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Puck of Pook's Hill by Rudyard Kipling
page 34 of 231 (14%)
whom he had spoken to us in France. She cried out fiercely at me, and
would have had me hanged in that hour, but her brother said that I had
spared his life--he said not how he saved mine from the Saxons--and that
our Duke had won the day; and even while they wrangled over my poor
body, of a sudden he fell down in a swoon from his wounds.

'"This is _thy_ fault," said the Lady Ælueva to me, and she kneeled
above him and called for wine and cloths.

'"If I had known," I answered, "he should have ridden and I walked. But
he set me on my horse; he made no complaint; he walked beside me and
spoke merrily throughout. I pray I have done him no harm."

'"Thou hast need to pray," she said, catching up her underlip. "If he
dies, thou shalt hang."

'They bore off Hugh to his chamber; but three tall men of the house
bound me and set me under the beam of the Great Hall with a rope round
my neck. The end of the rope they flung over the beam, and they sat them
down by the fire to wait word whether Hugh lived or died. They cracked
nuts with their knife-hilts the while.'

'And how did you feel?' said Dan.

'Very weary; but I did heartily pray for my schoolmate Hugh his health.
About noon I heard horses in the valley, and the three men loosed my
ropes and fled out, and De Aquila's men rode up. Gilbert de Aquila came
with them, for it was his boast that, like his father, he forgot no man
that served him. He was little, like his father, but terrible, with a
nose like an eagle's nose and yellow eyes like an eagle. He rode tall
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