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'Think a little for once of me!' said Romaine。  'I must not have 

seen you before to…night。  To…night we are to have had our only 

interview; and you are to have given me the power; and to…night I 

am to have lost sight of you again … I know not whither; you were 

upon business; it was none of my affairs to question you!  And 

this; you are to remark; in the interests of your own safety much 

more than mine。'



'I am not even to write to you?' I said; a little bewildered。



'I believe I am cutting the last strand that connects you with 

common sense;' he replied。  'But that is the plain English of it。  

You are not even to write; and if you did; I would not answer。'



'A letter; however … ' I began。



'Listen to me;' interrupted Romaine。  'So soon as your cousin reads 

the paragraph; what will he do?  Put the police upon looking into 

my correspondence!  So soon as you write to me; in short; you write 

to Bow Street; and if you will take my advice; you will date that 

letter from France。'



'The devil!' said I; for I began suddenly to see that this might 

put me out of the way of my business。



'What is it now?' says he。



'There will be more to be done; then; before we can part;' I 

answered。



'I give you the whole night;' said he。  'So long as you are off ere 

daybreak; I am content。'



'In short; Mr。 Romaine;' said I; 'I have had so much benefit of 

your advice and services that I am loth to sever the connection; 

and would even ask a substitute。  I would be obliged for a letter 

of introduction to one of your own cloth in Edinburgh … an old man 

for choice; very experienced; very respectable; and very secret。  

Could you favour me with such a letter?'



'Why; no;' said he。  'Certainly not。  I will do no such thing; 

indeed。'



'It would be a great favour; sir;' I pleaded。



'It would be an unpardonable blunder;' he replied。  'What?  Give 

you a letter of introduction? and when the police come; I suppose; 

I must forget the circumstance?  No; indeed。  Talk of it no more。'



'You seem to be always in the right;' said I。  'The letter would be 

out of the question; I quite see that。  But the lawyer's name might 

very well have dropped from you in the way of conversation; having 

heard him mentioned; I might profit by the circumstance to 

introduce myself; and in this way my business would be the better 

done; and you not in the least compromised。'



'What is this business?' said Romaine。



'I have not said that I had any;' I replied。  'It might arise。  

This is only a possibility that I must keep in view。'



'Well;' said he; with a gesture of the hands; 'I mention Mr。 

Robbie; and let that be an end of it! … Or wait!' he added; 'I have 

it。  Here is something that will serve you for an introduction; and 

cannot compromise me。'  And he wrote his name and the Edinburgh 

lawyer's address on a piece of card and tossed it to me。









CHAPTER XXI … I BECOME THE OWNER OF A CLARET…COLOURED CHAISE





WHAT with packing; signing papers; and partaking of an excellent 

cold supper in the lawyer's room; it was past two in the morning 

before we were ready for the road。  Romaine himself let us out of a 

window in a part of the house known to Rowley: it appears it served 

as a kind of postern to the servants' hall; by which (when they 

were in the mind for a clandestine evening) they would come 

regularly in and out; and I remember very well the vinegar aspect 

of the lawyer on the receipt of this piece of information … how he 

pursed his lips; jutted his eyebrows; and kept repeating; 'This 

must be seen to; indeed! this shall be barred to…morrow in the 

morning!'  In this preoccupation; I believe he took leave of me 

without observing it; our things were handed out; we heard the 

window shut behind us; and became instantly lost in a horrid 

intricacy of blackness and the shadow of woods。



A little wet snow kept sleepily falling; pausing; and falling 

again; it seemed perpetually beginning to snow and perpetually 

leaving off; and the darkness was intense。  Time and again we 

walked into trees; time and again found ourselves adrift among 

garden borders or stuck like a ram in the thicket。  Rowley had 

possessed himself of the matches; and he was neither to be 

terrified nor softened。  'No; I will not; Mr。 Anne; sir;' he would 

reply。  'You know he tell me to wait till we were over the 'ill。  

It's only a little way now。  Why; and I thought you was a soldier; 

too!'  I was at least a very glad soldier when my valet consented 

at last to kindle a thieves' match。  From this; we easily lit the 

lantern; and thenceforward; through a labyrinth of woodland paths; 

were conducted by its uneasy glimmer。  Both booted and great…

coated; with tall hats much of a shape; and laden with booty in the 

form of a despatch…box; a case of pistols; and two plump valises; I 

thought we had very much the look of a pair of brothers returning 

from the sack of Amersham Place。



We issued at last upon a country by…road where we might walk 

abreast and without precaution。  It was nine miles to Aylesbury; 

our immediate destination; by a watch; which formed part of my new 

outfit; it should be about half…past three in the morning; and as 

we did not choose to arrive before daylight; time could not be said 

to press。  I gave the order to march at ease。



'Now; Rowley;' said I; 'so far so good。  You have come; in the most 

obliging manner in the world; to carry these valises。  The question 

is; what next?  What are we to do at Aylesbury? or; more 

particularly; what are you?  Thence; I go on a journey。  Are you to 

accompany me?'



He gave a little chuckle。  'That's all settled already; Mr。 Anne; 

sir;' he replied。  'Why; I've got my things here in the valise … a 

half a dozen shirts and what not; I'm all ready; sir: just you lead 

on: YOU'LL see。'



'The devil you have!' said I。  'You made pretty sure of your 

welcome。'



'If you please; sir;' said Rowley。



He looked up at me; in the light of the lantern; with a boyish 

shyness and triumph that awoke my conscience。  I could never let 

this innocent involve himself in the perils and difficulties that 

beset my course; without some hint of warning; which it was a 

matter of extreme delicacy to make plain enough and not too plain。



'No; no;' said I; 'you may think you have made a choice; but it was 

blindfold; and you must make it over again。  The Count's service is 

a good one; what are you leaving it for?  Are you not throwing away 

the substance for the shadow?  No; do not answer me yet。  You 

imagine that I am a prosperous nobleman; just declared my uncle's 

heir; on the threshold of the best of good fortune; and; from the 

point of view of a judicious servant; a jewel of a master to serve 

and stick to?  Well; my boy; I am nothing of the kind; nothing of 

the kind。'



As I said the words; I came to a full stop and held up the lantern 

to his face。  He stood before me; brilliantly illuminated on the 

background of impenetrable night and falling snow; stricken to 

stone between his double burden like an ass between two panniers; 

and gaping at me like a blunderbuss。  I had never seen a face so 

predestined to be astonished; or so susceptible of rendering the 

emotion of surprise; and it tempted me as an open piano tempts the 

musician。



'Nothing of the sort; Rowley;' I continued; in a churchyard voice。  

'These are appearances; petty appearances。  I am in peril; 

homeless; hunted。  I count scarce any one in England who is not my 

enemy。  From this hour I drop my name; my title; I become nameless; 

my name is proscribed。  My liberty; my life; hang by a hair。  The 

destiny which you will accept; if you go forth with me; is to be 

tracked by spies; to hide yourself under a false name; to follow 

the desperate pretences and perhaps share the fate of a murderer 

with a price upon his head。'



His face had been hitherto beyond expectation; passing from one 

depth to another of tragic astonishment; and really worth paying to 

see; but at this it suddenly cleared。  'Oh; I ain't afraid!' he 

said; and then; choking into laughter; 'why; I see it from the 

first!'



I could have beaten him。  But I had so grossly overshot the mark 

that I suppose it took me two good miles of road and half an hour 

of elocution to persuade him I had been in earnest。  In the course 

of which I became so interested in demonstrating my present danger 

that I forgot all about my future safety; and not only told him the 

story of Goguelat; but threw in the business of the drovers as 

well; and ended by blurting out that I was a soldier of Napoleon's 

and a prisoner of war。



This was far from my views when I began; and it is a common 

complaint of me that I have a long tongue。  I believe it is a fault 

beloved by fortune。  Which of you considerate fellows would have 

done a thing at once so foolhardy and so wise as to make a 

confidant of a boy in his teens; and positively smelling of the 

nursery?  And when had I cause to repent it?  There is none so apt 

as a boy to be the adviser of any man in difficulties such as mine。  

To the beginnings of virile common sense he adds the last lights of 

the child's imagination; and he can fling himself into business 

with that superior earnestness that properly belongs to play。  And 

Rowley was a boy made to my hand。  He had a high sense of romance; 

and a secret cultus for all soldiers and criminals。  His travelling 

library consisted of a chap…book life of Wallace and some sixpenny 

parts of the 'Old Bailey Sessions Papers' by Gurney the shorthand 

writer; and the choice depicts his character to a hair。  You can 

imagine how his new prospects brightened on a boy of this 

disposition。  To be the servant and companion of a fugitive; a 

soldier; and a murderer; rolled in one 

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