The Teeth of the Tiger - Maurice Leblanc (feel good books txt) 📗
- Author: Maurice Leblanc
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He sprang out and asked the butler:
“Is Mlle. Levasseur in?”
“Yes, sir, she’s in her room.”
“She was away yesterday, wasn’t she?”
“Yes, sir, she received a telegram asking her to go to the country to see a relation who was ill. She came back last night.”
“I want to speak to her. Send her to me. At once.”
“In the study, sir?”
“No, upstairs, in the boudoir next to my bedroom.”
This was a small room on the second floor which had once been a lady’s boudoir, and he preferred it to his study since the attempt at murder of which he had been the object. He was quieter up there, farther away; and he kept his important papers there. He always carried the key with him: a special key with three grooves to it and an inner spring.
Mazeroux had followed him into the courtyard and was keeping close behind him, apparently unobserved by Perenna, who having so far appeared not to notice it. He now, however, took the sergeant by the arm and led him to the front steps.
“All is going well. I was afraid that Florence, suspecting something, might not have come back. But she probably doesn’t know that I saw her yesterday. She can’t escape us now.”
They went across the hall and up the stairs to the first floor. Mazeroux rubbed his hands.
“So you’ve come to your senses, Chief?”
“At any rate I’ve made up my mind. I will not, do you hear, I will not have Mme. Fauville kill herself; and, as there is no other way of preventing that catastrophe, I shall sacrifice Florence.”
“Without regret?”
“Without remorse.”
“Then you forgive me?”
“I thank you.”
And he struck him a clean, powerful blow under the chin. Mazeroux fell without a moan, in a dead faint on the steps of the second flight.
Halfway up the stairs was a dark recess that served as a lumber room where the servants kept their pails and brooms and the soiled household linen. Don Luis carried Mazeroux to it, and, seating him comfortably on the floor, with his back to a housemaid’s box, he stuffed his handkerchief into his mouth, gagged him with a towel, and bound his wrists and ankles with two tablecloths. The other ends of these he fastened to a couple of strong nails. As Mazeroux was slowly coming to himself, Don Luis said:
“I think you have all you want. Tablecloths—napkins—something in your mouth in case you’re hungry. Eat at your ease. And then take a little nap, and you’ll wake up as fresh as paint.”
He locked him in and glanced at his watch.
“I have an hour before me. Capital!”
At that moment his intention was to insult Florence, to throw up all her scandalous crimes in her face, and, in this way, to force a written and signed confession from her. Afterward, when Marie Fauville’s safety was insured, he would see. Perhaps he would put Florence in his motor and carry her off to some refuge from which, with the girl for a hostage, he would be able to influence the police. Perhaps—But he did not seek to anticipate events. What he wanted was an immediate, violent explanation.
He ran up to his bedroom on the second floor and dipped his face into cold water. Never had he experienced such a stimulation of his whole being, such an unbridling of his blind instincts.
“It’s she!” he spluttered. “I hear her! She is at the bottom of the stairs. At last! Oh, the joy of having her in front of me! Face to face! She and I alone!”
He returned to the landing outside the boudoir. He took the key from his pocket. The door opened.
He uttered a great shout: Gaston Sauverand was there! In that locked room Gaston Sauverand was waiting for him, standing with folded arms.
X Gaston Sauverand ExplainsGaston Sauverand!
Instinctively, Don Luis took a step back, drew his revolver, and aimed it at the criminal:
“Hands up!” he commanded. “Hands up, or I fire!”
Sauverand did not appear to be put out. He nodded toward two revolvers which he had laid on a table beyond his reach and said:
“There are my arms. I have come here not to fight, but to talk.”
“How did you get in?” roared Don Luis, exasperated by this display of calmness. “A false key, I suppose? But how did you get hold of the key? How did you manage it?”
The other did not reply. Don Luis stamped his foot:
“Speak, will you? Speak! If not—”
But Florence ran into the room. She passed him by without his trying to stop her, flung herself upon Gaston Sauverand, and, taking no heed of Perenna’s presence, said:
“Why did you come? You promised me that you wouldn’t. You swore it to me. Go!”
Sauverand released himself and forced her into a chair.
“Let me be, Florence. I promised only so as to reassure you. Let me be.”
“No, I will not!” exclaimed the girl eagerly. “It’s madness! I won’t have you say a single word. Oh, please, please stop!”
He bent over her and smoothed her forehead, separating her mass of golden hair.
“Let me do things my own way, Florence,” he said softly.
She was silent, as though disarmed by the gentleness of his voice; and he whispered more words which Don Luis could not hear and which seemed to convince her.
Perenna had not moved. He stood opposite them with his arm outstretched and his finger on the trigger, aiming at the enemy. When Sauverand addressed Florence by her Christian name, he started from head to foot and his finger trembled. What miracle kept him from shooting? By what supreme effort of will did he stifle the jealous hatred that burnt him like fire? And here was Sauverand daring to stroke Florence’s hair!
He lowered his arm. He would kill them later, do with them what he pleased, since they were in his power, and since nothing henceforth could snatch them from his vengeance.
He took Sauverand’s two revolvers and laid them in a drawer. Then
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