Then they quitted the house, followed by the polyglot curses of
Barlasch, who was now endeavouring to find his bayonet amidst his
chaotic possessions.
CHAPTER IX. THE GOLDEN GUESS.
The golden guess
Is morning star to the full round of truth.
Barlasch was never more sober in his life than when he emerged a
minute later from his room, while Lisa was still feverishly bolting
the door. He had not wasted much time at his toilet. In his
flannel shirt, his arms bare to the elbow, knotted and muscular, he
looked like some rude son of toil.
"One thinks of one's self," he hastened to explain to Desiree,
fearing that she might ascribe some other motive to his action.
"Some day the patron may be in power again, and then he will
remember a poor soldier. It is good to think of the future."
He shook his head pessimistically at Lisa as belonging to a sex
liable to error: instanced in this case by bolting the door too
eagerly.
"Now," he said, turning to Desiree again, "have you any in Dantzig
to help you?"
"Yes," she answered rather slowly.
"Then send for him."
"I cannot do that."
"Then go for him yourself," snapped Barlasch impatiently.
He looked at her fiercely beneath his shaggy eyebrows.
"It is no use to be afraid," he said; "you are afraid--I see it in
your face. And it is never any use. Before they hammered on that
door there, my legs shook.
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