what you did for me. I
wish I could do something in return." She laughed.
"Well," she said, "you were very kind in the ship. You were a good enemy
to me then. Weren't you?"
"Yes," I said, "I beat you properly on the ship. I carried the Duke's
letters in my pistol cartridges, where you never suspected them. The
letters which were in the satchel I forged myself after I got on board.
If you'd not been a silly you'd have seen that they were forged."
"So that was why," she said. "Those letters gave everybody more anxious
work than you've any notion of. Oh, Martin, though, I helped to drug you
to get those letters. It was terrible. Terrible. Will you ever forgive
me?"
"Why, yes, Aurelia," I said. "After all, it was done for your King. Just
as I mean to run away from here to serve mine. All is fair in the King's
service. Let us shake hands on that." We shook hands heartily, looking
into each other's eyes.
"By the way," I said, "where did you get to that day in Holland, when I
got the letters from you?"
"Ah," she answered, "you made me like a wildcat that day. I nearly
killed you, twice. You remember that low parapet on the roof? I was
behind that, waiting for you with a loaded pistol. You were all very
near your deaths that morning. In the King's service, of course.
For just a minute, I thought that you would climb up to examine that
parapet. What a crazy lot you all were not to know at once that I was
there! Where else could I have been?"
"Well," I answered, "I beat you in the ride, didn't I? You thought
yourself awfully clever about that horse at the inn. Well, I beat
you there. I beat you in the race. I beat you with my letters to the
Dutchman. I beat you over those forgeries."
"Yes, indeed," she said. "I can beat all the men in your Duke's service.
Every one. Even clever Colonel Lane. Even Fletcher of Saltoun. But a
boy is so unexpected, there's no beating a boy, except with a good
birch rod. You beat me so often, Martin, that I think you can afford to
forgive me for tricking you once in bringing you here."
"I shall beat you in that, too, Miss Carew," I said; "for I mean to get
away from you as soon as I can."
"So you say," she said. "But we have club men walking all round this
house all night, as well as sentries by day, guarding the stock.
Your gang of marauders will find a rough welcome if they come for
refreshments here."
Even as she spoke, there came a sudden crash of fire-arms from the
meado
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