CHAPTER VII
HE CONSIDERS THE GREAT SCHEME
Bandied back and forth by the four walls of the study the report crashed and echoed, reverberating, like a peal of thunder. When it died out, there was absolute silence for a space, during which all three actors of the litte drama stood almost as though stricken motionless.
O'Rourke saw Chambret slowly lower the revolver, the whites of his eyes gleaming in the lamplight; while from the muzzle of the weapon a thin, grayish spiral of smoke trickled up to join the heavier, pungent cloud that hovered near the ceiling. He saw Madame la Princesse standing, swaying ever so slightly, her hands clasped before her, her lips a-quiver with mute inquiry, her eyes, horror filled, fixed upon his face.
Chambret stepped back and cast the revolver upon the desk, whereon it fell with a heavy thud, shattering the silence and quickening the tableau simultaneously.
Madame started toward O'Rourke with a low cry.
"A good shot!" said the latter composedly. "A very good shot, Monsieur Chambret; for which pray accept me congratulations."
He held out the card in a hand that was steadiness itself.
"Observe, madame," he said unperturbed, "the bullet penetrated the precise center of the ace—and in this half-light!"
She was near enough to him now to snatch the card from his fingers, not rudely but in an agony of suspense. Holding
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