[Quentin Durward by Sir Walter Scott]@TWC D-Link bookQuentin Durward CHAPTER XVI: THE VAGRANT 4/14
"I can tell you that, say what you will of your religion, the Goddess whom you worship rides in this company." "Peace!" said Quentin, in astonishment, "on thy life, not a word farther, but in answer to what I ask thee .-- Canst thou be faithful ?" "I can--all men can," said the Bohemian. "But wilt thou be faithful ?" "Wouldst thou believe me the more should I swear it ?" answered Maugrabin, with a sneer. "Thy life is in my hand," said the young Scot. "Strike, and see whether I fear to die," answered the Bohemian. "Will money render thee a trusty guide ?" demanded Durward. "If I be not such without it, no," replied the heathen. "Then what will bind thee ?" asked the Scot. "Kindness," replied the Bohemian. "Shall I swear to show thee such, if thou art true guide to us on this pilgrimage ?" "No," replied Hayraddin, "it were extravagant waste of a commodity so rare.
To thee I am bound already." "How ?" exclaimed Durward, more surprised than ever. "Remember the chestnut trees on the banks of the Cher! The victim whose body thou didst cut down was my brother, Zamet the Maugrabin." "And yet," said Quentin, "I find you in correspondence with those very officers by whom your brother was done to death, for it was one of them who directed me where to meet with you--the same, doubtless, who procured yonder ladies your services as a guide." "What can we do ?" answered Hayraddin, gloomily.
"These men deal with us as the sheepdogs do with the flock, they protect us for a while, drive us hither and thither at their pleasure, and always end by guiding us to the shambles." Quentin had afterwards occasion to learn that the Bohemian spoke truth in this particular, and that the Provost guard, employed to suppress the vagabond bands by which the kingdom was infested, entertained correspondence among them, and forbore, for a certain time, the exercise of their duty, which always at last ended in conducting their allies to the gallows.
This is a sort of political relation between thief and officer, for the profitable exercise of their mutual professions, which has subsisted in all countries, and is by no means unknown to our own. Durward, parting from the guide, fell back to the rest of the retinue, very little satisfied with the character of Hayraddin, and entertaining little confidence in the professions of gratitude which he had personally made to him.
He proceeded to sound the other two men who had been assigned him for attendants, and he was concerned to find them stupid and as unfit to assist him with counsel, as in the rencounter they had shown themselves reluctant to use their weapons. "It is all the better," said Quentin to himself, his spirit rising with the apprehended difficulties of his situation, "that lovely young lady shall owe all to me.
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