Page:The Mysterious Warning - Parsons (1796, volume 2).djvu/21

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

rode round his grounds, and grew quite desperate that chance did not befriend me.—One morning, riding through a narrow valley, accompanied by one servant only, I met a Gentleman with a gun, and an English pointer running by his side. As he advanced I saw a young man, of a noble air, and an engaging countenance; struck with a presentiment that this must be the Count, I accosted him, and inquired to whom that mansion, whose turrets we saw through the trees, and the neighbouring grounds, belonged?

"To Count M***, Sir (replied he, eying me with a scrutinizing look:) Are you a stranger in this country that you ask the question?"

"I am (answered I) having resided in these parts only a fortnight."

"A fortnight! (repeated he, with some emotion) you are on a visit then I suppose?"

"No; I came here for that purpose, but found my good friend dead, the late Count Zimchaw."