Oddsfish! by Robert Hugh Benson
page 300 of 587 (51%)
page 300 of 587 (51%)
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assault. So I sat down on the stairs that rose straight up to the first
floor. (It was a little oak-panelled entrance that I was in, with a single lamp burning in a socket on the wall.) "You will first answer my question," I said. "Is Mistress Jermyn within doors?" Then he came at me, thinking, I suppose that my sitting down gave him an advantage, and he lifted his weapon as he came. I had no time to draw my own sword--which was besides, somewhere between my legs; but I rose up, and, as I rose, struck out at his chin with all my force, with my whole weight behind. He staggered back against the doorway he had come out by; and the same moment two things happened. The old woman screamed aloud; and Dolly sprang suddenly out on to the head of the stairs, from a door that opened there, full into the light of the lamp. "Why-" cried she. "Oh! there you are," I said bitterly. "Then Mistress Jermyn is within doors." Then I turned and went straight upstairs after her; and, as I went heard the ring of running footsteps in the paved passage out of doors, and knew that the guard was coming up. The fellow still leaned, dazed, against the doorpost; and the old woman was pouring out scream after scream. I went after Dolly straight into the room from which she had come. It |
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