[The Czar’s Spy by William Le Queux]@TWC D-Link bookThe Czar’s Spy CHAPTER XI 3/65
There is at present no danger." I rose, gripped a big rusty chain to steady myself, and climbed into the narrow doorway in the ponderous wall, where I found myself in the darkness beside the female who had apparently been expecting our arrival and watching our signal. Without a word she led me through a short passage, and then, striking a match, lit a big old-fashioned lantern.
As the light fell upon her features I saw they were thin and hard, with deep-set eyes and a stray wisp of silver across her wrinkled brow.
Around her head was a kind of hood of the same stuff as her dress, a black, coarse woolen, while around her neck was a broad linen collar.
In an instant I recognized that she was a member of some religious order, some minor order perhaps, with whose habit we, in Italy, were not acquainted. The thin ascetic countenance was that of a woman of strong character, and her funereal habit seemed much too large for her stunted, shrunken figure. "The sister speaks French ?" I hazarded in that language, knowing that in most convents throughout Europe French is known. "Oui, m'sieur," was her answer.
"And a leetle Engleesh, too--a ve-ry leetle," she smiled. "You know why I am here ?" I said, gratified that at least one person in that lonesome country could speak my own tongue. "Yes, I have already been told," was her answer with a strong accent, as we stood in that small, bare stone room, a semicircular chamber in the tower, once perhaps a prison.
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