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CHAPTER IV—IN THE ABBEY CHURCH
 In Shoreby Abbey Church the prayers were kept up all night without cessation, now with the singing of psalms, now with a note or two upon the bell.  
Rutter, the spy, was nobly waked.  There he lay, meanwhile, as they had arranged him, his dead hands crossed upon his bosom, his dead eyes staring on the roof; and hard by, in the stall, the lad who had slain him waited, in sore disquietude, the coming of the morning.
 
Once only, in the course of the hours, Sir Oliver leaned across to his captive.
 
“Richard,” he whispered, “my son, if ye mean me evil, I will certify, on my soul’s welfare, ye design upon an innocent man.  Sinful in the eye of Heaven I do declare myself; but sinful as against you I am not, neither have been ever.”
 
“My father,” returned Dick, in the same tone of voice, “trust me, I design nothing; but as for your innocence, I may not forget that ye cleared yourself but lamely.”
 
“A man may be innocently guilty,” replied the priest.  “He may be set blindfolded upon a mission, ignorant of its true scope.  So it was with me.  I did decoy your father to his death; but as Heaven sees us in this sacred place, I knew not what I did.”
 
“It may be,” returned Dick.  “But see what a strange web ye have woven, that I should be, at this hour, at once your prisoner and your judge; that ye should both threaten my days and deprecate my anger.  Methinks, if ye had been all your life a true man and good priest, ye would neither thus fear nor thus detest me.  And now to your prayers.  I do obey you, since needs must; but I will not be burthened with your company.”
 
The priest uttered a sigh so heavy that it had almost touched the lad into some sentiment of pity, and he bowed his head upon his hands like a man borne down below a weight of care.  He joined no longer in the psalms; but Dick could hear the beads rattle through his fingers and the prayers a-pattering between his teeth.
 
Yet a little, and the grey of the morning began to struggle through the painted casements of the church, and to put to shame the glimmer of the tapers.  The light slowly broadened and brightened, and presently through the south-eastern clerestories a flush of rosy sunlight flickered on the walls.  The storm was over; the great clouds had disburdened their snow and fled farther on, and the new day was breaking on a merry winter landscape sheathed in white.
 
A bustle of church officers followed; the bier was carried forth to the deadhouse, and the stains of blood were cleansed from off the tiles, that no such ill-omened spectacle should disgrace the marriage of Lord Shoreby.  At the same time, the very ecclesiastics who had been so dismally engaged all night began to put on morning faces, to do honour to the merrier ceremony which was about to follow.  And further to announce the coming of the day, the pious of the town began to assemble and fall to prayer before their favourite shrines, or wait their turn at the confessionals.
 
Favoured by this stir, it was of course easily possible for any man to avoid the vigilance of Sir Daniel’s sentries at the door; and presently Dick, looking about him wearily, caught the eye of no less a person than Will Lawless, still in his monk’s habit.
 
The outlaw, at the same moment, recognised his leader, and privily signed to him with hand and eye.
 
Now, Dick was far from having forgiven the old rogue his most untimely drunkenness, but he had no desire to involve him in his own predicament; and he signalled back to him, as plain as he was able, to begone.
 
Lawless, as though he had understood, disappeared at once behind a pillar, and Dick breathed again.
 
What, then, was his dismay to feel himself plucked by the sleeve and to find the old robber installed beside him, upon the next seat, and, to all appearance, plunged in his devotions!
 
Instantly Sir Oliver arose from his place, and, gliding behind the stalls, made for the soldiers in the aisle.  If the priest’s suspicions had been so lightly wakened, the harm was already done, and Lawless a prisoner in the church.
 
“Move not,” whispered Dick.  “We are in the plaguiest pass, thanks, before all things, to thy swinishness of yestereven.  When ye saw me here, so strangely seated where I have neither right nor interest, what a murrain I could ye not smell harm and get ye gone from evil?”
 
“Nay,” returned Lawless, “I thought ye had heard from Ellis, and were here on duty.”
 
“Ellis!” echoed Dick.  “Is Ellis, then, returned?
 
“For sure,” replied the outlaw.  “He came last night, and belted me sore for being in wine—so there ye are avenged, my master.  A furious man is Ellis Duckworth!  He hath ridden me hot-spur from Craven to prevent this marriage; and, Master Dick, ye know the way of him—do so he will!”
 
“Nay, then,” returned Dick, with composure, “you and I, my poor brother, are dead men; for I sit here a prisoner upon suspicion, and my neck was to answer for this very marriage that he purposeth to mar.  I had a fair choice, by the rood! to lose my sweetheart or else lose my life!  Well, the cast is thrown—it is to be my life.”
 
“By the mass,” cried Lawless, half arising, “I am gone!”
 
But Dick had his hand at once upon his shoulder.
 
“Friend Lawless, sit ye still,” he said.  “An ye have eyes, look yonder at the corner by the chancel arch; see ye not that, even upon the motion of your rising, yon armed men are up and ready to intercept you?  Yield ye, friend.  Ye were bold aboard ship, when ye thought to die a sea-death; be bold again, now that y’ are to die presently upon the gallows.”
 
“Master Dick,” gasped Lawless, “the thing hath come upon me somewhat of the suddenest.  But give me a moment till I fetch my breath again; and, by the mass, I will be as stout-hearted as yourself.”
 
“Here is my bold fellow!” returned Dick.  “And yet, Lawless, it goes hard against the grain with me to die; but where whining mendeth nothing, wherefore whine?”
 
“Nay, that indeed!” chimed Lawless.  “And a fig for death, at worst!  It has to be done, my master, soon or late.  And hanging in a good quarrel is an easy death, they say, though I could never hear of any that came back to say so.”
 
And so saying, the stout old rascal leaned back in his stall, folded his arms, and began to look about him with the greatest air of insolence and unconcern.
 
“And for the matter of that,” Dick added, “it is yet our best chance to keep quiet.  We wot not yet what Duckworth purposes; and when all is said, and if the worst befall, we may yet clear our feet of it.”
 
Now that they ceased talking, they were aware of a very distant and thin strain of mirthful music which steadily drew nearer, louder, and merrier.  The bells in the tower began to break forth into a doubling peal, and a greater and greater concourse of people to crowd into the church, shuffling the snow from off their feet, and clapping and blowing in their hands.  The western door was flung wide open, showing a glimpse of sunlit, snowy street, and admitting in a great gust the shrewd air of the morning; and in short, it became plain by every sign that Lord Shoreby desired to be married very early in the day, and that the wedding-train was drawing near.
 
Some of Lord Shoreby’s men now cleared a passage down the middle aisle, forcing the people back with lance-stocks; and just then, outside the portal, the secular musicians could be descried drawing near over the frozen snow, the fifers and trumpeters scarlet in the face with lusty blowing, the drummers and the cymbalists beating as for a wager.
 
These, as they drew near the door of the sacred building, filed off on either side, and, marking time to their own vigorous music, stood stamping in the snow.  As they thus opened their ranks, the leaders of this noble bridal train appeared behind and between them; and such was the variety and gaiety of their attire, such the display of silks and velvet, fur and satin, embroidery and lace, that the procession showed forth upon the snow like a flower-bed in a path or a painted window in a wall.
 
First came the bride, a sorry sight, as pale as winter, clinging to Sir Daniel’s arm, and attended, as brides-maid, by the short young lady who had befriended Dick the night before.  Close behind, in the most radiant toilet, followed the bridegroom, halting on a gouty foot; and as he passed the threshold of the sacred building and doffed his hat, his bald head was seen to be rosy with emotion.
 
And now came the hour of Ellis Duckworth.
 
Dick, who sat stunned among contrary emotions, grasping the desk in front of him, beheld a movement in the crowd............
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