Book the Third - The Track of a Storm
1. I. In Secret
 (continued)
"He lies!" cried the smith. "He is a traitor since the decree.
 His life is forfeit to the people.  His cursed life is not his own!" 
At the instant when Darnay saw a rush in the eyes of the crowd,
 which another instant would have brought upon him, the postmaster
 turned his horse into the yard, the escort rode in close upon his
 horse's flanks, and the postmaster shut and barred the crazy double
 gates.  The farrier struck a blow upon them with his hammer, and the
 crowd groaned; but, no more was done. 
"What is this decree that the smith spoke of?" Darnay asked the
 postmaster, when he had thanked him, and stood beside him in the yard. 
"Truly, a decree for selling the property of emigrants." 
"When passed?" 
"On the fourteenth." 
"The day I left England!" 
"Everybody says it is but one of several, and that there will be
 others--if there are not already-banishing all emigrants, and
 condemning all to death who return.  That is what he meant when he
 said your life was not your own." 
"But there are no such decrees yet?" 
"What do I know!" said the postmaster, shrugging his shoulders;
 "there may be, or there will be.  It is all the same.  What would
 you have?" 
They rested on some straw in a loft until the middle of the night,
 and then rode forward again when all the town was asleep.  Among the
 many wild changes observable on familiar things which made this wild
 ride unreal, not the least was the seeming rarity of sleep.
 After long and lonely spurring over dreary roads, they would come to
 a cluster of poor cottages, not steeped in darkness, but all
 glittering with lights, and would find the people, in a ghostly
 manner in the dead of the night, circling hand in hand round a
 shrivelled tree of Liberty, or all drawn up together singing a
 Liberty song.  Happily, however, there was sleep in Beauvais that
 night to help them out of it and they passed on once more into
 solitude and loneliness:  jingling through the untimely cold and wet,
 among impoverished fields that had yielded no fruits of the earth
 that year, diversified by the blackened remains of burnt houses, and
 by the sudden emergence from ambuscade, and sharp reining up across
 their way, of patriot patrols on the watch on all the roads. 
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