[The Nest of the Sparrowhawk by Baroness Orczy]@TWC D-Link bookThe Nest of the Sparrowhawk CHAPTER X 13/13
Yet was he sorely tempted, and we may presume that he cursed inwardly, for his enemy refused to be drawn into wordy warfare, and he himself had exhausted his vocabulary of sneering abuse, even as he had exhausted his breath. Perhaps in his innermost heart he was ashamed of his outburst.
After all, he had taken this man's money, and had broken bread with him.
His hand dropped to his side, and his head fell forward on his breast even as with a pleasant laugh the prince carelessly turned away, and with an affected gesture brushed his silken doublet, there where the blacksmith's hard grip had marred the smoothness of the delicate fabric. Had Adam Lambert possessed that subtle sixth sense, which hears and sees that which goes on in the mind of others, he had perceived a thought in his lodger's brain cells which might have caused him to still further regret his avowal of open enmity. For as the blacksmith finally turned away and walked off through the park, skirting the boundary wall, Sir Marmaduke looked over his shoulder at the ungainly figure which was soon lost in the gloom, and muttered a round oath between his teeth. "An exceedingly unpleasant person," he vowed within himself, "you will have to be removed, good master, an you get too troublesome.".
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