[1] [...] what [...] after he m [...]rde| [...]ng of hir husband.After supper, mistres Arden caused hir daughter to plaie on the virginals, and they dansed, and she with them, and so séemed to protract time as it were; till maister Arden should come, and she said, I mar|uell where he is so long; well, he will come anon I am sure, I praie you in the meane while let vs plaie a game at the tables. But the Londoners said, they must go to their hosts house, or else they should be shut out at doores, and so taking their leaue, depar|ted. When they were gone, the seruants that were not priuie to the murder, were sent abroad into the towne; some to séeke their maister, and some of o|ther errands, all sauing Michaell and a maid, Mos|bies sister, and one of mistres Ardens owne daugh|ters. Then they tooke the dead bodie, and caried it out, to laie it in a field next to the church [...]yard, and ioining to his garden wall,The workers of this mis|chiefe carie out Arden [...]laine into the [...]. through the which he went to the church. In the meane time it began to snow, and when they came to the garden gate, they remembred that they had forgotten the kaie, and one went in for it, and finding it, at length brought it, opened the gate, and caried the corps into the same field, as it were ten pases from the garden gate, and laid him downe on his backe streight in his night gowne, with his slippers on: and betwéene one of his slippers and his foot, a long rush or two remai|ned. When they had thus laid him downe, they re|turned the same way they came through the garden into the house.