[The Black Douglas by S. R. Crockett]@TWC D-Link book
The Black Douglas

CHAPTER XVII
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I should try sword point and arrowhead on such gentry, and if these do them no harm, why then I think they will not distress me much." But all the same he said nothing to the girl about the red blood on his sword or the splashed gouts on the steps of the staircase.
He followed Maud Lindesay into her chamber, and being arrived there, lifted couch and all in his arms, with an ease born of long apprenticeship to the forehammer.

The girl regarded him with admiration which she was careful not to dissemble.
"You are very strong," she said.

Then, after a pause, she added, "Margaret and I like strong men." The heart of the youth was glad within him, thus to be called a man, even though he kept saying over and over to himself: "She means it not! She means it not! She loves the Earl! I know well she loves the Earl!" Maud Lindesay paused a moment before the chamber door of her little charge, finger on lip, listening.
"She sleeps--go quietly," she whispered, holding the door open for him.

He set down the bed where she showed him--by the side of the small slumbering figure of the Maid of Galloway.
Then he went softly to the door.

The girl followed him.


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