[Fair Margaret by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link book
Fair Margaret

CHAPTER III
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Therefore, since there is enough for all of us and more, I shall pass this business and its goodwill over to others, to be managed in their name, but on shares, and if it please God we will keep next Yule at Dedham." As he spoke the door at the far end of the hall opened, and through it came that serving-man who had been bidden to follow the Spaniard.
"Well," said Castell, "what tidings ?" The man bowed and said: "I followed the Don as you bade me to his lodging, which I reached without his seeing me, though from time to time he stopped to look about him.

He rests near the palace of Westminster, in the same big house where dwells the ambassador de Ayala, and those who stood round lifted their bonnets to him.
"Watching I saw some of these go to a tavern, a low place that is open all night, and, following them there, called for a drink and listened to their talk, who know the Spanish tongue well, having worked for five years in your worship's house at Seville.

They spoke of the fray to-night, and said that if they could catch that long-legged fellow, meaning Master Brome yonder, they would put a knife into him, since he had shamed them by killing the Scotch knave, who was their officer and the best swordsman in their company, with a staff, and then setting his British bulldogs on them.

I fell into talk with them, saying that I was an English sailor from Spain, which they were too drunk to question, and asked who might be the tall don who had interfered in the fray before the king came.

They told me he is a rich senor named d'Aguilar, but ill to serve in Lent because he is so strict a churchman, although not strict in other matters.


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