The Poor Plutocrats
ontents CHAPTER I. BOREDOM II. A NEW MODE OF DUELLING III. AN AMIABLE MAN IV. CHILDISH NONSENSE V. SHE IS NOT FOR YOU VI. BRINGING HOME THE BRIDE VII. THE CAVERN OF LUCSIA VIII. STRONG JUON IX. THE GEINA MAID-MARKET X. THE BLACK JEWELRY XI. TWO TALES, OF WHICH ONLY ONE IS TRUE XII. THE SOIREES AT ARAD XIII. TIT FOR TAT XIV. THE MIKALAI CSARDA XV. WHO IT WAS THAT RECOGNIZED FATIA NEGRA XVI. LEANDER BABEROSSY
Juana knew that life; fate spared her nought. She was wholly a wife,
but a sorrowful and suffering wife; a wife incessantly wounded, yet
forgiving always; a wife pure as a flawless diamond,--she who had the
beauty and the glow of the diamond, and in that beauty, that glow, a
vengeance in her hand; for she was certainly not a woman to fear the
dagger added to her "dot."
At first, inspired by a real love, by one of those passions which for
the time being change even odious characters and bring to light all
that may be noble in a soul, Diard behaved like a man of honor. He
forced Montefiore to leave the regiment and even the army corps, so
that his wife might never meet him during the time they remained in
Spain. Next, he petitioned for his own removal, and succeeded in
entering the Imperial Guard. He desired at any price to obtain a
title, honors, and consideration in keeping with his present wealth.
With this idea in his mind, he behaved courageously in one of the most
bloody battles in Germany, but, unfortunately, he was too severely
wounded to remain in the service. Threatened with the loss of a leg,
he was forced to retire on a pension, without the title of baron,
without those rewards he hoped to win, and would have won had he not
been Diard.
This event, this wound, and his thwarted hopes contributed to change
his character. His Provencal energy, roused for a time, sank down. At
first he was sustained by his wife, in whom his efforts, his courage,
ontents CHAPTER I. BOREDOM II. A NEW MODE OF DUELLING III. AN AMIABLE MAN IV. CHILDISH NONSENSE V. SHE IS NOT FOR YOU VI. BRINGING HOME THE BRIDE VII. THE CAVERN OF LUCSIA VIII. STRONG JUON IX. THE GEINA MAID-MARKET X. THE BLACK JEWELRY XI. TWO TALES, OF WHICH ONLY ONE IS TRUE XII. THE SOIREES AT ARAD XIII. TIT FOR TAT XIV. THE MIKALAI CSARDA XV. WHO IT WAS THAT RECOGNIZED FATIA NEGRA XVI. LEANDER BABEROSSY