[In the Irish Brigade by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link book
In the Irish Brigade

CHAPTER 4: At Versailles
18/37

He waited until I had gone to Paris on business that would keep me there for a day or two.

A messenger arrived with a letter, purporting to be from me, saying that I wished my daughter to join me at once, and had sent a carriage to take her to me.

Anne is young, and, suspecting no harm, at once threw on a mantle and hood, and entered the carriage.

It was broad daylight, and there was nothing to disquiet her until, on approaching the town, the carriage turned off the main road.

This struck her as strange, and she was just about to ask the question where she was being taken, when the carriage stopped in a lonely spot, the door was opened, and a man stepped in.
"Before she had even time to recognize him, he threw a thick cloak over her head.


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