You'll hardly have time for a nap, I fear.
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You'll want to start, no doubt.
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I shall not follow till dusk.
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Hunting at night is so much more exciting than by day, don't you think? Au revoir, Mr. Rainsford, au revoir." General Zaroff, with a deep, courtly bow, strolled from the room.
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From another door came Ivan. Under one arm he carried khaki hunting clothes, a haversack of food, a leather sheath containing a long-bladed hunting knife; his right hand rested on a cocked revolver thrust in the crimson sash about his waist.
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Rainsford had fought his way through the bush for two hours. "I must keep my nerve. I must keep my nerve," he said through tight teeth.
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He had not been entirely clearheaded when the chateau gates snapped shut behind him.
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His whole idea at first was to put distance between himself and General Zaroff; and, to this end, he had plunged along, spurred on by the sharp rowers of something very like panic.
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Now he had got a grip on himself, had stopped, and was taking stock of himself and the situation.
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He saw that straight flight was futile; inevitably it would bring him face to face with the sea.
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He was in a picture with a frame of water, and his operations, clearly, must take place within that frame.
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"I'll give him a trail to follow," muttered Rainsford, and he struck off from the rude path he had been following into the trackless wilderness.
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He executed a series of intricate loops; he doubled on his trail again and again, recalling all the lore of the fox hunt, and all the dodges of the fox.
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Night found him leg-weary, with hands and face lashed by the branches, on a thickly wooded ridge.
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He knew it would be insane to blunder on through the dark, even if he had the strength.
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His need for rest was imperative and he thought, "I have played the fox, now I must play the cat of the fable." A big tree with a thick trunk and outspread branches was near by, and, taking care to leave not the slightest mark, he climbed up into the crotch, and, stretching out on one of the broad limbs, after a fashion, rested.
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Rest brought him new confidence and almost a feeling of security.
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Even so zealous a hunter as General Zaroff could not trace him there, he told himself; only the devil himself could follow that complicated trail through the jungle after dark.
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But perhaps the general was a devil-
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An apprehensive night crawled slowly by like a wounded snake and sleep did not visit Rainsford, although the silence of a dead world was on the jungle.
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Toward morning when a dingy gray was varnishing the sky, the cry of some startled bird focused Rainsford's attention in that direction.
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Something was coming through the bush, coming slowly, carefully, coming by the same winding way Rainsford had come.
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He flattened himself down on the limb and, through a screen of leaves almost as thick as tapestry, he watched… .
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That which was approaching was a man.
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It was General Zaroff.
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