[When Valmond Came to Pontiac Complete by Gilbert Parker]@TWC D-Link bookWhen Valmond Came to Pontiac Complete CHAPTER XII 7/23
I have no responsibility." "They might arrest you for aiding and abetting if--" "If what, dear and cheerful friend ?" "If I did not make it right for you." He smiled, approving his own kindness. She touched his arm, and said with ironical sweetness: "How you relieve my mind!" Then with delicate insinuation: "I have a lot of old muskets here, at least two hundred pounds of powder, and plenty of provisions, and I will send them to--Valmond Napoleon." He instantly became grave.
"I warn you--" She interrupted him.
"Nonsense! You warn me!" She laughed mockingly.
"I warn you, dear Seigneur, that you will be more sorry than satisfied, if you meddle in this matter." "You are going to send those things to him ?" he asked anxiously. "Certainly--and food every day." And she kept her word. De la Riviere, as he went down the hill, thought with irritation of how ill things were going with him and Madame Chalice--so different from two years ago, when their friendship had first begun.
He had remembered her with a singular persistency; he had looked forward to her coming back; and when she came, his heart had fluttered like a schoolboy's.
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