now he pushed it open and stepped into the dark passage beyond.  A tiny streak of light filtrated through a small curtained window in the concierge’s lodge; it served to guide Kennard to the foot of the narrow stone staircase which led to the floors above.  Just at the foot of the stairs, on the mat, a white paper glimmered in the dim shaft of light.  He paused, puzzled, quite certain that the paper was not there five minutes ago when he went out.  Oh! it may have fluttered in from the courtyard beyond, or from anywhere, driven by the draught.  But, even so, with that mechanical action peculiar to most people under like circumstances, he stooped and picked up the paper, turned it over between his fingers, and saw that a few words were scribbled on it in pencil.  The light was too dim to read by, so Kennard, still quite mechanically, kept the paper in his hand and went up to his room.  There, by the light of the lamp, he read the few words scribbled in pencil: 

“Wait in the street outside.”

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The League of the Scarlet Pimpernel from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.