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Stephens, Robert Neilson, 1867-1906

"An Enemy to the King"


I suppose that the man, running to intercept me, had found a thrust less
practicable than a blow with the hilt of a dagger.
When I again knew that I was alive, I turned over and sat up. Several
men--bourgeois, vagabonds, menials, and such--were standing around,
looking down at me and talking of the affray. I looked for Bussy and De
Quelus, but did not see either. At a little distance away was another
group, and people walked from that group to mine, and _vice versa._
"Where is M. Bussy?" I asked.
"Oho, this one is all right!" cried one, who might have been a clerk or a
student; "he asks questions. You wish to know about Bussy, eh? You ought
to have seen him gallop from the field without a scratch, while his
enemies pulled themselves together and took to their heels."
"What is that, over there?" I inquired, rising to my feet, and
discovering that I was not badly hurt.
"A dead man who was as much alive as any of us before he ran to help M.
Bussy. It is always the outside man who gets the worst of it, merely for
trying to be useful. There come the soldiers of the watch, after the
fight is over."
I walked over to the other group and knelt by the body on the ground. It
was that of a gentleman whom I had sometimes seen in Bussy's company. He
was indeed dead. The blood was already thickening about the hole that a
sword had made in his doublet.
The next day the whole court was talking of the wrath of the Duke of
Anjou at this assault upon his first gentleman-in-waiting.


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