登陆注册
15457300000009

第9章 CHAPTER II(1)

THE ULTIMATUM

News of the affair at Tavora reached Sir Terence O'Moy, the Adjutant-General at Lisbon, about a week later in dispatches from headquarters. These informed him that in the course of the humble apology and explanation of the regrettable occurrence offered by the Colonel of the 8th Dragoons in person to the Mother Abbess, it had transpired that Lieutenant Butler had left the convent alive, but that nevertheless he continued absent from his regiment.

Those dispatches contained other unpleasant matters of a totally different nature, with which Sir Terence must proceed to deal at once; but their gravity was completely outweighed in the adjutant's mind by this deplorable affair of Lieutenant Butler's. Without wishing to convey an impression that the blunt and downright O'Moy was gifted with any undue measure of shrewdness, it must nevertheless be said that he was quick to perceive what fresh thorns the occurrence was likely to throw in a path that was already thorny enough in all conscience, what a semblance of justification it must give to the hostility of the intriguers on the Council of Regency, what a formidable weapon it must place in the hands of Principal Souza and his partisans. In itself this was enough to trouble a man in O'Moy's position. But there was more. Lieutenant Butler happened to be his brother-in-law, own brother to O'Moy's lovely, frivolous wife. Irresponsibility ran strongly in that branch of the Butler family.

For the sake of the young wife whom he loved with a passionate and fearful jealousy such as is not uncommon in a man of O'Moy's temperament when at his age - he was approaching his forty-sixth birthday - he marries a girl of half his years, the adjutant had pulled his brother-in-law out of many a difficulty; shielded him on many an occasion from the proper consequences of his incurable rashness.

This affair of the convent, however, transcended anything that had gone before and proved altogether too much for O'Moy. It angered him as much as it afflicted him. Yet when he took his head in his hands and groaned, it was only his sorrow that he was expressing, and it was a sorrow entirely concerned with his wife.

The groan attracted the attention of his military secretary, Captain Tremayne, of Fletcher's Engineers, who sat at work at a littered writing-table placed in the window recess. He looked up sharply, sudden concern in the strong young face and the steady grey eyes he bent upon his chief. The sight of O'Moy's hunched attitude brought him instantly to his feet.

"Whatever is the matter, sir?"

"It's that damned fool Richard," growled O'Moy. "He's broken out again."

The captain looked relieved. "And is that all?"

O'Moy looked at him, white-faced, and in his blue eyes a blaze of that swift passion that had made his name a byword in the army.

"All?" he roared. "You'll say it's enough, by God, when you hear what the fool's been at this time. Violation of a nunnery, no less."

And he brought his massive fist down with a crash upon the document that had conveyed the information. "With a detachment of dragoons he broke into the convent of the Dominican nuns at Tavora one night a week ago. The alarm bell was sounded, and the village turned out to avenge the outrage. Consequences: three troopers killed, five peasants sabred to death and seven other casualties, Dick himself missing and reported to have escaped from the convent, but understood to remain in hiding - so that he adds desertion to the other crime, as if that in itself were not enough to hang him. That's all, as you say, and I hope you consider it enough even for Dick Butler - bad luck to him."

"My God!" said Captain Tremayne.

"I'm glad that you agree with me."

Captain Tremayne stared at his chief, the utmost dismay upon his fine young face. "But surely, sir, surely - I mean, sir, if this report is correct some explanation -" He broke down, utterly at fault.

"To be sure, there's an explanation. You may always depend upon a most elegant explanation for anything that Dick Butler does. His life is made up of mistakes and explanations." He spoke bitterly, "He broke into the nunnery under a misapprehension, according to the account of the sergeant who accompanied him," and Sir Terence read out that part of the report. "But how is that to help him, and at such a time as this, with public feeling as it is, and Wellington in his present temper about it? The provost's men are beating the country for the blackguard. When they find him it's a firing party he'll have to face."

Tremayne turned slowly to the window and looked down the fair prospect of the hillside over a forest of cork oaks alive with fresh green shoots to the silver sheen of the river a mile away. The storms of the preceding week had spent their fury - the travail that had attended the birth of Spring - and the day was as fair as a day of June in England. Weaned forth by the generous sunshine, the burgeoning of vine and fig, of olive and cork went on apace, and the skeletons of trees which a fortnight since had stood gaunt and bare were already fleshed in tender green.

>From the window of this fine conventual house on the heights of Monsanto, above the suburb of Alcantara, where the Adjutant-General had taken up his quarters, Captain Tremayne stood a moment considering the panorama spread to his gaze, from the red-brown roofs of Lisbon on his left - that city which boasted with Rome that it was built upon a cluster of seven hills - to the lines of embarkation that were building about the fort of St. Julian on his left. Then he turned, facing again the spacious, handsome room with its heavy, semi-ecclesiastical furniture, and Sir Terence, who, hunched in his chair at the ponderously carved black writing-table, scowled fiercely at nothing.

"What are you going to do, sir?" he inquired.

Sir Terence shrugged impatiently and heaved himself up in his chair.

"Nothing," he growled.

"Nothing?"

The interrogation, which seemed almost to cover a reproach, irritated the adjutant.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 萌妃来袭:皇上求扑倒

    萌妃来袭:皇上求扑倒

    片段:“桂花糕吃不吃?”“吃!吃!”“玫瑰酥吃不吃?”“咕噜~”某人明显听到自己咽了咽口水“珍珠翡翠汤圆吃不吃?”“吃!吃!”某人立即小鸡啄米般用力点头。“皇上吃不吃?”“吃!吃!~”某人似乎还没反应过来。。。一个劲的点头碧雪在一旁偷笑着。。。某人才后知后觉上、当、了!“很好!今晚通通满足你!”达到目的的某只心情大好的说着。。。。
  • 蓝星人传奇

    蓝星人传奇

    我们从哪里来?我们是谁?我们要到哪里去?明白答案的那一刻,你将超凡入圣。这是一个发生在平行宇宙的故事,清王朝在不知名穿越者的干涉下没有灭亡。步入现代社会时,因为太阳与地球之间相对位置发生了变化,太阳南极发射出的高能量未知粒子可以照射到地球上。主角作为尼安德特人的纯血后裔拥有了特异功能,从一个小乞丐变成了超能者。同样拥有百分之一到百分之百之间的两族混血也拥有了各种特异功能。现代科学为基础的唯物论代表着科技的力量,各种特异功能修炼技法代表的唯心论代表着修真力量,两股势力接连碰撞,引发战争。最后,地球的孩子们最终放弃了争端看向浩瀚的宇宙,与银河系其它生命之间产生联系,争夺整个星系的资源。
  • 魂魄战尊

    魂魄战尊

    魂界大的能统领,魂魄大陆,这里的人们都修练叫:魂魄的东西,修魄境、魂狮、地魂境、天魂境、魂魄境、魂灵境、王魂境、皇魄境、皇灵、魂尊、魂圣、战尊。四大神兽被龙云天给觉醒了,后来跟龙云天融合在了一起。
  • 胡同里的女孩

    胡同里的女孩

    十年生死两茫茫,风雨人生共牵手;问苍茫大地,谁忧我思;携手共同风雨,演绎曲折乐章;一曲海韵谣,诉尽人间情;立金沙海岸,思人间冷暖;观沧海心潮涌动,浪淘尽千古情缘;椰风轻吻伊人颊,斑驳树影俩情人;风过,雨过,爱过,恨过,方知今宵是何年,待到山花烂漫时,那人却在沙滩上。独守清幽,写一首情诗,听一曲情殇,品一壶清茶,尝一生忧思。宁静致远,与世无争。
  • 夜影重生

    夜影重生

    又一世轮回,是否还能达成上一世情缘。我愿生生世世,不再见你。
  • 奔流岁月

    奔流岁月

    江高丽摸着头上的青茬,一双眯缝眼一眨不眨的盯着上铺的床板子有半个多钟头了,不死心的爬起来翻了翻右手边的抽屉,借着窗外惨淡的月光,里面的东西被拨拉的乱七八糟,一盒比豆腐块儿大不了多少的象棋,一瓶老干妈,外加几张揉巴的皱皱巴巴的角票儿,连个手机都没有。“妈的,还是大一啊。”
  • 九天星月

    九天星月

    这是一片被隔绝的大陆,曾经生活着数以万计的不同族群,一个人的到来改变了这个大陆的格局。上古神族统治的时代被他彻底颠覆。万年之后,族群的记忆被人渐渐遗忘,但族群的仇恨却是从未消退。时代的变迁总是伴随着杀戮,嗜血过后总是给无数人留下难以愈合的伤疤。好人未必是好人,正义也未必就是正义。一个人选择的道路任何人都没资格评价。你不是他!他更不是你!
  • 阎王的妻子

    阎王的妻子

    “我曾是她的刻骨铭心可现在你是我的全部”对于这件事,他只做了这样的解释,可是她信了
  • 荣宠无度之女屌丝逆袭

    荣宠无度之女屌丝逆袭

    他迎风而立,白色绣地金莲衣袍翻飞,飘若如仙,长若流水的发丝服帖顺在背后,微仰着头,背抵在敞开的窗子,似笑非笑——不分性别的美丽,如此惊心动魄的魅惑。九洲无绝色!悦目是佳人!倾国倾城貌!惊为天下人!域僵少族长迦莲,风华绝代,梦莲大陆皇室血统贵公子,世间一等一奇才。才震梦莲,惊艳中原!运筹帷幄之中,决胜千里之外。当她在斗兽场上傲然而立,大放光彩,淡然地面对迎面而来的夹击,他和她的命运就被牢牢地绑在了一起。她,是他的软肋,也是他唯一的软肋;他,是她的牵挂,也是她唯一的牵挂据说他们再次相遇:“别出声,否则要了你的命。”某男冷冽地开口。“摸够了没有。”某女咬牙切齿道。
  • 帝尊追妻路:给本上神滚开

    帝尊追妻路:给本上神滚开

    她是九重天高高在上的子初上神,遇到了被土埋葬的他。作为上神,她很好心的救了他,哪想却被调戏了。某男不着寸缕,调笑道,“你是神?以前听说过,如今倒是第一次见到。”某神斜斜觑了他一眼,“那些人见到神倒是恭恭敬敬的,你倒好,就不怕天谴?”某男挑起她的下巴,眉眼含笑,“何为天谴,那不过是唬人的东西罢了!”某神一把甩开他的手,“你这是亵渎神灵!”某男漫不经心道,“反正刚刚已经亵渎过了。”原以为孽缘即将开始,哪想她将他的尸体烧的连灰都不剩。麻蛋,这祸害居然还重生了!感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持!