well



himself upon the ruffian, belaboring wildly with his cane. ‘My Ruiz! My Ruiz!’
“Then—imagine this! Naturally enough, we thought to see Rascogne deal with the old fool as easily as he had done earlier with Sir Carayne; but it was not so, not at all!—so overwrought was Il Conde at the loss of his prized Ruiz that he wielded his cane with a maddened frenzy that should soon have maimed any but the greatest of swordsmen. Rascogne’s grin was soon replaced with astonishment, then, as he gave ground before Il Conde’s onslaught, to that intent concentration which is the hallmark of all masters of the fencing art.
“ ‘O doughty dotard!’ he exclaimed, parrying the whirling cane, ‘O grim gaffer! Well struck—oh, well struck! And yet again!’ The highwayman leapt back