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Page 33
"Why do you gaze at me so sadly and compassionately?" asked Leonore
suddenly, cowering as though in fright.
"I did not know that I was doing so," he answered gently.
"You were, you are still," she cried anxiously. "Father, I read misfortune
in your face. You are concealing something from me! You--oh, heaven, you
have news of Kolbielsky."
She started up, letting the bank-notes fall unheeded to the floor, seized
her father's arm with both hands, and gazed silently at him with panting
breath.
He avoided her eyes, released himself almost violently from her grasp,
stooped, picked up the bills and divided them into halves, putting five
into his breast pocket, and giving his daughter the other five.
"Take it, my Leonore; take the magic key which will open Paradise to you!"
She took the bank-notes and, with a contemptuous gesture, flung them on the
floor.
"You know something of Kolbielsky," she repeated. "Where is he? Answer me,
father, if you don't wish me to fall dead at your feet."
"Yet if I do answer, poor child, what will it avail you? He is lost, you
cannot save him."
She neither shrieked nor wept, she only grasped her father's arm more
firmly and looked him steadily in the face.
"Where is Kolbielsky?" she asked. "Answer, or I will kill myself."
"Well, Leonore, I will give you a proof of my infinite love. I will tell
you the truth, the whole truth. When the prisoners were dragged out of the
hut, one of them suddenly made an attempt to escape. The soldier tried to
hold him, they struggled--in the scuffle the conspirator's wig fell off.
Hitherto he had had white hair--"
"It was Baron von Moudenfels?" asked Leonore breathlessly.
"Yes, Leonore, it was Baron von Moudenfels. But when the wig was torn from
his head, we saw no old man, no Baron von Moudenfels, but--"
"Kolbielsky!" she shrieked with a loud cry of anguish.
Her father nodded, and let his head sink upon his breast.
"And he, too, was shot this morning?" she asked in a low, strange whisper.
"No, Leonore. I told you that the emperor, out of regard for his future
ally, the Emperor Francis, did not have him executed. He simply imprisoned
him and punished him only by compelling him to witness the execution. He
will leave it to the Emperor Francis to pronounce sentence of death upon
the assassin."
"He lives? You will swear that he lives?" she asked breathlessly.
"I will swear that he lives, and that he will live until the return of the
courier whom Count Bubna, who is in Sch�nbrunn attending to the peace
negotiations--has sent to Totis to the Emperor Francis."
The Baroness de Simonie bounded like a tigress through the room, tearing at
the bell till it sounded like a tocsin and the servants came rushing in
terror from the anteroom.
"My carriage--it must be ready in five minutes!" she cried. The servants
ran out and Leonore darted across the room, tore open the door of the
adjoining chamber, opened a wardrobe in frantic haste, and dragged out a
cloak, which she flung over her shoulders.
"In heaven's name, Leonore, are you out of your senses?" asked her father,
who had hurried after her and now seized her arm. "What do you mean to do?
Where are you going?"
"To the Emperor Napoleon!" she cried loudly. "To the Emperor Napoleon, to
save the life of the man I love. Give me the money, father!"
"What money, Leonore?"
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