The man in greyBeing episodes of the Chovan [i.e. Chouan] conspiracies in Normandy during the First Empire.
me out of that wallet, if you please, ere you move another step, and two hundred for each one of us here, or----" 
The man with the wooden leg had come to a halt, but somehow it seemed that he had not done so because the others held and compelled him, but because he himself had a desire to stand still. Now when Hare-Lip paused, a world of menace in every line of his gaunt, quivering body, Silver-Leg laughed with gentle irony, as a man would laugh at the impotent vapourings of a child. 
"Or what, my good Hare-Lip?" he queried slowly. 
Then as the other instinctively lowered his gaze and mumbled something between his teeth, Silver-Leg shrugged his shoulders and said with kind indulgence, still as if he were speaking to a child: "Madame will settle, my friend. Do not worry. It is bad to worry. You remember Fear-Nought: he took to worrying--just as you are doing now--wanted to be paid out of his turn, or more than his share, I forget which. But you remember him?" 
"I do," muttered Hare-Lip with a savage oath. "Fear-Nought was tracked down by the police and dragged to Vincennes, or Force, or Bicêtre--we never knew." 
"To the guillotine, my good Hare-Lip," rejoined Silver-Leg blandly, "along with some other very brave Chouans like yourselves, who also had given their leaders some considerable trouble." 
"Betrayed by you," growled Hare-Lip menacingly. 
"Punished--that's all," concluded Silver-Leg as he once more turned to go. 
"Treachery is a game at which more than one can play." "The stakes are high. And only one man can win," remarked Silver-Leg dryly. 
"And one man must lose," shouted Hare-Lip, now beside himself with rage, "and that one shall be you this time, my fine Silver-Leg. À moi, my mates!" he called to his companions. 
And in a moment the men fell on Silver-Leg with the vigour born of terror and greed, and for the first moment or two of their desperate tussle it seemed as if the man with the wooden leg must succumb to the fury of his assailants. Darkness encompassed them all round, and the deep silence which dwells in the heart of the woods. And in the darkness and the silence these men fought--and fought desperately--for the possession of a few hundred francs just filched at the muzzle of a pistol from a few peaceable travellers. 
Pistols of course could not be used; the police patrols might not be far away, and so they fought on in silence, grim and determined, one man against half a dozen, and that one halt, and weighted with the spoils. But he had the strength of a giant, and with his back against a stately fir tree he used the heavy wallet as a flail, keeping his assailants at arm's length with the menace of death-dealing blows. 
Then, suddenly, from far away, even through the dull thuds of this weird and grim struggle, there came the sound of 
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