登陆注册
5452800000141

第141章

If this be but game and play, let me go my ways; for time presses, and I have a weighty errand on hand."

She rose up and came close to him, and laid a hand on his knee and looked wistfully into his face as she said: "Nay then, I can tell thee all the tale as thou sittest in thy saddle; for meseems short will be thy farewell when I have told it."

And she sighed withal.

Then Ralph was ashamed to gainsay her, and she now become gentle and sweet and enticing, and sad withal; so he got off his horse and tied him to a tree, and went and stood by the damsel as she lay upon the grass, and said:

"I prithee tell thy tale and let me depart if there be naught for me to do."

Then she said: "This is the first word, that as to the Red Rock, I lied; and my lady is the Queen of Utterbol, and I am her thrall, and it is I who have drawn thee hither from the camp."

The blood mounted to Ralph's brow for anger; when he called to mind how he had been led hither and thither on other folk's errands ever since he left Upmeads. But he said naught, and Agatha looked on him timidly and said:

"I say I am her thrall, and I did it to serve her and because she bade me."

Said Ralph roughly: "And Redhead, him whom I saved from torments and death; dost thou know him? didst thou know him?"

"Yea," she said, "I had from him what he had learned concerning thee from the sergeants and others, and then I put words into his mouth."

"Yea then," quoth Ralph, "then he also is a traitor!" "Nay, nay," she said, "he is a true man and loveth thee, and whatever he hath said to thee he troweth himself. Moreover, I tell thee here and now that all that he told thee of the affairs of Utterbol, and thine outlook there, is true and overtrue."

She sprang to her feet therewith, and stood before him and clasped her hands before him and said: "I know that thou seekest the Well at the World's End and the deliverance of the damsel whom the Lord ravished from the wild man: now I swear it by thy mouth, that if thou go to Utterbol thou art undone and shalt come to the foulest pass there, and moreover that so going thou shalt bring the uttermost shame and torments on the damsel."

Said Ralph: "Yea, but what is her case as now? tell me."

Quoth Agatha: "She is in no such evil case; for my lady hateth her not as yet, or but little; and, which is far more, my lord loveth her after his fashion, and withal as I deem feareth her; for though she hath utterly gainsaid his desire, he hath scarce so much as threatened her. A thing unheard of.

Had it been another woman she had by this time known all the bitterness that leadeth unto death at Utterbol."

Ralph paled and he scowled on her, then he said:

"And how knowest thou all the privity of the Lord of Utterbol? who telleth thee of all this?" She smiled and spake daintily:

"Many folk tell me that which I would know; and that is because whiles I conquer the tidings with my wits, and whiles buy it with my body. Anyhow what I tell thee is the very sooth concerning this damsel, and this it is: that whereas she is but in peril, she shall be in deadly peril, yea and that instant, if thou go to Utterbol, thou, who art her lover..." "Nay," said Ralph angrily, "I am not her lover, I am but her well-willer." "Well," quoth Agatha looking down and knitting her brows, "when thy good will towards her has become known, then shall she be thrown at once into the pit of my lord's cruelty. Yea, to speak sooth, even as it is, for thy sake (for her I heed naught) I would that the lord might find her gone when he cometh back to Utterbol."

"Yea," said Ralph, reddening, "and is there any hope for her getting clear off?" "So I deem," said Agatha.

She was silent awhile and then spake in a low voice:

"It is said that each man that seeth her loveth her; yea, and will befriend her, even though she consent not to his desire.

Maybe she hath fled from Utterbol."

Ralph stood silent awhile with a troubled face; and then he said:

"Yet thou hast not told me the why and wherefore of this play of thine, and the beguiling me into fleeing from the camp.

Tell it me that I may pardon thee and pass on."

She said: "By thine eyes I swear that this is sooth, and that there is naught else in it than this: My lady set her love, when first she set her eyes upon thee--as forsooth all women must: as for me, I had not seen thee (though I told my lady that I had) till within this hour that we met in the wood."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 重生之无敌神王在都市

    重生之无敌神王在都市

    神王林澈在大限来临之时,触摸仙域失败,意外穿越到因见义勇为而死亡的地球少年身上。
  • 守得花开伴月明

    守得花开伴月明

    “从前,她认为生命中的那个人不可能再出现了。可究竟她比较幸运。使得她可以遇到一个爱自己,自己也爱的人。海枯石烂,至死不渝。”
  • 祇园正仪

    祇园正仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 态度的神奇力量:今日态度成功口诀

    态度的神奇力量:今日态度成功口诀

    好好地活用你的天赋吧!好好地发挥你的想像力吧!挖掘你具有创造力的源泉吧!因为如果你这么做,总有一天一定会迈向成功的巅峰,是的,指的就是你——顶尖人物。作者给我们分享的一切都是经过他多年来深沉的思索、痛苦的历练所凝聚浓缩的人生真谛,成功定律。所以阅读本书,不想改变都是不可能的,因为他改变你于无形。观察成功者的所作所为,并且重复不断地做与他同样的事情,你就会出现与他同样的结果,这就是成功最快速的方法,这叫因果定律,去寻找达成成功的因,然后再一次种下成功的因,你自然而然会收获成功的果实。
  • 暴力厨师

    暴力厨师

    我的理想就是做出天下最美的美食,让仙子吃了迈不动腿,大佬吃了随手赏赐各种功法...
  • 大宋情

    大宋情

    将近320年的大宋政权,必定会在泱泱华夏前面历史之中留下浓墨重彩的一笔,当现代人安奇穿越到宋朝,又会发生怎样的趣事呢?
  • 范小青短篇小说精选集:我在哪里丢失了你(2006年~2009年第四辑)

    范小青短篇小说精选集:我在哪里丢失了你(2006年~2009年第四辑)

    范小青是优秀的小说家,发表中短篇小说200余篇,间或出版的长篇16部,她的创作历程平静而稳健。26年来她不间断地发表短篇小说,像一位从青年时代就拾麦粒的女孩,一直不停地收获,如今她拾的麦粒也堆成了“小墩墩”。这部小说集是“范小青短篇小说精选集”之《我在哪里丢失了你》,是范小青一粒粒精心挑选出的麦粒中的最具生命力的种子。
  • 炼金术士王森

    炼金术士王森

    面对死亡的威胁,是在沉默中带着不甘而死亡还是奋起反抗?在炼金术的道路上一路求索,只是想活的更精彩更自由而已!(且看王森在这钢炼的世界会做出怎样的选择)
  • 燕北录

    燕北录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 襄阳记

    襄阳记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。