Princess Zara - Page 54/127

I wanted the man to talk and to talk about her, and I must confess what

I did not at the moment realize that my desire found its source more in

personal resentment against any confidential passages that may have

taken place between those two, than in my plain duty to the cause I was

serving.

There are many kinds of jealousy, and each kind will find its

expression through innumerable channels. If I had been charged with

jealousy at that moment, I would have repudiated the suggestion with

scorn and contempt; and yet I was jealous.

I had thought rather deeply upon this approaching conversation with

Morét, while on my way to interview him, but I was no nearer to a

determination regarding what I should say to him, when I entered the

room he occupied in the prison, than I had been when the idea first

occurred to me. Now when I entered the room where he was imprisoned, I

said: "Why is it, Morét, that you have never taken any further advantage of

my promise that you could write and send letters?"

"There is no one with whom I care to communicate," he replied.

"Not even with the princess?" I asked the question idly, watching him

from between half closed lids.

"With what princess?" he asked calmly, and without a trace of surprise

or resentment in his perfectly trained countenance.

"Zara de Echeveria," I said, coldly.

"I do not know her."

"No! She knows you."

"Indeed? It is an honor to be known by a princess."

"I have it from her own lips that she is responsible for your presence

in the palace."

"Then surely there is no need to interview me on the subject." He was

thoroughly my equal in this play-of-words.

"She was told in my presence that you were dead. Would you not like to

hear what she said in reply?" I asked him.

"If you care to tell me."

"She said that it was better so; that if you lived you would have

betrayed all your friends--including her; that in fact you were more

fool than knave."

"She is not complimentary; but as I do not know her, it makes no

difference." Nothing could have been more composed than Morét's manner

was.

"You will not discuss her?"

"I would if I could, but I do not know her, monsieur."

"Well, Morét, I like your loyalty, even to one who has used you as a

mere tool, and who is now rejoiced to learn that you are dead, and out

of her way, with the dangerous secrets you possess. I am going to her

as soon as I leave you; perhaps she will talk about you again."

Morét stared at me unwinkingly, but with a countenance that was like

marble in its intensity. I knew that he was suffering, and that my

words were the cause of his agony. I knew that I was prodding him

deeply and severely, thrusting the iron into his soul with as little

compunction as a Mexican charo exerts when he "cinches" a heavily

burdened burro. But I was doing it with malice prepense, and I was

doing it for a purpose.