[The Tavern Knight by Rafael Sabatini]@TWC D-Link book
The Tavern Knight

CHAPTER XV
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And in his rage and mortification at the way she used him, and for which he now bitterly upbraided her, he was very near the point of tears, like the blubbering schoolboy that at heart he was.
"And as for the debt, madam," he cried, striking the oaken table of the hall with his clenched hand, "it is a debt that shall be paid, a debt which this gentleman whom you defend would not permit me to contract until I had promised payment--aye, 'fore George!--and with interest, for in the payment I may risk my very life." "I see no interest in that, since you risk nothing more than what you owe him," she answered, with a disdain that brought the impending tears to his eyes.

But if he lacked the manliness to restrain them, he possessed at least the shame to turn his back and hide them from her.
"But tell me, sir," she added, her curiosity awakened, "if I am to judge, what was the nature of this bargain ?" He was silent for a moment, and took a turn in the hall--mastering himself to speak--his hands clasped behind his back, and his eyes bent towards the polished floor which the evening sunlight, filtered through the gules of the leaded windows, splashed here and there with a crimson stain.

She sat in the great leathern chair at the head of the board, and, watching him, waited.
He was debating whether he was bound to secrecy in the matter, and in the end he resolved that he was not.

Thereupon, pausing before her, he succinctly told the story Crispin had related to him that night in Worcester--the story of a great wrong, that none but a craven could have left unavenged.

He added nothing to it, subtracted nothing from it, but told the tale as it had been told to him on that dreadful night, the memory of which had still power to draw a shudder from him.
Cynthia sat with parted lips and eager eyes, drinking in that touching narrative of suffering that was rather as some romancer's fabrication than a true account of what a living man had undergone.


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