[The Vicomte de Bragelonne by Alexandre Dumas Pere]@TWC D-Link bookThe Vicomte de Bragelonne CHAPTER XXVII 7/10
The general is too prudent a man to have thus abandoned his army on the eve of a battle without having at least given notice of it to one of us.
As for myself, I cannot believe but some strange event has been the cause of this disappearance.
Yesterday some foreign fishermen came to sell their fish here; they were lodged yonder among the Scots; that is to say, on the road the general took with this gentleman, to go to the abbey, and to return from it.
It was one of these fishermen that accompanied the general with a light.
And this morning, bark and fishermen have all disappeared, carried away by the night's tide." "For my part," said the lieutenant, "I see nothing in that that is not quite natural, for these people were not prisoners." "No; but I repeat it was one of them who lighted the general and this gentleman to the abbey, and Digby assures us that the general had strong suspicions concerning those people.
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