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Love-at-Arms - Rafael Sabatini


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       Rafael Sabatini

      Love-at-Arms

      Being a Narrative Excerpted from the Chronicles of Urbino During The Dominion of the High and Mighty Messer Guidobaldo Da Montefeltro

      Published by Good Press, 2021

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664637468

       CHAPTER I. VOX POPULI

       CHAPTER II. ON A MOUNTAIN PATH

       CHAPTER III. SACKCLOTH AND MOTLEY

       CHAPTER IV. MONNA VALENTINA

       CHAPTER V. GIAN MARIA

       CHAPTER VI. THE AMOROUS DUKE

       CHAPTER VII. GONZAGA THE INSIDIOUS

       CHAPTER VIII. AMONG THE DREGS OF WINE

       CHAPTER IX. THE “TRATTA DI CORDE”

       CHAPTER X. THE BRAYING OF AN ASS

       CHAPTER XI. WANDERING KNIGHTS

       CHAPTER XII. THE FOOL'S INQUISITIVENESS

       CHAPTER XIII. GIAN MARIA MAKES A VOW

       CHAPTER XIV. FORTEMANI DRINKS WATER

       CHAPTER XV. THE MERCY OF FRANCESCO

       CHAPTER XVI. GONZAGA UNMASKS

       CHAPTER XVII. THE ENEMY

       CHAPTER XVIII. TREACHERY

       CHAPTER XIX. PLOT AND COUNTERPLOT

       CHAPTER XX. THE LOVERS

       CHAPTER XXI. THE PENITENT

       CHAPTER XXII. A REVELATION

       CHAPTER XXIII. IN THE ARMOURY TOWER

       CHAPTER XXIV. THE INTERRUPTED MASS

       CHAPTER XXV. THE CAPITULATION OF ROCCALEONE

       Table of Contents

      From the valley, borne aloft on the wings of the evening breeze, rose faintly the tolling of an Angelus bell, and in a goat-herd's hut on the heights above stood six men with heads uncovered and bowed, obeying its summons to evening prayer. A brass lamp, equipped with three beaks, swung from the grimy ceiling, and, with more smoke than flame, shed an indifferent light, and yet a more indifferent smell, throughout the darkening hovel. But it sufficed at least to reveal in the accoutrements and trappings of that company a richness that was the more striking by contrast with the surrounding squalor.

      As the last stroke of the Ave Maria faded on the wind that murmured plaintively through the larches of the hillside, they piously crossed themselves, and leisurely resuming their head-gear, they looked at one another with questioning glances. Yet before any could voice the inquiry that was in the minds of all, a knock fell upon the rotten timbers of the door.

      “At last!” exclaimed old Fabrizio da Lodi, in a voice charged with relief, whilst a younger man of good shape and gay garments strode to the door in obedience to Fabrizio's glance, and set it wide.

      Across the threshold stepped a tall figure under a wide, featherless hat, and wrapped in a cloak which he loosened as he entered, revealing the very plainest of raiment beneath. A leather hacketon was tightened at the waist by a girdle of hammered steel, from which depended on his left a long sword with ringed, steel quillons, whilst from behind his right hip peeped the hilt of a stout Pistoja dagger. His hose of red cloth vanished into boots of untanned leather, laced in front and turned down at the knees, and completed in him the general appearance of a mercenary in time of peace, in spite of which the six nobles, in that place of paradoxes, bared their heads anew, and stood in attitudes of deferential attention.

      He paused a moment to throw off his cloak, of which the young man who had admitted him hastened to relieve him as readily as if he had been born a servitor. He next removed his hat, and allowed it to remain slung from his shoulders, displaying, together with a still youthful countenance of surpassing strength and nobility, a mane of jet-black hair coiffed in a broad net of gold thread—the only article of apparel that might have suggested his station to be higher than at first had seemed.

      He stepped briskly to the coarse and grease-stained table, about which the company was standing, and his black eyes ran swiftly over the faces that confronted him.

      “Sirs,” he said at last, “I am here. My horse went lame a half-league beyond Sant' Angelo, and I was constrained to end the journey on foot.”

      “Your Excellency will be tired,” cried Fabrizio, with that ready solicitude which is ever at the orders of the great. “A cup of Puglia wine, my lord. Here, Fanfulla,” he called, to the young nobleman who had acted as usher. But the new-comer silenced him and put the matter aside with a gesture.

      “Let that wait. Time imports as you little dream. It may well be, illustrious sirs, that had I not come thus I had not come at all.”

      “How?” cried one, expressing the wonder that rose in every mind, even as on every countenance some consternation showed. “Are we betrayed?”

      “If you are in case to fear betrayal, it may well be, my friends. As I crossed the bridge over the Metauro and took the path that leads hither, my eyes were caught by a crimson light shining from a tangle of bushes by the roadside. That crimson flame was a reflection of the setting sun flashed from the steel cap of a hidden watcher. The path took me nearer, and


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