Atlantida - Page 91/145

"Get along, the whole pack of you," howled the Hetman of Jitomir.

"Stay with me, Lieutenant de Saint-Avit."

When we were alone, he poured out another huge cupfull of liqueur. The

ceiling of the room was lost in the gray smoke.

"What time is it?" I asked.

"After midnight. But you are not going to leave me like this, my dear

boy? I am heavy-hearted."

He wept bitterly. The tail of his coat spread out on the divan behind

him like the apple-green wings of a beetle.

"Isn't Aguida a beauty?" he went on, still weeping. "She makes me

think of the Countess de Teruel, though she is a little darker. You

know the Countess de Teruel, Mercedes, who went in bathing nude at

Biarritz, in front of the rock of the Virgin, one day when Prince

Bismarck was standing on the foot-bridge. You do not remember her?

Mercedes de Teruel."

I shrugged my shoulders.

"I forget; you must have been too young. Two, perhaps three years old.

A child. Yes, a child. Oh, my child, to have been of that generation

and to be reduced to playing cards with savages ... I must tell

you...."

I stood up and pushed him off.

"Stay, stay," he implored. "I will tell you everything you want to

know, how I came here, things I have never told anyone. Stay, I must

unbosom myself to a true friend. I will tell you everything, I repeat.

I trust you. You are a Frenchman, a gentleman. I know that you will

repeat nothing to her."

"That I will repeat nothing to her?... To whom?"

His voice stuck in his throat. I thought I saw a shudder of fear pass

over him.

"To her ... to Antinea," he murmured.

I sat down again.