A cynical, cutting smile crossed Doltaire’s face. “A charitable trick, upon my soul, to fetch a gentleman from a warm dungeon and stand him against an icy wall on a deadly morning to cool his heels as he waits for his hour to die! You’d skin your lion and shoot him afterwards—voila!” All this time he held the watch in his hand.
“You, Gabord,” he went on, “you are a man to obey orders—eh?”
Gabord hesitated a moment as if waiting for Lancy to speak, and then said, “I was not in command. When I was called upon I brought him forth.”
“Excuses! excuses! You sweated to be rid of your charge.”
Gabord’s face lowered. “M’sieu’ would have been in heaven by this if I had’nt stopped it,” he broke out angrily.
Doltaire turned sharply on Lancy. “I thought as much,” said he, “and you would have let Gabord share your misdemeanor. Yet your father was a gentleman! If you had shot monsieur before seven, you would have taken the dungeon he left. You must learn, my young provincial, that you are not to supersede France and the King. It is now seven o’clock; you will march your men back into quarters.”
Then turning to me, he raised his cap. “You will find your cloak more comfortable, Captain Moray,” said he, and he motioned Gabord to hand it to me, as he came forward. “May I breakfast with you?” he added courteously. He yawned a little. “I have not risen so early in years, and I am chilled to the bone. Gabord insists that it is warm in your dungeon; I have a fancy to breakfast there. It will recall my year in the Bastile.”
He smiled in a quaint, elusive sort of fashion, and as I drew the cloak about me, I said through chattering teeth, for I had suffered with the brutal cold, “I am glad to have the chance to offer breakfast.”
“To me or any one?” he dryly suggested. “Think! by now, had I not come, you might have been in a warmer world than this—indeed, much warmer,” he suddenly said, as he stooped, picked up some snow in his bare hand, and clapped it to my cheek, rubbing it with force and swiftness. The cold had nipped it, and this was the way to draw out the frost. His solicitude at the moment was so natural and earnest that it was hard to think he was my enemy.
When he had rubbed awhile, he gave me his own handkerchief to dry my face; and so perfect was his courtesy, it was impossible to do otherwise than meet him as he meant and showed for the moment. He had stepped between me and death, and even an enemy who does that, no matter what the motive, deserves something at your hands.