[Uncle Bernac by Arthur Conan Doyle]@TWC D-Link book
Uncle Bernac

CHAPTER XIV
11/16

But she was a woman of change and impulse, full of little squirts of courage and corresponding reactions into cowardice.
She had hardly vanished from our sight when there was a harsh roar, like an angry beast, and next instant Josephine came flying into the room again, with the Emperor, inarticulate with passion, raving at her heels.
So frightened was she, that she began to run towards the fireplace, upon which Madame de Remusat, who had no wish to form a rearguard upon such an occasion, began running also, and the two of them, like a pair of startled hens, came rustling and fluttering back to the seats which they had left.

There they cowered whilst the Emperor, with a convulsed face and a torrent of camp-fire oaths, stamped and raged about the room.
'You, Constant, you!' he shouted; 'is this the way in which you serve me?
Have you no sense then--no discretion?
Am I never to have any privacy?
Must I eternally submit to be spied upon by women?
Is everyone else to have liberty, and I only to have none?
As to you, Josephine, this finishes it all.

I had hesitations before, but now I have none.

This brings everything to an end between us.' We would all, I am sure, have given a good deal to slip from the room--at least, my own embarrassment far exceeded my interest--but the Emperor from his lofty standpoint cared as little about our presence as if we had been so many articles of furniture.

In fact, it was one of this strange man's peculiarities that it was just those delicate and personal scenes with which privacy is usually associated that he preferred to have in public, for he knew that his reproaches had an additional sting when they fell upon other ears besides those of his victim.


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