He instantly threw
himself over the wall, and nothing but the crashing weight of his tread
could have saved the lives of the two unsuspecting persons before him.
Startled, however, by the noise of his footsteps, Lamh Laudher turned
round to observe who it was that followed them, and immediately the
massy and colossal black now stripped of his cloak--for he had thrown it
aside--stood in their presence. The female instinctively drew the cloak
round her face, and Lamh Laudher was about to ask why he followed them,
when the Boxer approached him in an attitude of assault.
With a calmness almost unparalleled under the circumstances, Lamh
Laudher desired the female by no means to cling to him.
"If you do," said he, "I am murdered where I stand."
"No," she shrieked, "you shall not. Stand back, man, stand back, if you
murder him I will take care you shall suffer for it. Stand back. Lamh
Laudher never injured you."
"Ha!" exclaimed the Boxer, in reply; "why, what is this! Who have we
here?"
Ellen, for it was she, had already thrown back the cloak from her
features, and stepped forward between them.
"Well, I am glad it is you," said the black, "and so may he. Come, I
shall conduct you home."
He caught her arm as he spoke, and drew her over to his side like an
infant.
"Come, my pretty girl, come; I will treat you tenderly, and all I shall
ask is a kiss in return.
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