The Laughing Cavalier by Baroness Orczy (best 7 inch ereader .TXT) ๐
Description
A young woman in 17th century Holland inadvertently overhears the details of a plot to kill a political figure. The principal figures in the plot, one of whom is her brother and another her former lover, hire an insolent English mercenary to kidnap her to get her out of the way until their deeds are done. From there very little goes according to plan.
For her fifth novel in the series, Baroness Orczy uses Franz Halsโ famous painting titled The Laughing Cavalier to build an elaborate backstory for the ancestor of the Scarlet Pimpernel.
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- Author: Baroness Orczy
Read book online ยซThe Laughing Cavalier by Baroness Orczy (best 7 inch ereader .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Baroness Orczy
One of Barneveldโs sons had already paid for such an attempt with his life; the other had escaped only in order to intrigue again, to plot again, and again to fail. And this poor girl had by a fortuitous mishap overheard the discussion of the guilty secret. Stoutenburg had come back and meant to kill the Stadtholder: Nicolaes Beresteyn was his accomplice and had callously sacrificed his innocent sister to the success of his friendโs schemes.
If out of this network of intrigues a sensible philosopher did not succeed in consolidating his independence with the aid of a substantial fortune, then he was neither so keen nor so daring as his friends and he himself supposed!
And Gilda wondered what went on in his mind for those twinkling eyes of his never betrayed any deeper thought: but she noticed with great mortification that the insults which she had heaped upon him so freely had not shamed him at all, for the good-humoured smile was not effaced from his lips, rather did the shapely hand wander up to the moustache in order to give itโ โshe thoughtโ โa more provoking curl.
โI still await your answer,โ she said haughtily, seeing that his prolonged silence savoured of impertinence.
โI humbly crave your pardon, mejuffrouw,โ he said pleasantly, โI was absorbed in wonderment.โ
โYou marvelled, sir, how easily I saw behind your schemes, and saw the hand which drove you in harness?โ
โYour pardon, mejuffrouw. I was pondering on your own words. You deigned to say just now that Iโ โa man should be fighting for my country.โ
โAnd you are worthy, sir, to be called a man.โ
โQuite so,โ he said whimsically. โBut even if I did lay claim to the title, mejuffrouw, how could I fight for my country when my country doth not happen to be at war just now.โ
โYour country? What pray might your country be? Not that this concerns me in the least,โ she added hastily.
โOf course not,โ he rejoined blandly.
โWhat is your country, sir?โ
โEngland.โ
โI do not like the English.โ
โNor do I, mejuffrouw. But I was unfortunately not consulted as to my choice of a fatherland: nor doth it change the fact that King James of England is at peace just now with all the world.โ
โSo you preferred to earn a dishonest living by abducting innocent women, to further the intrigues of your paymaster.โ
โIt is a harsh exposition,โ he said blandly, โof an otherwise obvious fact.โ
โAnd you are not ashamed.โ
โNot more than is necessary for my comfort.โ
โAnd cannot I move you, sir,โ she said with sudden warmth, โcannot an appeal to you from my lips rouse a feeling of manhood within you. My father is a rich man,โ she continued eagerly, โhe hath it in his power to reward those who do him service; he can do so far more effectually than the Lord of Stoutenburg. Sir! I would not think of making an appeal to your heart! no doubt long ago you have taught it to remain cold to the prayers of a woman in distress: but surely you will listen to the call of your own self-interest. My father must be nigh heartbroken by now. The hours have sped away and he knows not where to find me.โ
โNo! I have taken very good care of that, mejuffrouw. We are at Leyden now, but we left Haarlem through the Groningen gate. We travelled North first, then East, then only South.โ โโ โฆ Mynheer Beresteyn would require a divining rod wherewith to find you now.โ
It seemed unnecessary cruelty to tell her that, when already despair had seized on her heart, but she would not let this abominable rogue see how deeply she was hurt. She feigned not to have noticed the purport of his words and continued with the same insistent eagerness:
โTorn with anxiety, sir, he will be ready with a rich reward for one who would bring his only daughter safely home to him. I know not what the Lord of Stoutenburg hath promised you for doing his abominable work for him, but this I do assure you that my father will double and treble whatever sum you choose to name. Take me back to him, sir, now, this night, and tomorrow morning you could count yourself one of the rich men of Haarlem.โ
But Diogenes with half-closed eyes and gentle smile slowly shook his head.
โWere I to present myself before Mynheer Beresteyn tonight, he would summon the town guard and I should count myself as good as hanged tomorrow.โ
โDo you measure other menโs treachery then by your own?โ
โI measure other menโs wrath by mine, mejuffrouwโ โand if a rogue had stolen my daughter, I should not rest until I had seen him hanged.โ
โI pledge you my wordโ โโ she began hotly.
โAnd I mine, mejuffrouw,โ he broke in a little more firmly than he had spoken hitherto, โthat I will place you safely and I pray God in good health, into the care of a certain gentleman in Rotterdam. To this is my word of honour pledged and even such a mean vagabond as I is bound by a given word.โ
To this she made no reply. Perhaps she felt that in
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