“Gentlemen,” said Morcerf, “it is only a quarter past ten, and I expect someone else.”
“Ah, true, a diplomatist!” observed Debray.
“Diplomat or not, I don’t know; I only know that he charged himself on my account with a mission, which he terminated so entirely to my satisfaction, that had I been king, I should have instantly created him knight of all my orders, even had I been able to offer him the Golden Fleece and the Garter.”
“Well, since we are not to sit down to table,” said Debray, “take a glass of sherry, and tell us all about it.”
“You all know that I had the fancy of going to Africa.”
“It is a road your ancestors have traced for you,” said Albert gallantly.
“Yes? but I doubt that your object was like theirs—to rescue the Holy Sepulchre.”
“You are quite right, Beauchamp,” observed the young aristocrat. “It was only to fight as an amateur. I cannot bear duelling ever since two seconds, whom I had chosen to arrange an affair, forced me to break the arm of one of my best friends, one whom you all know—poor Franz d’Épinay.”
“Ah, true,” said Debray, “you did fight some time ago; about what?”