Beltane the Smith by Jeffery Farnol
page 11 of 712 (01%)
page 11 of 712 (01%)
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"Fight with me!" says Beltane, his keen gaze upon the speaker.
"Aye, verily!" nodded the stranger, and, forthwith, laying by his long cloak, he showed two swords whose broad blades glittered, red and evil, in the sunset. "But," says Beltane, shaking his head, "I have no quarrel with thee, good fellow." "Quarrel?" exclaimed the stranger, "no quarrel, quotha? What matter for that? Surely you would not forego a good bout for so small a matter? Doth a man eat only when famishing, or drink but to quench his thirst? Out upon thee, messire smith!" "But sir," said Beltane, bending to his brush again, "an I should fight with thee, where would be the reason?" "Nowhere, youth, since fighting is ever at odds with reason; yet for such unreasonable reasons do reasoning men fight." "None the less, I will not fight thee," answered Beltane, deftly touching in the wing of an archangel, "so let there be an end on't." "End forsooth, we have not yet begun! An you must have a quarrel, right fully will I provoke thee, since fight with thee I must, it being so my duty--" "How thy duty?" "I am so commanded." |
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