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Dell, Ethel M. (Ethel May), 1881-1939

"The Swindler and Other Stories"

"I would rather die a thousand
times!"
His brows contracted into a single grim line. He left the window and
came towards her.
But at his action she sprang away like a mad thing, dodged him, avoided
him, then leapt suddenly upon a chair and snatched a rapier from a group
of swords arranged in a circle upon the wall. The light fell full upon
her ashen face and eyes of horror. She was beside herself.
All her instincts urged her to resistance. She had always shrunk from
this man. If she could only hold him at bay for a little--if she could
only resist long enough--surely she heard the feet of the murderers upon
the corridor already! It would not take them long to batter down the
door and take her life!
As she sprang to the ground again, Pierre spoke. The frown had gone from
his face; it wore a faint, ironical smile. His eyes, alert, unblinking,
marked her every movement as the eyes of a lynx upon its prey. He did
not appear in the least disconcerted. There was even a sort of terrible
patience in his attitude, as though he already saw the end of the
struggle.
"Would it not be wiser, mademoiselle," he said, "to reserve your steel
for an enemy?"
She met his piercing look for an instant as she compelled her white lips
to answer. "You are the worst enemy that I have."
He threw back his head with an arrogant gesture very characteristic of
him. "By your own choice, mademoiselle," he said.


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