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Calderon the Courtier, a Tale, Complete by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton
page 42 of 76 (55%)
courtier may manage such an intrigue with even more dexterity than a
soldier. I will bear her to the house we spoke of; there I know she can
lie hid in safety, till the languid pursuit of uninterested officials
shall cease, and thence I can easily find means to transport her, under
safe and honourable escort, to any place it may please you to appoint."

"And think you Beatriz will fly with you, a stranger? Impossible! Your
plan pleases me not."

"Nor does it please me," said Calderon, coldly; "the risks I proposed to
run are too imminent to be contemplated complacently: I thank you for
releasing me from my offer; nor should I have made it, Fonseca, but from
this fear, what if to-morrow the duke himself (he is a churchman,
remember) see the novice? what if he terrify her with threats against
yourself? what if he induce the abbess and the Church to abridge the
novitiate? what if Beatriz be compelled or awed into taking the veil?
what if you be released even next week and find her lost to you for
ever?"

"They cannot--they dare not!"

"The duke dares all things for ambition; your alliance with Beatriz he
would hold a disgrace to his house. Think not my warnings are without
foundation--I speak from authority; such is the course the Duke de Lerma
has resolved upon. Nothing else could have induced me to offer to brave
for your sake all the hazard of outraging the law and braving the terrors
of the Inquisition. But let us think of some other plan. Is your escape
possible? I fear not. No; you must trust to my chance of persuading the
duke into prosecuting the matter no further; trust to some mightier
scheme engrossing all his thoughts; to a fit of good-humour after his
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