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<h2> CHAPTER XLI </h2>
<p>Denys, placed in the middle of his companions, lest he should be so mad as
attempt escape was carried off in an agony of grief and remorse. For his
sake Gerard had abandoned the German route to Rome; and what was his
reward? left all alone in the centre of Burgundy. This was the thought
which maddened Denys most, and made him now rave at heaven and earth, now
fall into a gloomy silence so savage and sinister that it was deemed
prudent to disarm him. They caught up their leader just outside the town,
and the whole cavalcade drew up and baited at the “Tete d'Or.”</p>
<p>The young landlady, though much occupied with the count, and still more
with the bastard, caught sight of Denys, and asked him somewhat anxiously
what had become of his young companion?</p>
<p>Denys, with a burst of grief, told her all, and prayed her to send after
Gerard. “Now he is parted from me, he will maybe listen to my rede,” said
he; “poor wretch, he loves not solitude.”</p>
<p>The landlady gave a toss of her head. “I trow I have been somewhat
over-kind already,” said she, and turned rather red.</p>
<p>“You will not?”</p>
<p>“Not I.”</p>
<p>“Then,”—and he poured a volley of curses and abuse upon her.</p>
<p>She turned her back upon him, and went off whimpering, and Saying she was
not used to be cursed at; and ordered her hind to saddle two mules.</p>
<p>Denys went north with his troop, mute and drooping over his saddle, and
quite unknown to him, that veracious young lady made an equestrian toilet
in only forty minutes, she being really in a hurry, and spurred away with
her servant in the opposite direction.</p>
<p>At dark, after a long march, the bastard and his men reached “The White
Hart;” their arrival caused a prodigious bustle, and it was some time
before Manon discovered her old friend among so many. When she did, she
showed it only by heightened colour. She did not claim the acquaintance.
The poor soul was already beginning to scorn.</p>
<p>“The base degrees by which she did ascend.”</p>
<p>Denys saw but could not smile. The inn reminded him too much of Gerard.</p>
<p>Ere the night closed the wind changed. She looked into the room and
beckoned him with her finger. He rose sulkily, and his guards with him.</p>
<p>“Nay, I would speak a word to thee in private.”</p>
<p>She drew him to a corner of the room, and there asked him under her breath
would he do her a kindness.</p>
<p>He answered out loud, “No, he would not; he was not in the vein to do
kindnesses to man or woman. If he did a kindness it should be to a dog;
and not that if he could help it.”</p>
<p>“Alas, good archer, I did you one eftsoons, you and your pretty comrade,”
said Manon humbly.</p>
<p>“You did, dame, you did; well then, for his sake—what is't to do?”</p>
<p>“Thou knowest my story. I had been unfortunate. Now I am worshipful. But a
woman did cast him in my teeth this day. And so 'twill be ever while he
hangs there. I would have him ta'en down; well-a-day!”</p>
<p>“With all my heart.”</p>
<p>“And none dare I ask but thee. Wilt do't?”</p>
<p>“Not I, even were I not a prisoner.”</p>
<p>On this stern refusal the tender Manon sighed, and clasped her palms
together despondently. Denys told her she need not fret. There were
soldiers of a lower stamp who would not make two bites of such a cherry.
It was a mere matter of money; if she could find two angels, he would find
two soldiers to do the dirty work of “The White Hart.”</p>
<p>This was not very palatable. However, reflecting that soldiers were birds
of passage, drinking here to-night, knocked on the head there to-morrow,
she said softly, “Send them out to me. But prithee, tell them that 'tis
for one that is my friend; let them not think 'tis for me; I should sink
into the earth; times are changed.”</p>
<p>Denys found warriors glad to win an angel apiece so easily. He sent them
out, and instantly dismissing the subject with contempt, sat brooding on
his lost friend.</p>
<p>Manon and the warriors soon came to a general understanding. But what were
they to do with the body when taken down? She murmured, “The river is nigh
the—the place.”</p>
<p>“Fling him in, eh?”</p>
<p>“Nay, nay; be not so cruel! Could ye not put him—gently—and—with
somewhat weighty?”</p>
<p>She must have been thinking on the subject in detail; for she was not one
to whom ideas came quickly.</p>
<p>All was speedily agreed, except the time of payment. The mail-clad itched
for it, and sought it in advance. Manon demurred to that.</p>
<p>What, did she doubt their word? then let her come along with them, or
watch them at a distance.</p>
<p>“Me?” said Manon with horror. “I would liever die than see it done.”</p>
<p>“Which yet you would have done.”</p>
<p>“Ay, for sore is my need. Times are changed.”</p>
<p>She had already forgotten her precept to Denys.</p>
<p>An hour later the disagreeable relic of caterpillar existence ceased to
canker the worshipful matron's public life, and the grim eyes of the past
to cast malignant glances down into a white hind's clover field.</p>
<p>Total. She made the landlord an average wife, and a prime house-dog, and
outlived everybody.</p>
<p>Her troops, when they returned from executing with mediaeval naivete the
precept, “Off wi' the auld love,” received a shock. They found the
market-place black with groups; it had been empty an hour ago. Conscience
smote them. This came of meddling with the dead. However, the bolder of
the two, encouraged by the darkness, stole forward alone, and slily
mingled with a group: he soon returned to his companion, saying, in a tone
of reproach not strictly reasonable,</p>
<p>“Ye born fool, it is only a miracle.”</p>
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