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"Have you anything to say to me, sir? Do not speak loud. The fellow that conducted me from the castle is drinking ale in the house behind. He did not know of this door on the side.... Have you anything to say?"
"Yes," said Robin.
"What is it?"
"Two things. The first is that I think one of the fellows in the inn is doubtful of me. Merton tells me he has asked a great number of questions about me. What had I best do?"
"Who is he?"
"He is a servant of my lord Shrewsbury's who is in the neighbourhood."
The doctor was silent.
"Am I in danger?" asked the priest quietly. "Shall I endanger her Grace?"
"You cannot endanger her Grace. She is near her end in any case. But for yourself--"
"Yes."
"You are endangering yourself every instant by remaining," said the doctor dryly.
"The second matter--" began Robin.
"But what of yourself--"
"Myself must be endangered," said Robin softly. "The second matter is whether you cannot get me near her Grace in the event of her execution.
I could at least give her absolution _sub conditione_."
Mr. Bourgoign shot a glance at him which he could not interpret.
"Sir," he said; "G.o.d will reward you.... As regards the second matter it will be exceedingly difficult. If it is to be in the open court, I may perhaps contrive it. If it is to be in the hall, none but known persons would be admitted.... Have you anything more, sir?"
"No."
"Then you had best be gone again at once.... Her Grace prays for you....
She had a fit of weeping last night to know that a priest was here and she not able to have him.... Do you pray for her...."
V
Sunday morning dawned; the bells pealed out; the crowds went by the church and came back to dinner; and yet no word had come to the inn.
Robin scarcely stirred out all that day for fear a summons should come and he miss it. He feigned a little illness and sat wrapped up in the corner window of the parlour upstairs, whence he could command both roads--that which led to the Castle, and that which led to the bridge over which Mr. Beale must come. He considered it prudent also to do this, because of the fellow of whom Merton had told him--a man that looked like a groom, and who was lent, he heard, with one or two others by his master to do service at the Castle.
Robin's own plan had been distinct ever since M. de Preau had brought him the first message. He bore himself, as has been said, a.s.suredly and confidently; and if he were questioned would simply have said that he had business connected with the Castle. This, a.s.serted in a proper tone, would probably have its effect. There was so much mystery, involving such highly-placed personages from the Queen of England downwards, that discretion was safer than curiosity.
It was growing towards dark when Robin, after long and fruitless staring down the castle road, turned himself to the other. The parlour was empty at this hour except for himself.
He saw the group gathering as usual at the entrance to the bridge to watch the arrivals from London, who, if there were any, generally came about this time.
Then, as he looked, he saw two hors.e.m.e.n mount the further slope of the bridge, and come full into view.
Now there was nothing whatever about these two persons, in outward appearance, to explain the strange effect they had upon the priest. They could not possibly be the party for which he was watching. Mr. Beale would certainly come with a great company. They were, besides, plainly no more than serving-men: one wore some kind of a livery; the other, a strongly-built man who sat his horse awkwardly, was in new clothes that did not fit him. They rode ordinary hackneys; and each had luggage strapped behind his saddle. All this the priest saw as they came up the narrow street and halted before the inn door. They might, perhaps, be servants of Mr. Beale; yet that did not seem probable as there was no sign of a following party. The landlord came out on to the steps beneath; and after a word or two, they slipped off their horses wearily, and led them round into the court of the inn.
All this was usual enough; the priest had seen such arrivals a dozen times at this very door; yet he felt sick as he looked at them. There appeared to him something terrible and sinister about them. He had seen the face of the liveried servant; but not of the other: this one had carried his head low, with his great hat drawn down on his head. The priest wondered, too, what they carried in their trunks.
When he went down to supper in the great room of the inn, he could not forbear looking round for them. But only one was to be seen--the liveried servant who had done the talking.
Robin turned to his neighbour--a lawyer with whom he had spoken a few times.
"That is a new livery to me," he said, nodding towards the stranger.
"That?" said the lawyer. "That? Why, that is the livery of Mr.
Walsingham. I have seen it in London."
Towards the end of supper a stir broke out among the servants who sat at the lower end of the room near the windows that looked out upon the streets. Two or three sprung up from the tables and went to look out.
"What is that?" cried the lawyer.
"It is Mr. Beale going past, sir," answered a voice.
Robin lifted his eyes with an effort and looked. Even as he did so there came a trampling of horses' hoofs; and then, in the light that streamed from the windows, there appeared a company on horseback. They were too far away from where he sat, and the lights were too confusing, for him to see more than the general crowd that went by--perhaps from a dozen to twenty all told. But by them ran the heads of men who had waited at the bridge to see them go by; and a murmuring of voices came even through the closed windows. It was plain that others besides those who were close to her Grace, saw a sinister significance in Mr. Beale's arrival.
VI
Robin had hardly reached his room after supper and a little dessert in the parlour, before Merton came in. He drew his hand out of his breast as he entered, and, with a strange look, gave the priest a folded letter. Robin took it without a word and read it through.
After a pause he said to the other:
"Who were those two men that came before supper? I saw them ride up."
"There is only one, sir. He is one of Mr. Walsingham's men."
"There were two," said the priest.
"I will inquire, sir," said the young man, looking anxiously from the priest's face to the note and back again.
Robin noticed it.
"It is bad news," he said shortly. "I must say no more.... Will you inquire for me; and come and tell me at once."
When the young man had gone Robin read the note again before destroying it.