[The Midnight Queen by May Agnes Fleming]@TWC D-Link bookThe Midnight Queen CHAPTER XXII 8/16
In mercy's name, sir, do not turn us out in the streets at this dreadful time!" "Not I! You and your wife Joanna may stagnate here till you blue-mold, for me.
But keep the door fast, my good old friend, and admit no strangers, but those who can tell you La Masque is dead!" With which parting piece of advice Sir Norman left the house, and joined George, who sat like an effigy before the door, in a state of great mental wrath, and who accosted him rather suddenly the moment he made his appearance. "I tell you what, Sir Norman Kingsley, if you have many more morning calls to make, I shall beg leave to take my departure.
As it is, I know we are behind time, and his ma--the count, I mean, is not one who it accustomed or inclined to be kept waiting." "I am quite at your service now," said Sir Norman, springing on horseback; "so away with you, quick as you like." George wanted no second order.
Before the words were well out of his companion's mouth, he was dashing away like a bolt from a bow, as furiously as if on a steeple-chase, with Sir Norman close at his heels; and they rode, flushed and breathless, with their steeds all a foaming, into the court-yard of the royal palace at Whitehall, just as the early rising sun was showing his florid and burning visage above the horizon. The court-yard, unlike the city streets, swarmed with busy life.
Pages, and attendants, and soldiers, moving hither and thither, or lounging about, preparing for the morning's journey to Oxford.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|