[Red Axe by Samuel Rutherford Crockett]@TWC D-Link bookRed Axe CHAPTER XI 9/15
Also in this promotion you shall have a good sufficient reason to give those who may accuse you of changing your service." I could not answer him for gladness.
The hope seemed so unbelievable--the fortune too grateful to be true.
I was overcome, and, as I guess, showed it in my face.
For twice I essayed to speak and could not. So that Master Gerard rose and glided over to me, patting me kindly enough on the shoulders and bidding me take courage, saying that he loved to see modesty in this untoward generation, in which there was little virtue and no gratitude at all. So I grasped him by the hand and kissed his thin, bony fingers. "Bide ye, bide ye," he said; "one day I may kiss yours an you be active. The wide spaces of Destiny lie before you, though I shall not live to see it.
But you must bestir you, for I am an old man, and have not far to travel now to the place from which one leaps off into the dark." He conducted me to the door of his chamber and gave me his hand again with the same inscrutable smile on his thin face, and his skull-cap pushed farther back than ever over the flat, ophidian brow. "When you have all things ready," he said, "come to me for the letter of introduction, and also for that which may obtain you a worthy outfit for your journeying to Plassenburg.
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