The Project Gutenberg eBook of Sir Nigel, by Arthur Conan Doyle

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Title: Sir Nigel

Author: Arthur Conan Doyle

Release Date: August 10, 2000 [eBook #2845]
[Most recently updated: April 11, 2023]

Language: English


*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SIR NIGEL ***




[Illustration]




Sir Nigel

By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle




CONTENTS

  INTRODUCTION
  I. THE HOUSE OF LORING
  II. HOW THE DEVIL CAME TO WAVERLEY
  III. THE YELLOW HORSE OF CROOKSBURY
  IV. HOW THE SUMMONER CAME TO THE MANOR HOUSE OF TILFORD
  V. HOW NIGEL WAS TRIED BY THE ABBOT OF WAVERLEY
  VI. IN WHICH LADY ERMYNTRUDE OPENS THE IRON COFFER
  VII. HOW NIGEL WENT MARKETING TO GUILDFORD
  VIII. HOW THE KING HAWKED ON CROOKSBURY HEATH
  IX. HOW NIGEL HELD THE BRIDGE AT TILFORD
  X. HOW THE KING GREETED HIS SENESCHAL OF CALAIS
  XI. IN THE HALL OF THE KNIGHT OF DUPLIN
  XII. HOW NIGEL FOUGHT THE TWISTED MAN OF SHALFORD
  XIII. HOW THE COMRADES JOURNEYED DOWN THE OLD, OLD ROAD
  XIV. HOW NIGEL CHASED THE RED FERRET
  XV. HOW THE RED FERRET CAME TO COSFORD
  XVI. HOW THE KING’S COURT FEASTED IN CALAIS CASTLE
  XVII. THE SPANIARDS ON THE SEA
  XVIII. HOW BLACK SIMON CLAIMED FORFEIT FROM THE KING OF SARK
  XIX. HOW A SQUIRE OF ENGLAND MET A SQUIRE OF FRANCE
  XX. HOW THE ENGLISH ATTEMPTED THE CASTLE OF LA BROHINIÈRE
  XXI. HOW THE SECOND MESSENGER WENT TO COSFORD
  XXII. HOW ROBERT OF BEAUMANOIR CAME TO PLOERMEL
  XXIII. HOW THIRTY OF JOSSELIN ENCOUNTERED THIRTY OF PLOERMEL
  XXIV. HOW NIGEL WAS CALLED TO HIS MASTER
  XXV. HOW THE KING OF FRANCE HELD COUNSEL AT MAUPERTUIS
  XXVI. HOW NIGEL FOUND HIS THIRD DEED
  XXVII. HOW THE THIRD MESSENGER CAME TO COSFORD




INTRODUCTION


Dame History is so austere a lady that if one, has been so ill-advised
as to take a liberty with her, one should hasten to make amends by
repentance and confession. Events have been transposed to the extent of
some few months in this narrative in order to preserve the continuity
and evenness of the story. I hope so small a divergence may seem a
venial error after so many centuries. For the rest, it is as accurate
as a good deal of research and hard work could make it.

The matter of diction is always a question of taste and discretion in a
historical reproduction. In the year 1350 the upper classes still spoke
Norman-French, though they were just beginning to condescend to
English. The lower classes spoke the English of the original Piers
Plowman text, which would be considerably more obscure than their
superiors’ French if the two were now reproduced or imitated. The most
which the chronicles can do is to catch the cadence and style of their
talk, and to infuse here and there such a dash of the archaic as may
indicate their fashion of speech.

I am aware that there are incidents which may strike the modern reader
as brutal and repellent. It is useless, however, to draw the Twentieth
Century and label it the Fourteenth. It was a sterner age, and men’s
code of morality, especially in matters of cruelty, was very different.
There is no incident in the text for which very good warrant may not be
given. The fantastic graces of Chivalry lay upon the surface of life,
but beneath it was a half-savage population, fierce and animal, with
little ruth or mercy. It was a raw, rude England, full of elemental
passions, and redeemed only by elemental virtues. Such I have tried to
draw it.

For good or bad, many books have gone to the building of this one. I
look round my study table and I survey those which lie with me at the
moment, before I happily disperse them forever. I see La Croix’s
“Middle Ages,” Oman’s “Art of War,” Rietstap’s “Armorial General,” De
la Borderie’s “Histoire de Bretagne,” Dame Berner’s “Boke of St.
Albans,” “The Chronicle of Jocelyn of Brokeland,” “The Old Road,”
Hewitt’s “Ancient Armour,” Coussan’s “Heraldry,” Boutell’s “Arms,”
Browne’s “Chaucer’s England,” Cust’s “Scenes of the Middle Ages,”
Husserand’s “Wayfaring Life,” Ward’s “Canterbury Pilgrims;” Cornish’s
“Chivalry,” Hastings’ “British Archer,” Strutt’s “Sports,” Johnes
Froissart, Hargrove’s “Archery,” Longman’s “Edward III,” Wright’s
“Domestic Manners.” With these and many others I have lived for months.
If I have been unable to combine and transfer their effect, the fault
is mine.

ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE.


“UNDERSHAW,” November 30, 1905.




I.
THE HOUSE OF LORING


In the month of July of the year 1348, between the feasts of St.
Benedict and of St. Swithin, a strange thing came upon England, for out
of the east there drifted a monstrous cloud, purple and piled, heavy
with evil, climbing slowly up the hushed heaven. In the shadow of that
strange cloud the leaves drooped in the trees, the birds ceased their
calling, and the cattle and the sheep gathered cowering under the
hedges. A gloom fell upon all the land, and men stood with their eyes
upon the strange cloud and a heaviness upon their hearts. They crept
into the churches where the trembling people were blessed and shriven
by the trembling priests. Outside no bird flew, and there came no
rustling from the woods, nor any of the homely sounds of Nature. All
was still, and nothing moved, save only the great cloud which rolled up
and onward, with fold on fold from the black horizon. To the west was
the light summer sky, to the east this brooding cloud-bank, creeping
ever slowly across, until the last thin blue gleam faded away and the
whole vast sweep of the heavens was one great leaden arch.

Then the rain began to fall. All day it rained, and all the night and
all the week and all the month, until folk had forgotten the blue
heavens and the gleam of the sunshine. It was not heavy, but it was
steady and cold and unceasing, so that the people were weary of its
hissing and its splashing, with the slow drip from the eaves. Always
the same thick evil cloud flowed from east to west with the rain
beneath it. None could see for more than a bow-shot from their
dwellings for the drifting veil of the rain-storms. Every morning the
folk looked upward for a break, but their eyes rested always upon the
same endless cloud, until at last they ceased to look up, and their
hearts despaired of ever seeing the change. It was raining at
Lammas-tide and raining at the Feast of the Assumption and still
raining at Michaelmas. The crops and the hay, sodden and black, had
rotted in the fields, for they were not worth the garnering. The sheep
had died, and the calves also, so there was little to kill when
Martinmas came and it was time to salt the meat for the winter. They
feared a famine, but it was worse than famine which was in store for
them.

For the rain had ceased at last, and a sickly autumn sun shone upon a
land which was soaked and sodden with water. Wet and rotten leaves
reeked and festered under the foul haze which rose from the woods. The
fields were spotted with monstrous fungi of a size and color never
matched before—scarlet and mauve and liver and black. It was as though
the sick earth had burst into foul pustules; mildew and lichen mottled
the walls, and with that filthy crop Death sprang also from the
water-soaked earth. Men died, and women and children, the baron of the
castle, the franklin on the farm, the monk in the abbey and the villein
in his wattle-and-daub cottage. All breathed the same polluted reek and
all died the same death of corruption. Of those who were stricken none
recovered, and the illness was ever the same—gross boils, raving, and
the black blotches which gave its name to the disease. All through the
winter the dead rotted by the wayside for want of some one to bury
them. In many a village no single man was left alive. Then at last the
spring came with sunshine and health and lightness and laughter—the
greenest, sweetest, tenderest spring that England had ever known—but
only half of England could know it. The other half had passed away with
the great purple cloud.

Yet it was there in that stream of death, in that reek of corruption,
that the brighter and freer England was born. There in that dark hour
the first streak of the new dawn was seen. For in no way save by a
great upheaval and change could the nation break away from that iron
feudal system which held her limbs. But now it was a new country which
came out from that year of death. The barons were dead in swaths. No
high turret nor cunning moat could keep out that black commoner who
struck them down.

Oppressive laws slackened for want of those who could enforce them, and
once slackened could never be enforced again. The laborer would be a
slave no longer. The bondsman snapped his shackles. There was much to
do and few left to do it. Therefore the few should be freemen, name
their own price, and work where and for whom they would. It was the
black death which cleared the way for that great rising thirty years
later which left the English peasant the freest of his class in Europe.

But there were few so far-sighted that they could see that here, as
ever, good was coming out of evil. At the moment misery and ruin were
brought into every family. The dead cattle, the ungarnered crops, the
untilled lands—every spring of wealth had dried up at the same moment.
Those who were rich became poor; but those who were poor already, and
especially those who were poor with the burden of gentility upon their
shoulders, found themselves in a perilous state. All through England
the smaller gentry were ruined, for they had no trade save war, and
they drew their living from the work of others. On many a manor-house
there came evil times, and on none more than on the Manor of Tilford,
where for many generations the noble family of the Lorings had held
their home.

There was a time when the Lorings had held the country from the North
Downs to the Lakes of Frensham, and when their grim castle-keep rising
above the green meadows which border the River Wey had been the
strongest fortalice betwixt Guildford Castle in the east and Winchester
in the west. But there came that Barons’ War, in which the King used
his Saxon subjects as a whip with which to scourge his Norman barons,
and Castle Loring, like so many other great strongholds, was swept from
the face of the land. From that time the Lorings, with estates sadly
curtailed, lived in what had been the dower-house, with enough for
splendor.

And then came their lawsuit with Waverley Abbey, and the Cistercians
laid claim to their richest land, with peccary, turbary and feudal
rights over the remainder. It lingered on for years, this great
lawsuit, and when it was finished the men of the Church and the men of
the Law had divided all that was richest of the estate between them.
There was still left the old manor-house from which with each
generation there came a soldier to uphold the credit of the name and to
show the five scarlet roses on the silver shield where it had always
been shown—in the van. There were twelve bronzes in the little chapel
where Matthew the priest said mass every morning, all of men of the
house of Loring. Two lay with their legs crossed, as being from the
Crusades. Six others rested their feet upon lions, as having died in
war. Four only lay with the effigy of their hounds to show that they
had passed in peace.

Of this famous but impoverished family, doubly impoverished by law and
by pestilence, two members were living in the year of grace 1349—Lady
Ermyntrude Loring and her grandson Nigel. Lady Ermyntrude’s husband had
fallen before the Scottish spearsmen at Stirling, and her son Eustace,
Nigel’s father, had found a glorious death nine years before this
chronicle opens upon the poop of a Norman galley at the sea-fight of
Sluys. The lonely old woman, fierce and brooding like the falcon mewed
in her chamber, was soft only toward the lad whom she had brought up.
All the tenderness and love of her nature, so hidden from others that
they could not imagine their existence, were lavished upon him. She
could not bear him away from her, and he, with that respect for
authority which the age demanded, would not go without her blessing and
consent.

So it came about that Nigel, with his lion heart and with the blood of
a hundred soldiers thrilling in his veins, still at the age of two and
twenty, wasted the weary days reclaiming his hawks with leash and lure
or training the alans and spaniels who shared with the family the big
earthen-floored hall of the manor-house.

Day by day the aged Lady Ermyntrude had seen him wax in strength and in
manhood, small of stature, it is true, but with muscles of steel—and a
soul of fire. From all parts, from the warden of Guildford Castle, from
the tilt-yard of Farnham, tales of his prowess were brought back to
her, of his daring as a rider, of his debonair courage, of his skill
with all weapons; but still she, who had both husband and son torn from
her by a bloody death, could not bear that this, the last of the
Lorings, the final bud of so famous an old tree, should share the same
fate. With a weary heart, but with a smiling face, he bore with his
uneventful days, while she would ever put off the evil time until the
harvest was better, until the monks of Waverley should give up what
they had taken, until his uncle should die and leave money for his
outfit, or any other excuse with which she could hold him to her side.

And indeed, there was need for a man at Tilford, for the strife betwixt
the Abbey and the manor-house had never been appeased, and still on one
pretext or another the monks would clip off yet one more slice of their
neighbor’s land. Over the winding river, across the green meadows, rose
the short square tower and the high gray walls of the grim Abbey, with
its bell tolling by day and night, a voice of menace and of dread to
the little household.

It is in the heart of the great Cistercian monastery that this
chronicle of old days must take its start, as we trace the feud betwixt
the monks and the house of Loring, with those events to which it gave
birth, ending with the coming of Chandos, the strange spear-running of
Tilford Bridge and the deeds with which Nigel won fame in the wars.
Elsewhere, in the chronicle of the White Company, it has been set forth
what manner of man was Nigel Loring. Those who love him may read herein
those things which went to his making. Let us go back together and gaze
upon this green stage of England, the scenery, hill, plain and river
even as now, the actors in much our very selves, in much also so
changed in thought and act that they might be dwellers in another world
to ours.




II.
HOW THE DEVIL CAME TO WAVERLEY


The day was the first of May, which was the Festival of the Blessed
Apostles Philip and James. The year was the 1,349th from man’s
salvation.

From tierce to sext, and then again from sext to nones, Abbot John of
the House of Waverley had been seated in his study while he conducted
the many high duties of his office. All around for many a mile on every
side stretched the fertile and flourishing estate of which he was the
master. In the center lay the broad Abbey buildings, with church and
cloisters, hospitium, chapter-house and frater-house, all buzzing with
a busy life. Through the open window came the low hum of the voices of
the brethren as they walked in pious converse in the ambulatory below.
From across the cloister there rolled the distant rise and fall of a
Gregorian chant, where the precentor was hard at work upon the choir,
while down in the chapter-house sounded the strident voice of Brother
Peter, expounding the rule of Saint Bernard to the novices.

Abbot John rose to stretch his cramped limbs. He looked out at the
greensward of the cloister, and at the graceful line of open Gothic
arches which skirted a covered walk for the brethren within. Two and
two in their black-and-white garb with slow step and heads inclined,
they paced round and round. Several of the more studious had brought
their illuminating work from the scriptorium, and sat in the warm
sunshine with their little platters of pigments and packets of
gold-leaf before them, their shoulders rounded and their faces sunk low
over the white sheets of vellum. There too was the copper-worker with
his burin and graver. Learning and art were not traditions with the
Cistercians as with the parent Order of the Benedictines, and yet the
library of Waverley was well filled both with precious books and with
pious students.

But the true glory of the Cistercian lay in his outdoor work, and so
ever and anon there passed through the cloister some sunburned monk,
soiled mattock or shovel in hand, with his gown looped to his knee,
fresh from the fields or the garden. The lush green water-meadows
speckled with the heavy-fleeced sheep, the acres of corn-land reclaimed
from heather and bracken, the vineyards on the southern slope of
Crooksbury Hill, the rows of Hankley fish-ponds, the Frensham marshes
drained and sown with vegetables, the spacious pigeon-cotes, all
circled the great Abbey round with the visible labors of the Order.

The Abbot’s full and florid face shone with a quiet content as he
looked out at his huge but well-ordered household. Like every head of a
prosperous Abbey, Abbot John, the fourth of the name, was a man of
various accomplishments. Through his own chosen instruments he had to
minister a great estate and to keep order and decorum among a large
body of men living a celibate life. He was a rigid disciplinarian
toward all beneath him, a supple diplomatist to all above. He held high
debate with neighboring abbots and lords, with bishops, with papal
legates, and even on occasion with the King’s majesty himself. Many
were the subjects with which he must be conversant. Questions of
doctrine, questions of building, points of forestry, of agriculture, of
drainage, of feudal law, all came to the Abbot for settlement. He held
the scales of justice in all the Abbey banlieue which stretched over
many a mile of Hampshire and of Surrey. To the monks his displeasure
might mean fasting, exile to some sterner community, or even
imprisonment in chains. Over the layman also he could hold any
punishment save only corporeal death, instead of which he had in hand
the far more dreadful weapon of spiritual excommunication.

Such were the powers of the Abbot, and it is no wonder that there were
masterful lines in the ruddy features of Abbot John, or that the
brethren, glancing up, should put on an even meeker carriage and more
demure expression as they saw the watchful face in the window above
them.

A knock at the door of his studio recalled the Abbot to his immediate
duties, and he returned to his desk. Already he had spoken with his
cellarer and prior, almoner, chaplain and lector, but now in the tall
and gaunt monk who obeyed his summons to enter he recognized the most
important and also the most importunate of his agents, Brother Samuel
the sacrist, whose office, corresponding to that of the layman’s
bailiff, placed the material interests of the monastery and its
dealings with the outer world entirely under his control, subject only
to the check of the Abbot. Brother Samuel was a gnarled and stringy old
monk whose stern and sharp-featured face reflected no light from above
but only that sordid workaday world toward which it was forever turned.
A huge book of accounts was tucked under one of his arms, while a great
bunch of keys hung from the other hand, a badge of his office, and also
on occasion of impatience a weapon of offense, as many a scarred head
among rustics and lay brothers could testify.

The Abbot sighed wearily, for he suffered much at the hands of his
strenuous agent. “Well, Brother Samuel, what is your will?” he asked.

“Holy father, I have to report that I have sold the wool to Master
Baldwin of Winchester at two shillings a bale more than it fetched last
year, for the murrain among the sheep has raised the price.”

“You have done well, brother.”

“I have also to tell you that I have distrained Wat the warrener from
his cottage, for his Christmas rent is still unpaid, nor the hen-rents
of last year.”

“He has a wife and four children, brother.” He was a good, easy man,
the Abbot, though liable to be overborne by his sterner subordinate.

“It is true, holy father; but if I should pass him, then how am I to
ask the rent of the foresters of Puttenham, or the hinds in the
village? Such a thing spreads from house to house, and where then is
the wealth of Waverley?”

“What else, Brother Samuel?”

“There is the matter of the fish-ponds.”

The Abbot’s face brightened. It was a subject upon which he was an
authority. If the rule of his Order had robbed him of the softer joys
of life, he had the keener zest for those which remained.

“How have the char prospered, brother?”

“They have done well, holy father, but the carp have died in the
Abbot’s pond.”

“Carp prosper only upon a gravel bottom. They must be put in also in
their due proportion, three milters to one spawner, brother sacrist,
and the spot must be free from wind, stony and sandy, an ell deep, with
willows and grass upon the banks. Mud for tench, brother, gravel for
carp.”

The sacrist leaned forward with the face of one who bears tidings of
woe. “There are pike in the Abbot’s pond,” said he.

“Pike!” cried the Abbot in horror. “As well shut up a wolf in our
sheepfold. How came a pike in the pond? There were no pike last year,
and a pike does not fall with the rain nor rise in the springs. The
pond must be drained, or we shall spend next Lent upon stockfish, and
have the brethren down with the great sickness ere Easter Sunday has
come to absolve us from our abstinence.”

“The pond shall be drained, holy father; I have already ordered it.
Then we shall plant pot-herbs on the mud bottom, and after we have
gathered them in, return the fish and water once more from the lower
pond, so that they may fatten among the rich stubble.”

“Good!” cried the Abbot. “I would have three fish-stews in every
well-ordered house—one dry for herbs, one shallow for the fry and the
yearlings, and one deep for the breeders and the tablefish. But still,
I have not heard you say how the pike came in the Abbot’s pond.”

A spasm of anger passed over the fierce face of the sacrist, and his
keys rattled as his bony hand clasped them more tightly. “Young Nigel
Loring!” said he. “He swore that he would do us scathe, and in this way
he has done it.”

“How know you this?”

“Six weeks ago he was seen day by day fishing for pike at the great
Lake of Frensham. Twice at night he has been met with a bundle of straw
under his arm on the Hankley Down. Well, I wot that the straw was wet
and that a live pike lay within it.”

The Abbot shook his head. “I have heard much of this youth’s wild ways;
but now indeed he has passed all bounds if what you say be truth. It
was bad enough when it was said that he slew the King’s deer in Woolmer
Chase, or broke the head of Hobbs the chapman, so that he lay for seven
days betwixt life and death in our infirmary, saved only by Brother
Peter’s skill in the pharmacies of herbs; but to put pike in the
Abbot’s pond—why should he play such a devil’s prank?”

“Because he hates the House of Waverley, holy father; because he swears
that we hold his father’s land.”

“In which there is surely some truth.”

“But, holy father, we hold no more than the law has allowed.”

“True, brother, and yet between ourselves, we may admit that the
heavier purse may weigh down the scales of Justice. When I have passed
the old house and have seen that aged woman with her ruddled cheeks and
her baleful eyes look the curses she dare not speak, I have many a time
wished that we had other neighbors.”

“That we can soon bring about, holy father. Indeed, it is of it that I
wished to speak to you. Surely it is not hard for us to drive them from
the country-side. There are thirty years’ claims of escuage unsettled,
and there is Sergeant Wilkins, the lawyer of Guildford, whom I will
warrant to draw up such arrears of dues and rents and issues of hidage
and fodder-corn that these folk, who are as beggarly as they are proud,
will have to sell the roof-tree over them ere they can meet them.
Within three days I will have them at our mercy.”

“They are an ancient family and of good repute. I would not treat them
too harshly, brother.”

“Bethink you of the pike in the carp pond!”

The Abbot hardened his heart at the thought. “It was indeed a devil’s
deed—when we had but newly stocked it with char and with carp. Well,
well, the law is the law, and if you can use it to hurt, it is still
lawful to do so. Have these claims been advanced?”

“Deacon the bailiff with his two varlets went down to the Hall
yesternight on the matter of the escuage, and came screaming back with
this young hothead raging at their heels. He is small and slight, yet
he has the strength of many men in the hour of his wrath. The bailiff
swears that he will go no more, save with half a score of archers to
uphold him.”

The Abbot was red with anger at this new offense. “I will teach him
that the servants of Holy Church, even though we of the rule of Saint
Bernard be the lowliest and humblest of her children, can still defend
their own against the froward and the violent! Go, cite this man before
the Abbey court. Let him appear in the chapter-house after tierce
to-morrow.”

But the wary sacrist shook his head: “Nay, holy father, the times are
not yet ripe. Give me three days, I pray you, that my case against him
may be complete. Bear in mind that the father and the grandfather of
this unruly squire were both famous men of their day and the foremost
knights in the King’s own service, living in high honor and dying in
their knightly duty. The Lady Ermyntrude Loring was first lady to the
King’s mother. Roger FitzAlan of Farnham and Sir Hugh Walcott of
Guildford Castle were each old comrades-in-arms of Nigel’s father, and
sib to him on the distaff side. Already there has been talk that we
have dealt harshly with them. Therefore, my rede is that we be wise and
wary and wait until his cup be indeed full.”

The Abbot had opened his mouth to reply, when the consultation was
interrupted by a most unwonted buzz of excitement from among the monks
in the cloister below. Questions and answers in excited voices sounded
from one side of the ambulatory to the other. Sacrist and Abbot were
gazing at each other in amazement at such a breach of the discipline
and decorum of their well-trained flock, when there came a swift step
upon the stair, and a white-faced brother flung open the door and
rushed into the room.

“Father Abbot!” he cried. “Alas, alas! Brother John is dead, and the
holy subprior is dead, and the Devil is loose in the five-virgate
field!”




III.
THE YELLOW HORSE OF CROOKSBURY


In those simple times there was a great wonder and mystery in life. Man
walked in fear and solemnity, with Heaven very close above his head,
and Hell below his very feet. God’s visible hand was everywhere, in the
rainbow and the comet, in the thunder and the wind. The Devil too raged
openly upon the earth; he skulked behind the hedge-rows in the
gloaming; he laughed loudly in the night-time; he clawed the dying
sinner, pounced on the unbaptized babe, and twisted the limbs of the
epileptic. A foul fiend slunk ever by a man’s side and whispered
villainies in his ear, while above him there hovered an angel of grace
who pointed to the steep and narrow track. How could one doubt these
things, when Pope and priest and scholar and King were all united in
believing them, with no single voice of question in the whole wide
world?

Every book read, every picture seen, every tale heard from nurse or
mother, all taught the same lesson. And as a man traveled through the
world his faith would grow the firmer, for go where he would there were
the endless shrines of the saints, each with its holy relic in the
center, and around it the tradition of incessant miracles, with stacks
of deserted crutches and silver votive hearts to prove them. At every
turn he was made to feel how thin was the veil, and how easily rent,
which screened him from the awful denizens of the unseen world.

Hence the wild announcement of the frightened monk seemed terrible
rather than incredible to those whom he addressed. The Abbot’s ruddy
face paled for a moment, it is true, but he plucked the crucifix from
his desk and rose valiantly to his feet.

“Lead me to him!” said he. “Show me the foul fiend who dares to lay his
grip upon brethren of the holy house of Saint Bernard! Run down to my
chaplain, brother! Bid him bring the exorcist with him, and also the
blessed box of relics, and the bones of Saint James from under the
altar! With these and a contrite and humble heart we may show front to
all the powers of darkness.”

But the sacrist was of a more critical turn of mind. He clutched the
monk’s arm with a grip which left its five purple spots for many a day
to come.

“Is this the way to enter the Abbot’s own chamber, without knock or
reverence, or so much as a ‘Pax vobiscum’?” said he sternly. “You were
wont to be our gentlest novice, of lowly carriage in chapter, devout in
psalmody and strict in the cloister. Pull your wits together and answer
me straightly. In what form has the foul fiend appeared, and how has he
done this grievous scathe to our brethren? Have you seen him with your
own eyes, or do you repeat from hearsay? Speak, man, or you stand on
the penance-stool in the chapter-house this very hour!”

Thus adjured, the frightened monk grew calmer in his bearing, though
his white lips and his startled eyes, with the gasping of his breath,
told of his inward tremors.

“If it please you, holy father, and you, reverend sacrist, it came
about in this way. James the subprior, and Brother John and I had spent
our day from sext onward on Hankley, cutting bracken for the
cow-houses. We were coming back over the five-virgate field, and the
holy subprior was telling us a saintly tale from the life of Saint
Gregory, when there came a sudden sound like a rushing torrent, and the
foul fiend sprang over the high wall which skirts the water-meadow and
rushed upon us with the speed of the wind. The lay brother he struck to
the ground and trampled into the mire. Then, seizing the good subprior
in his teeth, he rushed round the field, swinging him as though he were
a fardel of old clothes.

“Amazed at such a sight, I stood without movement and had said a credo
and three aves, when the Devil dropped the subprior and sprang upon me.
With the help of Saint Bernard I clambered over the wall, but not
before his teeth had found my leg, and he had torn away the whole back
skirt of my gown.” As he spoke he turned and gave corroboration to his
story by the hanging ruins of his long trailing garment.

“In what shape then did Satan appear?” the Abbot demanded.

“As a great yellow horse, holy father—a monster horse, with eyes of
fire and the teeth of a griffin.”

“A yellow horse!” The sacrist glared at the scared monk. “You foolish
brother! How will you behave when you have indeed to face the King of
Terrors himself if you can be so frightened by the sight of a yellow
horse? It is the horse of Franklin Aylward, my father, which has been
distrained by us because he owes the Abbey fifty good shillings and can
never hope to pay it. Such a horse, they say, is not to be found
betwixt this and the King’s stables at Windsor, for his sire was a
Spanish destrier, and his dam an Arab mare of the very breed which
Saladin, whose soul now reeks in Hell, kept for his own use, and even
it has been said under the shelter of his own tent. I took him in
discharge of the debt, and I ordered the varlets who had haltered him
to leave him alone in the water-meadow, for I have heard that the beast
has indeed a most evil spirit, and has killed more men than one.”

“It was an ill day for Waverley that you brought such a monster within
its bounds,” said the Abbot. “If the subprior and Brother John be
indeed dead, then it would seem that if the horse be not the Devil he
is at least the Devil’s instrument.”

“Horse or Devil, holy father, I heard him shout with joy as he trampled
upon Brother John, and had you seen him tossing the subprior as a dog
shakes a rat you would perchance have felt even as I did.”

“Come then,” cried the Abbot, “let us see with our own eyes what evil
has been done.”

And the three monks hurried down the stair which led to the cloisters.

They had no sooner descended than their more pressing fears were set at
rest, for at that very moment, limping, disheveled and mud-stained, the
two sufferers were being led in amid a crowd of sympathizing brethren.
Shouts and cries from outside showed, however, that some further drama
was in progress, and both Abbot and sacrist hastened onward as fast as
the dignity of their office would permit, until they had passed the
gates and gained the wall of the meadow. Looking over it, a remarkable
sight presented itself to their eyes.

Fetlock deep in the lush grass there stood a magnificent horse, such a
horse as a sculptor or a soldier might thrill to see. His color was a
light chestnut, with mane and tail of a more tawny tint. Seventeen
hands high, with a barrel and haunches which bespoke tremendous
strength, he fined down to the most delicate lines of dainty breed in
neck and crest and shoulder. He was indeed a glorious sight as he stood
there, his beautiful body leaning back from his wide-spread and propped
fore legs, his head craned high, his ears erect, his mane bristling,
his red nostrils opening and shutting with wrath, and his flashing eyes
turning from side to side in haughty menace and defiance.

Scattered round in a respectful circle, six of the Abbey lay servants
and foresters, each holding a halter, were creeping toward him. Every
now and then, with a beautiful toss and swerve and plunge, the great
creature would turn upon one of his would-be captors, and with
outstretched head, flying mane and flashing teeth, would chase him
screaming to the safety of the wall, while the others would close
swiftly in behind and cast their ropes in the hope of catching neck or
leg, but only in their turn to be chased to the nearest refuge.

Had two of these ropes settled upon the horse, and had their throwers
found some purchase of stump or boulder by which they could hold them,
then the man’s brain might have won its wonted victory over swiftness
and strength. But the brains were themselves at fault which imagined
that one such rope would serve any purpose save to endanger the
thrower.

Yet so it was, and what might have been foreseen occurred at the very
moment of the arrival of the monks. The horse, having chased one of his
enemies to the wall, remained so long snorting his contempt over the
coping that the others were able to creep upon him from behind. Several
ropes were flung, and one noose settled over the proud crest and lost
itself in the waving mane. In an instant the creature had turned and
the men were flying for their lives; but he who had cast the rope
lingered, uncertain what use to make of his own success. That moment of
doubt was fatal. With a yell of dismay, the man saw the great creature
rear above him. Then with a crash the fore feet fell upon him and
dashed him to the ground. He rose screaming, was hurled over once more,
and lay a quivering, bleeding heap, while the savage horse, the most
cruel and terrible in its anger of all creatures on earth, bit and
shook and trampled the writhing body.

A loud wail of horror rose from the lines of tonsured heads which
skirted the high wall—a wail which suddenly died away into a long
hushed silence, broken at last by a rapturous cry of thanksgiving and
of joy.

On the road which led to the old dark manor-house upon the side of the
hill a youth had been riding. His mount was a sorry one, a weedy,
shambling, long-haired colt, and his patched tunic of faded purple with
stained leather belt presented no very smart appearance; yet in the
bearing of the man, in the poise of his head, in his easy graceful
carriage, and in the bold glance of his large blue eyes, there was that
stamp of distinction and of breed which would have given him a place of
his own in any assembly. He was of small stature, but his frame was
singularly elegant and graceful. His face, though tanned with the
weather, was delicate in features and most eager and alert in
expression. A thick fringe of crisp yellow curls broke from under the
dark flat cap which he was wearing, and a short golden beard hid the
outline of his strong square chin. One white osprey feather thrust
through a gold brooch in the front of his cap gave a touch of grace to
his somber garb. This and other points of his attire, the short hanging
mantle, the leather-sheathed hunting-knife, the cross belt which
sustained a brazen horn, the soft doe-skin boots and the prick spurs,
would all disclose themselves to an observer; but at the first glance
the brown face set in gold and the dancing light of the quick,
reckless, laughing eyes, were the one strong memory left behind.

Such was the youth who, cracking his whip joyously, and followed by
half a score of dogs, cantered on his rude pony down the Tilford Lane,
and thence it was that with a smile of amused contempt upon his face he
observed the comedy in the field and the impotent efforts of the
servants of Waverley.

Suddenly, however, as the comedy turned swiftly to black tragedy, this
passive spectator leaped into quick strenuous life. With a spring he
was off his pony, and with another he was over the stone wall and
flying swiftly across the field. Looking up from his victim, the great
yellow horse saw this other enemy approach, and spurning the prostrate,
but still writhing body with its heels, dashed at the newcomer.

But this time there was no hasty flight, no rapturous pursuit to the
wall. The little man braced himself straight, flung up his metal-headed
whip, and met the horse with a crashing blow upon the head, repeated
again and again with every attack. In vain the horse reared and tried
to overthrow its enemy with swooping shoulders and pawing hoofs. Cool,
swift and alert, the man sprang swiftly aside from under the very
shadow of death, and then again came the swish and thud of the unerring
blow from the heavy handle.

The horse drew off, glared with wonder and fury at this masterful man,
and then trotted round in a circle, with mane bristling, tail streaming
and ears on end, snorting in its rage and pain. The man, hardly
deigning to glance at his fell neighbor, passed on to the wounded
forester, raised him in his arms with a strength which could not have
been expected in so slight a body, and carried him, groaning, to the
wall, where a dozen hands were outstretched to help him over. Then, at
his leisure, the young man also climbed the wall, smiling back with
cool contempt at the yellow horse, which had come raging after him once
more.

As he sprang down, a dozen monks surrounded him to thank him or to
praise him; but he would have turned sullenly away without a word had
he not been stopped by Abbot John in person.

“Nay, Squire Loring,” said he, “if you be a bad friend to our Abbey,
yet we must needs own that you have played the part of a good Christian
this day, for if there is breath left in our servant’s body it is to
you next to our blessed patron Saint Bernard that we owe it.”

“By Saint Paul! I owe you no good-will, Abbot John,” said the young
man. “The shadow of your Abbey has ever fallen across the house of
Loring. As to any small deed that I may have done this day, I ask no
thanks for it. It is not for you nor for your house that I have done
it, but only because it was my pleasure so to do.”

The Abbot flushed at the bold words, and bit his lip with vexation.

It was the sacrist, however, who answered: “It would be more fitting
and more gracious,” said he, “if you were to speak to the holy Father
Abbot in a manner suited to his high rank and to the respect which is
due to a Prince of the Church.”

The youth turned his bold blue eyes upon the monk, and his sunburned
face darkened with anger. “Were it not for the gown upon your back, and
for your silvering hair, I would answer you in another fashion,” said
he. “You are the lean wolf which growls ever at our door, greedy for
the little which hath been left to us. Say and do what you will with
me, but by Saint Paul! if I find that Dame Ermyntrude is baited by your
ravenous pack I will beat them off with this whip from the little patch
which still remains of all the acres of my fathers.”

“Have a care, Nigel Loring, have a care!” cried the Abbot, with finger
upraised. “Have you no fears of the law of England?”

“A just law I fear and obey.”

“Have you no respect for Holy Church?”

“I respect all that is holy in her. I do not respect those who grind
the poor or steal their neighbor’s land.”

“Rash man, many a one has been blighted by her ban for less than you
have now said! And yet it is not for us to judge you harshly this day.
You are young and hot words come easily to your lips. How fares the
forester?”

“His hurt is grievous, Father Abbot, but he will live,” said a brother,
looking up from the prostrate form. “With a blood-letting and an
electuary, I will warrant him sound within a month.”

“Then bear him to the hospital. And now, brother, about this terrible
beast who still gazes and snorts at us over the top of the wall as
though his thoughts of Holy Church were as uncouth as those of Squire
Nigel himself, what are we to do with him?”

“Here is Franklin Aylward,” said one of the brethren. “The horse was
his, and doubtless he will take it back to his farm.”

But the stout red-faced farmer shook his head at the proposal. “Not I,
in faith!” said he. “The beast hath chased me twice round the paddock;
it has nigh slain my boy Samkin. He would never be happy till he had
ridden it, nor has he ever been happy since. There is not a hind in my
employ who will enter his stall. Ill fare the day that ever I took the
beast from the Castle stud at Guildford, where they could do nothing
with it and no rider could be found bold enough to mount it! When the
sacrist here took it for a fifty-shilling debt he made his own bargain
and must abide by it. He comes no more to the Crooksbury farm.”

“And he stays no more here,” said the Abbot. “Brother sacrist, you have
raised the Devil, and it is for you to lay it again.”

“That I will most readily,” cried the sacrist. “The pittance-master can
stop the fifty shillings from my very own weekly dole, and so the Abbey
be none the poorer. In the meantime here is Wat with his arbalist and a
bolt in his girdle. Let him drive it to the head through this cursed
creature, for his hide and his hoofs are of more value than his wicked
self.”

A hard brown old woodman who had been shooting vermin in the Abbey
groves stepped forward with a grin of pleasure. After a lifetime of
stoats and foxes, this was indeed a noble quarry which was to fall
before him. Fitting a bolt on the nut of his taut crossbow, he had
raised it to his shoulder and leveled it at the fierce, proud,
disheveled head which tossed in savage freedom at the other side of the
wall. His finger was crooked on the spring, when a blow from a whip
struck the bow upward and the bolt flew harmless over the Abbey
orchard, while the woodman shrank abashed from Nigel Loring’s angry
eyes.

“Keep your bolts for your weasels!” said he. “Would you take life from
a creature whose only fault is that its spirit is so high that it has
met none yet who dare control it? You would slay such a horse as a king
might be proud to mount, and all because a country franklin, or a monk,
or a monk’s varlet, has not the wit nor the hands to master him?”

The sacrist turned swiftly on the Squire. “The Abbey owes you an
offering for this day’s work, however rude your words may be,” said he.
“If you think so much of the horse, you may desire to own it. If I am
to pay for it, then with the holy Abbot’s permission it is in my gift
and I bestow it freely upon you.”

The Abbot plucked at his subordinate’s sleeve. “Bethink you, brother
sacrist,” he whispered, “shall we not have this man’s blood upon our
heads?”

“His pride is as stubborn as the horse’s, holy father,” the sacrist
answered, his gaunt fact breaking into a malicious smile. “Man or
beast, one will break the other and the world will be the better for
it. If you forbid me—”

“Nay, brother, you have bought the horse, and you may have the bestowal
of it.”

“Then I give it—hide and hoofs, tail and temper—to Nigel Loring, and
may it be as sweet and as gentle to him as he hath been to the Abbot of
Waverley!”

The sacrist spoke aloud amid the tittering of the monks, for the man
concerned was out of earshot. At the first words which had shown him
the turn which affairs had taken he had run swiftly to the spot where
he had left his pony. From its mouth he removed the bit and the stout
bridle which held it. Then leaving the creature to nibble the grass by
the wayside he sped back whence he came.

“I take your gift, monk,” said he, “though I know well why it is that
you give it. Yet I thank you, for there are two things upon earth for
which I have ever yearned, and which my thin purse could never buy. The
one is a noble horse, such a horse as my father’s son should have
betwixt his thighs, and here is the one of all others which I would
have chosen, since some small deed is to be done in the winning of him,
and some honorable advancement to be gained. How is the horse called?”

“Its name,” said the franklin, “is Pommers. I warn you, young sir, that
none may ride him, for many have tried, and the luckiest is he who has
only a staved rib to show for it.”

“I thank you for your rede,” said Nigel, “and now I see that this is
indeed a horse which I would journey far to meet. I am your man,
Pommers, and you are my horse, and this night you shall own it or I
will never need horse again. My spirit against thine, and God hold thy
spirit high, Pommers, so that the greater be the adventure, and the
more hope of honor gained!”

While he spoke the young Squire had climbed on to the top of the wall
and stood there balanced, the very image of grace and spirit and
gallantry, his bridle hanging from one hand and his whip grasped in the
other. With a fierce snort, the horse made for him instantly, and his
white teeth flashed as he snapped; but again a heavy blow from the
loaded whip caused him to swerve, and even at the instant of the
swerve, measuring the distance with steady eyes, and bending his supple
body for the spring, Nigel bounded into the air and fell with his legs
astride the broad back of the yellow horse. For a minute, with neither
saddle nor stirrups to help him, and the beast ramping and rearing like
a mad thing beneath him, he was hard pressed to hold his own. His legs
were like two bands of steel welded on to the swelling arches of the
great horse’s ribs, and his left hand was buried deep in the tawny
mane.

Never had the dull round of the lives of the gentle brethren of
Waverley been broken by so fiery a scene. Springing to right and
swooping to left, now with its tangled wicked head betwixt its
forefeet, and now pawing eight feet high in the air, with scarlet,
furious nostrils and maddened eyes, the yellow horse was a thing of
terror and of beauty. But the lithe figure on his back, bending like a
reed in the wind to every movement, firm below, pliant above, with calm
inexorable face, and eyes which danced and gleamed with the joy of
contest, still held its masterful place for all that the fiery heart
and the iron muscles of the great beast could do.

Once a long drone of dismay rose from the monks, as rearing higher and
higher yet a last mad effort sent the creature toppling over backward
upon its rider. But, swift and cool, he had writhed from under it ere
it fell, spurned it with his foot as it rolled upon the earth, and then
seizing its mane as it rose swung himself lightly on to its back once
more. Even the grim sacrist could not but join the cheer, as Pommers,
amazed to find the rider still upon his back, plunged and curveted down
the field.

But the wild horse only swelled into a greater fury. In the sullen
gloom of its untamed heart there rose the furious resolve to dash the
life from this clinging rider, even if it meant destruction to beast
and man. With red, blazing eyes it looked round for death. On three
sides the five-virgate field was bounded by a high wall, broken only at
one spot by a heavy four-foot wooden gate. But on the fourth side was a
low gray building, one of the granges of the Abbey, presenting a long
flank unbroken by door or window. The horse stretched itself into a
gallop, and headed straight for that craggy thirty-foot wall. He would
break in red ruin at the base of it if he could but dash forever the
life of this man, who claimed mastery over that which had never found
its master yet.

The great haunches gathered under it, the eager hoofs drummed the
grass, as faster and still more fast the frantic horse bore himself and
his rider toward the wall. Would Nigel spring off? To do so would be to
bend his will to that of the beast beneath him. There was a better way
than that. Cool, quick and decided, the man swiftly passed both whip
and bridle into the left hand which still held the mane. Then with the
right he slipped his short mantle from his shoulders and lying forward
along the creature’s strenuous, rippling back he cast the flapping
cloth over the horse’s eyes.

The result was but too successful, for it nearly brought about the
downfall of the rider. When those red eyes straining for death were
suddenly shrouded in unexpected darkness the amazed horse propped on
its forefeet and came to so dead a stop that Nigel was shot forward on
to its neck and hardly held himself by his hair-entwined hand. Ere he
had slid back into position the moment of danger had passed, for the
horse, its purpose all blurred in its mind by this strange thing which
had befallen, wheeled round once more, trembling in every fiber, and
tossing its petulant head until at last the mantle had been slipped
from its eyes and the chilling darkness had melted into the homely
circle of sunlit grass once more.

But what was this new outrage which had been inflicted upon it? What
was this defiling bar of iron which was locked hard against its mouth?
What were these straps which galled the tossing neck, this band which
spanned its chest? In those instants of stillness ere the mantle had
been plucked away Nigel had lain forward, had slipped the snaffle
between the champing teeth, and had deftly secured it.

Blind, frantic fury surged in the yellow horse’s heart once more at
this new degradation, this badge of serfdom and infamy. His spirit rose
high and menacing at the touch. He loathed this place, these people,
all and everything which threatened his freedom. He would have done
with them forever; he would see them no more. Let him away to the
uttermost parts of the earth, to the great plains where freedom is.
Anywhere over the far horizon where he could get away from the defiling
bit and the insufferable mastery of man.

He turned with a rush, and one magnificent deer-like bound carried him
over the four-foot gate. Nigel’s hat had flown off, and his yellow
curls streamed behind him as he rose and fell in the leap. They were in
the water-meadow now, and the rippling stream twenty feet wide gleamed
in front of them running down to the main current of the Wey. The
yellow horse gathered his haunches under him and flew over like an
arrow. He took off from behind a boulder and cleared a furze-bush on
the farther side. Two stones still mark the leap from hoof-mark to
hoof-mark, and they are eleven good paces apart. Under the hanging
branch of the great oak-tree on the farther side (that _Quercus
Tilfordiensis ordiensis_ is still shown as the bound of the Abby’s
immediate precincts) the great horse passed. He had hoped to sweep off
his rider, but Nigel sank low on the heaving back with his face buried
in the flying mane. The rough bough rasped him rudely, but never shook
his spirit nor his grip. Rearing, plunging and struggling, Pommers
broke through the sapling grove and was out on the broad stretch of
Hankley Down.

And now came such a ride as still lingers in the gossip of the lowly
country folk and forms the rude jingle of that old Surrey ballad, now
nearly forgotten, save for the refrain:

The Doe that sped on Hinde Head,
    The Kestril on the winde,
And Nigel on the Yellow Horse
    Can leave the world behinde.


Before them lay a rolling ocean of dark heather, knee-deep, swelling in
billow on billow up to the clear-cut hill before them. Above stretched
one unbroken arch of peaceful blue, with a sun which was sinking down
toward the Hampshire hills. Through the deep heather, down the gullies,
over the watercourses, up the broken slopes, Pommers flew, his great
heart bursting with rage, and every fiber quivering at the indignities
which he had endured.

And still, do what he would, the man clung fast to his heaving sides
and to his flying mane, silent, motionless, inexorable, letting him do
what he would, but fixed as Fate upon his purpose. Over Hankley Down,
through Thursley Marsh, with the reeds up to his mud-splashed withers,
onward up the long slope of the Headland of the Hinds, down by the
Nutcombe Gorge, slipping, blundering, bounding, but never slackening
his fearful speed, on went the great yellow horse. The villagers of
Shottermill heard the wild clatter of hoofs, but ere they could swing
the ox-hide curtains of their cottage doors horse and rider were lost
amid the high bracken of the Haslemere Valley. On he went, and on,
tossing the miles behind his flying hoofs. No marsh-land could clog
him, no hill could hold him back. Up the slope of Linchmere and the
long ascent of Fernhurst he thundered as on the level, and it was not
until he had flown down the incline of Henley Hill, and the gray castle
tower of Midhurst rose over the coppice in front, that at last the
eager outstretched neck sank a little on the breast, and the breath
came quick and fast. Look where he would in woodland and on down, his
straining eyes could catch no sign of those plains of freedom which he
sought.

And yet another outrage! It was bad that this creature should still
cling so tight upon his back, but now he would even go to the
intolerable length of checking him and guiding him on the way that he
would have him go. There was a sharp pluck at his mouth, and his head
was turned north once more. As well go that way as another, but the man
was mad indeed if he thought that such a horse as Pommers was at the
end of his spirit or his strength. He would soon show him that he was
unconquered, if it strained his sinews or broke his heart to do so.
Back then he flew up the long, long ascent. Would he ever get to the
end of it? Yet he would not own that he could go no farther while the
man still kept his grip. He was white with foam and caked with mud. His
eyes were gorged with blood, his mouth open and gasping, his nostrils
expanded, his coat stark and reeking. On he flew down the long Sunday
Hill until he reached the deep Kingsley Marsh at the bottom. No, it was
too much! Flesh and blood could go no farther. As he struggled out from
the reedy slime with the heavy black mud still clinging to his
fetlocks, he at last eased down with sobbing breath and slowed the
tumultuous gallop to a canter.

Oh, crowning infamy! Was there no limit to these degradations? He was
no longer even to choose his own pace. Since he had chosen to gallop so
far at his own will he must now gallop farther still at the will of
another. A spur struck home on either flank. A stinging whip-lash fell
across his shoulder. He bounded his own height in the air at the pain
and the shame of it. Then, forgetting his weary limbs, forgetting his
panting, reeking sides, forgetting everything save this intolerable
insult and the burning spirit within, he plunged off once more upon his
furious gallop. He was out on the heather slopes again and heading for
Weydown Common. On he flew and on. But again his brain failed him and
again his limbs trembled beneath him, and yet again he strove to ease
his pace, only to be driven onward by the cruel spur and the falling
lash. He was blind and giddy with fatigue.

He saw no longer where he placed his feet, he cared no longer whither
he went, but his one mad longing was to get away from this dreadful
thing, this torture which clung to him and would not let him go.
Through Thursley village he passed, his eyes straining in his agony,
his heart bursting within him, and he had won his way to the crest of
Thursley Down, still stung forward by stab and blow, when his spirit
weakened, his giant strength ebbed out of him, and with one deep sob of
agony the yellow horse sank among the heather. So sudden was the fall
that Nigel flew forward over his shoulder, and beast and man lay
prostrate and gasping while the last red rim of the sun sank behind
Butser and the first stars gleamed in a violet sky.

The young Squire was the first to recover, and kneeling by the panting,
overwrought horse he passed his hand gently over the tangled mane and
down the foam-flecked face. The red eye rolled up at him; but it was
wonder not hatred, a prayer and not a threat, which he could read in
it. As he stroked the reeking muzzle, the horse whinnied gently and
thrust his nose into the hollow of his hand. It was enough. It was the
end of the contest, the acceptance of new conditions by a chivalrous
foe from a chivalrous victor.

“You are my horse, Pommers,” Nigel whispered, and he laid his cheek
against the craning head. “I know you, Pommers, and you know me, and
with the help of Saint Paul we shall teach some other folk to know us
both. Now let us walk together as far as this moorland pond, for indeed
I wot not whether it is you or I who need the water most.”

And so it was that some belated monks of Waverley passing homeward from
the outer farms saw a strange sight which they carried on with them so
that it reached that very night the ears both of sacrist and of Abbot.
For, as they passed through Tilford they had seen horse and man walking
side by side and head by head up the manor-house lane. And when they
had raised their lanterns on the pair it was none other than the young
Squire himself who was leading home, as a shepherd leads a lamb, the
fearsome yellow horse of Crooksbury.




IV.
HOW THE SUMMONER CAME TO THE MANOR HOUSE OF TILFORD


By the date of this chronicle the ascetic sternness of the old Norman
castles had been humanized and refined so that the new dwellings of the
nobility, if less imposing in appearance, were much more comfortable as
places of residence. A gentle race had built their houses rather for
peace than for war. He who compares the savage bareness of Pevensey or
Guildford with the piled grandeur of Bodmin or Windsor cannot fail to
understand the change in manners which they represent.

The earlier castles had a set purpose, for they were built that the
invaders might hold down the country; but when the Conquest was once
firmly established a castle had lost its meaning save as a refuge from
justice or as a center for civil strife. On the marches of Wales and of
Scotland the castle might continue to be a bulwark to the kingdom, and
there still grew and flourished; but in all other places they were
rather a menace to the King’s majesty, and as such were discouraged and
destroyed. By the reign of the third Edward the greater part of the old
fighting castles had been converted into dwelling-houses or had been
ruined in the civil wars, and left where their grim gray bones are
still littered upon the brows of our hills. The new buildings were
either great country-houses, capable of defense, but mainly
residential, or they were manor-houses with no military significance at
all.

Such was the Tilford Manor-house where the last survivors of the old
and magnificent house of Loring still struggled hard to keep a footing
and to hold off the monks and the lawyers from the few acres which were
left to them. The mansion was a two-storied one, framed in heavy beams
of wood, the interstices filled with rude blocks of stone. An outside
staircase led up to several sleeping-rooms above. Below there were only
two apartments, the smaller of which was the bower of the aged Lady
Ermyntrude. The other was the hall, a very large room, which served as
the living room of the family and as the common dining-room of
themselves and of their little group of servants and retainers. The
dwellings of these servants, the kitchens, the offices and the stables
were all represented by a row of penthouses and sheds behind the main
building. Here lived Charles the page, Peter the old falconer, Red
Swire who had followed Nigel’s grandfather to the Scottish wars,
Weathercote the broken minstrel, John the cook, and other survivors of
more prosperous days, who still clung to the old house as the barnacles
to some wrecked and stranded vessel.

One evening about a week after the breaking of the yellow horse, Nigel
and his grandmother sat on either side of the large empty fireplace in
this spacious apartment. The supper had been removed, and so had the
trestle tables upon which it had been served, so that the room seemed
bare and empty. The stone floor was strewed with a thick layer of green
rushes, which was swept out every Saturday and carried with it all the
dirt and débris of the week. Several dogs were now crouched among these
rushes, gnawing and cracking the bones which had been thrown from the
table. A long wooden buffet loaded with plates and dishes filled one
end of the room, but there was little other furniture save some benches
against the walls, two dorseret chairs, one small table littered with
chessmen, and a great iron coffer. In one corner was a high wickerwork
stand, and on it two stately falcons were perched, silent and
motionless, save for an occasional twinkle of their fierce yellow eyes.

But if the actual fittings of the room would have appeared scanty to
one who had lived in a more luxurious age, he would have been surprised
on looking up to see the multitude of objects which were suspended
above his head. Over the fireplace were the coats-of-arms of a number
of houses allied by blood or by marriage to the Lorings. The two
cresset-lights which flared upon each side gleamed upon the blue lion
of the Percies, the red birds of de Valence, the black engrailed cross
of de Mohun, the silver star of de Vere, and the ruddy bars of
FitzAlan, all grouped round the famous red roses on the silver shield
which the Lorings had borne to glory upon many a bloody field. Then
from side to side the room was spanned by heavy oaken beams from which
a great number of objects were hanging. There were mail-shirts of
obsolete pattern, several shields, one or two rusted and battered
helmets, bowstaves, lances, otter-spears, harness, fishing-rods, and
other implements of war or of the chase, while higher still amid the
black shadows of the peaked roof could be seen rows of hams, flitches
of bacon, salted geese, and those other forms of preserved meat which
played so great a part in the housekeeping of the Middle Ages.

Dame Ermyntrude Loring, daughter, wife, and mother of warriors, was
herself a formidable figure. Tall and gaunt, with hard craggy features
and intolerant dark eyes, even her snow-white hair and stooping back
could not entirely remove the sense of fear which she inspired in those
around her. Her thoughts and memories went back to harsher times, and
she looked upon the England around her as a degenerate and effeminate
land which had fallen away from the old standard of knightly courtesy
and valor.

The rising power of the people, the growing wealth of the Church, the
increasing luxury in life and manners, and the gentler tone of the age
were all equally abhorrent to her, so that the dread of her fierce
face, and even of the heavy oak staff with which she supported her
failing limbs, was widespread through all the country round.

Yet if she was feared she was also respected, for in days when books
were few and readers scarce, a long memory and a ready tongue were of
the more value; and where, save from Dame Ermyntrude, could the young
unlettered Squires of Surrey and Hampshire hear of their grandfathers
and their battles, or learn that lore of heraldry and chivalry which
she handed down from a ruder but a more martial age? Poor as she was,
there was no one in Surrey whose guidance would be more readily sought
upon a question of precedence or of conduct than the Dame Ermyntrude
Loring.

She sat now with bowed back by the empty fireplace, and looked across
at Nigel with all the harsh lines of her old ruddled face softening
into love and pride. The young Squire was busy cutting bird-bolts for
his crossbow, and whistling softly as he worked. Suddenly he looked up
and caught the dark eyes which were fixed upon him. He leaned forward
and patted the bony hand.

“What hath pleased you, dear dame? I read pleasure in your eyes.”

“I have heard to-day, Nigel, how you came to win that great war-horse
which stamps in our stable.”

“Nay, dame; I had told you that the monks had given it to me.”

“You said so, fair son, but never a word more. Yet the horse which you
brought home was a very different horse I wot, to that which was given
you. Why did you not tell me?”

“I should think it shame to talk of such a thing.”

“So would your father before you, and his father no less. They would
sit silent among the knights when the wine went round and listen to
every man’s deeds; but if perchance there was anyone who spoke louder
than the rest and seemed to be eager for honor, then afterwards your
father would pluck him softly by the sleeve and whisper in his ear to
learn if there was any small vow of which he could relieve him, or if
he would deign to perform some noble deed of arms upon his person. And
if the man were a braggart and would go no further, your father would
be silent and none would know it. But if he bore himself well, your
father would spread his fame far and wide, but never make mention of
himself.”

Nigel looked at the old woman with shining eyes. “I love to hear you
speak of him,” said he. “I pray you to tell me once more of the manner
of his death.”

“He died as he had lived, a very courtly gentleman. It was at the great
sea-battle upon the Norman coast, and your father was in command of the
after-guard in the King’s own ship. Now the French had taken a great
English ship the year before when they came over and held the narrow
seas and burned the town of Southampton.

“This ship was the Christopher, and they placed it in the front of
their battle; but the English closed upon it and stormed over its side,
and slew all who were upon it.

“But your father and Sir Lorredan of Genoa, who commanded the
Christopher, fought upon the high poop, so that all the fleet stopped
to watch it, and the King himself cried aloud at the sight, for Sir
Lorredan was a famous man-at-arms and bore himself very stoutly that
day, and many a knight envied your father that he should have chanced
upon so excellent a person. But your father bore him back and struck
him such a blow with a mace that he turned the helmet half round on his
head, so that he could no longer see through the eye holes, and Sir
Lorredan threw down his sword and gave himself to ransom. But your
father took him by the helmet and twisted it until he had it straight
upon his head. Then, when he could see once again, he handed him his
sword, and prayed him that he would rest himself and then continue, for
it was great profit and joy to see any gentleman carry himself so well.
So they sat together and rested by the rail of the poop; but even as
they raised their hands again your father was struck by a stone from a
mangonel and so died.”

“And this Sir Lorredan,” cried Nigel, “he died also, as I understand?”

“I fear that he was slain by the archers, for they loved your father,
and they do not see these things with our eyes.”

“It was a pity,” said Nigel; “for it is clear that he was a good knight
and bore himself very bravely.”

“Time was, when I was young, when commoners dared not have laid their
grimy hands upon such a man. Men of gentle blood and coat-armor made
war upon each other, and the others, spearmen or archers, could
scramble amongst themselves. But now all are of a level, and only here
and there one like yourself, fair son, who reminds me of the men who
are gone.”

Nigel leaned forward and took her hands in his. “What I am you have
made me,” said he.

“It is true, Nigel. I have indeed watched over you as the gardener
watches his most precious blossom, for in you alone are all the hopes
of our ancient house, and soon—very soon—you will be alone.”

“Nay, dear lady, say not that.”

“I am very old, Nigel, and I feel the shadow closing in upon me. My
heart yearns to go, for all whom I have known and loved have gone
before me. And you—it will be a blessed day for you, since I have held
you back from that world into which your brave spirit longs to plunge.”

“Nay, nay, I have been happy here with you at Tilford.”

“We are very poor, Nigel. I do not know where we may find the money to
fit you for the wars. Yet we have good friends. There is Sir John
Chandos, who has won such credit in the French wars and who rides ever
by the King’s bridle-arm. He was your father’s friend and they were
Squires together. If I sent you to court with a message to him he would
do what he could.”

Nigel’s fair face flushed. “Nay, Dame Ermyntrude, I must find my own
gear, even as I have found my own horse, for I had rather ride into
battle in this tunic than owe my suit to another.”

“I feared that you would say so, Nigel; but indeed I know not how else
we may get the money,” said the old woman sadly. “It was different in
the days of my father. I can remember that a suit of mail was but a
small matter in those days, for in every English town such things could
be made. But year by year since men have come to take more care of
their bodies, there have been added a plate of proof here and a cunning
joint there, and all must be from Toledo or Milan, so that a knight
must have much metal in his purse ere he puts any on his limbs.”

Nigel looked up wistfully at the old armor which was slung on the beams
above him. “The ash spear is good,” said he, “and so is the oaken
shield with facings of steel. Sir Roger FitzAlan handled them and said
that he had never seen better. But the armor—”

Lady Ermyntrude shook her old head and laughed. “You have your father’s
great soul, Nigel, but you have not his mighty breadth of shoulder and
length of limb. There was not in all the King’s great host a taller or
a stronger man. His harness would be little use to you. No, fair son, I
rede you that when the time comes you sell this crumbling house and the
few acres which are still left, and so go forth to the wars in the hope
that with your own right hand you will plant the fortunes of a new
house of Loring.”

A shadow of anger passed over Nigel’s fresh young face. “I know not if
we may hold off these monks and their lawyers much longer. This very
day there came a man from Guildford with claims from the Abbey
extending back before my father’s death.”

“Where are they, fair son?”

“They are flapping on the furze-bushes of Hankley, for I sent his
papers and parchments down wind as fast as ever falcon flew.”

“Nay! you were mad to do that, Nigel. And the man, where is he?”

“Red Swire and old George the archer threw him into the Thursley bog.”

“Alas! I fear me such things cannot be done in these days, though my
father or my husband would have sent the rascal back to Guildford
without his ears. But the Church and the Law are too strong now for us
who are of gentler blood. Trouble will come of it, Nigel, for the Abbot
of Waverley is not one who will hold back the shield of the Church from
those who are her servants.”

“The Abbot would not hurt us. It is that gray lean wolf of a sacrist
who hungers for our land. Let him do his worst. I fear him not.”

“He has such an engine at his back, Nigel, that even the bravest must
fear him. The ban which blasts a man’s soul is in the keeping of his
church, and what have we to place against it? I pray you to speak him
fair, Nigel.”

“Nay, dear lady, it is both my duty and my pleasure to do what you bid
me; but I would die ere I ask as a favor that which we can claim as a
right. Never can I cast my eyes from yonder window that I do not see
the swelling down-lands and the rich meadows, glade and dingle, copse
and wood, which have been ours since Norman-William gave them to that
Loring who bore his shield at Senlac. Now, by trick and fraud, they
have passed away from us, and many a franklin is a richer man than I;
but never shall it be said that I saved the rest by bending my neck to
their yoke. Let them do their worst, and let me endure it or fight it
as best I may.”

The old lady sighed and shook her head. “You speak as a Loring should,
and yet I fear that some great trouble will befall us. But let us talk
no more of such matters, since we cannot mend them. Where is your
citole, Nigel? Will you not play and sing to me?”

The gentleman of those days could scarce read and write; but he spoke
in two languages, played at least one musical instrument as a matter of
course, and possessed a number of other accomplishments, from the
imping of hawk’s feathers, to the mystery of venery, with knowledge of
every beast and bird, its time of grace and when it was seasonable. As
far as physical feats went, to vault barebacked upon a horse, to hit a
running hare with a crossbow-bolt, or to climb the angle of a castle
courtyard, were feats which had come by nature to the young Squire; but
it was very different with music, which had called for many a weary
hour of irksome work. Now at last he could master the strings, but both
his ear and his voice were not of the best, so that it was well perhaps
that there was so small and so unprejudiced an audience to the
Norman-French chanson, which he sang in a high reedy voice with great
earnestness of feeling, but with many a slip and quaver, waving his
yellow head in cadence to the music:

A sword!  A sword!  Ah, give me a sword!
    For the world is all to win.
Though the way be hard and the door be barred,
    The strong man enters in.
If Chance and Fate still hold the gate,
    Give me the iron key,
And turret high my plume shall fly,
    Or you may weep for me!

A horse!  A horse!  Ah, give me a horse!
    To bear me out afar,
Where blackest need and grimmest deed
    And sweetest perils are.
Hold thou my ways from glutted days
    Where poisoned leisure lies,
And point the path of tears and wrath
    Which mounts to high emprise!

A heart!  A heart!  Ah, give me a heart
    To rise to circumstance!
Serene and high and bold to try
    The hazard of the chance,
With strength to wait, but fixed as fate
    To plan and dare and do,
The peer of all, and only thrall,
    Sweet lady mine, to you!


It may have been that the sentiment went for more than the music, or it
may have been the nicety of her own ears had been dulled by age, but
old Dame Ermyntrude clapped her lean hands together and cried out in
shrill applause.

“Weathercote has indeed had an apt pupil!” she said. “I pray you that
you will sing again.”

“Nay, dear dame, it is turn and turn betwixt you and me. I beg that you
will recite a romance, you who know them all. For all the years that I
have listened I have never yet come to the end of them, and I dare
swear that there are more in your head than in all the great books
which they showed me at Guildford Castle. I would fain hear ‘Doon of
Mayence,’ or ‘The Song of Roland,’ or ‘Sir Isumbras.’”

So the old dame broke into a long poem, slow and dull in the inception,
but quickening as the interest grew, until with darting hands and
glowing face she poured forth the verses which told of the emptiness of
sordid life, the beauty of heroic death, the high sacredness of love
and the bondage of honor. Nigel, with set, still features and brooding
eyes, drank in the fiery words, until at last they died upon the old
woman’s lips and she sank back weary in her chair.

Nigel stooped over her and kissed her brow. “Your words will ever be as
a star upon my path,” said he. Then, carrying over the small table and
the chessmen, he proposed that they should play their usual game before
they sought their rooms for the night.

But a sudden and rude interruption broke in upon their gentle contest.
A dog pricked its ears and barked. The others ran growling to the door.
And then there came a sharp clash of arms, a dull heavy blow as from a
club or sword-pommel, and a deep voice from without summoned them to
open in the King’s name. The old dame and Nigel had both sprung to
their feet, their table overturned and their chessmen scattered among
the rushes. Nigel’s hand had sought his crossbow, but the Lady
Ermyntrude grasped his arm.

“Nay, fair son! Have you not heard that it is in the King’s name?” said
she. “Down, Talbot! Down, Bayard! Open the door and let his messenger
in!”

Nigel undid the bolt, and the heavy wooden door swung outward upon its
hinges. The light from the flaring cressets beat upon steel caps and
fierce bearded faces, with the glimmer of drawn swords and the yellow
gleam of bowstaves. A dozen armed archers forced their way into the
room. At their head were the gaunt sacrist of Waverley and a stout
elderly man clad in a red velvet doublet and breeches much stained and
mottled with mud and clay. He bore a great sheet of parchment with a
fringe of dangling seals, which he held aloft as he entered.

“I call on Nigel Loring!” he cried. “I, the officer of the King’s law
and the lay summoner of Waverley, call upon the man named Nigel
Loring!”

“I am he.”

“Yes, it is he!” cried the sacrist. “Archers, do as you were ordered!”

In an instant the band threw themselves upon him like the hounds on a
stag. Desperately Nigel strove to gain his sword which lay upon the
iron coffer. With the convulsive strength which comes from the spirit
rather than from the body, he bore them all in that direction, but the
sacrist snatched the weapon from its place, and the rest dragged the
writhing Squire to the ground and swathed him in a cord.

“Hold him fast, good archers! Keep a stout grip on him!” cried the
summoner. “I pray you, one of you, prick off these great dogs which
snarl at my heels. Stand off, I say, in the name of the King! Watkin,
come betwixt me and these creatures who have as little regard for the
law as their master.”

One of the archers kicked off the faithful dogs. But there were others
of the household who were equally ready to show their teeth in defense
of the old house of Loring. From the door which led to their quarters
there emerged the pitiful muster of Nigel’s threadbare retainers. There
was a time when ten knights, forty men-at-arms and two hundred archers
would march behind the scarlet roses. Now at this last rally when the
young head of the house lay bound in his own hall, there mustered at
his call the page Charles with a cudgel, John the cook with his longest
spit, Red Swire the aged man-at-arms with a formidable ax swung over
his snowy head, and Weathercote the minstrel with a boar-spear. Yet
this motley array was fired with the spirit of the house, and under the
lead of the fierce old soldier they would certainly have flung
themselves upon the ready swords of the archers, had the Lady
Ermyntrude not swept between them:

“Stand back, Swire!” she cried. “Back, Weathercote Charles, put a leash
on Talbot, and hold Bayard back!” Her black eyes blazed upon the
invaders until they shrank from that baleful gaze. “Who are you, you
rascal robbers, who dare to misuse the King’s name and to lay hands
upon one whose smallest drop of blood has more worth than all your
thrall and caitiff bodies?”

“Nay, not so fast, dame, not so fast, I pray you!” cried the stout
summoner, whose face had resumed its natural color, now that he had a
woman to deal with. “There is a law of England, mark you, and there are
those who serve and uphold it, who are the true men and the King’s own
lieges. Such a one am I. Then again, there are those who take such as
me and transfer, carry or convey us into a bog or morass. Such a one is
this graceless old man with the ax, whom I have seen already this day.
There are also those who tear, destroy or scatter the papers of the
law, of which this young man is the chief. Therefore, I would rede you,
dame, not to rail against us, but to understand that we are the King’s
men on the King’s own service.”

“What then is your errand in this house at this hour of the night?”

The summoner cleared his throat pompously, and turning his parchment to
the light of the cressets he read out a long document in Norman-French,
couched in such a style and such a language that the most involved and
foolish of our forms were simplicity itself compared to those by which
the men of the long gown made a mystery of that which of all things on
earth should be the plainest and the most simple. Despair fell cold
upon Nigel’s heart and blanched the face of the old dame as they
listened to the dread catalogue of claims and suits and issues,
questions of peccary and turbary, of house-bote and fire-bote, which
ended by a demand for all the lands, hereditaments, tenements,
messuages and curtilages, which made up their worldly all.

Nigel, still bound, had been placed with his back against the iron
coffer, whence he heard with dry lips and moist brow this doom of his
house. Now he broke in on the recital with a vehemence which made the
summoner jump:

“You shall rue what you have done this night!” he cried. “Poor as we
are, we have our friends who will not see us wronged, and I will plead
my cause before the King’s own majesty at Windsor, that he, who saw the
father die, may know what things are done in his royal name against the
son. But these matters are to be settled in course of law in the King’s
courts, and how will you excuse yourself for this assault upon my house
and person?”

“Nay, that is another matter,” said the sacrist. “The question of debt
may indeed be an affair of a civil court. But it is a crime against the
law and an act of the Devil, which comes within the jurisdiction of the
Abbey Court of Waverley when you dare to lay hands upon the summoner or
his papers.”

“Indeed, he speaks truth,” cried the official. “I know no blacker sin.”

“Therefore,” said the stern monk, “it is the order of the holy father
Abbot that you sleep this night in the Abbey cell, and that to-morrow
you be brought before him at the court held in the chapter-house so
that you receive the fit punishment for this and the many other violent
and froward deeds which you have wrought upon the servants of Holy
Church. Enough is now said, worthy master summoner. Archers, remove
your prisoner!”

As Nigel was lifted up by four stout archers, the Dame Ermyntrude would
have rushed to his aid, but the sacrist thrust her back.

“Stand off, proud woman! Let the law take its course, and learn to
humble your heart before the power of Holy Church. Has your life not
taught its lesson, you, whose horn was exalted among the highest and
will soon not have a roof above your gray hairs? Stand back, I say,
lest I lay a curse upon you!”

The old dame flamed suddenly into white wrath as she stood before the
angry monk: “Listen to me while I lay a curse upon you and yours!” she
cried as she raised her shriveled arms and blighted him with her
flashing eyes—

“As you have done to the house of Loring, so may God do to you, until
your power is swept from the land of England, and of your great Abbey
of Waverley there is nothing left but a pile of gray stones in a green
meadow! I see it! I see it! With my old eyes I see it! From scullion to
Abbot and from cellar to tower, may Waverley and all within it droop
and wither from this night on!”

The monk, hard as he was, quailed before the frantic figure and the
bitter, burning words. Already the summoner and the archers with their
prisoner were clear of the house. He turned and with a clang he shut
the heavy door behind him.




V.
HOW NIGEL WAS TRIED BY THE ABBOT OF WAVERLEY


The law of the Middle Ages, shrouded as it was in old Norman-French
dialect, and abounding in uncouth and incomprehensible terms, in
deodands and heriots, in infang and outfang, was a fearsome weapon in
the hands of those who knew how to use it. It was not for nothing that
the first act of the rebel commoners was to hew off the head of the
Lord Chancellor. In an age when few knew how to read or to write, these
mystic phrases and intricate forms, with the parchments and seals which
were their outward expression, struck cold terror into hearts which
were steeled against mere physical danger.

Even young Nigel Loring’s blithe and elastic spirit was chilled as he
lay that night in the penal cell of Waverley and pondered over the
absolute ruin which threatened his house from a source against which
all his courage was of no avail. As well take up sword and shield to
defend himself against the black death, as against this blight of Holy
Church. He was powerless in the grip of the Abbey. Already they had
shorn off a field here and a grove there, and now in one sweep they
would take in the rest, and where then was the home of the Lorings, and
where should Lady Ermyntrude lay her aged head, or his old retainers,
broken and spent, eke out the balance of their days? He shivered as he
thought of it.

It was very well for him to threaten to carry the matter before the
King, but it was years since royal Edward had heard the name of Loring,
and Nigel knew that the memory of princes was a short one. Besides, the
Church was the ruling power in the palace as well as in the cottage,
and it was only for very good cause that a King could be expected to
cross the purposes of so high a prelate as the Abbot of Waverley, as
long as they came within the scope of the law. Where then was he to
look for help? With the simple and practical piety of the age, he
prayed for the aid of his own particular saints: of Saint Paul, whose
adventures by land and sea had always endeared him; of Saint George,
who had gained much honorable advancement from the Dragon; and of Saint
Thomas, who was a gentleman of coat-armor, who would understand and
help a person of gentle blood. Then, much comforted by his naïve
orisons he enjoyed the sleep of youth and health until the entrance of
the lay brother with the bread and small beer, which served as
breakfast, in the morning.

The Abbey court sat in the chapter-house at the canonical hour of
tierce, which was nine in the forenoon. At all times the function was a
solemn one, even when the culprit might be a villain who was taken
poaching on the Abbey estate, or a chapman who had given false measure
from his biased scales. But now, when a man of noble birth was to be
tried, the whole legal and ecclesiastical ceremony was carried out with
every detail, grotesque or impressive, which the full ritual
prescribed. The distant roll of church music and the slow tolling of
the Abbey bell; the white-robed brethren, two and two, walked thrice
round the hall singing the “_Benedicite_” and the “_Veni, Creator_”
before they settled in their places at the desks on either side. Then
in turn each high officer of the Abbey from below upward, the almoner,
the lector, the chaplain, the subprior and the prior, swept to their
wonted places.

Finally there came the grim sacrist, with demure triumph upon his
downcast features, and at his heels Abbot John himself, slow and
dignified, with pompous walk and solemn, composed face, his iron-beaded
rosary swinging from his waist, his breviary in his hand, and his lips
muttering as he hurried through his office for the day. He knelt at his
high prie-dieu; the brethren, at a signal from the prior, prostrated
themselves upon the floor, and the low deep voices rolled in prayer,
echoed back from the arched and vaulted roof like the wash of waves
from an ocean cavern. Finally the monks resumed their seats; there
entered clerks in seemly black with pens and parchment; the
red-velveted summoner appeared to tell his tale; Nigel was led in with
archers pressing close around him; and then, with much calling of old
French and much legal incantation and mystery, the court of the Abbey
was open for business.

It was the sacrist who first advanced to the oaken desk reserved for
the witnesses and expounded in hard, dry, mechanical fashion the many
claims which the House, of Waverley had against the family of Loring.
Some generations back in return for money advanced or for spiritual
favor received the Loring of the day had admitted that his estate had
certain feudal duties toward the Abbey. The sacrist held up the
crackling yellow parchment with swinging leaden seals on which the
claim was based. Amid the obligations was that of escuage, by which the
price of a knight’s fee should be paid every year. No such price had
been paid, nor had any service been done. The accumulated years came
now to a greater sum than the fee simple of the estate. There were
other claims also. The sacrist called for his books, and with thin,
eager forefinger he tracked them down: dues for this, and tailage for
that, so many shillings this year, and so many marks that one. Some of
it occurred before Nigel was born; some of it when he was but a child.
The accounts had been checked and certified by the sergeant of the law.

Nigel listened to the dread recital, and felt like some young stag who
stands at bay with brave pose and heart of fire, but who sees himself
compassed round and knows clearly that there is no escape. With his
bold young face, his steady blue eyes, and the proud poise of his head,
he was a worthy scion of the old house, and the sun, shining through
the high oriel window, and showing up the stained and threadbare
condition of his once rich doublet, seemed to illuminate the fallen
fortunes of his family.

The sacrist had finished his exposition, and the sergeant-at-law was
about to conclude a case which Nigel could in no way controvert, when
help came to him from an unexpected quarter. It may have been a certain
malignity with which the sacrist urged his suit, it may have been a
diplomatic dislike to driving matters to extremes, or it may have been
some genuine impulse of kindliness, for Abbot John was choleric but
easily appeased. Whatever the cause, the result was that a white plump
hand, raised in the air with a gesture of authority, showed that the
case was at an end.

“Our brother sacrist hath done his duty in urging this suit,” said he,
“for the worldly wealth of this Abbey is placed in his pious keeping,
and it is to him that we should look if we suffered in such ways, for
we are but the trustees of those who come after us. But to my keeping
has been consigned that which is more precious still, the inner spirit
and high repute of those who follow the rule of Saint Bernard. Now it
has ever been our endeavor, since first our saintly founder went down
into the valley of Clairvaux and built himself a cell there, that we
should set an example to all men in gentleness and humility. For this
reason it is that we built our houses in lowly places, that we have no
tower to our Abbey churches, and that no finery and no metal, save only
iron or lead, come within our walls. A brother shall eat from a wooden
platter, drink from an iron cup, and light himself from a leaden
sconce. Surely it is not for such an order who await the exaltation
which is promised to the humble, to judge their own case and so acquire
the lands of their neighbor! If our cause be just, as indeed I believe
that it is, then it were better that it be judged at the King’s assizes
at Guildford, and so I decree that the case be now dismissed from the
Abbey court so that it can be heard elsewhere.”

Nigel breathed a prayer to the three sturdy saints who had stood by him
so manfully and well in the hour of his need. “Abbot John,” said he, “I
never thought that any man of my name would utter thanks to a
Cistercian of Waverley; but by Saint Paul! you have spoken like a man
this day, for it would indeed be to play with cogged dice if the
Abbey’s case is to be tried in the Abbey court.”

The eighty white-clad brethren looked with half resentful, half amused
eyes as they listened to this frank address to one who, in their small
lives, seemed to be the direct vice-regent of Heaven. The archers had
stood back from Nigel, as though he was at liberty to go, when the loud
voice of the summoner broke in upon the silence—

“If it please you, holy father Abbot,” cried the voice, “this decision
of yours is indeed secundum legem and intra vires so far as the civil
suit is concerned which lies between this person and the Abbey. That is
your affair; but it is I, Joseph the summoner, who have been grievously
and criminally mishandled, my writs, papers and indentures destroyed,
my authority flouted, and my person dragged through a bog, quagmire or
morass, so that my velvet gabardine and silver badge of office were
lost and are, as I verily believe, in the morass, quagmire or bog
aforementioned, which is the same bog, morass—”

“Enough!” cried the Abbot sternly. “Lay aside this foolish fashion of
speech and say straitly what you desire.”

“Holy father, I have been the officer of the King’s law no less than
the servant of Holy Church, and I have been let, hindered and assaulted
in the performance of my lawful and proper duties, whilst my papers,
drawn in the King’s name, have been shended and rended and cast to the
wind. Therefore, I demand justice upon this man in the Abbey court, the
said assault having been committed within the banlieue of the Abbey’s
jurisdiction.”

“What have you to say to this, brother sacrist?” asked the Abbot in
some perplexity.

“I would say, father, that it is within our power to deal gently and
charitably with all that concerns ourselves, but that where a the
King’s officer is concerned we are wanting in our duty if we give him
less than the protection that he demands. I would remind you also, holy
father, that this is not the first of this man’s violence, but that he
has before now beaten our servants, defied our authority, and put pike
in the Abbot’s own fish-pond.”

The prelate’s heavy cheeks flushed with anger as this old grievance
came fresh into his mind. His eyes hardened as he looked at the
prisoner. “Tell me, Squire Nigel, did you indeed put pike in the pond?”

The young man drew himself proudly up. “Ere I answer such a question,
father Abbot, do you answer one from me, and tell me what the monks of
Waverley have ever done for me that I should hold my hand when I could
injure them?”

A low murmur ran round the room, partly wonder at his frankness, and
partly anger at his boldness.

The Abbot settled down in his seat as one who has made up his mind.
“Let the case of the summoner be laid before me,” said he. “Justice
shall be done, and the offender shall be punished, be he noble or
simple. Let the plaint be brought before the court.”

The tale of the summoner, though rambling and filled with endless legal
reiteration, was only too clear in its essence. Red Swire, with his
angry face framed in white bristles, was led in, and confessed to his
ill treatment of the official. A second culprit, a little wiry
nut-brown archer from Churt, had aided and abetted in the deed. Both of
them were ready to declare that young Squire Nigel Loring knew nothing
of the matter. But then there was the awkward incident of the tearing
of the writs. Nigel, to whom a lie was an impossibility, had to admit
that with his own hands he had shredded those august documents. As to
an excuse or an explanation, he was too proud to advance any. A cloud
gathered over the brow of the Abbot, and the sacrist gazed with an
ironical smile at the prisoner, while a solemn hush fell over the
chapter-house as the case ended and only, judgment remained.

“Squire Nigel,” said the Abbot, “it was for you, who are, as all men
know, of ancient lineage in this land, to give a fair example by which
others should set their conduct. Instead of this, your manor house has
ever been a center for the stirring up of strife, and now not content
with your harsh showing toward us, the Cistercian monks of Waverley,
you have even marked your contempt for the King’s law, and through your
servants have mishandled the person of his messenger. For such offenses
it is in my power to call the spiritual terrors of the Church upon your
head, and yet I would not be harsh with you, seeing that you are young,
and that even last week you saved the life of a servant of the Abbey
when in peril. Therefore, it is by temporal and carnal means that I
will use my power to tame your overbold spirit, and to chasten that
headstrong and violent humor which has caused such scandal in your
dealings with our Abbey. Bread and water for six weeks from now to the
Feast of Saint Benedict, with a daily exhortation from our chaplain,
the pious Father Ambrose, may still avail to bend the stiff neck and to
soften the hard heart.”

At this ignominious sentence by which the proud heir of the house of
Loring would share the fate of the meanest village poacher, the hot
blood of Nigel rushed to his face, and his eye glanced round him with a
gleam which said more plainly than words that there could be no tame
acceptance of such a doom. Twice he tried to speak, and twice his anger
and his shame held the words in his throat.

“I am no subject of yours, proud Abbot!” he cried at last. “My house
has ever been vavasor to the King. I deny the power of you and your
court to lay sentence upon me. Punish these your own monks, who whimper
at your frown, but do not dare to lay your hand upon him who fears you
not, for he is a free man, and the peer of any save only the King
himself.”

The Abbot seemed for an instant taken aback by these bold words, and by
the high and strenuous voice in which they were uttered. But the
sterner sacrist came as ever to stiffen his will. He held up the old
parchment in his hand.

“The Lorings were indeed vavasors to the King,” said he; “but here is
the very seal of Eustace Loring which shows that he made himself vassal
to the Abbey and held his land from it.”

“Because he was gentle,” cried Nigel, “because he had no thought of
trick or guile.”

“Nay!” said the summoner. “If my voice may be heard, father Abbot, upon
a point of the law, it is of no weight what the causes may have been
why a deed is subscribed, signed or confirmed, but a court is concerned
only with the terms, articles, covenants and contracts of the said
deed.”

“Besides,” said the sacrist, “sentence is passed by the Abbey court,
and there is an end of its honor and good name if it be not upheld.”

“Brother sacrist,” said the Abbot angrily, “methinks you show overmuch
zeal in this case, and certes, we are well able to uphold the dignity
and honor of the Abbey court without any rede of thine. As to you,
worthy summoner, you will give your opinion when we crave for it, and
not before, or you may yourself get some touch of the power of our
tribunal. But your case hath been tried, Squire Loring, and judgment
given. I have no more to say.”

He motioned with his hand, and an archer laid his grip upon the
shoulder of the prisoner. But that rough plebeian touch woke every
passion of revolt in Nigel’s spirit. Of all his high line of ancestors,
was there one who had been subjected to such ignominy as this? Would
they not have preferred death? And should he be the first to lower
their spirit or their traditions? With a quick, lithe movement, he
slipped under the arm of the archer, and plucked the short, straight
sword from the soldier’s side as he did so. The next instant he had
wedged himself into the recess of one of the narrow windows, and there
were his pale set face, his burning eyes, and his ready blade turned
upon the assembly.

“By Saint Paul!” said he, “I never thought to find honorable
advancement under the roof of an abbey, but perchance there may, be
some room for it ere you hale me to your prison.”

The chapter-house was in an uproar. Never in the long and decorous
history of the Abbey had such a scene been witnessed within its walls.
The monks themselves seemed for an instant to be infected by this
spirit of daring revolt. Their own lifelong fetters hung more loosely
as they viewed this unheard-of defiance of authority. They broke from
their seats on either side and huddled half-scared, half-fascinated, in
a large half-circle round the defiant captive, chattering, pointing,
grimacing, a scandal for all time. Scourges should fall and penance be
done for many a long week before the shadow of that day should pass
from Waverley. But meanwhile there was no effort to bring them back to
their rule. Everything was chaos and disorder. The Abbot had left his
seat of justice and hurried angrily forward, to be engulfed and hustled
in the crowd of his own monks like a sheep-dog who finds himself
entangled amid a flock.

Only the sacrist stood clear. He had taken shelter behind the
half-dozen archers, who looked with some approval and a good deal of
indecision at this bold fugitive from justice.

“On him!” cried the sacrist. “Shall he defy the authority of the court,
or shall one man hold six of you at bay? Close in upon him and seize
him. You, Baddlesmere, why do you hold back?”

The man in question, a tall bushy-bearded fellow, clad like the others
in green jerkin and breeches with high brown boots, advanced slowly,
sword in hand, against Nigel. His heart was not in the business, for
these clerical courts were not popular, and everyone had a tender heart
for the fallen fortunes of the house of Loring and wished well to its
young heir.

“Come, young sir, you have caused scathe enough,” said he. “Stand forth
and give yourself up!”

“Come and fetch me, good fellow,” said Nigel, with a dangerous smile.

The archer ran in. There was a rasp of steel, a blade flickered like a
swift dart of flame, and the man staggered back, with blood running
down his forearm and dripping from his fingers. He wrung them and
growled a Saxon oath.

“By the black rood of Bromeholm!” he cried, “I had as soon put my hand
down a fox’s earth to drag up a vixen from her cubs.”

“Standoff!” said Nigel curtly. “I would not hurt you; but by Saint
Paul! I will not be handled, or some one will be hurt in the handling.”

So fierce was his eye and so menacing his blade as he crouched in the
narrow bay of the window that the little knot of archers were at a loss
what to do. The Abbot had forced his way through the crowd and stood,
purple with outraged dignity, at their side.

“He is outside the law,” said he. “He hath shed blood in a court of
justice, and for such a sin there is no forgiveness. I will not have my
court so flouted and set at naught. He who draws the sword, by the
sword also let him perish. Forester Hugh lay a shaft to your bow!”

The man, who was one of the Abbey’s lay servants, put his weight upon
his long bow and slipped the loose end of the string into the upper
notch. Then, drawing one of the terrible three-foot arrows,
steel-tipped and gaudily winged, from his waist, he laid it to the
string.

“Now draw your bow and hold it ready!” cried the furious Abbot. “Squire
Nigel, it is not for Holy Church to shed blood, but there is naught but
violence which will prevail against the violent, and on your head be
the sin. Cast down the sword which you hold in your hand!”

“Will you give me freedom to leave your Abbey?”

“When you have abided your sentence and purged your sin.”

“Then I had rather die where I stand than give up my sword.”

A dangerous flame lit in the Abbot’s eyes. He came of a fighting Norman
stock, like so many of those fierce prelates who, bearing a mace lest
they should be guilty of effusion of blood, led their troops into
battle, ever remembering that it was one of their own cloth and dignity
who, crosier in hand, had turned the long-drawn bloody day of Hastings.
The soft accent of the churchman was gone and it was the hard voice of
a soldier which said—

“One minute I give you, and no more. Then when I cry ‘Loose!’ drive me
an arrow through his body.”

The shaft was fitted, the bow was bent, and the stern eyes of the
woodman were fixed on his mark. Slowly the minute passed, while Nigel
breathed a prayer to his three soldier saints, not that they should
save his body in this life, but that they should have a kindly care for
his soul in the next. Some thought of a fierce wildcat sally crossed
his mind, but once out of his corner he was lost indeed. Yet at the
last he would have rushed among his enemies, and his body was bent for
the spring, when with a deep sonorous hum, like a breaking harp-string,
the cord of the bow was cloven in twain, and the arrow tinkled upon the
tiled floor. At the same moment a young curly-headed bowman, whose
broad shoulders and deep chest told of immense strength, as clearly as
his frank, laughing face and honest hazel eyes did of good humor and
courage, sprang forward sword in hand and took his place by Nigel’s
side.

“Nay, comrades!” said he. “Samkin Aylward cannot stand by and see a
gallant man shot down like a bull at the end of a baiting. Five against
one is long odds; but two against four is better, and by my
finger-bones! Squire Nigel and I leave this room together, be it on our
feet or no.”

The formidable appearance of this ally and his high reputation among
his fellows gave a further chill to the lukewarm ardor of the attack.
Aylward’s left arm was passed through his strung bow, and he was known
from Woolmer Forest to the Weald as the quickest, surest archer that
ever dropped a running deer at tenscore paces.

“Nay, Baddlesmere, hold your fingers from your string-case, or I may
chance to give your drawing hand a two months’ rest,” said Aylward.
“Swords, if you will, comrades, but no man strings his bow till I have
loosed mine.”

Yet the angry hearts of both Abbot and sacrist rose higher with a fresh
obstacle.

“This is an ill day for your father, Franklin Aylward, who holds the
tenancy of Crooksbury,” said the sacrist. “He will rue it that ever he
begot a son who will lose him his acres and his steading.”

“My father is a bold yeoman, and would rue it evermore that ever his
son should stand by while foul work was afoot,” said Aylward stoutly.
“Fall on, comrades! We are waiting.”

Encouraged by promises of reward if they should fall in the service of
the Abbey, and by threats of penalties if they should hold back, the
four archers were about to close, when a singular interruption gave an
entirely new turn to the proceedings.

At the door of the chapter-house, while these fiery doings had been
afoot, there had assembled a mixed crowd of lay brothers, servants and
varlets who had watched the development of the drama with the interest
and delight with which men hail a sudden break in a dull routine.
Suddenly there was an agitation at the back of this group, then a swirl
in the center, and finally the front rank was violently thrust aside,
and through the gap there emerged a strange and whimsical figure, who
from the instant of his appearance dominated both chapter-house and
Abbey, monks, prelates and archers, as if he were their owner and their
master.

He was a man somewhat above middle age, with thin lemon-colored hair, a
curling mustache, a tufted chin of the same hue, and a high craggy
face, all running to a great hook of the nose, like the beak of an
eagle. His skin was tanned a brown-red by much exposure to the wind and
sun. In height he was tall, and his figure was thin and loose-jointed,
but stringy and hard-bitten. One eye was entirely covered by its lid,
which lay flat over an empty socket, but the other danced and sparkled
with a most roguish light, darting here and there with a twinkle of
humor and criticism and intelligence, the whole fire of his soul
bursting through that one narrow cranny.

His dress was as noteworthy as his person. A rich purple doublet and
cloak was marked on the lapels with a strange scarlet device shaped
like a wedge. Costly lace hung round his shoulders, and amid its soft
folds there smoldered the dull red of a heavy golden chain. A knight’s
belt at his waist and a knight’s golden spurs twinkling from his
doeskin riding-boots proclaimed his rank, and on the wrist of his left
gauntlet there sat a demure little hooded falcon of a breed which in
itself was a mark of the dignity of the owner. Of weapons he had none,
but a mandolin was slung by a black silken band over his back, and the
high brown end projected above his shoulder. Such was the man, quaint,
critical, masterful, with a touch of what is formidable behind it, who
now surveyed the opposing groups of armed men and angry monks with an
eye which commanded their attention.

“Excusez!” said he, in a lisping French. “Excusez, mes amis! I had
thought to arouse from prayer or meditation, but never have I seen such
a holy exercise as this under an abbey’s roof, with swords for
breviaries and archers for acolytes. I fear that I have come amiss, and
yet I ride on an errand from one who permits no delay.”

The Abbot, and possibly the sacrist also, had begun to realize that
events had gone a great deal farther than they had intended, and that
without an extreme scandal it was no easy matter for them to save their
dignity and the good name of Waverley. Therefore, in spite of the
debonair, not to say disrespectful, bearing of the newcomer, they
rejoiced at his appearance and intervention.

“I am the Abbot of Waverley, fair son,” said the prelate. “If your
message deal with a public matter it may be fitly repeated in the
chapter-house; if not I will give you audience in my own chamber; for
it is clear to me that you are a gentle man of blood and coat-armor who
would not lightly break in upon the business of our court—a business
which, as you have remarked, is little welcome to men of peace like
myself and the brethren of the rule of Saint Bernard.”

“_Pardieu!_ Father Abbot,” said the stranger. “One had but to glance at
you and your men to see that the business was indeed little to your
taste, and it may be even less so when I say that rather than see this
young person in the window, who hath a noble bearing, further molested
by these archers, I will myself adventure my person on his behalf.”

The Abbot’s smile turned to a frown at these frank words. “It would
become you better, sir, to deliver the message of which you say that
you are the bearer, than to uphold a prisoner against the rightful
judgment of a court.”

The stranger swept the court with his questioning eye. “The message is
not for you, good father Abbot. It is for one whom I know not. I have
been to his house, and they have sent me hither. The name is Nigel
Loring.”

“It is for me, fair sir.”

“I had thought as much. I knew your father, Eustace Loring, and though
he would have made two of you, yet he has left his stamp plain enough
upon your face.”

“You know not the truth of this matter,” said the Abbot. “If you are a
loyal man, you will stand aside, for this young man hath grievously
offended against the law, and it is for the King’s lieges to give us
their support.”

“And you have haled him up for judgment,” cried the stranger with much
amusement. “It is as though a rookery sat in judgment upon a falcon. I
warrant that you have found it easier to judge than to punish. Let me
tell you, father Abbot, that this standeth not aright. When powers such
as these were given to the like of you, they were given that you might
check a brawling underling or correct a drunken woodman, and not that
you might drag the best blood in England to your bar and set your
archers on him if he questioned your findings.”

The Abbot was little used to hear such words of reproof uttered in so
stern a voice under his own abbey roof and before his listening monks.
“You may perchance find that an Abbey court has more powers than you
wot of, Sir Knight,” said he, “if knight indeed you be who are so
uncourteous and short in your speech. Ere we go further, I would ask
your name and style?”

The stranger laughed. “It is easy to see that you are indeed men of
peace,” said he proudly. “Had I shown this sign,” and he touched the
token upon his lapels, “whether on shield or pennon, in the marches of
France or Scotland, there is not a cavalier but would have known the
red pile of Chandos.”

Chandos, John Chandos, the flower of English chivalry, the pink of
knight-errantry, the hero already of fifty desperate enterprises, a man
known and honored from end to end of Europe! Nigel gazed at him as one
who sees a vision. The archers stood back abashed, while the monks
crowded closer to stare at the famous soldier of the French wars. The
Abbot abated his tone, and a smile came to his angry face.

“We are indeed men of peace, Sir John, and little skilled in warlike
blazonry,” said he; “yet stout as are our Abbey walls, they are not so
thick that the fame of your exploits has not passed through them and
reached our ears. If it be your pleasure to take an interest in this
young and misguided Squire, it is not for us to thwart your kind
intention or to withhold such grace as you request. I am glad indeed
that he hath one who can set him so fair an example for a friend.”

“I thank you for your courtesy, good father Abbot,” said Chandos
carelessly. “This young Squire has, however, a better friend than
myself, one who is kinder to those he loves and more terrible to those
he hates. It is from him I bear a message.”

“I pray you, fair and honored sir,” said Nigel, “that you will tell me
what is the message that you bear.”

“The message, _mon ami_, is that your friend comes into these parts and
would have a night’s lodging at the manor house of Tilford for the love
and respect that he bears your family.”

“Nay, he is most welcome,” said Nigel, “and yet I hope that he is one
who can relish a soldier’s fare and sleep under a humble roof, for
indeed we can but give our best, poor as it is.”

“He is indeed a soldier and a good one,” Chandos answered, laughing,
“and I warrant he has slept in rougher quarters than Tilford
Manor-house.”

“I have few friends, fair sir,” said Nigel, with a puzzled face. “I
pray you give me this gentleman’s name.”

“His name is Edward.”

“Sir Edward Mortimer of Kent, perchance, or is it Sir Edward Brocas of
whom the Lady Ermyntrude talks?”

“Nay, he is known as Edward only, and if you ask a second name it is
Plantagenet, for he who comes to seek the shelter of your roof is your
liege lord and mine, the King’s high majesty, Edward of England.”




VI.
IN WHICH LADY ERMYNTRUDE OPENS THE IRON COFFER


AS in a dream Nigel heard these stupendous and incredible words. As in
a dream also he had a vision of a smiling and conciliatory Abbot, of an
obsequious sacrist, and of a band of archers who cleared a path for him
and for the King’s messenger through the motley crowd who had choked
the entrance of the Abbey court. A minute later he was walking by the
side of Chandos through the peaceful cloister, and in front in the open
archway of the great gate was the broad yellow road between its borders
of green meadow-land. The spring air was the sweeter and the more
fragrant for that chill dread of dishonor and captivity which had so
recently frozen his ardent heart. He had already passed the portal when
a hand plucked at his sleeve and he turned to find himself confronted
by the brown honest face and hazel eyes of the archer who had
interfered in his behalf.

“Well,” said Aylward, “what have you to say to me, young sir?”

“What can I say, my good fellow, save that I thank you with all my
heart? By Saint Paul! if you had been my blood brother you could not
have stood by me more stoutly.”

“Nay! but this is not enough.”

Nigel colored with vexation, and the more so as Chandos was listening
with his critical smile to their conversation. “If you had heard what
was said in the court,” said he, “you would understand that I am not
blessed at this moment with much of this world’s gear. The black death
and the monks have between them been heavy upon our estate. Willingly
would I give you a handful of gold for your assistance, since that is
what you seem to crave; but indeed I have it not, and so once more I
say that you must be satisfied with my thanks.”

“Your gold is nothing to me,” said Aylward shortly, “nor would you buy
my loyalty if you filled my wallet with rose nobles, so long as you
were not a man after my own heart. But I have seen you back the yellow
horse, and I have seen you face the Abbot of Waverley, and you are such
a master as I would very gladly serve if you have by chance a place for
such a man. I have seen your following, and I doubt not that they were
stout fellows in your grandfather’s time; but which of them now would
draw a bow-string to his ear? Through you I have left the service of
the Abbey of Waverley, and where can I look now for a post? If I stay
here I am all undone like a fretted bow-string.”

“Nay, there can be no difficulty there,” said Chandos. “_Pardieu!_ a
roistering, swaggering dare-devil archer is worth his price on the
French border. There are two hundred such who march behind my own
person, and I would ask nothing better than to see you among them.”

“I thank you, noble sir, for your offer,” said Aylward, “and I had
rather follow your banner than many another one, for it is well known
that it goes ever forward, and I have heard enough of the wars to know
that there are small pickings for the man who lags behind. Yet, if the
Squire will have me, I would choose to fight under the five roses of
Loring, for though I was born in the hundred of Easebourne and the rape
of Chichester, yet I have grown up and learned to use the longbow in
these parts, and as the free son of a free franklin I had rather serve
my own neighbor than a stranger.”

“My good fellow,” said Nigel, “I have told you that I could in no wise
reward you for such service.”

“If you will but take me to the wars I will see to my own reward,” said
Aylward. “Till then I ask for none, save a corner of your table and six
feet of your floor, for it is certain that the only reward I would get
from the Abbey for this day’s work would be the scourge for my back and
the stocks for my ankles. Samkin Aylward is your man, Squire Nigel,
from this hour on, and by these ten finger-bones he trusts the Devil
will fly away with him if ever he gives you cause to regret it!” So
saying he raised his hand to his steel cap in salute, slung his great
yellow bow over his back, and followed on some paces in the rear of his
new master.

“_Pardieu!_ I have arrived _à la bonne heure_,” said Chandos. “I rode
from Windsor and came to your manor house, to find it empty save for a
fine old dame, who told me of your troubles. From her I walked across
to the Abbey, and none too soon, for what with cloth-yard shafts for
your body, and bell, book and candle for your soul, it was no very
cheerful outlook. But here is the very dame herself, if I mistake not.”

It was indeed the formidable figure of the Lady Ermyntrude, gaunt,
bowed and leaning on her staff, which had emerged from the door of the
manor-house and advanced to greet them. She croaked with laughter, and
shook her stick at the great building as she heard of the discomfiture
of the Abbey court. Then she led the way into the hall where the best
which she could provide had been laid out for their illustrious guest.
There was Chandos blood in her own veins, traceable back through the de
Greys, de Multons, de Valences, de Montagues and other high and noble
strains, so that the meal had been eaten and cleared before she had
done tracing the network of intermarriages and connections, with
quarterings, impalements, lozenges and augmentations by which the
blazonry of the two families might be made to show a common origin.
Back to the Conquest and before it there was not a noble family-tree
every twig and bud of which was not familiar to the Dame Ermyntrude.

And now when the trestles were cleared and the three were left alone in
the hall, Chandos broke his message to the lady. “King Edward hath ever
borne in mind that noble knight your son Sir Eustace,” said he. “He
will journey to Southampton next week, and I am his harbinger. He bade
me say, noble and honored lady, that he would come from Guildford in
any easy stage so that he might spend one night under your roof.”

The old dame flushed with pleasure, and then turned white with vexation
at the words. “It is in truth great honor to the house of Loring,” said
she, “yet our roof is now humble and, as you have seen, our fare is
plain. The King knows not that we are so poor. I fear lest we seem
churlish and niggard in his eyes.”

But Chandos reasoned away her fears. The King’s retinue would journey
on to Farnham Castle. There were no ladies in his party. Though he was
King, still he was a hardy soldier, and cared little for his ease. In
any case, since he had declared his coming, they must make the best of
it. Finally, with all delicacy, Chandos offered his own purse if it
would help in the matter. But already the Lady Ermyntrude had recovered
her composure.

“Nay, fair kinsman, that may not be,” said she. “I will make such
preparation as I may for the King. He will bear in mind that if the
house of Loring can give nothing else, they have always held their
blood and their lives at his disposal.”

Chandos was to ride on to Farnham Castle and beyond, but he expressed
his desire to have a warm bath ere he left Tilford, for like most of
his fellow-knights, he was much addicted to simmering in the hottest
water that he could possibly endure. The bath therefore, a high hooped
arrangement like a broader but shorter churn, was carried into the
privacy of the guest-chamber, and thither it was that Nigel was
summoned to hold him company while he stewed and sweltered in his tub.

Nigel perched himself upon the side of the high bed, swinging his legs
over the edge and gazing with wonder and amusement at the quaint face,
the ruffled yellow hair, and the sinewy shoulders of the famous
warrior, dimly seen amid a pillar of steam. He was in a mood for talk;
so Nigel with eager lips plied him with a thousand questions about the
wars, hanging upon every word which came back to him, like those of the
ancient oracles, out of the mist and the cloud. To Chandos himself, the
old soldier for whom war had lost its freshness, it was a renewal of
his own ardent youth to listen to Nigel’s rapid questions and to mark
the rapt attention with which he listened.

“Tell me of the Welsh, honored sir,” asked the Squire. “What manner of
soldiers are the Welsh?”

“They are very valiant men of war,” said Chandos, splashing about in
his tub. “There is good skirmishing to be had in their valleys if you
ride with a small following. They flare up like a furzebush in the
flames, but if for a short space you may abide the heat of it, then
there is a chance that it may be cooler.”

“And the Scotch?” asked Nigel. “You have made war upon them also, as I
understand.”

“The Scotch knights have no masters in the world, and he who can hold
his own with the best of them, be it a Douglas, a Murray or a Seaton,
has nothing more to learn. Though you be a hard man, you will always
meet as hard a one if you ride northward. If the Welsh be like the
furze fire, then, _pardieu!_ the Scotch are the peat, for they will
smolder and you will never come to the end of them. I have had many
happy hours on the marches of Scotland, for even if there be no war the
Percies of Alnwick or the Governor of Carlisle can still raise a little
bickering with the border clans.”

“I bear in mind that my father was wont to say that they were very
stout spearmen.”

“No better in the world, for the spears are twelve foot long and they
hold them in very thick array; but their archers are weak, save only
the men of Ettrick and Selkirk who come from the forest. I pray you to
open the lattice, Nigel, for the steam is overthick. Now in Wales it is
the spearmen who are weak, and there are no archers in these islands
like the men of Gwent with their bows of elm, which shoot with such
power that I have known a cavalier to have his horse killed when the
shaft had passed through his mail breeches, his thigh and his saddle.
And yet, what is the most strongly shot arrow to these new balls of
iron driven by the fire-powder which will crush a man’s armor as an egg
is crushed by a stone? Our fathers knew them not.”

“Then the better for us,” cried Nigel, “since there is at least one
honorable venture which is all our own.”

Chandos chuckled and turned upon the flushed youth a twinkling and
sympathetic eye. “You have a fashion of speech which carries me back to
the old men whom I met in my boyhood,” said he. “There were some of the
real old knight-errants left in those days, and they spoke as you do.
Young as you are, you belong to another age. Where got you that trick
of thought and word?”

“I have had only one to teach me, the Lady Ermyntrude.”

“_Pardieu!_ she has trained a proper young hawk ready to stoop at a
lordly quarry,” said Chandos. “I would that I had the first unhooding
of you. Will you not ride with me to the wars?”

The tears brimmed over from Nigel’s eyes, and he wrung the gaunt hand
extended from the bath. “By Saint Paul! what could I ask better in the
world? I fear to leave her, for she has none other to care for her. But
if it can in any way be arranged—”

“The King’s hand may smooth it out. Say no more until he is here. But
if you wish to ride with me—”

“What could man wish for more? Is there a Squire in England who would
not serve under the banner of Chandos! Whither do you go, fair sir? And
when do you go? Is it to Scotland? Is it to Ireland? Is it to France?
But alas, alas!”

The eager face had clouded. For the instant he had forgotten that a
suit of armor was as much beyond his means as a service of gold plate.
Down in a twinkling came all his high hopes to the ground. Oh, these
sordid material things, which come between our dreams and their
fulfilment! The Squire of such a knight must dress with the best. Yet
all the fee simple of Tilford would scarce suffice for one suit of
plate.

Chandos, with his quick wit and knowledge of the world, had guessed the
cause of this sudden change. “If you fight under my banner it is for me
to find the weapons,” said he. “Nay, I will not be denied.”

But Nigel shook his head sadly. “It may not be. The Lady Ermyntrude
would sell this old house and every acre round it, ere she would permit
me to accept this gracious bounty which you offer. Yet I do not
despair, for only last week I won for myself a noble war-horse for
which I paid not a penny, so perchance a suit of armor may also come my
way.”

“And how won you the horse?”

“It was given me by the monks of Waverley.”

“This is wonderful. _Pardieu!_ I should have expected, from what I had
seen, that they would have given you little save their malediction.”

“They had no use for the horse, and they gave it to me.”

“Then we have only to find some one who has no use for a suit of armor
and will give it to you. Yet I trust that you will think better of it
and let me, since that good lady proves that I am your kinsman, fit you
for the wars.”

“I thank you, noble sir, and if I should turn to anyone it would indeed
be to you; but there are other ways which I would try first. But I pray
you, good Sir John, to tell me of some of your noble spear-runnings
against the French, for the whole land rings with the tale of your
deeds and I have heard that in one morning three champions have fallen
before your lance. Was it not so?”

“That it was indeed so these scars upon my body will prove; but these
were the follies of my youth.”

“How can you call them follies? Are they not the means by which
honorable advancement may be gained and one’s lady exalted?”

“It is right that you should think so, Nigel. At your age a man should
have a hot head and a high heart. I also had both and fought for my
lady’s glove or for my vow or for the love of fighting. But as one
grows older and commands men one has other things to think of. One
thinks less of one’s own honor and more of the safety of the army. It
is not your own spear, your own sword, your own arm, which will turn
the tide of fight; but a cool head may save a stricken field. He who
knows when his horsemen should charge and when they should fight on
foot, he who can mix his archers with his men-at-arms in such a fashion
that each can support the other, he who can hold up his reserve and
pour it into the battle when it may turn the tide, he who has a quick
eye for boggy land and broken ground—that is the man who is of more
worth to an army than Roland, Oliver and all the paladins.”

“Yet if his knights fail him, honored sir, all his head-work will not
prevail.”

“True enough, Nigel; so may every Squire ride to the wars with his soul
on fire, as yours is now. But I must linger no longer, for the King’s
service must be done. I will dress, and when I have bid farewell to the
noble Dame Ermyntrude I will on to Farnham; but you will see me here
again on the day that the King comes.”

So Chandos went his way that evening, walking his horse through the
peaceful lanes and twanging his citole as he went, for he loved music
and was famous for his merry songs. The cottagers came from their huts
and laughed and clapped as the rich full voice swelled and sank to the
cheery tinkling of the strings. There were few who saw him pass that
would have guessed that the quaint one-eyed man with the yellow hair
was the toughest fighter and craftiest man of war in Europe. Once only,
as he entered Farnham, an old broken man-at-arms ran out in his rags
and clutched at his horse as a dog gambols round his master. Chandos
threw him a kind word and a gold coin as he passed on to the castle.

In the meanwhile young Nigel and the Lady Ermyntrude, left alone with
their difficulties, looked blankly in each other’s faces.

“The cellar is well nigh empty,” said Nigel. “There are two firkins of
small beer and a tun of canary. How can we set such drink before the
King and his court?”

“We must have some wine of Bordeaux. With that and the mottled cow’s
calf and the fowls and a goose, we can set forth a sufficient repast if
he stays only for the one night. How many will be with him?”

“A dozen, at the least.”

The old dame wrung her hands in despair. “Nay, take it not to heart,
dear lady!” said Nigel. “We have but to say the word and the King would
stop at Waverley, where he and his court would find all that they could
wish.”

“Never!” cried the Lady Ermyntrude. “It would be shame and disgrace to
us forever if the King were to pass our door when he has graciously
said that he was fain to enter in. Nay, I will do it. Never did I think
that I would be forced to this, but I know that he would wish it, and I
will do it.”

She went to the old iron coffer, and taking a small key from her girdle
she unlocked it. The rusty hinges, screaming shrilly as she threw back
the lid, proclaimed how seldom it was that she had penetrated into the
sacred recesses of her treasure-chest. At the top were some relics of
old finery: a silken cloak spangled with golden stars, a coif of silver
filigree, a roll of Venetian lace. Beneath were little packets tied in
silk which the old lady handled with tender care: a man’s
hunting-glove, a child’s shoe, a love-knot done in faded green ribbon,
some letters in rude rough script, and a vernicle of Saint Thomas. Then
from the very bottom of the box she drew three objects, swathed in
silken cloth, which she uncovered and laid upon the table. The one was
a bracelet of rough gold studded with uncut rubies, the second was a
gold salver, and the third was a high goblet of the same metal.

“You have heard me speak of these, Nigel, but never before have you
seen them, for indeed I have not opened the hutch for fear that we
might be tempted in our great need to turn them into money. I have kept
them out of my sight and even out of my thoughts. But now it is the
honor of the house which calls, and even these must go. This goblet was
that which my husband, Sir Nele Loring, won after the intaking of
Belgrade when he and his comrades held the lists from matins to vespers
against the flower of the French chivalry. The salver was given him by
the Earl of Pembroke in memory of his valor upon the field of Falkirk.”

“And the bracelet, dear lady?”

“You will not laugh, Nigel?”

“Nay, why should I laugh?”

“The bracelet was the prize for the Queen of Beauty which was given to
me before all the high-born ladies of England by Sir Nele Loring a
month before our marriage—the Queen of Beauty, Nigel—I, old and
twisted, as you see me. Five strong men went down before his lance ere
he won that trinket for me. And now in my last years—”

“Nay, dear and honored lady, we will not part with it.”

“Yes, Nigel, he would have it so. I can hear his whisper in my ear.
Honor to him was everything—the rest nothing. Take it from me, Nigel,
ere my heart weakens. To-morrow you will ride with it to Guildford; you
will see Thorold the goldsmith; and you will raise enough money to pay
for all that we shall need for the King’s coming.” She turned her face
away to hide the quivering of her wrinkled features, and the crash of
the iron lid covered the sob which burst from her overwrought soul.




VII.
HOW NIGEL WENT MARKETING TO GUILDFORD


It was on a bright June morning that young Nigel, with youth and
springtime to make his heart light, rode upon his errand from Tilford
to Guildford town. Beneath him was his great yellow warhorse,
caracoling and curveting as he went, as blithe and free of spirit as
his master. In all England one would scarce have found upon that
morning so high-mettled and so debonair a pair. The sandy road wound
through groves of fir, where the breeze came soft and fragrant with
resinous gums, or over heathery downs, which rolled away to north and
to south, vast and untenanted, for on the uplands the soil was poor and
water scarce. Over Crooksbury Common he passed, and then across the
great Heath of Puttenham, following a sandy path which wound amid the
bracken and the heather, for he meant to strike the Pilgrims’ Way where
it turned eastward from Farnham and from Seale. As he rode he
continually felt his saddle-bag with his hand, for in it, securely
strapped, he had placed the precious treasures of the Lady Ermyntrude.
As he saw the grand tawny neck tossing before him, and felt the easy
heave of the great horse and heard the muffled drumming of his hoofs,
he could have sung and shouted with the joy of living.

Behind him, upon the little brown pony which had been Nigel’s former
mount, rode Samkin Aylward the bowman, who had taken upon himself the
duties of personal attendant and body-guard. His great shoulders and
breadth of frame seemed dangerously top-heavy upon the tiny steed, but
he ambled along, whistling a merry lilt and as lighthearted as his
master. There was no countryman who had not a nod and no woman who had
not a smile for the jovial bowman, who rode for the most part with his
face over his shoulder, staring at the last petticoat which had passed
him. Once only he met with a harsher greeting. It was from a tall,
white-headed, red-faced man whom they met upon the moor.

“Good-morrow, dear father!” cried Aylward. “How is it with you at
Crooksbury? And how are the new black cow and the ewes from Alton and
Mary the dairymaid and all your gear?”

“It ill becomes you to ask, you ne’er-do-weel,” said the old man. “You
have angered the monks of Waverley, whose tenant I am, and they would
drive me out of my farm. Yet there are three more years to run, and do
what they may I will bide till then. But little did I think that I
should lose my homestead through you, Samkin, and big as you are I
would knock the dust out of that green jerkin with a good hazel switch
if I had you at Crooksbury.”

“Then you shall do it to-morrow morning, good father, for I will come
and see you then. But indeed I did not do more at Waverley than you
would have done yourself. Look me in the eye, old hothead, and tell me
if you would have stood by while the last Loring—look at him as he
rides with his head in the air and his soul in the clouds—was shot down
before your very eyes at the bidding of that fat monk! If you would,
then I disown you as my father.”

“Nay, Samkin, if it was like that, then perhaps what you did was not so
far amiss. But it is hard to lose the old farm when my heart is buried
deep in the good brown soil.”

“Tut, man! there are three years to run, and what may not happen in
three years? Before that time I shall have gone to the wars, and when I
have opened a French strong box or two you can buy the good brown soil
and snap your fingers at Abbot John and his bailiffs. Am I not as
proper a man as Tom Withstaff of Churt? And yet he came back after six
months with his pockets full of rose nobles and a French wench on
either arm.”

“God preserve us from the wenches, Samkin! But indeed I think that if
there is money to be gathered you are as likely to get your fist full
as any man who goes to the war. But hasten, lad, hasten! Already your
young master is over the brow.”

Thus admonished, the archer waved his gauntleted hand to his father,
and digging his heels into the sides of his little pony soon drew up
with the Squire. Nigel glanced over his shoulder and slackened speed
until the pony’s head was up to his saddle.

“Have I not heard, archer,” said he, “that an outlaw has been loose in
these parts?”

“It is true, fair sir. He was villain to Sir Peter Mandeville, but he
broke his bonds and fled into the forests. Men call him the ‘Wild Man
of Puttenham.’”

“How comes it that he has not been hunted down? If the man be a
draw-latch and a robber it would be an honorable deed to clear the
country of such an evil.”

“Twice the sergeants-at-arms from Guildford have come out against him,
but the fox has many earths, and it would puzzle you to get him out of
them.”

“By Saint Paul! were my errand not a pressing one I would be tempted to
turn aside and seek him. Where lives he, then?”

“There is a great morass beyond Puttenham, and across it there are
caves in which he and his people lurk.”

“His people? He hath a band?”

“There are several with him.”

“It sounds a most honorable enterprise,” said Nigel. “When the King
hath come and gone we will spare a day for the outlaws of Puttenham. I
fear there is little chance for us to see them on this journey.”

“They prey upon the pilgrims who pass along the Winchester Road, and
they are well loved by the folk in these parts, for they rob none of
them and have an open hand for all who will help them.”

“It is right easy to have an open hand with the money that you have
stolen,” said Nigel; “but I fear that they will not try to rob two men
with swords at their girdles like you and me, so we shall have no
profit from them.”

They had passed over the wild moors and had come down now into the main
road by which the pilgrims from the west of England made their way to
the national shrine at Canterbury. It passed from Winchester, and up
the beautiful valley of the Itchen until it reached Farnham, where it
forked into two branches, one of which ran along the Hog’s Back, while
the second wound to the south and came out at Saint Catherine’s Hill
where stands the Pilgrim shrine, a gray old ruin now, but once so
august, so crowded and so affluent. It was this second branch upon
which Nigel and Aylward found themselves as they rode to Guildford.

No one, as it chanced, was going the same way as themselves, but they
met one large drove of pilgrims returning from their journey with
pictures of Saint Thomas and snails’ shells or little leaden ampullae
in their hats and bundles of purchases over their shoulders. They were
a grimy, ragged, travel-stained crew, the men walking, the women borne
on asses. Man and beast, they limped along as if it would be a glad day
when they saw their homes once more. These and a few beggars or
minstrels, who crouched among the heather on either side of the track
in the hope of receiving an occasional farthing from the passer-by,
were the only folk they met until they had reached the village of
Puttenham. Already there, was a hot sun and just breeze enough to send
the dust flying down the road, so they were glad to clear their throats
with a glass of beer at the ale-stake in the village, where the fair
alewife gave Nigel a cold farewell because he had no attentions for
her, and Aylward a box on the ear because he had too many.

On the farther side of Puttenham the road runs through thick woods of
oak and beech, with a tangled undergrowth of fern and bramble. Here
they met a patrol of sergeants-at-arms, tall fellows, well-mounted,
clad in studded-leather caps and tunics, with lances and swords. They
walked their horses slowly on the shady side of the road, and stopped
as the travelers came up, to ask if they had been molested on the way.

“Have a care,” they added, “for the ‘Wild Man’ and his wife are out.
Only yesterday they slew a merchant from the west and took a hundred
crowns.”

“His wife, you say?”

“Yes, she is ever at his side, and has saved him many a time, for if he
has the strength it is she who has the wit. I hope to see their heads
together upon the green grass one of these mornings.”

The patrol passed downward toward Farnham, and so, as it proved, away
from the robbers, who had doubtless watched them closely from the dense
brushwood which skirted the road. Coming round a curve, Nigel and
Aylward were aware of a tall and graceful woman who sat, wringing her
hands and weeping bitterly, upon the bank by the side of the track. At
such a sight of beauty in distress Nigel pricked Pommers with the spur
and in three bounds was at the side of the unhappy lady.

“What ails you, fair dame?” he asked. “Is there any small matter in
which I may stand your friend, or is it possible that anyone hath so
hard a heart as to do you an injury.”

She rose and turned upon him a face full of hope and entreaty. “Oh,
save my poor, poor father!” she cried. “Have you perchance seen the
way-wardens? They passed us, and I fear they are beyond reach.”

“Yes, they have ridden onward, but we may serve as well.”

“Then hasten, hasten, I pray you! Even now they may be doing him to
death. They have dragged him into yonder grove and I have heard his
voice growing ever weaker in the distance. Hasten, I implore you!”

Nigel sprang from his horse and tossed the rein to Aylward.

“Nay, let us go together. How many robbers were there, lady?”

“Two stout fellows.”

“Then I come also.”

“Nay, it is not possible,” said Nigel. “The wood is too thick for
horses, and we cannot leave them in the road.”

“I will guard them,” cried the lady.

“Pommers is not so easily held. Do you bide here, Aylward, until you
hear from me. Stir not, I command you!” So saying, Nigel, with the
light, of adventure gleaming in his joyous eyes, drew his sword and
plunged swiftly into the forest.

Far and fast he ran, from glade to glade, breaking through the bushes,
springing over the brambles, light as a young deer, peering this way
and that, straining his ears for a sound, and catching only the cry of
the wood-pigeons. Still on he went, with the constant thought of the
weeping woman behind and of the captured man in front. It was not until
he was footsore and out of breath that he stopped with his hand to his
side, and considered that his own business had still to be done, and
that it was time once more that he should seek the road to Guildford.

Meantime Aylward had found his own rough means of consoling the woman
in the road, who stood sobbing with her face against the side of
Pommers’ saddle.

“Nay, weep not, my pretty one,” said he. “It brings the tears to my own
eyes to see them stream from thine.”

“Alas! good archer, he was the best of fathers, so gentle and so kind!
Had you but known him, you must have loved him.”

“Tut, tut! he will suffer no scathe. Squire Nigel will bring him back
to you anon.”

“No, no, I shall never see him more. Hold me, archer, or I fall!”

Aylward pressed his ready arm round the supple waist. The fainting
woman leaned with her hand upon his shoulder. Her pale face looked past
him, and it was some new light in her eyes, a flash of expectancy, of
triumph, of wicked joy, which gave him sudden warning of his danger.

He shook her off and sprang to one side, but only just in time to avoid
a crashing blow from a great club in the hands of a man even taller and
stronger than himself. He had one quick vision of great white teeth
clenched in grim ferocity, a wild flying beard and blazing wild-beast
eyes. The next instant he had closed, ducking his head beneath another
swing of that murderous cudgel.

With his arms round the robber’s burly body and his face buried in his
bushy beard, Aylward gasped and strained and heaved. Back and forward
in the dusty road the two men stamped and staggered, a grim
wrestling-match, with life for the prize. Twice the great strength of
the outlaw had Aylward nearly down, and twice with his greater youth
and skill the archer restored his grip and his balance. Then at last
his turn came. He slipped his leg behind the other’s knee, and, giving
a mighty wrench, tore him across it. With a hoarse shout the outlaw
toppled backward and had hardly reached the ground before Aylward had
his knee upon his chest and his short sword deep in his beard and
pointed to his throat.

“By these ten finger-bones!” he gasped, “one more struggle and it is
your last!”

The man lay still enough, for he was half-stunned by the crashing fall.
Aylward looked round him, but the woman had disappeared. At the first
blow struck she had vanished into the forest. He began to have fears
for his master, thinking that he perhaps had been lured into some
deathtrap; but his forebodings were soon at rest, for Nigel himself
came hastening down the road, which he had struck some distance from
the spot where he left it.

“By Saint Paul!” he cried, “who is this man on whom you are perched,
and where is the lady who has honored us so far as to crave our help?
Alas, that I have been unable to find her father!”

“As well for you, fair sir,” said Aylward, “for I am of opinion that
her father was the Devil. This woman is, as I believe, the wife of the
‘Wild Man of Puttenham,’ and this is the ‘Wild Man’ himself who set
upon me and tried to brain me with his club.”

The outlaw, who had opened his eyes, looked with a scowl from his
captor to the new-comer. “You are in luck, archer,” said he, “for I
have come to grips with many a man, but I cannot call to mind any who
have had the better of me.”

“You have indeed the grip of a bear,” said Aylward; “but it was a
coward deed that your wife should hold me while you dashed out my
brains with a stick. It is also a most villainous thing to lay a snare
for wayfarers by asking for their pity and assistance, so that it was
our own soft hearts which brought us into such danger. The next who
hath real need of our help may suffer for your sins.”

“When the hand of the whole world is against you,” said the outlaw in a
surly voice, “you must fight as best you can.”

“You well deserve to be hanged, if only because you have brought this
woman, who is fair and gentle-spoken, to such a life,” said Nigel. “Let
us tie him by the wrist to my stirrup leather, Aylward, and we will
lead him into Guildford.”

The archer drew a spare bowstring from his case and had bound the
prisoner as directed, when Nigel gave a sudden start and cry of alarm.

“Holy Mary!” he cried. “Where is the saddle-bag?”

It had been cut away by a sharp knife. Only the two ends of strap
remained. Aylward and Nigel stared at each other in blank dismay. Then
the young Squire shook his clenched hands and pulled at his yellow
curls in his despair.

“The Lady Ermyntrude’s bracelet! My grandfather’s cup!” he cried. “I
would have died ere I lost them! What can I say to her? I dare not
return until I have found them. Oh, Aylward, Aylward! how came you to
let them be taken?”

The honest archer had pushed back his steel cap and was scratching his
tangled head. “Nay, I know nothing of it. You never said that there was
aught of price in the bag, else had I kept a better eye upon it.
Certes! it was not this fellow who took it, since I have never had my
hands from him. It can only be the woman who fled with it while we
fought.”

Nigel stamped about the road in his perplexity. “I would follow her to
the world’s end if I knew where I could find her, but to search these
woods for her is to look for a mouse in a wheat-field. Good Saint
George, thou who didst overcome the Dragon, I pray you by that most
honorable and knightly achievement that you will be with me now! And
you also, great Saint Julian, patron of all wayfarers in distress! Two
candles shall burn before your shrine at Godalming, if you will but
bring me back my saddle-bag. What would I not give to have it back?”

“Will you give me my life?” asked the outlaw. “Promise that I go free,
and you shall have it back, if it be indeed true that my wife has taken
it.”

“Nay, I cannot do that,” said Nigel. “My honor would surely be
concerned, since my loss is a private one; but it would be to the
public scathe that you should go free. By Saint Paul! it would be an
ungentle deed if in order to save my own I let you loose upon the gear
of a hundred others.”

“I will not ask you to let me loose,” said the “Wild Man.” “If you will
promise that my life be spared I will restore your bag.”

“I cannot give such a promise, for it will lie with the Sheriff and
reeves of Guildford.”

“Shall I have your word in my favor?”

“That I could promise you, if you will give back the bag, though I know
not how far my word may avail. But your words are vain, for you cannot
think that we will be so fond as to let you go in the hope that you
return?”

“I would not ask it,” said the “Wild Man,” “for I can get your bag and
yet never stir from the spot where I stand. Have I your promise upon
your honor and all that you hold dear that you will ask for grace?”

“You have.”

“And that my wife shall be unharmed?”

“I promise it.”

The outlaw laid back his head and uttered a long shrill cry like the
howl of a wolf. There was a silent pause, and then, clear and shrill,
there rose the same cry no great distance away in the forest. Again the
“Wild Man” called, and again his mate replied. A third time he
summoned, as the deer bells to the doe in the greenwood. Then with a
rustle of brushwood and snapping of twigs the woman was before them
once more, tall, pale, graceful, wonderful. She glanced neither at
Aylward nor Nigel, but ran to the side of her husband.

“Dear and sweet lord,” she cried, “I trust they have done you no hurt.
I waited by the old ash, and my heart sank when you came not.”

“I have been taken at last, wife.”

“Oh, cursed, cursed day! Let him go, kind, gentle sirs; do not take him
from me!”

“They will speak for me at Guildford,” said the “Wild Man.” “They have
sworn it. But hand them first the bag that you have taken.”

She drew it out from under her loose cloak. “Here it is, gentle sir.
Indeed it went to my heart to take it, for you had mercy upon me in my
trouble. But now I am, as you see, in real and very sore distress. Will
you not have mercy now? Take ruth on us, fair sir! On my knees I beg it
of you, most gentle and kindly Squire!”

Nigel had clutched his bag, and right glad he was to feel that the
treasures were all safe within it. “My proffer is given,” said he. “I
will say what I can; but the issue rests with others. I pray you to
stand up, for indeed I cannot promise more.”

“Then I must be content,” said she, rising, with a composed face. “I
have prayed you to take ruth, and indeed I can do no more; but ere I go
back to the forest I would rede you to be on your guard lest you lose
your bag once more. Wot you how I took it, archer? Nay, it was simple
enough, and may happen again, so I make it clear to you. I had this
knife in my sleeve, and though it is small it is very sharp. I slipped
it down like this. Then when I seemed to weep with my face against the
saddle, I cut down like this—”

In an instant she had shorn through the stirrup leather which bound her
man, and he, diving under the belly of the horse, had slipped like a
snake into the brushwood. In passing he had struck Pommers from
beneath, and the great horse, enraged and insulted, was rearing high,
with two men hanging to his bridle. When at last he had calmed there
was no sign left of the “Wild Man” or of his wife. In vain did Aylward,
an arrow on his string, run here and there among the great trees and
peer down the shadowy glades. When he returned he and his master cast a
shamefaced glance at each other.

“I trust that we are better soldiers than jailers,” said Aylward, as he
climbed on his pony.

But Nigel’s frown relaxed into a smile. “At least we have gained back
what we lost,” said he. “Here I place it on the pommel of my saddle,
and I shall not take my eyes from it until we are safe in Guildford
town.”

So they jogged on together until passing Saint Catherine’s shrine they
crossed the winding Wey once more, and so found themselves in the steep
high street with its heavy-caved gabled houses, its monkish hospitium
upon the left, where good ale may still be quaffed, and its great
square-keeped castle upon the right, no gray and grim skeleton of ruin,
but very quick and alert, with blazoned banner flying free, and steel
caps twinkling from the battlement. A row of booths extended from the
castle gate to the high street, and two doors from the Church of the
Trinity was that of Thorold the goldsmith, a rich burgess and Mayor of
the town.

He looked long and lovingly at the rich rubies and at the fine work
upon the goblet. Then he stroked his flowing gray beard as he pondered
whether he should offer fifty nobles or sixty, for he knew well that he
could sell them again for two hundred. If he offered too much his
profit would be reduced. If he offered too little the youth might go as
far as London with them, for they were rare and of great worth. The
young man was ill-clad, and his eyes were anxious. Perchance he was
hard pressed and was ignorant of the value of what he bore. He would
sound him.

“These things are old and out of fashion, fair sir,” said he. “Of the
stones I can scarce say if they are of good quality or not, but they
are dull and rough. Yet, if your price be low I may add them to my
stock, though indeed this booth was made to sell and not to buy. What
do you ask?”

Nigel bent his brows in perplexity. Here was a game in which neither
his bold heart nor his active limbs could help him. It was the new
force mastering the old: the man of commerce conquering the man of
war—wearing him down and weakening him through the centuries until he
had him as his bond-servant and his thrall.

“I know not what to ask, good sir,” said Nigel. “It is not for me, nor
for any man who bears my name, to chaffer and to haggle. You know the
worth of these things, for it is your trade to do so. The Lady
Ermyntrude lacks money, and we must have it against the King’s coming,
so give me that which is right and just, and we will say no more.”

The goldsmith smiled. The business was growing more simple and more
profitable. He had intended to offer fifty, but surely it would be
sinful waste to give more than twenty-five.

“I shall scarce know what to do with them when I have them,” said he.
“Yet I should not grudge twenty nobles if it is a matter in which the
King is concerned.”

Nigel’s heart turned to lead. This sum would not buy one-half what was
needful. It was clear that the Lady Ermyntrude had overvalued her
treasures. Yet he could not return empty-handed, so if twenty nobles
was the real worth, as this good old man assured him, then he must be
thankful and take it.

“I am concerned by what you say,” said he. “You know more of these
things than I can do. However, I will take—”

“A hundred and fifty,” whispered Aylward’s voice in his ear.

“A hundred and fifty,” said Nigel, only too relieved to have found the
humblest guide upon these unwonted paths.

The goldsmith started. This youth was not the simple soldier that he
had seemed. That frank face, those blue eyes, were traps for the
unwary. Never had he been more taken aback in a bargain.

“This is fond talk and can lead to nothing, fair sir,” said he, turning
away and fiddling with the keys of his strong boxes. “Yet I have no
wish to be hard on you. Take my outside price, which is fifty nobles.”

“And a hundred,” whispered Aylward.

“And a hundred,” said Nigel, blushing at his own greed.

“Well, well, take a hundred!” cried the merchant. “Fleece me, skin me,
leave me a loser, and take for your wares the full hundred!”

“I should be shamed forever if I were to treat you so badly,” said
Nigel. “You have spoken me fair, and I would not grind you down.
Therefore, I will gladly take one hundred—”

“And fifty,” whispered Aylward.

“And fifty,” said Nigel.

“By Saint John of Beverley!” cried the merchant. “I came hither from
the North Country, and they are said to be shrewd at a deal in those
parts; but I had rather bargain with a synagogue full of Jews than with
you, for all your gentle ways. Will you indeed take no less than a
hundred and fifty? Alas! you pluck from me my profits of a month. It is
a fell morning’s work for me. I would I had never seen you!” With
groans and lamentations he paid the gold pieces across the counter, and
Nigel, hardly able to credit his own good fortune, gathered them into
the leather saddle-bag.

A moment later with flushed face he was in the street and pouring out
his thanks to Aylward.

“Alas, my fair lord! the man has robbed us now,” said the archer. “We
could have had another twenty had we stood fast.”

“How know you that, good Aylward?”

“By his eyes, Squire Loring. I wot I have little store of reading where
the parchment of a book or the pinching of a blazon is concerned, but I
can read men’s eyes, and I never doubted that he would give what he has
given.”

The two travelers had dinner at the monk’s hospitium, Nigel at the high
table and Aylward among the commonalty. Then again they roamed the high
street on business intent. Nigel bought taffeta for hangings, wine,
preserves, fruit, damask table linen and many other articles of need.
At last he halted before the armorer’s shop at the castle-yard, staring
at the fine suits of plate, the engraved pectorals, the plumed helmets,
the cunningly jointed gorgets, as a child at a sweet-shop.

“Well, Squire Loring,” said Wat the armorer, looking sidewise from the
furnace where he was tempering a sword blade, “what can I sell you this
morning? I swear to you by Tubal Cain, the father of all workers in
metal, that you might go from end to end of Cheapside and never see a
better suit than that which hangs from yonder hook!”

“And the price, armorer?”

“To anyone else, two hundred and fifty rose nobles. To you two
hundred.”

“And why cheaper to me, good fellow?”

“Because I fitted your father also for the wars, and a finer suit never
went out of my shop. I warrant that it turned many an edge before he
laid it aside. We worked in mail in those days, and I had as soon have
a well-made thick-meshed mail as any plates; but a young knight will be
in the fashion like any dame of the court, and so it must be plate now,
even though the price be trebled.”

“Your rede is that the mail is as good?”

“I am well sure of it.”

“Hearken then, armorer! I cannot at this moment buy a suit of plate,
and yet I sorely need steel harness on account of a small deed which it
is in my mind to do. Now I have at my home at Tilford that very suit of
mail of which you speak, with which my father first rode to the wars.
Could you not so alter it that it should guard my limbs also?”

The armorer looked at Nigel’s small upright figure and burst out
laughing. “You jest, Squire Loring! The suit was made for one who was
far above the common stature of man.”

“Nay, I jest not. If it will but carry me through one spear-running it
will have served its purpose.”

The armorer leaned back on his anvil and pondered while Nigel stared
anxiously at his sooty face.

“Right gladly would I lend you a suit of plate for this one venture,
Squire Loring, but I know well that if you should be overthrown your
harness becomes prize to the victor. I am a poor man with many
children, and I dare not risk the loss of it. But as to what you say of
the old suit of mail, is it indeed in good condition?”

“Most excellent, save only at the neck, which is much frayed.”

“To shorten the limbs is easy. It is but to cut out a length of the
mail and then loop up the links. But to shorten the body—nay, that is
beyond the armorer’s art.”

“It was my last hope. Nay, good armorer, if you have indeed served and
loved my gallant father, then I beg you by his memory that you will
help me now.”

The armorer threw down his heavy hammer with a crash upon the floor.
“It is not only that I loved your father, Squire Loring, but it is that
I have seen you, half armed as you were, ride against the best of them
at the Castle tiltyard. Last Martinmas my heart bled for you when I saw
how sorry was your harness, and yet you held your own against the stout
Sir Oliver with his Milan suit: When go you to Tilford?”

“Even now.”

“Heh, Jenkin, fetch out the cob!” cried the worthy Wat. “May my right
hand lose its cunning if I do not send you into battle in your father’s
suit! To-morrow I must be back in my booth, but to-day I give to you
without fee and for the sake of the good-will which I bear to your
house. I will ride with you to Tilford, and before night you shall see
what Wat can do.”

So it came about that there was a busy evening at the old Tilford
Manor-house, where the Lady Ermyntrude planned and cut and hung the
curtains for the hall, and stocked her cupboards with the good things
which Nigel had brought from Guildford.

Meanwhile the Squire and the armorer sat with their heads touching and
the old suit of mail with its gorget of overlapping plates laid out
across their knees. Again and again old Wat shrugged his shoulders, as
one who has been asked to do more than can be demanded from mortal man.
At last, at a suggestion from the Squire, he leaned back in his chair
and laughed long and loudly in his bushy beard, while the Lady
Ermyntrude glared her black displeasure at such plebeian merriment.
Then taking his fine chisel and his hammer from his pouch of tools, the
armorer, still chuckling at his own thoughts, began to drive a hole
through the center of the steel tunic.




VIII.
HOW THE KING HAWKED ON CROOKSBURY HEATH


The King and his attendants had shaken off the crowd who had followed
them from Guildford along the Pilgrims’ Way and now, the mounted
archers having beaten off the more persistent of the spectators, they
rode at their ease in a long, straggling, glittering train over the
dark undulating plain of heather.

In the van was the King himself, for his hawks were with him and he had
some hope of sport. Edward at that time was a well-grown, vigorous man
in the very prime of his years, a keen sportsman, an ardent gallant and
a chivalrous soldier. He was a scholar too, speaking Latin, French,
German, Spanish, and even a little English.

So much had long been patent to the world, but only of recent years had
he shown other and more formidable characteristics: a restless ambition
which coveted his neighbor’s throne, and a wise foresight in matters of
commerce, which engaged him now in transplanting Flemish weavers and
sowing the seeds of what for many years was the staple trade of
England. Each of these varied qualities might have been read upon his
face. The brow, shaded by a crimson cap of maintenance, was broad and
lofty. The large brown eyes were ardent and bold. His chin was
clean-shaven, and the close-cropped dark mustache did not conceal the
strong mouth, firm, proud and kindly, but capable of setting tight in
merciless ferocity. His complexion was tanned to copper by a life spent
in field sports or in war, and he rode his magnificent black horse
carelessly and easily, as one who has grown up in the saddle. His own
color was black also, for his active; sinewy figure was set off by
close-fitting velvet of that hue, broken only by a belt of gold, and by
a golden border of open pods of the broom-plant.

With his high and noble bearing, his simple yet rich attire and his
splendid mount, he looked every inch a King.

The picture of gallant man on gallant horse was completed by the noble
Falcon of the Isles which fluttered along some twelve feet above his
head, “waiting on,” as it was termed, for any quarry which might arise.
The second bird of the cast was borne upon the gauntleted wrist of
Raoul the chief falconer in the rear.

At the right side of the monarch and a little behind him rode a youth
some twenty years of age, tall, slim and dark, with noble aquiline
features and keen penetrating eyes which sparkled with vivacity and
affection as he answered the remarks of the King. He was clad in deep
crimson diapered with gold, and the trappings of his white palfrey were
of a magnificence which proclaimed the rank of its rider. On his face,
still free from mustache or beard, there sat a certain gravity and
majesty of expression which showed that young as he was great affairs
had been in his keeping and that his thoughts and interests were those
of the statesman and the warrior. That great day when, little more than
a school-boy, he had led the van of the victorious army which had
crushed the power of France and Crécy, had left this stamp upon his
features; but stern as they were they had not assumed that tinge of
fierceness which in after years was to make “The Black Prince” a name
of terror on the marches of France. Not yet had the first shadow of
fell disease come to poison his nature ere it struck at his life, as he
rode that spring day, light and debonair, upon the heath of Crooksbury.

On the left of the King, and so near to him that great intimacy was
implied, rode a man about his own age, with the broad face, the
projecting jaw and the flattish nose which are often the outward
indications of a pugnacious nature.

His complexion was crimson, his large blue eyes somewhat prominent, and
his whole appearance full-blooded and choleric. He was short, but
massively built, and evidently possessed of immense strength. His
voice, however, when he spoke was gentle and lisping, while his manner
was quiet and courteous. Unlike the King or the Prince, he was clad in
light armor and carried a sword by his side and a mace at his
saddle-bow, for he was acting as Captain of the King’s Guard, and a
dozen other knights in steel followed in the escort. No hardier soldier
could Edward have at his side, if, as was always possible in those
lawless times, sudden danger was to threaten, for this was the famous
knight of Hainault, now naturalized as an Englishman, Sir Walter Manny,
who bore as high a reputation for chivalrous valor and for gallant
temerity as Chandos himself.

Behind the knights, who were forbidden to scatter and must always
follow the King’s person, there was a body of twenty or thirty hobblers
or mounted bowmen, together with several squires, unarmed themselves
but leading spare horses upon which the heavier part of their knights’
equipment was carried. A straggling tail of falconers, harbingers,
varlets, body-servants and huntsmen holding hounds in leash completed
the long and many-colored train which rose and dipped on the low
undulations of the moor.

Many weighty things were on the mind of Edward the King. There was
truce for the moment with France, but it was a truce broken by many
small deeds of arms, raids, surprises and ambushes upon either side,
and it was certain that it would soon dissolve again into open war.
Money must be raised, and it was no light matter to raise it, now that
the Commons had once already voted the tenth lamb and the tenth sheaf.
Besides, the Black Death had ruined the country, the arable land was
all turned to pasture, the laborer, laughing at statutes, would not
work under fourpence a day, and all society was chaos. In addition, the
Scotch were growling over the border, there was the perennial trouble
in half-conquered Ireland, and his allies abroad in Flanders and in
Brabant were clamoring for the arrears of their subsidies.

All this was enough to make even a victorious monarch full of care; but
now Edward had thrown it all to the winds and was as light-hearted as a
boy upon a holiday. No thought had he for the dunning of Florentine
bankers or the vexatious conditions of those busybodies at Westminster.
He was out with his hawks, and his thoughts and his talk should be of
nothing else. The varlets beat the heather and bushes as they passed,
and whooped loudly as the birds flew out.

“A magpie! A magpie!” cried the falconer.

“Nay, nay, it is not worthy of your talons, my brown-eyed queen,” said
the King, looking up at the great bird which flapped from side to side
above his head, waiting for the whistle which should give her the
signal. “The tercels, falconer—a cast of tercels! Quick, man, quick!
Ha! the rascal makes for wood! He puts in! Well flown, brave peregrine!
He makes his point. Drive him out to thy comrade. Serve him, varlets!
Beat the bushes! He breaks! He breaks! Nay, come away then! You will
see Master Magpie no more.”

The bird had indeed, with the cunning of its race, flapped its way
through brushwood and bushes to the thicker woods beyond, so that
neither the hawk amid the cover nor its partner above nor the clamorous
beaters could harm it. The King laughed at the mischance and rode on.
Continually birds of various sorts were flushed, and each was pursued
by the appropriate hawk, the snipe by the tercel, the partridge by the
goshawk, even the lark by the little merlin. But the King soon tired of
this petty sport and went slowly on his way, still with the magnificent
silent attendant flapping above his head.

“Is she not a noble bird, fair son?” he asked, glancing up as her
shadow fell upon him.

“She is indeed, sire. Surely no finer ever came from the isles of the
north.”

“Perhaps not, and yet I have had a hawk from Barbary as good a footer
and a swifter flyer. An Eastern bird in yarak has no peer.”

“I had one once from the Holy Land,” said de Manny. “It was fierce and
keen and swift as the Saracens themselves. They say of old Saladin that
in his day his breed of birds, of hounds and of horses had no equal on
earth.”

“I trust, dear father, that the day may come when we shall lay our
hands on all three,” said the Prince, looking with shining eyes upon
the King. “Is the Holy Land to lie forever in the grasp of these
unbelieving savages, or the Holy Temple to be defiled by their foul
presence? Ah! my dear and most sweet lord, give to me a thousand lances
with ten thousand bowmen like those I led at Crécy, and I swear to you
by God’s soul that within a year I will have done homage to you for the
Kingdom of Jerusalem!”

The King laughed as he turned to Walter Manny. “Boys will still be
boys,” said he.

“The French do not count me such!” cried the young Prince, flushing
with anger.

“Nay, fair son, there is no one sets you at a higher rate than your
father. But you have the nimble mind and quick fancy of youth, turning
over from the thing that is half done to a further task beyond. How
would we fare in Brittany and Normandy while my young paladin with his
lances and his bowmen was besieging Ascalon or battering at Jerusalem?”

“Heaven would help in Heaven’s work.”

“From what I have heard of the past,” said the King dryly, “I cannot
see that Heaven has counted for much as an ally in these wars of the
East. I speak with reverence, and yet it is but sooth to say that
Richard of the Lion Heart or Louis of France might have found the
smallest earthly principality of greater service to him than all the
celestial hosts. How say you to that, my Lord Bishop?”

A stout churchman who had ridden behind the King on a solid bay cob,
well-suited to his weight and dignity, jogged up to the monarch’s
elbow. “How say you, sire? I was watching the goshawk on the partridge
and heard you not.”

“Had I said that I would add two manors to the See of Chichester, I
warrant that you would have heard me, my Lord Bishop.”

“Nay, fair lord, test the matter by saying so,” cried the jovial
Bishop.

The King laughed aloud. “A fair counter, your reverence. By the rood!
you broke your lance that passage. But the question I debated was this:
How is it that since the Crusades have manifestly been fought in God’s
quarrel, we Christians have had so little comfort or support in
fighting them. After all our efforts and the loss of more men than
could be counted, we are at last driven from the country, and even the
military orders which were formed only for that one purpose can scarce
hold a footing in the islands of the Greek sea. There is not one
seaport nor one fortress in Palestine over which the flag of the Cross
still waves. Where then was our ally?”

“Nay, sire, you open a great debate which extends far beyond this
question of the Holy Land, though that may indeed be chosen as a fair
example. It is the question of all sin, of all suffering, of all
injustice—why it should pass without the rain of fire and the
lightnings of Sinai. The wisdom of God is beyond our understanding.”

The King shrugged his shoulders. “This is an easy answer, my Lord
Bishop. You are a prince of the Church. It would fare ill with an
earthly prince who could give no better answer to the affairs which
concerned his realm.”

“There are other considerations which might be urged, most gracious
sire. It is true that the Crusades were a holy enterprise which might
well expect the immediate blessing of God; but the Crusaders—is it
certain that they deserved such a blessing? Have I not heard that their
camp was the most dissolute ever seen?”

“Camps are camps all the world over, and you cannot in a moment change
a bowman into a saint. But the holy Louis was a crusader after your own
heart. Yet his men perished at Mansurah and he himself at Tunis.”

“Bethink you also that this world is but the antechamber of the next,”
said the prelate. “By suffering and tribulation the soul is cleansed,
and the true victor may be he who by the patient endurance of
misfortune merits the happiness to come.”

“If that be the true meaning of the Church’s blessing, then I hope that
it will be long before it rests upon our banners in France,” said the
King. “But methinks that when one is out with a brave horse and a good
hawk one might find some other subject than theology. Back to the
birds, Bishop, or Raoul the falconer will come to interrupt thee in thy
cathedral.”

Straightway the conversation came back to the mystery of the woods and
the mystery of the rivers, to the dark-eyed hawks and the yellow-eyed,
to hawks of the lure and hawks of the fist. The Bishop was as steeped
in the lore of falconry as the King, and the others smiled as the two
wrangled hard over disputed and technical questions: if an eyas trained
in the mews can ever emulate the passage hawk taken wild, or how long
the young hawks should be placed at hack, and how long weathered before
they are fully reclaimed.

Monarch and prelate were still deep in this learned discussion, the
Bishop speaking with a freedom and assurance which he would never have
dared to use in affairs of Church and State, for in all ages there is
no such leveler as sport. Suddenly, however, the Prince, whose keen
eyes had swept from time to time over the great blue heaven, uttered a
peculiar call and reined up his palfrey, pointing at the same time into
the air.

“A heron!” he cried. “A heron on passage!”

To gain the full sport of hawking a heron must not be put up from its
feeding-ground, where it is heavy with its meal, and has no time to get
its pace on before it is pounced upon by the more active hawk, but it
must be aloft, traveling from point to point, probably from the
fish-stream to the heronry. Thus to catch the bird on passage was the
prelude of all good sport. The object to which the Prince had pointed
was but a black dot in the southern sky, but his strained eyes had not
deceived him, and both Bishop and King agreed that it was indeed a
heron, which grew larger every instant as it flew in their direction.

“Whistle him off, sire! Whistle off the gerfalcon!” cried the Bishop.

“Nay, nay, he is overfar. She would fly at check.”

“Now, sire, now!” cried the Prince, as the great bird with the breeze
behind him came sweeping down the sky.

The King gave the shrill whistle, and the well-trained hawk raked out
to the right and to the left to make sure which quarry she was to
follow. Then, spying the heron, she shot up in a swift ascending curve
to meet him.

“Well flown, Margot! Good bird!” cried the King, clapping his hands to
encourage the hawk, while the falconers broke into the shrill whoop
peculiar to the sport.

Going on her curve, the hawk would soon have crossed the path of the
heron; but the latter, seeing the danger in his front and confident in
his own great strength of wing and lightness of body, proceeded to
mount higher in the air, flying in such small rings that to the
spectators it almost seemed as if the bird was going perpendicularly
upward.

“He takes the air!” cried the King. “But strong as he flies, he cannot
out fly Margot. Bishop, I lay you ten gold pieces to one that the heron
is mine.”

“I cover your wager, sire,” said the Bishop. “I may not take gold so
won, and yet I warrant that there is an altar-cloth somewhere in need
of repairs.”

“You have good store of altar-cloths, Bishop, if all the gold I have
seen you win at tables goes to the mending of them,” said the King.
“Ah! by the rood, rascal, rascal! See how she flies at check!”

The quick eyes of the Bishop had perceived a drift of rooks when on
their evening flight to the rookery were passing along the very line
which divided the hawk from the heron. A rook is a hard temptation for
a hawk to resist. In an instant the inconstant bird had forgotten all
about the great heron above her and was circling over the rooks, flying
westward with them as she singled out the plumpest for her stoop.

“There is yet time, sire! Shall I cast off her mate?” cried the
falconer.

“Or shall I show you, sire, how a peregrine may win where a gerfalcon
fails?” said the Bishop. “Ten golden pieces to one upon my bird.”

“Done with you, Bishop!” cried the King, his brow dark with vexation.
“By the rood! if you were as learned in the fathers as you are in hawks
you would win to the throne of Saint Peter! Cast off your peregrine and
make your boasting good.”

Smaller than the royal gerfalcon, the Bishop’s bird was none the less a
swift and beautiful creature. From her perch upon his wrist she had
watched with fierce, keen eyes the birds in the heaven, mantling
herself from time to time in her eagerness. Now when the button was
undone and the leash uncast the peregrine dashed off with a whir of her
sharp-pointed wings, whizzing round in a great ascending circle which
mounted swiftly upward, growing ever smaller as she approached that
lofty point where, a mere speck in the sky, the heron sought escape
from its enemies. Still higher and higher the two birds mounted, while
the horsemen, their faces upturned, strained their eyes in their
efforts to follow them.

“She rings! She still rings!” cried the Bishop. “She is above him! She
has gained her pitch.”

“Nay, nay, she is far below,” said the King.

“By my soul, my Lord Bishop is right!” cried the Prince. “I believe she
is above. See! See! She swoops!”

“She binds! She binds!” cried a dozen voices as the two dots blended
suddenly into one.

There could be no doubt that they were falling rapidly. Already they
grew larger to the eye. Presently the heron disengaged himself and
flapped heavily away, the worse for that deadly embrace, while the
peregrine, shaking her plumage, ringed once more so as to get high
above the quarry and deal it a second and more fatal blow. The Bishop
smiled, for nothing, as it seemed, could hinder his victory.

“Thy gold pieces shall be well spent, sire,” said he. “What is lost to
the Church is gained by the loser.”

But a most unlooked-for chance deprived the Bishop’s altar cloth of its
costly mending. The King’s gerfalcon having struck down a rook, and
finding the sport but tame, bethought herself suddenly of that noble
heron, which she still perceived fluttering over Crooksbury Heath. How
could she have been so weak as to allow these silly, chattering rooks
to entice her away from that lordly bird? Even now it was not too late
to atone for her mistake. In a great spiral she shot upward until she
was over the heron. But what was this? Every fiber of her, from her
crest to her deck feathers, quivered with jealousy and rage at the
sight of this creature, a mere peregrine, who had dared to come between
a royal gerfalcon and her quarry. With one sweep of her great wings she
shot up until she was above her rival. The next instant—

“They crab! They crab!” cried the King, with a roar of laughter,
following them with his eyes as they bustled down through the air.
“Mend thy own altar-cloths, Bishop. Not a groat shall you have from me
this journey. Pull them apart, falconer, lest they do each other an
injury. And now, masters, let us on, for the sun sinks toward the
west.”

The two hawks, which had come to the ground interlocked with clutching
talons and ruffled plumes, were torn apart and brought back bleeding
and panting to their perches, while the heron after its perilous
adventure flapped its way heavily onward to settle safely in the
heronry of Waverley. The cortege, who had scattered in the excitement
of the chase, came together again, and the journey was once more
resumed.

A horseman who had been riding toward them across the moor now
quickened his pace and closed swiftly upon them. As he came nearer, the
King and the Prince cried out joyously and waved their hands in
greeting.

“It is good John Chandos!!” cried the King. “By the rood, John, I have
missed your merry songs this week or more! Glad I am to see that you
have your citole slung to your back. Whence come you then?”

“I come from Tilford, sire, in the hope that I should meet your
majesty.”

“It was well thought of. Come, ride here between the Prince and me, and
we will believe that we are back in France with our war harness on our
backs once more. What is your news, Master John?”

Chandos’ quaint face quivered with suppressed amusement and his one eye
twinkled like a star. “Have you had sport, my liege?”

“Poor sport, John. We flew two hawks on the same heron. They crabbed,
and the bird got free. But why do you smile so?”

“Because I hope to show you better sport ere you come to Tilford.”

“For the hawk? For the hound?”

“A nobler sport than either.”

“Is this a riddle, John? What mean you?”

“Nay, to tell all would be to spoil all. I say again that there is rare
sport betwixt here and Tilford, and I beg you, dear lord, to mend your
pace that we make the most of the daylight.”

Thus adjured, the King set spurs to his horse, and the whole cavalcade
cantered over the heath in the direction which Chandos showed.
Presently as they came over a slope they saw beneath them a winding
river with an old high-backed bridge across it. On the farther side was
a village green with a fringe of cottages and one dark manor house upon
the side of the hill.

“This is Tilford,” said Chandos. “Yonder is the house of the Lorings.”

The King’s expectations had been aroused and his face showed his
disappointment.

“Is this the sport that you have promised us, Sir John? How can you
make good your words?”

“I will make them good, my liege.”

“Where then is the sport?”

On the high crown of the bridge a rider in armor was seated, lance in
hand, upon a great yellow steed. Chandos touched the King’s arm and
pointed. “That is the sport,” said he.




IX.
HOW NIGEL HELD THE BRIDGE AT TILFORD


The King looked at the motionless figure, at the little crowd of hushed
expectant rustics beyond the bridge, and finally at the face of
Chandos, which shone with amusement.

“What is this, John?” he asked.

“You remember Sir Eustace Loring, sire?”

“Indeed I could never forget him nor the manner of his death.”

“He was a knight errant in his day.”

“That indeed he was—none better have I known.”

“So is his son Nigel, as fierce a young war-hawk as ever yearned to use
beak and claws; but held fast in the mews up to now. This is his trial
fight. There he stands at the bridge-head, as was the wont in our
fathers’ time, ready to measure himself against all comers.”

Of all Englishmen there was no greater knight errant than the King
himself, and none so steeped in every quaint usage of chivalry; so that
the situation was after his own heart.

“He is not yet a knight?”

“No, sire, only a Squire.”

“Then he must bear himself bravely this day if he is to make good what
he has done. Is it fitting that a young untried Squire should venture
to couch his lance against the best in England?”

“He hath given me his cartel and challenge,” said Chandos, drawing a
paper from his tunic. “Have I your permission, sire, to issue it?”

“Surely, John, we have no cavalier more versed in the laws of chivalry
than yourself. You know this young man, and you are aware how far he is
worthy of the high honor which he asks. Let us hear his defiance.”

The knights and squires of the escort, most of whom were veterans of
the French war, had been gazing with interest and some surprise at the
steel-clad figure in front of them. Now at a call from Sir Walter Manny
they assembled round the spot where the King and Chandos had halted.
Chandos cleared his throat and read from his paper—

“‘_A tous seigneurs, chevaliers et escuyers_,’ so it is headed,
gentlemen. It is a message from the good Squire Nigel Loring of
Tilford, son of Sir Eustace Loring, of honorable memory. Squire Loring
awaits you in arms, gentlemen, yonder upon the crown of the old bridge.
Thus says he: ‘For the great desire that I, a most humble and unworthy
Squire, entertain, that I may come to the knowledge of the noble
gentlemen who ride with my royal master, I now wait on the Bridge of
the Way in the hope that some of them may condescend to do some small
deed of arms upon me, or that I may deliver them from any vow which
they may have taken. This I say out of no esteem for myself, but solely
that I may witness the noble bearing of these famous cavaliers and
admire their skill in the handling of arms. Therefore, with the help of
Saint George, I will hold the bridge with sharpened lances against any
or all who may deign to present themselves while daylight lasts.”

“What say you to this, gentlemen?” asked the King, looking round with
laughing eyes.

“Truly it is issued in very good form,” said the Prince. “Neither
Claricieux nor Red Dragon nor any herald that ever wore tabard could
better it. Did he draw it of his own hand?”

“He hath a grim old grandmother who is one of the ancient breed,” said
Chandos. “I doubt not that the Dame Ermyntrude hath drawn a challenge
or two before now. But hark ye, sire, I would have a word in your
ear—and yours too, most noble Prince.”

Leading them aside, Chandos whispered some explanations, which ended by
them all three bursting into a shout of laughter.

“By the rood! no honorable gentleman should be reduced to such
straits,” said the King. “It behooves me to look to it. But how now,
gentlemen? This worthy cavalier still waits his answer.”

The soldiers had all been buzzing together; but now Walter Manny turned
to the King with the result of their counsel.

“If it please your majesty,” said he, “we are of opinion that this
Squire hath exceeded all bounds in desiring to break a spear with a
belted knight ere he has given his proofs. We do him sufficient honor
if a Squire ride against him, and with your consent I have chosen my
own body-squire, John Widdicombe, to clear the path for us across the
bridge.”

“What you say, Walter, is right and fair,” said the King. “Master
Chandos, you will tell our champion yonder what hath been arranged. You
will advise him also that it is our royal will that this contest be not
fought upon the bridge, since it is very clear that it must end in one
or both going over into the river, but that he advance to the end of
the bridge and fight upon the plain. You will tell him also that a
blunted lance is sufficient for such an encounter, but that a
hand-stroke or two with sword or mace may well be exchanged, if both
riders should keep their saddles. A blast upon Raoul’s horn shall be
the signal to close.”

Such ventures as these where an aspirant for fame would wait for days
at a cross-road, a ford, or a bridge, until some worthy antagonist
should ride that way, were very common in the old days of adventurous
knight erranty, and were still familiar to the minds of all men because
the stories of the romancers and the songs of the trouveres were full
of such incidents. Their actual occurrence however had become rare.
There was the more curiosity, not unmixed with amusement, in the
thoughts of the courtiers as they watched Chandos ride down to the
bridge and commented upon the somewhat singular figure of the
challenger. His build was strange, and so also was his figure, for the
limbs were short for so tall a man. His head also was sunk forward as
if he were lost in thought or overcome with deep dejection.

“This is surely the Cavalier of the Heavy Heart,” said Manny. “What
trouble has he, that he should hang his head?”

“Perchance he hath a weak neck,” said the King.

“At least he hath no weak voice,” the Prince remarked, as Nigel’s
answer to Chandos came to their ears. “By our lady, he booms like a
bittern.”

As Chandos rode back again to the King, Nigel exchanged the old ash
spear which had been his father’s for one of the blunted tournament
lances which he took from the hands of a stout archer in attendance. He
then rode down to the end of the bridge where a hundred-yard stretch of
greensward lay in front of him. At the same moment the Squire of Sir
Walter Manny, who had been hastily armed by his comrades, spurred
forward and took up his position.

The King raised his hand; there was a clang from the falconer’s horn,
and the two riders, with a thrust of their heels and a shake of their
bridles, dashed furiously at each other. In the center the green strip
of marshy meadowland, with the water squirting from the galloping
hoofs, and the two crouching men, gleaming bright in the evening sun,
on one side the half circle of motionless horsemen, some in steel, some
in velvet, silent and attentive, dogs, hawks, and horses all turned to
stone; on the other the old peaked bridge, the blue lazy river, the
group of openmouthed rustics, and the dark old manor-house with one
grim face which peered from the upper window.

A good man was John Widdicombe, but he had met a better that day.
Before that yellow whirlwind of a horse and that rider who was welded
and riveted to his saddle his knees could not hold their grip. Nigel
and Pommers were one flying missile, with all their weight and strength
and energy centered on the steady end of the lance. Had Widdicombe been
struck by a thunderbolt he could not have flown faster or farther from
his saddle. Two full somersaults did he make, his plates clanging like
cymbals, ere he lay prone upon his back.

For a moment the King looked grave at that prodigious fall. Then
smiling once more as Widdicombe staggered to his feet, he clapped his
hands loudly in applause. “A fair course and fairly run!” he cried.
“The five scarlet roses bear themselves in peace even as I have seen
them in war. How now, my good Walter? Have you another Squire or will
you clear a path for us yourself?”

Manny’s choleric face had turned darker as he observed the mischance of
his representative. He beckoned now to a tall knight, whose gaunt and
savage face looked out from his open bassinet as an eagle might from a
cage of steel.

“Sir Hubert,” said he, “I bear in mind the day when you overbore the
Frenchman at Caen. Will you not be our champion now?”

“When I fought the Frenchman, Walter, it was with naked weapons,” said
the knight sternly. “I am a soldier and I love a soldier’s work, but I
care not for these tiltyard tricks which were invented for nothing but
to tickle the fancies of foolish women.”

“Oh, most ungallant speech!” cried the King. “Had my good-consort heard
you she would have arraigned you to appear at a Court of Love with a
jury of virgins to answer for your sins. But I pray you to take a
tilting spear, good Sir Hubert!”

“I had as soon take a peacock’s feather, my fair lord; but I will do
it, if you ask me. Here, page, hand me one of those sticks, and let me
see what I can do.”

But Sir Hubert de Burgh was not destined to test either his skill or
his luck. The great bay horse which he rode was as unused to this
warlike play as was its master, and had none of its master’s stoutness
of heart; so that when it saw the leveled lance, the gleaming figure
and the frenzied yellow horse rushing down upon it, it swerved, turned
and galloped furiously down the river-bank. Amid roars of laughter from
the rustics on the one side and from the courtiers on the other, Sir
Hubert was seen, tugging vainly at his bridle, and bounding onward,
clearing gorse-bushes and heather-clumps, until he was but a
shimmering, quivering gleam upon the dark hillside. Nigel, who had
pulled Pommers on to his very haunches at the instant that his opponent
turned, saluted with his lance and trotted back to the bridge-head,
where he awaited his next assailant.

“The ladies would say that a judgment hath fallen upon our good Sir
Hubert for his impious words,” said the King.

“Let us hope that his charger may be broken in ere they venture to ride
out between two armies,” remarked the Prince. “They might mistake the
hardness of his horse’s mouth for a softness of the rider’s heart. See
where he rides, still clearing every bush upon his path.”

“By the rood!” said the King, “if the bold Hubert has not increased his
repute as a jouster he has gained great honor as a horseman. But the
bridge is still closed, Walter. How say you now? Is this young Squire
never to be unhorsed, or is your King himself to lay lance in rest ere
his way can be cleared? By the head of Saint Thomas! I am in the very
mood to run a course with this gentle youth.”

“Nay, nay, sire, too much honor hath already been done him!” said
Manny, looking angrily at the motionless horseman. “That this untried
boy should be able to say that in one evening he has unhorsed my
Squire, and seen the back of one of the bravest knights in England is
surely enough to turn his foolish head. Fetch me a spear, Robert! I
will see what I can make of him.”

The famous knight took the spear when it was brought to him as a
master-workman takes a tool. He balanced it, shook it once or twice in
the air, ran his eyes down it for a flaw in the wood, and then finally
having made sure of its poise and weight laid it carefully in rest
under his arm. Then gathering up his bridle so as to have his horse
under perfect command, and covering himself with the shield, which was
slung round his neck, he rode out to do battle.

Now, Nigel, young and inexperienced, all Nature’s aid will not help you
against the mixed craft and strength of such a warrior. The day will
come when neither Manny nor even Chandos could sweep you from your
saddle; but now, even had you some less cumbrous armor, your chance
were small. Your downfall is near; but as you see the famous black
chevrons on a golden ground your gallant heart which never knew fear is
only filled with joy and amazement at the honor done you. Your downfall
is near, and yet in your wildest dreams you would never guess how
strange your downfall is to be.

Again with a dull thunder of hoofs the horses gallop over the soft
water-meadow. Again with a clash of metal the two riders meet. It is
Nigel now, taken clean in the face of his helmet with the blunted
spear, who flies backward off his horse and falls clanging on the
grass.

But good heavens! what is this? Manny has thrown up his hands in horror
and the lance has dropped from his nerveless fingers. From all sides,
with cries of dismay, with oaths and shouts and ejaculations to the
saints, the horsemen ride wildly in. Was ever so dreadful, so sudden,
so complete, an end to a gentle passage at arms? Surely their eyes must
be at fault? Some wizard’s trick has been played upon them to deceive
their senses. But no, it was only too clear. There on the greensward
lay the trunk of the stricken cavalier, and there, a good dozen yards
beyond, lay his helmeted head.

“By the Virgin!” cried Manny wildly, as he jumped from his horse, “I
would give my last gold piece that the work of this evening should be
undone! How came it? What does it mean? Hither, my Lord Bishop, for
surely it smacks of witchcraft and the Devil.”

With a white face the Bishop had sprung down beside the prostrate body,
pushing through the knot of horrified knights and squires.

“I fear that the last offices of the Holy Church come too late,” said
he in a quivering voice. “Most unfortunate young man! How sudden an
end! _In medio vitæ_, as the Holy Book has it—one moment in the pride
of his youth, the next his head torn from his body. Now God and his
saints have mercy upon me and guard me from evil!”

The last prayer was shot out of the Bishop with an energy and
earnestness unusual in his orisons. It was caused by the sudden outcry
of one of the Squires who, having lifted the helmet from the ground,
cast it down again with a scream of horror.

“It is empty!” he cried. “It weighs as light as a feather.”

“’Fore God, it is true!” cried Manny, laying his hand on it. “There is
no one in it. With what have I fought, father Bishop? Is it of this
world or of the next?”

The Bishop had clambered on his horse the better to consider the point.
“If the foul fiend is abroad,” said he, “my place is over yonder by the
King’s side. Certes that sulphur-colored horse hath a very devilish
look. I could have sworn that I saw both smoke and flame from its
nostrils. The beast is fit to bear a suit of armor which rides and
fights and yet hath no man within it.”

“Nay, not too fast, father Bishop,” said one of the knights. “It may be
all that you say and yet come from a human workshop. When I made a
campaign in South Germany I have seen at Nuremberg a cunning figure,
devised by an armorer, which could both ride and wield a sword. If this
be such a one—”

“I thank you all for your very gentle courtesy,” said a booming voice
from the figure upon the ground.

At the words even the valiant Manny sprang into his saddle. Some rode
madly away from the horrid trunk. A few of the boldest lingered.

“Most of all,” said the voice, “would I thank the most noble knight,
Sir Walter Manny, that he should deign to lay aside his greatness and
condescend to do a deed of arms upon so humble a Squire.”

“’Fore God!” said Manny, “if this be the Devil, then the Devil hath a
very courtly tongue. I will have him out of his armor, if he blast me!”

So saying he sprang once more from his horse and plunging his hand down
the slit in the collapsed gorget he closed it tightly upon a fistful of
Nigel’s yellow curls. The groan that came forth was enough to convince
him that it was indeed a man who lurked within. At the same time his
eyes fell upon the hole in the mail corselet which had served the
Squire as a visor, and he burst into deep-chested mirth. The King, the
Prince and Chandos, who had watched the scene from a distance, too much
amused by it to explain or interfere, rode up weary with laughter, now
that all was discovered.

“Let him out!” said the King, with his hand to his side. “I pray you to
unlace him and let him out! I have shared in many a spear-running, but
never have I been nearer falling from my horse than as I watched this
one. I feared the fall had struck him senseless, since he lay so
still.”

Nigel had indeed lain with all the breath shaken from his body, and as
he was unaware that his helmet had been carried off, he had not
understood either the alarm or the amusement that he had caused. Now
freed from the great hauberk in which he had been shut like a pea in a
pod, he stood blinking in the light, blushing deeply with shame that
the shifts to which his poverty had reduced him should be exposed to
all these laughing courtiers. It was the King who brought him comfort.

“You have shown that you can use your father’s weapons,” said he, “and
you have proved also that you are the worthy bearer of his name and his
arms, for you have within you that spirit for which he was famous. But
I wot that neither he nor you would suffer a train of hungry men to
starve before your door; so lead on, I pray you, and if the meat be as
good as this grace before it, then it will be a feast indeed.”




X.
HOW THE KING GREETED HIS SENESCHAL OF CALAIS


It would have fared ill with the good name of Tilford Manor house and
with the housekeeping of the aged Dame Ermyntrude had the King’s whole
retinue, with his outer and inner marshal, his justiciar, his
chamberlain and his guard, all gathered under the one roof. But by the
foresight and the gentle management of Chandos this calamity was
avoided, so that some were quartered at the great Abbey and others
passed on to enjoy the hospitality of Sir Roger FitzAlan at Farnham
Castle. Only the King himself, the Prince, Manny, Chandos, Sir Hubert
de Burgh, the Bishop and two or three more remained behind as the
guests of the Lorings.

But small as was the party and humble the surroundings, the King in no
way relaxed that love of ceremony, of elaborate form and of brilliant
coloring which was one of his characteristics. The sumpter-mules were
unpacked, squires ran hither and thither, baths smoked in the
bed-chambers, silks and satins were unfolded, gold chains gleamed and
clinked, so that when at last, to the long blast of two court
trumpeters, the company took their seats at the board, it was the
brightest, fairest scene which those old black rafters had ever
spanned.

The great influx of foreign knights who had come in their splendor from
all parts of Christendom to take part in the opening of the Round Tower
of Windsor six years before, and to try their luck and their skill at
the tournament connected with it, had deeply modified the English
fashions of dress. The old tunic, over-tunic and cyclas were too sad
and simple for the new fashions, so now strange and brilliant
cote-hardies, pourpoints, courtepies, paltocks, hanselines and many
other wondrous garments, parti-colored or diapered, with looped,
embroidered or escalloped edges, flamed and glittered round the King.
He himself, in black velvet and gold, formed a dark rich center to the
finery around him. On his right sat the Prince, on his left the Bishop,
while Dame Ermyntrude marshaled the forces of the household outside,
alert and watchful, pouring in her dishes and her flagons at the right
moment, rallying her tired servants, encouraging the van, hurrying the
rear, hastening up her reserves, the tapping of her oak stick heard
everywhere the pressure was the greatest.

Behind the King, clad in his best, but looking drab and sorry amid the
brilliant costumes round him, Nigel himself, regardless of an aching
body and a twisted knee, waited upon his royal guests, who threw many a
merry jest at him over their shoulders as they still chuckled at the
adventure of the bridge.

“By the rood!” said King Edward, leaning back, with a chicken bone held
daintily between the courtesy fingers of his left hand, “the play is
too good for this country stage. You must to Windsor with me, Nigel,
and bring with you this great suit of harness in which you lurk. There
you shall hold the lists with your eyes in your midriff, and unless
some one cleave you to the waist I see not how any harm can befall you.
Never have I seen so small a nut in so great a shell.”

The Prince, looking back with laughing eyes, saw by Nigel’s flushed and
embarrassed face that his poverty hung heavily upon him. “Nay,” said he
kindly, “such a workman is surely worthy of better tools.”

“And it is for his master to see that he has them,” added the King.
“The court armorer will look to it that the next time your helmet is
carried away, Nigel, your head shall be inside it.”

Nigel, red to the roots of his flaxen hair, stammered out some words of
thanks.

John Chandos, however, had a fresh suggestion, and he cocked a roguish
eye as he made it: “Surely, my liege, your bounty is little needed in
this case. It is the ancient law of arms that if two cavaliers start to
joust, and one either by maladdress or misadventure fail to meet the
shock, then his arms become the property of him who still holds the
lists. This being so, methinks, Sir Hubert de Burgh, that the fine
hauberk of Milan and the helmet of Bordeaux steel in which you rode to
Tilford should remain with our young host as some small remembrance of
your visit.”

The suggestion raised a general chorus of approval and laughter, in
which all joined, save only Sir Hubert himself, who, flushed with
anger, fixed his baleful eyes upon Chandos’ mischievous and smiling
face.

“I said that I did not play that foolish game, and I know nothing of
its laws,” said he; “but you know well, John, that if you would have a
bout with sharpened spear or sword, where two ride to the ground, and
only one away from it, you have not far to go to find it.”

“Nay, nay, would you ride to the ground? Surely you had best walk,
Hubert,” said Chandos. “On your feet I know well that I should not see
your back as we have seen it to-day. Say what you will, your horse has
played you false, and I claim your suit of harness for Nigel Loring.”

“Your tongue is overlong, John, and I am weary of its endless clack!”
said Sir Hubert, his yellow mustache bristling from a scarlet face. “If
you claim my harness, do you yourself come and take it. If there is a
moon in the sky you may try this very night when the board is cleared.”

“Nay, fair sirs,” cried the King, smiling from one to the other, “this
matter must be followed no further. Do you fill a bumper of Gascony,
John, and you also, Hubert. Now pledge each other, I pray you, as good
and loyal comrades who would scorn to fight save in your King’s
quarrel. We can spare neither of you while there is so much work for
brave hearts over the sea. As to this matter of the harness, John
Chandos speaks truly where it concerns a joust in the lists, but we
hold that such a law is scarce binding in this, which was but a wayside
passage and a gentle trial of arms. On the other hand, in the case of
your Squire, Master Manny, there can be no doubt that his suit is
forfeit.”

“It is a grievous hearing for him, my liege,” said Walter Manny; “for
he is a poor man and hath been at sore pains to fit himself for the
wars. Yet what you say shall be done, fair sire. So, if you will come
to me in the morning, Squire Loring, John Widdicombe’s suit will be
handed over to you.”

“Then with the King’s leave, I will hand it back to him,” said Nigel,
troubled and stammering; “for indeed I had rather never ride to the
wars than take from a brave man his only suit of plate.”

“There spoke your father’s spirit!” cried the King. “By the rood!
Nigel, I like you full well. Let the matter bide in my hands. But I
marvel much that Sir Aymery the Lombard hath not come to us yet from
Windsor.”

From the moment of his arrival at Tilford, again and again King Edward
had asked most eagerly whether Sir Aymery had come, and whether there
was any news of him, so that the courtiers glanced at each other in
wonder. For Aymery was known to all of them as a famous mercenary of
Italy, lately appointed Governor of Calais, and this sudden and urgent
summons from the King might well mean some renewal of the war with
France, which was the dearest wish of every soldier. Twice the King had
stopped his meal and sat with sidelong head; his wine-cup in his hand,
listening attentively when some sound like the clatter of hoofs was
heard from outside; but the third time there could be no mistake. The
tramp and jingle of the horses broke loud upon the ear, and ended in
hoarse voices calling out of the darkness, which were answered by the
archers posted as sentries without the door.

“Some traveler has indeed arrived, my liege,” said Nigel. “What is your
royal will?”

“It can be but Aymery,” the King answered, “for it was only to him that
I left the message that he should follow me hither. Bid him come in, I
pray you, and make him very welcome at your board.”

Nigel cast open the door, plucking a torch from its bracket as he did
so. Half a dozen men-at-arms sat on their horses outside, but one had
dismounted, a short, squat, swarthy man with a rat face and quick,
restless brown eyes which peered eagerly past Nigel into the red glare
of the well-lit hall.

“I am Sir Aymery of Pavia,” he whispered. “For God’s sake, tell me! is
the King within?”

“He is at table, fair sir, and he bids you to enter.”

“One moment, young man, one moment, and a secret word in your ear. Wot
you why it is that the King has sent for me?”

Nigel read terror in the dark cunning eyes which glanced in sidelong
fashion into his. “Nay, I know not.”

“I would I knew—I would I was sure ere I sought his presence.”

“You have but to cross the threshold, fair sir, and doubtless you will
learn from the King’s own lips.”

Sir Aymery seemed to gather himself as one who braces for a spring into
ice-cold water. Then he crossed with a quick stride from the darkness
into the light. The King stood up and held out his hand with a smile
upon his long handsome face, and yet it seemed to the Italian that it
was the lips which smiled but not the eyes.

“Welcome!” cried Edward. “Welcome to our worthy and faithful Seneschal
of Calais! Come, sit here before me at the board, for I have sent for
you that I may hear your news from over the sea, and thank you for the
care that you have taken of that which is as dear to me as wife or
child. Set a place for Sir Aymery there, and give him food and drink,
for he has ridden fast and far in our service to-day.”

Throughout the long feast which the skill of the Lady Ermyntrude had
arranged, Edward chatted lightly with the Italian as well as with the
barons near him. Finally, when the last dish was removed and the
gravy-soaked rounds of coarse bread which served as plates had been
cast to the dogs, the wine-flagons were passed round; and old
Weathercote the minstrel entered timidly with his harp in the hope that
he might be allowed to play before the King’s majesty. But Edward had
other sport afoot.

“I pray you, Nigel, to send out the servants, so that we may be alone.
I would have two men-at-arms at every door lest we be disturbed in our
debate, for it is a matter of privacy. And now, Sir Aymery, these noble
lords as well as I, your master, would fain hear from your own lips how
all goes forward in France.”

The Italian’s face was calm; but he looked restlessly from one to
another along the line of his listeners.

“So far as I know, my liege, all is quiet on the French marches,” said
he.

“You have not heard then that they have mustered or gathered to a head
with the intention of breaking the truce and making some attempt upon
our dominions?”

“Nay, sire, I have heard nothing of it.”

“You set my mind much at ease, Aymery,” said the King; “for if nothing
has come to your ears, then surely it cannot be. It was said that the
wild Knight de Chargny had come down to St. Omer with his eyes upon my
precious jewel and his mailed hands ready to grasp it.”

“Nay, sire, let him come. He will find the jewel safe in its strong
box, with a goodly guard over it.”

“You are the guard over my jewel, Aymery.”

“Yes, sire, I am the guard.”

“And you are a faithful guard and one whom I can trust, are you not?
You would not barter away that which is so dear to me when I have
chosen you out of all my army to hold it for me?”

“Nay, sire, what reasons can there be for such questions? They touch my
honor very nearly. You know that I would part with Calais only when I
parted with my soul.”

“Then you know nothing of de Chargny’s attempt?”

“Nothing sire.”

“Liar and villain!” yelled the King, springing to his feet and dashing
his fist upon the table until the glasses rattled again. “Seize him,
archers! Seize him this instant! Stand close by either elbow, lest he
do himself a mischief! Now do you dare to tell me to my face, you
perjured Lombard, that you know nothing of de Chargny and his plans?”

“As God is my witness I know nothing of him!” The man’s lips were
white, and he spoke in a thin, sighing, reedy voice, his eyes wincing
away from the fell gaze of the angry King.

Edward laughed bitterly, and drew a paper from his breast. “You are the
judges in this case, you, my fair son, and you, Chandos, and you,
Manny, and you, Sir Hubert, and you also, my Lord Bishop. By my
sovereign power I make you a court that you may deal justice upon this
man, for by God’s eyes I will not stir from this room until I have
sifted the matter to the bottom. And first I would read you this
letter. It is superscribed to Sir Aymery of Pavia, _nomme_ Le Lombard,
Château de Calais. Is not that your name and style, you rogue?”

“It is my name, sire; but no such letter has come to me.”

“Else had your villainy never been disclosed. It is signed ‘Isidore de
Chargny’. What says my enemy de Chargny to my trusted servant? Listen!
‘We could not come with the last moon, for we have not gathered
sufficient strength, nor have we been able to collect the twenty
thousand crowns which are your price. But with the next turn of the
moon in the darkest hour we will come and you will be paid your money
at the small postern gate with the rowan-bush beside it.’ Well, rogue,
what say you now?”

“It is a forgery!” gasped the Italian.

“I pray you that you will let me see it, sire,” said Chandos. “De
Chargny was my prisoner, and so many letters passed ere his ransom was
paid that his script is well-known to me. Yes, yes, I will swear that
this is indeed his. If my salvation were at stake I could swear it.”

“If it were indeed written by de Chargny it was to dishonor me,” cried
Sir Aymery.

“Nay, nay!” said the young Prince. “We all know de Chargny and have
fought against him. Many faults he has, a boaster and a brawler, but a
braver man and one of greater heart and higher of enterprise does not
ride beneath the lilies of France. Such a man would never stoop to
write a letter for the sake of putting dishonor upon one of knightly
rank. I, for one, will never believe it.”

A gruff murmur from the others showed that they were of one mind with
the Prince. The light of the torches from the walls beat upon the line
of stern faces at the high table. They had sat like flint, and the
Italian shrank from their inexorable eyes. He looked swiftly round, but
armed men choked every entrance. The shadow of death had fallen athwart
his soul.

“This letter,” said the King, “was given by de Chargny to one Dom
Beauvais, a priest of St. Omer, to carry into Calais. The said priest,
smelling a reward, brought it to one who is my faithful servant, and so
it came to me. Straightway I sent for this man that he should come to
me. Meanwhile the priest has returned so that de Chargny may think that
his message is indeed delivered.”

“I know nothing of it,” said the Italian doggedly, licking his dry
lips.

A dark flush mounted to the King’s forehead, and his eyes were gorged
with his wrath. “No more of this, for God’s dignity!” he cried. “Had we
this fellow at the Tower, a few turns of the rack would tear a
confession from his craven soul. But why should we need his word for
his own guilt? You have seen, my lords, you have heard! How say you,
fair son? Is the man guilty?”

“Sire, he is guilty.”

“And you, John? And you, Walter? And you, Hubert? And you, my Lord
Bishop? You are all of one mind, then. He is guilty of the betrayal of
his trust. And the punishment?”

“It can only be death,” said the Prince, and each in turn the others
nodded their agreement.

“Aymery of Pavia, you have heard your doom,” said Edward, leaning his
chin upon his hand and glooming at the cowering Italian. “Step forward,
you archer at the door, you with the black beard. Draw your sword! Nay,
you white-faced rogue, I would not dishonor this roof-tree by your
blood. It is your heels, not your head, that we want. Hack off these
golden spurs of knighthood with your sword, archer! ’Twas I who gave
them, and I who take them back. Ha! they fly across the hall, and with
them every bond betwixt you and the worshipful order whose sign and
badge they are! Now lead him out on the heath afar from the house where
his carrion can best lie, and hew his scheming head from his body as a
warning to all such traitors!”

The Italian, who had slipped from his chair to his knees, uttered a cry
of despair, as an archer seized him by either shoulder. Writhing out of
their grip, he threw himself upon the floor and clutched at the King’s
feet.

“Spare me, my most dread lord, spare me, I beseech you! In the name of
Christ’s passion, I implore your grace and pardon! Bethink you, my good
and dear lord, how many years I have served under your banners and how
many services I have rendered. Was it not I who found the ford upon the
Seine two days before the great battle? Was it not I also who marshaled
the attack at the intaking of Calais? I have a wife and four children
in Italy, great King; and it was the thought of them which led me to
fall from my duty, for this money would have allowed me to leave the
wars and to see them once again. Mercy, my liege, mercy, I implore!”

The English are a rough race, but not a cruel one. The King sat with a
face of doom; but the others looked askance and fidgeted in their
seats.

“Indeed, my fair liege,” said Chandos, “I pray you that you will abate
somewhat of your anger.”

Edward shook his head curtly. “Be silent, John. It shall be as I have
said.”

“I pray you, my dear and honored liege, not to act with overmuch haste
in the matter,” said Manny. “Bind him and hold him until the morning,
for other counsels may prevail.”

“Nay, I have spoken. Lead him out!”

But the trembling man clung to the King’s knees in such a fashion that
the archers could not disengage his convulsive grip. “Listen to me a
moment, I implore you! Give me but one minute to plead with you, and
then do what you will.”

The King leaned back in his chair. “Speak and have done,” said he.

“You must spare me, my noble liege. For your own sake I say that you
must spare me, for I can set you in the way of such a knightly
adventure as will gladden your heart. Bethink you, sire, that this de
Chargny and his comrades know nothing of their plans having gone awry.
If I do but send them a message they will surely come to the postern
gate. Then, if we have placed our bushment with skill we shall have
such a capture and such a ransom as will fill your coffers. He and his
comrades should be worth a good hundred thousand crowns.”

Edward spurned the Italian away from him with his foot until he
sprawled among the rushes, but even as he lay there like a wounded
snake his dark eyes never left the King’s face.

“You double traitor! You would sell Calais to de Chargny, and then in
turn you would sell de Chargny to me. How dare you suppose that I or
any noble knight had such a huckster’s soul as to think only of ransoms
where honor is to be won? Could I or any true man be so caitiff and so
thrall? You have sealed your own doom. Lead him out!”

“One instant, I pray you, my fair and most sweet lord,” cried the
Prince. “Assuage your wrath yet a little while, for this man’s rede
deserves perhaps more thought than we have given it. He has turned your
noble soul sick with his talk of ransoms; but look at it, I pray you,
from the side of honor, and where could we find such hope of
worshipfully winning worship? I pray you to let me put my body in this
adventure, for it is one from which, if rightly handled, much
advancement is to be gained.”

Edward looked with sparkling eyes at the noble youth at his side.
“Never was hound more keen on the track of a stricken hart than you on
the hope of honor, fair son,” said he. “How do you conceive the matter
in your mind?”

“De Chargny and his men will be such as are worth going far to meet,
for he will have the pick of France under his banner that night. If we
did as this man says and awaited him with the same number of lances,
then I cannot think that there is any spot in Christendom where one
would rather be than in Calais that night.”

“By the rood, fair son, you are right!” cried the King, his face
shining with the thought. “Now which of you, John Chandos or Walter
Manny, will take the thing in charge?” He looked mischievously from one
to the other like a master who dangles a bone betwixt two fierce old
hounds. All they had to say was in their burning, longing eyes. “Nay,
John, you must not take it amiss; but it is Walter’s turn, and he shall
have it.”

“Shall we not all go under your banner, sire, or that of the Prince?”

“Nay, it is not fitting that the royal banners of England should be
advanced in so small an adventure. And yet, if you have space in your
ranks for two more cavaliers, both the Prince and I would ride with you
that night.”

The young man stooped and kissed his father’s hand.

“Take this man in your charge, Walter, and do with him as you will.
Guard well lest he betray us once again. Take him from my sight, for
his breath poisons the room. And now, Nigel, if that worthy graybeard
of thine would fain twang his harp or sing to us—but what in God’s name
would you have?”

He had turned, to find his young host upon his knee and his flaxen head
bent in entreaty.

“What is it, man? What do you crave?”

“A boon, fair liege!”

“Well, well, am I to have no peace to-night, with a traitor kneeling to
me in front, and a true man on his knees behind? Out with it, Nigel.
What would you have?”

“To come with you to Calais.”

“By the rood! your request is fair enough, seeing that our plot is
hatched beneath your very roof. How say you, Walter? Will you take him,
armor and all?” asked King Edward.

“Say rather will you take me?” said Chandos. “We two are rivals in
honor, Walter, but I am very sure that you would not hold me back.”

“Nay, John, I will be proud to have the best lance in Christendom
beneath my banner.”

“And I to follow so knightly a leader. But Nigel Loring is my Squire,
and so he comes with us also.”

“Then that is settled,” said the King, “and now there is no need for
hurry, since there can be no move until the moon has changed. So I pray
you to pass the flagon once again, and to drink with me to the good
knights of France. May they be of great heart and high of enterprise
when we all meet once more within the castle wall of Calais!”




XI.
IN THE HALL OF THE KNIGHT OF DUPLIN


The King had come and had gone. Tilford Manor house stood once more
dark and silent, but joy and contentment reigned within its walls. In
one night every trouble had fallen away like some dark curtain which
had shut out the sun. A princely sum of money had come from the King’s
treasurer, given in such fashion that there could be no refusal. With a
bag of gold pieces at his saddle-bow Nigel rode once more into
Guildford, and not a beggar on the way who had not cause to bless his
name.

There he had gone first to the goldsmith and had bought back cup and
salver and bracelet, mourning with the merchant over the evil chance
that gold and gold-work had for certain reasons which only those in the
trade could fully understand gone up in value during the last week, so
that already fifty gold pieces had to be paid more than the price which
Nigel had received. In vain the faithful Aylward fretted and fumed and
muttered a prayer that the day would come when he might feather a shaft
in the merchant’s portly paunch. The money had to be paid.

Thence Nigel hurried to Wat the armorer’s and there he bought that very
suit for which he had yearned so short a time before. Then and there he
tried it on in the booth, Wat and his boy walking round him with
spanner and wrench, fixing bolts and twisting rivets.

“How is that, my fair sir?” cried the armorer as he drew the bassinet
over the head and fastened it to the camail which extended to the
shoulders. “I swear by Tubal Cain that it fits you as the shell fits
the crab! A finer suit never came from Italy or Spain.”

Nigel stood in front of a burnished shield which served as a mirror,
and he turned this way and that, preening himself like a little shining
bird. His smooth breastplate, his wondrous joints with their deft
protection by the disks at knee and elbow and shoulder, the beautifully
flexible gauntlets and sollerets, the shirt of mail and the
close-fitting greave-plates were all things of joy and of beauty in his
eyes. He sprang about the shop to show his lightness, and then running
out he placed his hand on the pommel and vaulted into Pommers’ saddle,
while Wat and his boy applauded in the doorway.

Then springing off and running into the shop again he clanked down upon
his knees before the image of the Virgin upon the smithy wall. There
from his heart he prayed that no shadow or stain should come upon his
soul or his honor whilst these arms incased his body, and that he might
be strengthened to use them for noble and godly ends. A strange turn
this to a religion of peace, and yet for many a century the sword and
the faith had upheld each other and in a darkened world the best ideal
of the soldier had turned in some dim groping fashion toward the light.
“_Benedictus dominus deus meus qui docet manus meas ad prælium et
digitos meos ad bellum!_” There spoke the soul of the knightly soldier.

So the armor was trussed upon the armorer’s mule and went back with
them to Tilford, where Nigel put it on once more for the pleasure of
the Lady Ermyntrude, who clapped her skinny hands and shed tears of
mingled pain and joy—pain that she should lose him, joy that he should
go so bravely to the wars. As to her own future, it had been made easy
for her, since it was arranged that a steward should look to the
Tilford estate whilst she had at her disposal a suite of rooms in royal
Windsor, where with other venerable dames of her own age and standing
she could spend the twilight of her days discussing long-forgotten
scandals and whispering sad things about the grandfathers and the
grandmothers of the young courtiers all around them. There Nigel might
leave her with an easy mind when he turned his face to France.

But there was one more visit to be paid and one more farewell to be
spoken ere Nigel could leave the moorlands where he had dwelled so
long. That evening he donned his brightest tunic, dark purple velvet of
Genoa, with trimming of miniver, his hat with the snow-white feather
curling round the front, and his belt of embossed silver round his
loins. Mounted on lordly Pommers, with his hawk upon wrist and his
sword by his side, never did fairer young gallant or one more modest in
mind set forth upon such an errand. It was but the old Knight of Duplin
to whom he would say farewell; but the Knight of Duplin had two
daughters, Edith and Mary, and Edith was the fairest maid in all the
heather-country.

Sir John Buttesthorn, the Knight of Duplin, was so called because he
had been present at that strange battle, some eighteen years before,
when the full power of Scotland had been for a moment beaten to the
ground by a handful of adventurers and mercenaries, marching under the
banner of no nation, but fighting in their own private quarrel. Their
exploit fills no pages of history, for it is to the interest of no
nation to record it, and yet the rumor and fame of the great fight
bulked large in those times, for it was on that day when the flower of
Scotland was left dead upon the field, that the world first understood
that a new force had arisen in war, and that the English archer, with
his robust courage and his skill with the weapon which he had wielded
from his boyhood, was a power with which even the mailed chivalry of
Europe had seriously to reckon.

Sir John after his return from Scotland had become the King’s own head
huntsman, famous through all England for his knowledge of venery, until
at last, getting overheavy for his horses, he had settled in modest
comfort into the old house of Cosford upon the eastern slope of the
Hindhead hill. Here, as his face grew redder and his beard more white,
he spent the evening of his days, amid hawks and hounds, a flagon of
spiced wine ever at his elbow, and his swollen foot perched upon a
stool before him. There it was that many an old comrade broke his
journey as he passed down the rude road which led from London to
Portsmouth, and thither also came the young gallants of the country to
hear the stout knight’s tales of old wars, or to learn, from him that
lore of the forest and the chase which none could teach so well as he.

But sooth to say, whatever the old knight might think, it was not
merely his old tales and older wine which drew the young men to
Cosford, but rather the fair face of his younger daughter, or the
strong soul and wise counsel of the elder. Never had two more different
branches sprung from the same trunk. Both were tall and of a queenly
graceful figure. But there all resemblance began and ended.

Edith was yellow as the ripe corn, blue-eyed, winning, mischievous,
with a chattering tongue, a merry laugh, and a smile which a dozen of
young gallants, Nigel of Tilford at their head, could share equally
amongst them. Like a young kitten she played with all things that she
found in life, and some there were who thought that already the claws
could be felt amid the patting of her velvet touch.

Mary was dark as night, grave-featured, plain-visaged, with steady
brown eyes looking bravely at the world from under a strong black arch
of brows. None could call her beautiful, and when her fair sister cast
her arm round her and placed her cheek against hers, as was her habit
when company was there, the fairness of the one and the plainness of
the other leaped visibly to the eyes of all, each the clearer for that
hard contrast. And yet, here and there, there was one who, looking at
her strange, strong face, and at the passing gleams far down in her
dark eyes, felt that this silent woman with her proud bearing and her
queenly grace had in her something of strength, of reserve and of
mystery which was more to them than all the dainty glitter of her
sister.

Such were the ladies of Cosford toward whom Nigel Loring rode that
night with doublet of Genoan velvet and the new white feather in his
cap.

He had ridden over Thursley Ridge past that old stone where in days
gone by at the place of Thor the wild Saxons worshiped their war-god.
Nigel looked at it with a wary eye and spurred Pommers onward as he
passed it, for still it was said that wild fires danced round it on the
moonless nights, and they who had ears for such things could hear the
scream and sob of those whose lives had been ripped from them that the
fiend might be honored. Thor’s stone, Thor’s jumps, Thor’s
punch-bowl—the whole country-side was one grim monument to the God of
Battles, though the pious monks had changed his uncouth name for that
of the Devil his father, so that it was the Devil’s jumps and the
Devil’s punch-bowl of which they spoke. Nigel glanced back at the old
gray boulder, and he felt for an instant a shudder pass through his
stout heart. Was it the chill of the evening air, or was it that some
inner voice had whispered to him of the day when he also might lie
bound on such a rock and have such a blood-stained pagan crew howling
around him.

An instant later the rock and his vague fear and all things else had
passed from his mind, for there, down the yellow sandy path, the
setting sun gleaming on her golden hair, her lithe figure bending and
swaying with every heave of the cantering horse, was none other than
the same fair Edith, whose face had come so often betwixt him and his
sleep. His blood rushed hot to his face at the sight, for fearless of
all else, his spirit was attracted and yet daunted by the delicate
mystery of woman. To his pure and knightly soul not Edith alone, but
every woman, sat high and aloof, enthroned and exalted, with a thousand
mystic excellencies and virtues which raised her far above the rude
world of man. There was joy in contact with them; and yet there was
fear, fear lest his own unworthiness, his untrained tongue or rougher
ways should in some way break rudely upon this delicate and tender
thing. Such was his thought as the white horse cantered toward him; but
a moment later his vague doubts were set at rest by the frank voice of
the young girl, who waved her whip in merry greeting.

“Hail and well met, Nigel!” she cried. “Whither away this evening? Sure
I am that it is not to see your friends of Cosford, for when did you
ever don so brave a doublet for us? Come, Nigel, her name, that I may
hate her for ever.”

“Nay, Edith,” said the young Squire, laughing back at the laughing
girl. “I was indeed coming to Cosford.”

“Then we shall ride back together, for I will go no farther. How think
you that I am looking?”

Nigel’s answer was in his eyes as he glanced at the fair flushed face,
the golden hair, the sparkling eyes and the daintily graceful figure
set off in a scarlet-and-black riding-dress. “You are as fair as ever,
Edith.”

“Oh, cold of speech! Surely you were bred for the cloisters, and not
for a lady’s bower, Nigel. Had I asked such a question from young Sir
George Brocas or the Squire of Fernhurst, he would have raved from here
to Cosford. They are both more to my taste than you are, Nigel.”

“It is the worse for me, Edith,” said Nigel ruefully.

“Nay, but you must not lose heart.”

“Have I not already lost it?” said he.

“That is better,” she cried, laughing. “You can be quick enough when
you choose, Master Malapert. But you are more fit to speak of high and
weary matters with my sister Mary. She will have none of the prattle
and courtesy of Sir George, and yet I love them well. But tell me,
Nigel, why do you come to Cosford to-night?”

“To bid you farewell.”

“Me alone?”

“Nay, Edith, you and your sister Mary and the good knight your father.”

“Sir George would have said that he had come for me alone. Indeed you
are but a poor courtier beside him. But is it true, Nigel, that you go
to France?”

“Yes, Edith.”

“It was so rumored after the King had been to Tilford. The story goes
that the King goes to France and you in his train. Is that true?”

“Yes, Edith, it is true.”

“Tell me, then, to what part you go, and when?”

“That, alas! I may not say.”

“Oh, in sooth!” She tossed her fair head and rode onward in silence,
with compressed lips and angry eyes.

Nigel glanced at her in surprise and dismay. “Surely, Edith,” said he
at last, “you have overmuch regard for my honor that you should wish me
to break the word that I have given?”

“Your honor belongs to you, and my likings belong to me,” said she.
“You hold fast to the one, and I will do the same by the other.”

They rode in silence through Thursley village. Then a thought came to
her mind and in an instant her anger was forgotten and she was hot on a
new scent.

“What would you do if I were injured, Nigel? I have heard my father say
that small as you are there is no man in these parts could stand
against you. Would you be my champion if I suffered wrong?”

“Surely I or any man of gentle blood would be the champion of any woman
who had suffered wrong.”

“You or any and I or any—what sort of speech is that? Is it a
compliment, think you, to be mixed with a drove in that fashion? My
question was of you and me. If I were wronged would you be my man?”

“Try me and see, Edith!”

“Then I will do so, Nigel. Either Sir George Brocas or the Squire of
Fernhurst would gladly do what I ask, and yet I am of a mind, Nigel, to
turn to you.”

“I pray you to tell me what it is.”

“You know Paul de la Fosse of Shalford?”

“You mean the small man with the twisted back?”

“He is no smaller than yourself, Nigel, and as to his back there are
many folk that I know who would be glad to have his face.”

“Nay, I am no judge of that, and I spoke out of no discourtesy. What of
the man?”

“He has flouted me, Nigel, and I would have revenge.”

“What—on that poor twisted creature?”

“I tell you that he has flouted me!”

“But how?”

“I should have thought that a true cavalier would have flown to my aid,
withouten all these questions. But I will tell you, since I needs must.
Know then that he was one of those who came around me and professed to
be my own. Then, merely because he thought that there were others who
were as dear to me as himself he left me, and now he pays court to
Maude Twynham, the little freckle-faced hussy in his village.”

“But how has this hurt you, since he was no man of thine?”

“He was one of my men, was he not? And he has made game of me to his
wench. He has told her things about me. He has made me foolish in her
eyes. Yes, yes, I can read it in her saffron face and in her watery
eyes when we meet at the church door on Sundays. She smiles—yes, smiles
at me! Nigel, go to him! Do not slay him, nor even wound him, but lay
his face open with thy riding-whip, and then come back to me and tell
me how I can serve you.”

Nigel’s face was haggard with the strife within, for desire ran hot in
every vein, and yet reason shrank with horror. “By Saint Paul! Edith,”
he cried, “I see no honor nor advancement of any sort in this thing
which you have asked me to do. Is it for me to strike one who is no
better than a cripple? For my manhood I could not do such a deed, and I
pray you, dear lady, that you will set me some other task.”

Her eyes flashed at him in contempt. “And you are a man-at-arms!” she
cried, laughing in bitter scorn. “You are afraid of a little man who
can scarce walk. Yes, yes, say what you will, I shall ever believe that
you have heard of his skill at fence and of his great spirit, and that
your heart has failed you! You are right, Nigel. He is indeed a
perilous man. Had you done what I asked he would have slain you, and so
you have shown your wisdom.”

Nigel flushed and winced under the words, but he said no more, for his
mind was fighting hard within him, striving to keep that high image of
woman which seemed for a moment to totter on the edge of a fall.
Together in silence, side by side, the little man and the stately
woman, the yellow charger and the white jennet, passed up the sandy
winding track with the gorse and the bracken head-high on either side.
Soon a path branched off through a gateway marked with the boar-heads
of the Buttesthorns, and there was the low widespread house heavily
timbered, loud with the barking of dogs. The ruddy Knight limped forth
with outstretched hand and roaring voice—

“What how, Nigel! Good welcome and all hail! I had thought that you had
given over poor friends like us, now that the King had made so much of
you. The horses, varlets, or my crutch will be across you! Hush,
Lydiard! Down, Pelamon! I can scarce hear my voice for your yelping.
Mary, a cup of wine for young Squire Loring!”

She stood framed in the doorway, tall, mystic, silent, with strange,
wistful face and deep soul shining in her dark, questioning eyes. Nigel
kissed the hand that she held out, and all his faith in woman and his
reverence came back to him as he looked at her. Her sister had slipped
behind her and her fair elfish face smiled her forgiveness of Nigel
over Mary’s shoulder.

The Knight of Duplin leaned his weight upon the young man’s arm and
limped his way across the great high-roofed hall to his capacious oaken
chair. “Come, come, the stool, Edith!” he cried. “As God is my help,
that girl’s mind swarms with gallants as a granary with rats. Well,
Nigel, I hear strange tales of your spear-running at Tilford and of the
visit of the King. How seemed he? And my old friend Chandos—many happy
hours in the woodlands have we had together—and Manny too, he was ever
a bold and a hard rider—what news of them all?”

Nigel told to the old Knight all that had occurred, saying little of
his own success and much of his own failure, yet the eyes of the dark
woman burned the brighter as she sat at her tapestry and listened.

Sir John followed the story with a running fire of oaths, prayers,
thumps with his great fist and flourishes of his crutch. “Well, well,
lad, you could scarce expect to hold your saddle against Manny, and you
have carried yourself well. We are proud of you, Nigel, for you are our
own man, reared in the heather country. But indeed I take shame that
you are not more skilled in the mystery of the woods, seeing that I
have had the teaching of you, and that no one in broad England is my
master at the craft. I pray you to fill your cup again whilst I make
use of the little time that is left to us.”

And straightway the old Knight began a long and weary lecture upon the
times of grace and when each beast and bird was seasonable, with many
anecdotes, illustrations, warnings and exceptions, drawn from his own
great experience. He spoke also of the several ranks and grades of the
chase: how the hare, hart and boar must ever take precedence over the
buck, the doe, the fox, the marten and the roe, even as a knight
banneret does over a knight, while these in turn are of a higher class
to the badger, the wildcat or the otter, who are but the common
populace of the world of beasts. Of blood-stains also he spoke—how the
skilled hunter may see at a glance if blood be dark and frothy, which
means a mortal hurt, or thin and clear, which means that the arrow has
struck a bone.

“By such signs,” said he, “you will surely know whether to lay on the
hounds and cast down the blinks which hinder the stricken deer in its
flight. But above all I pray you, Nigel, to have a care in the use of
the terms of the craft, lest you should make some blunder at table, so
that those who are wiser may have the laugh of you, and we who love you
may be shamed.”

“Nay, Sir John,” said Nigel. “I think that after your teaching I can
hold my place with the others.”

The old Knight shook his white head doubtfully. “There is so much to be
learned that there is no one who can be said to know all,” said he.
“For example, Nigel, it is sooth that for every collection of beasts of
the forest, and for every gathering of birds of the air, there is their
own private name so that none may be confused with another.”

“I know it, fair sir.”

“You know it, Nigel, but you do not know each separate name, else are
you a wiser man than I had thought you. In truth—none can say that they
know all, though I have myself picked off eighty, and six for a wager
at court, and it is said that the chief huntsman of the Duke of
Burgundy has counted over a hundred—but it is in my mind that he may
have found them as he went, for there was none to say him nay. Answer
me now, lad, how would you say if you saw ten badgers together in the
forest?”

“A cete of badgers, fair sir.”

“Good, Nigel—good, by my faith! And if you walk in Woolmer Forest and
see a swarm of foxes, how would you call it?”

“A skulk of foxes.”

“And if they be lions?”

“Nay, fair sir, I am not like to meet several lions in Woolmer Forest.”

“Aye, lad, but there are other forests besides Woolmer, and other lands
besides England, and who can tell how far afield such a knight errant
as Nigel of Tilford may go, when he sees worship to be won? We will say
that you were in the deserts of Nubia, and that afterward at the court
of the great Sultan you wished to say that you had seen several lions,
which is the first beast of the chase, being the king of all animals.
How then would you say it?”

Nigel scratched his head. “Surely, fair sir, I would be content to say
that I had seen a number of lions, if indeed I could say aught after so
wondrous an adventure.”

“Nay, Nigel, a huntsman would have said that he had seen a pride of
lions, and so proved that he knew the language of the chase. Now had it
been boars instead of lions?”

“One says a singular of boars.”

“And if they be swine?”

“Surely it is a herd of swine.”

“Nay, nay, lad, it is indeed sad to see how little you know. Your
hands, Nigel, were always better than your head. No man of gentle birth
would speak of a herd of swine; that is the peasant speech. If you
drive them it is a herd. If you hunt them it is other. What call you
them, then, Edith?”

“Nay, I know not,” said the girl listlessly. A crumpled note brought in
by a varlet was clinched in her right hand and her blue eyes looked
afar into the deep shadows of the roof.

“But you can tell us, Mary?”

“Surely, sweet sir, one talks of a sounder of swine.”

The old Knight laughed exultantly. “Here is a pupil who never brings me
shame!” he cried. “Be it lore—of chivalry or heraldry or woodcraft or
what you will, I can always turn to Mary. Many a man can she put to the
blush.”

“Myself among them,” said Nigel.

“Ah, lad, you are a Solomon to some of them. Hark ye! only last week
that jack-fool, the young Lord of Brocas, was here talking of having
seen a covey of pheasants in the wood. One such speech would have been
the ruin of a young Squire at the court. How would you have said it,
Nigel?”

“Surely, fair sir, it should be a nye of pheasants.”

“Good, Nigel—a nye of pheasants, even as it is a gaggle of geese or a
badling of ducks, a fall of woodcock or a wisp of snipe. But a covey of
pheasants! What sort of talk is that? I made him sit even where you are
sitting, Nigel, and I saw the bottom of two pots of Rhenish ere I let
him up. Even then I fear that he had no great profit from his lesson,
for he was casting his foolish eyes at Edith when he should have been
turning his ears to her father. But where is the wench?”

“She hath gone forth, father.”

“She ever doth go forth when there is a chance of learning aught that
is useful indoors. But supper will soon be ready, and there is a boar’s
ham fresh from the forest with which I would ask your help, Nigel, and
a side of venison from the King’s own chase. The tinemen and verderers
have not forgotten me yet, and my larder is ever full. Blow three moots
on the horn, Mary, that the varlets may set the table, for the growing
shadow and my loosening belt warn me that it is time.”




XII.
HOW NIGEL FOUGHT THE TWISTED MAN OF SHALFORD


In the days of which you read all classes, save perhaps the very poor,
fared better in meat and in drink than they have ever done since. The
country was covered with woodlands—there were seventy separate forests
in England alone, some of them covering half a shire. Within these
forests the great beasts of the chase were strictly preserved, but the
smaller game, the hares, the rabbits, the birds, which swarmed round
the coverts, found their way readily into the poor man’s pot. Ale was
very cheap, and cheaper still was the mead which every peasant could
make for himself out of the wild honey in the tree-trunks. There were
many tea-like drinks also, which were brewed by the poor at no expense:
mallow tea, tansy tea, and others the secret of which has passed.

Amid the richer classes there was rude profusion, great joints ever on
the sideboard, huge pies, beasts of the field and beasts of the chase,
with ale and rough French or Rhenish wines to wash them down. But the
very rich had attained to a high pitch of luxury in their food, and
cookery was a science in which the ornamentation of the dish was almost
as important as the dressing of the food. It was gilded, it was
silvered, it was painted, it was surrounded with flame. From the boar
and the peacock down to such strange food as the porpoise and the
hedgehog, every dish had its own setting and its own sauce, very
strange and very complex, with flavorings of dates, currants, cloves,
vinegar, sugar and honey, of cinnamon, ground ginger, sandalwood,
saffron, brawn and pines. It was the Norman tradition to eat in
moderation, but to have a great profusion of the best and of the most
delicate from which to choose. From them came this complex cookery, so
unlike the rude and often gluttonous simplicity of the old Teutonic
stock.

Sir John Buttesthorn was of that middle class who fared in the old
fashion, and his great oak supper-table groaned beneath the generous
pastries, the mighty joints and the great flagons. Below were the
household, above on a raised dais the family table, with places ever
ready for those frequent guests who dropped in from the high road
outside. Such a one had just come, an old priest, journeying from the
Abbey of Chertsey to the Priory of Saint John at Midhurst. He passed
often that way, and never without breaking his journey at the
hospitable board of Cosford.

“Welcome again, good Father Athanasius!” cried the burly Knight. “Come
sit here on my right and give me the news of the country-side, for
there is never a scandal but the priests are the first to know it.”

The priest, a kindly, quiet man, glanced at an empty place upon the
farther side of his host. “Mistress Edith?” said he.

“Aye, aye, where is the hussy?” cried her father impatiently. “Mary, I
beg you to have the horn blown again, that she may know that the supper
is on the table. What can the little owlet do abroad at this hour of
the night?”

There was trouble in the priest’s gentle eyes as he touched the Knight
upon the sleeve. “I have seen Mistress Edith within this hour,” said
he. “I fear that she will hear no horn that you may blow, for she must
be at Milford ere now.”

“At Milford? What does she there?”

“I pray you, good Sir John, to abate your voice somewhat, for indeed
this matter is for our private discourse, since it touches the honor of
a lady.”

“Her honor?” Sir John’s ruddy face had turned redder still, as he
stared at the troubled features of the priest. “Her honor, say you—the
honor of my daughter? Make good those words, or never set your foot
over the threshold of Cosford again!”

“I trust that I have done no wrong, Sir John, but indeed I must say
what I have seen, else would I be a false friend and an unworthy
priest.”

“Haste man, haste! What in the Devil’s name have you seen?”

“Know you a little man, partly misshapen, named Paul de la Fosse?”

“I know him well. He is a man of noble family and coat-armor, being the
younger brother of Sir Eustace de la Fosse of Shalford. Time was when I
had thought that I might call him son, for there was never a day that
he did not pass with my girls, but I fear that his crooked back sped
him ill in his wooing.”

“Alas, Sir John! It is his mind that is more crooked than his back. He
is a perilous man with women, for the Devil hath given him such a
tongue and such an eye that he charms them even as the basilisk.
Marriage may be in their mind, but never in his, so that I could count
a dozen and more whom he has led to their undoing. It is his pride and
his boast over the whole countryside.”

“Well, well, and what is this to me or mine?”

“Even now, Sir John, as I rode my mule up the road I met this man
speeding toward his home. A woman rode by his side, and though her face
was hooded I heard her laugh as she passed me. That laugh I have heard
before, and it was under this very roof, from the lips of Mistress
Edith.”

The Knight’s knife dropped from his hand. But the debate had been such
that neither Mary nor Nigel could fail to have heard it. Mid the rough
laughter and clatter of voices from below the little group at the high
table had a privacy of their own.

“Fear not, father,” said the girl—“indeed, the good Father Athanasius
hath fallen into error, and Edith will be with us anon. I have heard
her speak of this man many times of late, and always with bitter
words.”

“It is true, sir,” cried Nigel eagerly. “It was only this very evening
as we rode over Thursley Moor that Mistress Edith told me that she
counted him not a fly, and that she would be glad if he were beaten for
his evil deeds.”

But the wise priest shook his silvery locks. “Nay, there is ever danger
when a woman speaks like that. Hot hate is twin brother to hot love.
Why should she speak so if there were not some bond between them?”

“And yet,” said Nigel, “what can have changed her thoughts in three
short hours? She was here in the hall with us since I came. By Saint
Paul, I will not believe it!”

Mary’s face darkened. “I call to mind,” said she, “that a note was
brought her by Hannekin the stable varlet when you were talking to us,
fair sir, of the terms of the chase. She read it and went forth.”

Sir John sprang to his feet, but sank into his chair again with a
groan. “Would that I were dead,” he cried, “ere I saw dishonor come
upon my house, and am so tied with this accursed foot that I can
neither examine if it be true, nor yet avenge it! If my son Oliver were
here, then all would be well. Send me this stable varlet that I may
question him.”

“I pray you, fair and honored sir,” said Nigel, “that you will take me
for your son this night, that I may handle this matter in the way which
seems best. On jeopardy of my honor I will do all that a man may.”

“Nigel, I thank you. There is no man in Christendom to whom I would
sooner turn.”

“But I would lean your mind in one matter, fair sir. This man, Paul de
la Fosse, owns broad acres, as I understand, and comes of noble blood.
There is no reason if things be as we fear that he should not marry
your daughter?”

“Nay, she could not wish for better.”

“It is well. And first I would question this Hannekin; but it shall be
done in such a fashion that none shall know, for indeed it is not a
matter for the gossip of servants. But if you will show me the man,
Mistress Mary, I will take him out to tend my own horse, and so I shall
learn all that he has to tell.”

Nigel was absent for some time, and when he returned the shadow upon
his face brought little hope to the anxious hearts at the high table.
“I have locked him in the stable loft, lest he talk too much,” said he,
“for my questions must have shown him whence the wind blew. It was
indeed from this man that the note came, and he had brought with him a
spare horse for the lady.”

The old Knight groaned, and his face sank upon his hands.

“Nay, father, they watch you!” whispered Mary. “For the honor of our
house let us keep a bold face to all.” Then, raising her young clear
voice, so that it sounded through the room: “If you ride eastward,
Nigel, I would fain go with you, that my sister may not come back
alone.”

“We will ride together, Mary,” said Nigel, rising; then in a lower
voice: “But we cannot go alone, and if we take a servant all is known.
I pray you to stay at home and leave the matter with me.”

“Nay, Nigel, she may sorely need a woman’s aid, and what woman should
it be save her own sister? I can take my tire-woman with us.”

“Nay, I shall ride with you myself if your impatience can keep within
the powers of my mule,” said the old priest.

“But it is not your road, father?”

“The only road of a true priest is that which leads to the good of
others. Come, my children, and we will go together.”

And so it was that stout Sir John Buttesthorn, the aged Knight of
Duplin, was left alone at his own high table, pretending to eat,
pretending to drink, fidgeting in his seat, trying hard to seem
unconcerned with his mind and body in a fever, while below him his
varlets and handmaids laughed and jested, clattering their cups and
clearing their trenchers, all unconscious of the dark shadow which
threw its gloom over the lonely man upon the dais above.

Meantime the Lady Mary upon the white jennet which her sister had
ridden on the same evening, Nigel on his war-horse, and the priest on
the mule, clattered down the rude winding road which led to London. The
country on either side was a wilderness of heather moors and of
morasses from which came the strange crying of night-fowl. A half-moon
shone in the sky between the rifts of hurrying clouds. The lady rode in
silence, absorbed in the thought of the task before them, the danger
and the shame.

Nigel chatted in a low tone with the priest. From him he learned more
of the evil name of this man whom they followed. His house at Shalford
was a den of profligacy and vice. No woman could cross that threshold
and depart unstained. In some strange fashion, inexplicable and yet
common, the man, with all his evil soul and his twisted body, had yet
some strange fascination for women, some mastery over them which
compelled them to his will. Again and again he had brought ruin to a
household, again and again his adroit tongue and his cunning wit had in
some fashion saved him from the punishment of his deeds. His family was
great in the county, and his kinsmen held favor with the King, so that
his neighbors feared to push things too far against him. Such was the
man, malignant and ravenous, who had stooped like some foul night-hawk
and borne away to his evil nest the golden beauty of Cosford. Nigel
said little as he listened, but he raised his hunting-dagger to his
tightened lips, and thrice he kissed the cross of its handle.

They had passed over the moors and through the village of Milford and
the little township of Godalming, until their path turned southward
over the Pease marsh and crossed the meadows of Shalford. There on the
dark hillside glowed the red points of light which marked the windows
of the house which they sought. A somber arched avenue of oak-trees led
up to it, and then they were in the moon-silvered clearing in front.

From the shadow of the arched door there sprang two rough serving-men,
bearded and gruff, great cudgels in their hands, to ask them who they
were and what their errand. The Lady Mary had slipped from her horse
and was advancing to the door, but they rudely barred her way.

“Nay, nay, our master needs no more!” cried one, with a hoarse laugh.
“Stand back, mistress, whoever you be! The house is shut, and our lord
sees no guests to-night.”

“Fellow,” said Nigel, speaking low and clear, “stand back from us! Our
errand is with your master.”

“Bethink you, my children,” cried the old priest, “would it not be best
perchance, that I go in to him and see whether the voice of the Church
may not soften this hard heart? I fear bloodshed if you enter.”

“Nay, father, I pray you to stay here for the nonce,” said Nigel. “And
you, Mary, do you bide with the good priest, for we know not what may
be within.”

Again he turned to the door, and again the two men barred his passage.

“Stand back, I say, back for your lives!” said Nigel. “By Saint Paul! I
should think it shame to soil my sword with such as you, but my soul is
set, and no man shall bar my path this night.”

The men shrank from the deadly menace of that gentle voice.

“Hold!” said one of them, peering through the darkness, “is it not
Squire Loring of Tilford?”

“That is indeed my name.”

“Had you spoken it I for one would not have stopped your way. Put down
your staff, Wat, for this is no stranger, but the Squire of Tilford.”

“As well for him,” grumbled the other, lowering his cudgel with an
inward prayer of thanksgiving. “Had it been otherwise I should have had
blood upon my soul to-night. But our master said nothing of neighbors
when he ordered us to hold the door. I will enter and ask him what is
his will.”

But already Nigel was past them and had pushed open the outer door.
Swift as he was, the Lady Mary was at his very heels, and the two
passed together into the hall beyond.

It was a great room, draped and curtained with black shadows, with one
vivid circle of light in the center, where two oil lamps shone upon a
small table. A meal was laid upon the table, but only two were seated
at it, and there were no servants in the room. At the near end was
Edith, her golden hair loose and streaming down over the scarlet and
black of her riding-dress.

At the farther end the light beat strongly upon the harsh face and the
high-drawn misshapen shoulders of the lord of the house. A tangle of
black hair surmounted a high rounded forehead, the forehead of a
thinker, with two deep-set cold gray eyes twinkling sharply from under
tufted brows. His nose was curved and sharp, like the beak of some
cruel bird, but below the whole of his clean-shaven powerful face was
marred by the loose slabbing mouth and the round folds of the heavy
chin. His knife in one hand and a half-gnawed bone in the other, he
looked fiercely up, like some beast disturbed in his den, as the two
intruders broke in upon his hall.

Nigel stopped midway between the door and the table. His eyes and those
of Paul de la Fosse were riveted upon each other. But Mary, with her
woman’s soul flooded over with love and pity, had rushed forward and
cast her arms round her younger sister. Edith had sprung up from her
chair, and with averted face tried to push the other away from her.

“Edith, Edith! By the Virgin, I implore you to come back with us, and
to leave this wicked man!” cried Mary. “Dear sister, you would not
break our father’s heart, nor bring his gray head in dishonor to the
grave! Come back Edith, come back and all is well.”

But Edith pushed her away, and her fair cheeks were flushed with her
anger. “What right have you over me, Mary, you who are but two years
older, that you should follow me over the country-side as though I were
a runagate villain and you my mistress? Do you yourself go back, and
leave me to do that which seems best in my own eyes.”

But Mary still held her in her arms, and still strove to soften the
hard and angry heart. “Our mother is dead, Edith. I thank God that she
died ere she saw you under this roof! But I stand for her, as I have
done all my life, since I am indeed your elder. It is with her voice
that I beg and pray you that you will not trust this man further, and
that you will come back ere it be too late!”

Edith writhed from her grasp, and stood flushed and defiant, with
gleaming, angry eyes fixed upon her sister. “You may speak evil of him
now,” said she, “but there was a time when Paul de la Fosse came to
Cosford, and who so gentle and soft-spoken to him then as wise, grave,
sister Mary? But he has learned to love another; so now he is the
wicked man, and it is shame to be seen under his roof! From what I see
of my good pious sister and her cavalier it is sin for another to ride
at night with a man at your side, but it comes easy enough to you. Look
at your own eye, good sister, ere you would take the speck from that of
another.”

Mary stood irresolute and greatly troubled, holding down her pride and
her anger, but uncertain how best to deal with this strong wayward
spirit.

“It is not a time for bitter words, dear sister,” said she, and again
she laid her hand upon her sister’s sleeve. “All that you say may be
true. There was indeed a time when this man was friend to us both, and
I know even as you do the power which he may have to win a woman’s
heart. But I know him now, and you do not. I know the evil that he has
wrought, the dishonor that he has brought, the perjury that lies upon
his soul, the confidence betrayed, the promise unfulfilled—all this I
know. Am I to see my own sister caught in the same well-used trap? Has
it shut upon you, child? Am I indeed already too late? For God’s sake,
tell me, Edith, that it is not so?”

Edith plucked her sleeve from her sister and made two swift steps to
the head of the table. Paul de la Fosse still sat silent with his eyes
upon Nigel. Edith laid her hand upon his shoulder: “This is the man I
love, and the only man that I have ever loved. This is my husband,”
said she.

At the word Mary gave a cry of joy.

“And is it so?” she cried. “Nay, then all is in honor, and God will see
to the rest. If you are man and wife before the altar, then indeed why
should I, or any other, stand between you? Tell me that it is indeed
so, and I return this moment to make your father a happy man.”

Edith pouted like a naughty child. “We are man and wife in the eyes of
God. Soon also we shall be wedded before all the world. We do but wait
until next Monday when Paul’s brother, who is a priest at St. Albans,
will come to wed us. Already a messenger has sped for him, and he will
come, will he not, dear love?”

“He will come,” said the master of Shalford, still with his eyes fixed
upon the silent Nigel.

“It is a lie; he will not come,” said a voice from the door.

It was the old priest, who had followed the others as far as the
threshold.

“He will not come,” he repeated as he advanced into the room.
“Daughter, my daughter, hearken to the words of one who is indeed old
enough to be your earthly father. This lie has served before. He has
ruined others before you with it. The man has no brother at Saint
Albans. I know his brothers well, and there is no priest among them.
Before Monday, when it is all too late, you will have found the truth
as others have done before you. Trust him not, but come with us!”

Paul de la Fosse looked up at her with a quick smile and patted the
hand upon his shoulder.

“Do you speak to them, Edith,” said he.

Her eyes flashed with scorn as she surveyed them each in turn, the
woman, the youth and the priest.

“I have but one word to say to them,” said she. “It is that they go
hence and trouble us no more. Am I not a free woman? Have I not said
that this is the only man I ever loved? I have loved him long. He did
not know it, and in despair he turned to another. Now he knows all and
never again can doubt come between us. Therefore I will stay here at
Shalford and come to Cosford no more save upon the arm of my husband.
Am I so weak that I would believe the tales you tell against him? Is it
hard for a jealous woman and a wandering priest to agree upon a lie?
No, no, Mary, you can go hence and take your cavalier and your priest
with you, for here I stay, true to my love and safe in my trust upon
his honor!”

“Well spoken, on my faith, my golden bird!” said the little master of
Shalford. “Let me add my own word to that which has been said. You
would not grant me any virtue in your unkindly speech, good Lady Mary,
and yet you must needs confess that at least I have good store of
patience, since I have not set my dogs upon your friends who have come
between me and my ease. But even to the most virtuous there comes at
last a time when poor human frailty may prevail, and so I pray you to
remove both yourself, your priest and your valiant knight errant, lest
perhaps there be more haste and less dignity when at last you do take
your leave. Sit down, my fair love, and let us turn once more to our
supper.” He motioned her to her chair, and he filled her wine-cup as
well as his own.

Nigel had said no word since he had entered the room, but his look had
never lost its set purpose, nor had his brooding eyes ever wandered
from the sneering face of the deformed master of Shalford. Now he
turned with swift decision to Mary and to the priest.

“That is over,” said he in a low voice. “You have done all that you
could, and now it is for me to play my part as well as I am able. I
pray you, Mary, and you, good father, that you will await me outside.”

“Nay, Nigel, if there is danger—”

“It is easier for me, Mary, if you are not there. I pray you to go. I
can speak to this man more at my ease.”

She looked at him with questioning eyes and then obeyed.

Nigel plucked at the priest’s gown.

“I pray you, father, have you your book of offices with you?”

“Surely, Nigel, it is ever in my breast.”

“Have it ready, father!”

“For what, my son?”

“There are two places you may mark; there is the service of marriage
and there is the prayer for the dying. Go with her, father, and be
ready at my call.”

He closed the door behind them and was alone with this ill-matched
couple. They both turned in their chairs to look at him, Edith with a
defiant face, the man with a bitter smile upon his lips and malignant
hatred in his eyes.

“What,” said he, “the knight errant still lingers? Have we not heard of
his thirst for glory? What new venture does he see that he should tarry
here?”

Nigel walked to the table.

“There is no glory and little venture,” said he; “but I have come for a
purpose and I must do it. I learn from your own lips, Edith, that you
will not leave this man.”

“If you have ears you have heard it.”

“You are, as you have said, a free woman, and who can gainsay you? But
I have known you, Edith, since we played as boy and girl on the
heather-hills together. I will save you from this man’s cunning and
from your own foolish weakness.”

“What would you do?”

“There is a priest without. He will marry you now. I will see you
married ere I leave this hall.”

“Or else?” sneered the man.

“Or else you never leave this hall alive. Nay, call not for your
servants or your dogs! By Saint Paul! I swear to you that this matter
lies between us three, and that if any fourth comes at your call you,
at least, shall never live to see what comes of it! Speak then, Paul of
Shalford! Will you wed this woman now, or will you not?”

Edith was on her feet with outstretched arms between them. “Stand back,
Nigel! He is small and weak. You would not do him a hurt! Did you not
say so this very day? For God’s sake, Nigel, do not look at him so!
There is death in your eyes.”

“A snake may be small and weak, Edith, yet every honest man would place
his heel upon it. Do you stand back yourself, for my purpose is set.”

“Paul!” she turned her eyes to the pale sneering face. “Bethink you,
Paul! Why should you not do what he asks? What matter to you whether it
be now or on Monday? I pray you, dear Paul, for my sake let him have
his way! Your brother can read the service again if it so please him.
Let us wed now, Paul, and then all is well.”

He had risen from his chair, and he dashed aside her appealing hands.
“You foolish woman,” he snarled, “and you, my savior of fair damsels,
who are so bold against a cripple, you have both to learn that if my
body be weak there is the soul of my breed within it! To marry because
a boasting, ranting, country Squire would have me do so—no, by the soul
of God, I will die first! On Monday I will marry, and no day sooner, so
let that be your answer.”

“It is the answer that I wished,” said Nigel, “for indeed I see no
happiness in this marriage, and the other may well be the better way.
Stand aside, Edith!” He gently forced her to one side and drew his
sword.

De la Fosse cried aloud at the sight. “I have no sword. You would not
murder me?” said he, leaning back with haggard-face and burning eyes
against his chair. The bright steel shone in the lamp-light. Edith
shrank back, her hand over her face.

“Take this sword!” said Nigel, and he turned the hilt to the cripple.
“Now!” he added, as he drew his hunting knife. “Kill me if you can,
Paul de la Fosse, for as God is my help I will do as much for you!”

The woman, half swooning and yet spellbound and fascinated, looked on
at that strange combat. For a moment the cripple stood with an air of
doubt, the sword grasped in his nerveless fingers. Then as he saw the
tiny blade in Nigel’s hand the greatness of the advantage came home to
him, and a cruel smile tightened his loose lips. Slowly, step by step
he advanced, his chin sunk upon his chest, his eyes glaring from under
the thick tangle of his brows like fires through the brushwood. Nigel
waited for him, his left hand forward, his knife down by his hip, his
face grave, still and watchful.

Nearer and nearer yet, with stealthy step, and then with a bound and a
cry of hatred and rage Paul de la Fosse had sped his blow. It was well
judged and well swung, but point would have been wiser than edge
against that supple body and those active feet. Quick as a flash, Nigel
had sprung inside the sweep of the blade, taking a flesh wound on his
left forearm, as he pressed it under the hilt. The next instant the
cripple was on the ground and Nigel’s dagger was at his throat.

“You dog!” he whispered. “I have you at my mercy! Quick ere I strike,
and for the last time! Will you marry or no?”

The crash of the fall and the sharp point upon his throat had cowed the
man’s spirit. He looked up with a white face and the sweat gleamed upon
his forehead. There was terror in his eyes.

“Nay, take your knife from me!” he cried. “I cannot die like a calf in
the shambles.”

“Will you marry?”

“Yes, yes, I will wed her! After all she is a good wench and I might do
worse. Let me up! I tell you I will marry her! What more would you
have?”

Nigel stood above him with his foot upon his misshapen body. He had
picked up his sword, and the point rested upon the cripple’s breast.

“Nay, you will bide where you are! If you are to live—and my conscience
cries loud against it—at least your wedding will be such as your sins
have deserved. Lie there, like the crushed worm that you are!” Then he
raised his voice. “Father Athanasius!” he cried. “What ho! Father
Athanasius!”

The old priest ran to the cry, and so did the Lady Mary. A strange
sight it was that met them now in the circle of light, the frightened
girl, half-unconscious against the table, the prostrate cripple, and
Nigel with foot and sword upon his body.

“Your book, father!” cried Nigel. “I know not if what we do is good or
ill; but we must wed them, for there is no way out.”

But the girl by the table had given a great cry, and she was clinging
and sobbing with her arms round her sister’s neck.

“Oh, Mary, I thank the Virgin that you have come! I thank the Virgin
that it is not too late! What did he say? He said that he was a de la
Fosse and that he would not be married at the sword-point. My heart
went out to him when he said it. But I, am I not a Buttesthorn, and
shall it be said that I would marry a man who could be led to the altar
with a knife at his throat? No, no, I see him as he is! I know him now,
the mean spirit, the lying tongue! Can I not read in his eyes that he
has indeed deceived me, that he would have left me as you say that he
has left others? Take me home, Mary, my sister, for you have plucked me
back this night from the very mouth of Hell!”

And so it was that the master of Shalford, livid and brooding, was left
with his wine at his lonely table, while the golden beauty of Cosford,
hot with shame and anger, her fair face wet with tears, passed out safe
from the house of infamy into the great calm and peace of the starry
night.




XIII.
HOW THE COMRADES JOURNEYED DOWN THE OLD, OLD ROAD


And now the season of the moonless nights was drawing nigh and the
King’s design was ripe. Very secretly his preparations were made.
Already the garrison of Calais, which consisted of five hundred archers
and two hundred men-at-arms, could, if forewarned, resist any attack
made upon it. But it was the King’s design not merely to resist the
attack, but to capture the attackers. Above all it was his wish to find
the occasion for one of those adventurous passages of arms which had
made his name famous throughout Christendom as the very pattern and
leader of knight-errant chivalry.

But the affair wanted careful handling. The arrival of any,
reinforcements, or even the crossing of any famous soldier, would have
alarmed the French and warned them that their plot had been discovered.
Therefore it was in twos and threes in the creyers and provision ships
which were continually passing from shore to shore that the chosen
warriors and their squires were brought to Calais. There they were
passed at night through the water-gate into the castle where they could
lie hidden, unknown to the townsfolk, until the hour for action had
come.

Nigel had received word from Chandos to join him at “The Sign of the
Broom-Pod” in Winchelsea. Three days beforehand he and Aylward rode
from Tilford all armed and ready for the wars. Nigel was in
hunting-costume, blithe and gay, with his precious armor and his small
baggage trussed upon the back of a spare horse which Aylward led by the
bridle. The archer had himself a good black mare, heavy and slow, but
strong enough to be fit to carry his powerful frame. In his brigandine
of chain mail and his steel cap, with straight strong sword by his
side, his yellow long-bow jutting over his shoulder, and his quiver of
arrows supported by a scarlet baldric, he was such a warrior as any
knight might well be proud to have in his train. All Tilford trailed
behind them, as they rode slowly over the long slope of heath land
which skirts the flank of Crooksbury Hill.

At the summit of the rise Nigel reined in Pommers and looked back at
the little village behind him. There was the old dark manor house, with
one bent figure leaning upon a stick and gazing dimly after him from
beside the door. He looked at the high-pitched roof, the timbered
walls, the long trail of swirling blue smoke which rose from the single
chimney, and the group of downcast old servants who lingered at the
gate, John the cook, Weathercote the minstrel, and Red Swire the broken
soldier. Over the river amid the trees he could see the grim, gray
tower of Waverley, and even as he looked, the iron bell, which had so
often seemed to be the hoarse threatening cry of an enemy, clanged out
its call to prayer. Nigel doffed his velvet cap and prayed also—prayed
that peace might remain at home, and good warfare, in which honor and
fame should await him, might still be found abroad. Then, waving his
hand to the people, he turned his horse’s head and rode slowly
eastward. A moment later Aylward broke from the group of archers and
laughing girls who clung to his bridle and his stirrup straps, and rode
on, blowing kisses over his shoulder. So at last the two comrades,
gentle and simple, were fairly started on their venture.

There are two seasons of color in those parts: the yellow, when the
country-side is flaming with the gorse-blossoms, and the crimson, when
all the long slopes are smoldering with the heather. So it was now.
Nigel looked back from time to time, as he rode along the narrow track
where the ferns and the ling brushed his feet on either side, and as he
looked it seemed to him that wander where he might he would never see a
fairer scene than that of his own home. Far to the westward, glowing in
the morning light, rolled billow after billow of ruddy heather land,
until they merged into the dark shadows of Woolmer Forest and the pale
clear green of the Butser chalk downs. Never in his life had Nigel
wandered far beyond these limits, and the woodlands, the down and the
heather were dear to his soul. It gave him a pang in his heart now as
he turned his face away from them; but if home lay to the westward, out
there to the eastward was the great world of adventure, the noble stage
where each of his kinsmen in turn had played his manly part and left a
proud name behind.

How often he had longed for this day! And now it had come with no
shadow cast behind it. Dame Ermyntrude was under the King’s protection.
The old servants had their future assured. The strife with the monks of
Waverley had been assuaged. He had a noble horse under him, the best of
weapons, and a stout follower at his back. Above all he was bound on a
gallant errand with the bravest knight in England as his leader. All
these thoughts surged together in his mind, and he whistled and sang,
as he rode, out of the joy of his heart, while Pommers sidled and
curveted in sympathy with the mood of his master. Presently, glancing
back, he saw from Aylward’s downcast eyes and Puckered brow that the
archer was clouded with trouble. He reined his horse to let him come
abreast of him.

“How now, Aylward?” said he. “Surely of all men in England you and I
should be the most blithe this morning, since we ride forward with all
hopes of honorable advancement. By Saint Paul! ere we see these heather
hills once more we shall either worshipfully win worship, or we shall
venture our persons in the attempt. These be glad thoughts, and why
should you be downcast?”

Aylward shrugged his broad shoulders, and a wry smile dawned upon his
rugged face. “I am indeed as limp as a wetted bowstring,” said he. “It
is the nature of a man that he should be sad when he leaves the woman
he loves.”

“In truth, yes!” cried Nigel, and in a flash the dark eyes of Mary
Buttesthorn rose before him, and he heard her low, sweet, earnest voice
as he had heard it that night when they brought her frailer sister back
from Shalford Manor, a voice which made all that was best and noblest
in a man thrill within his soul. “Yet, bethink you, archer, that what a
woman loves in man is not his gross body, but rather his soul, his
honor, his fame, the deeds with which he has made his life beautiful.
Therefore you are winning love as well as glory when you turn to the
wars.”

“It may be so,” said Aylward; “but indeed it goes to my heart to see
the pretty dears weep, and I would fain weep as well to keep them
company. When Mary—or was it Dolly?—nay, it was Martha, the red-headed
girl from the mill—when she held tight to my baldric it was like
snapping my heart-string to pluck myself loose.”

“You speak of one name and then of another,” said Nigel. “How is she
called then, this maid whom you love?”

Aylward pushed back his steel cap and scratched his bristling head with
some embarrassment. “Her name,” said he, “is Mary Dolly Martha Susan
Jane Cicely Theodosia Agnes Johanna Kate.”

Nigel laughed as Aylward rolled out this prodigious title. “I had no
right to take you to the wars,” said he; “for by Saint Paul! it is very
clear that I have widowed half the parish. But I saw your aged father
the franklin. Bethink you of the joy that will fill his heart when he
hears that you have done some small deed in France, and so won honor in
the eyes of all.”

“I fear that honor will not help him to pay his arrears of rent to the
sacrist of Waverley,” said Aylward. “Out he will go on the roadside,
honor and all, if he does not find ten nobles by next Epiphany. But if
I could win a ransom or be at the storming of a rich city, then indeed
the old man would be proud of me. ‘Thy sword must help my spade,
Samkin,’ said he as he kissed me goodby. Ah! it would indeed be a happy
day for him and for all if I could ride back with a saddle-bag full of
gold pieces, and please God, I shall dip my hand in somebody’s pocket
before I see Crooksbury Hill once more!”

Nigel shook his head, for indeed it seemed hopeless to try to bridge
the gulf between them. Already they had made such good progress along
the bridle-path through the heather that the little hill of Saint
Catharine and the ancient shrine upon its summit loomed up before them.
Here they crossed the road from the south to London, and at the
crossing two wayfarers were waiting who waved their hands in greeting,
the one a tall, slender, dark woman upon a white jennet, the other a
very thick and red-faced old man, whose weight seemed to curve the back
of the stout gray cob which he bestrode.

“What how, Nigel!” he cried. “Mary has told me that you make a start
this morning, and we have waited here this hour and more on the chance
of seeing you pass. Come, lad, and have a last stoup of English ale,
for many a time amid the sour French wines you will long for the white
foam under your nose, and the good homely twang of it.”

Nigel had to decline the draft, for it meant riding into Guildford
town, a mile out of his course, but very gladly he agreed with Mary
that they should climb the path to the old shrine and offer a last
orison together. The knight and Aylward waited below with the horses;
and so it came about that Nigel and Mary found themselves alone under
the solemn old Gothic arches, in front of the dark shadowed recess in
which gleamed the golden reliquary of the saint. In silence they knelt
side by side in prayer, and then came forth once more out of the gloom
and the shadow into the fresh sunlit summer morning. They stopped ere
they descended the path, and looked to right and left at the fair
meadows and the blue Wey curling down the valley.

“What have you prayed for, Nigel?” said she.

“I have prayed that God and His saints will hold my spirit high and
will send me back from France in such a fashion that I may dare to come
to you and to claim you for my own.”

“Bethink you well what it is that you say, Nigel,” said she. “What you
are to me only my own heart can tell; but I would never set eyes upon
your face again rather than abate by one inch that height of honor and
worshipful achievement to which you may attain.”

“Nay, my dear and most sweet lady, how should you abate it, since it is
the thought of you which will nerve my arm and uphold my heart?”

“Think once more, my fair lord, and hold yourself bound by no word
which you have said. Let it be as the breeze which blows past our faces
and is heard of no more. Your soul yearns for honor. To that has it
ever turned. Is there room in it for love also? or is it possible that
both shall live at their highest in one mind? Do you not call to mind
that Galahad and other great knights of old have put women out of their
lives that they might ever give their whole soul and strength to the
winning of honor? May it not be that I shall be a drag upon you, that
your heart may shrink from some honorable task, lest it should bring
risk and pain to me? Think well before you answer, my fair lord, for
indeed my very heart would break if it should ever happen that through
love of me your high hopes and great promise should miss fulfilment.”

Nigel looked at her with sparkling eyes. The soul which shone through
her dark face had transformed it for the moment into a beauty more
lofty and more rare than that of her shallow sister. He bowed before
the majesty of the woman, and pressed his lips to her hand. “You are
like a star upon my path which guides me on the upward way,” said he.
“Our souls are set together upon the finding of honor, and how shall we
hold each other back when our purpose is the same?”

She shook her proud head. “So it seems to you now, fair lord, but it
may be otherwise as the years pass. How shall you prove that I am
indeed a help and not a hindrance?”

“I will prove it by my deeds, fair and dear lady,” said Nigel. “Here at
the shrine of the holy Catharine, on this, the Feast of Saint Margaret,
I take my oath that I will do three deeds in your honor as a proof of
my high love before I set eyes upon your face again, and these three
deeds shall stand as a proof to you that if I love you dearly, still I
will not let the thought of you stand betwixt me and honorable
achievement!”

Her face shone with her love and her pride. “I also make my oath,” said
she, “and I do it in the name of the holy Catharine whose shrine is
hard by. I swear that I will hold myself for you until these three
deeds be done and we meet once more; also that if—which may dear Christ
forfend! you fall in doing them then I shall take the veil in Shalford
nunnery and look upon no man’s face again! Give me your hand, Nigel.”

She had taken a little bangle of gold filigree work from her arm and
fastened it upon his sunburnt wrist, reading aloud to him the engraved
motto in old French: “_Fais ce que dois, adviegne que pourra—c’est
commandé au chevalier_.” Then for one moment they fell into each
other’s arms and with kiss upon kiss, a loving man and a tender woman,
they swore their troth to each other. But the old knight was calling
impatiently from below and together they hurried down the winding path
to where the horses waited under the sandy bluff.

As far as the Shalford crossing Sir John rode by Nigel’s arm, and many
were the last injunctions which he gave him concerning woodcraft, and
great his anxiety lest he confuse a spay with a brocket, or either with
a hind. At last when they came to the reedy edge of the Wey the old
knight and his daughter reined up their horses. Nigel looked back at
them ere he entered the dark Chantry woods, and saw them still gazing
after him and waving their hands. Then the path wound amongst the trees
and they were lost to sight; but long afterwards when a clearing
exposed once more the Shalford meadows Nigel saw that the old man upon
the gray cob was riding slowly toward Saint Catharine’s Hill, but that
the girl was still where he had seen her last, leaning forward in her
saddle and straining her eyes to pierce the dark forest which screened
her lover from her view. It was but a fleeting glance through a break
in the foliage, and yet in after days of stress and toil in far distant
lands it was that one little picture—the green meadow, the reeds, the
slow blue-winding river, and the eager bending graceful figure upon the
white horse—which was the clearest and the dearest image of that
England which he had left behind him.

But if Nigel’s friends had learned that this was the morning of his
leaving, his enemies too were on the alert. The two comrades had just
emerged from the Chantry woods and were beginning the ascent of that
curving path which leads upward to the old Chapel of the Martyr when
with a hiss like an angry snake a long white arrow streaked under
Pommers and struck quivering in the grassy turf. A second whizzed past
Nigel’s ear, as he tried to turn; but Aylward struck the great
war-horse a sharp blow over the haunches, and it had galloped some
hundreds of yards before its rider could pull it up. Aylward followed
as hard as he could ride, bending low over his horse’s neck, while
arrows whizzed all around him.

“By Saint Paul!” said Nigel, tugging at his bridle and white with
anger, “they shall not chase me across the country as though I was a
frighted doe. Archer, how dare you to lash my horse when I would have
turned and ridden in upon them?”

“It is well that I did so,” said Aylward, “or by these ten
finger-bones! our journey would have begun and ended on the same day.
As I glanced round I saw a dozen of them at the least amongst the
brushwood. See now how the light glimmers upon their steel caps yonder
in the bracken under the great beech-tree. Nay, I pray you, my fair
lord, do not ride forward. What chance has a man in the open against
all these who lie at their ease in the underwood? If you will not think
of yourself, then consider your horse, which would have a cloth-yard
shaft feathered in its hide ere it could reach the wood.”

Nigel chafed in impotent anger. “Am I to be shot at like a popinjay at
a fair, by any reaver or outlaw that seeks a mark for his bow?” he
cried. “By Saint Paul! Aylward, I will put on my harness and go further
into the matter. Help me to untruss, I pray you!”

“Nay, my fair lord, I will not help you to your own downfall. It is a
match with cogged dice betwixt a horseman on the moor and archers amid
the forest. But these men are no outlaws, or they would not dare to
draw their bows within a league of the sheriff of Guildford.”

“Indeed, Aylward, I think that you speak truth,” said Nigel. “It may be
that these are the men of Paul de la Fosse of Shalford, whom I have
given little cause to love me. Ah! there is indeed the very man
himself.”

They sat their horses with their backs to the long slope which leads up
to the old chapel on the hill. In front of them was the dark ragged
edge of the wood, with a sharp twinkle of steel here and there in its
shadows which spoke of these lurking foes. But now there was a long
moot upon a horn, and at once a score of russet-clad bowmen ran forward
from amid the trees, spreading out into a scattered line and closing
swiftly in upon the travelers. In the midst of them, upon a great gray
horse, sat a small misshapen man, waving and cheering as one sets
hounds on a badger, turning his head this way and that as he whooped
and pointed, urging his bowmen onward up the slope.

“Draw them on, my fair lord! Draw them on until we have them out on the
down!” cried Aylward, his eyes shining with joy. “Five hundred paces
more, and then we may be on terms with them. Nay, linger not, but keep
them always just clear of arrowshot until our turn has come.”

Nigel shook and trembled with eagerness, as with his hand on his
sword-hilt he looked at the line of eager hurrying men. But it flashed
through his mind what Chandos had said of the cool head which is better
for the warrior than the hot heart. Aylward’s words were true and wise.
He turned Pommers’ head therefore, and amid a cry of derision from
behind them the comrades trotted over the down. The bowmen broke into a
run, while their leader screamed and waved more madly than before.
Aylward cast many a glance at them over his shoulder.

“Yet a little farther! Yet a little farther still!” he muttered. “The
wind is towards them and the fools have forgot that I can overshoot
them by fifty paces. Now, my good lord, I pray you for one instant to
hold the horses, for my weapon is of more avail this day, than thine
can be. They may make sorry cheer ere they gain the shelter of the wood
once more.”

He had sprung from his horse, and with a downward wrench of his arm and
a push with his knee he slipped the string into the upper nock of his
mighty war-bow. Then in a flash he notched his shaft and drew it to the
pile, his keen blue eyes glowing fiercely behind it from under his
knotted brows. With thick legs planted sturdily apart, his body laid to
the bow, his left arm motionless as wood, his right bunched into a
double curve of swelling muscles as he stretched the white well-waxed
string, he looked so keen and fierce a fighter that the advancing line
stopped for an instant at the sight of him. Two or three loosed off
their arrows, but the shafts flew heavily against the head wind, and
snaked along the hard turf some score of paces short of the mark. One
only, a short bandy-legged man, whose squat figure spoke of enormous
muscular strength, ran swiftly in and then drew so strong a bow that
the arrow quivered in the ground at Aylward’s very feet.

“It is Black Will of Lynchmere,” said the bowman. “Many a match have I
shot with him, and I know well that no other man on the Surrey marches
could have sped such a shaft. I trust that you are houseled and
shriven, Will, for I have known you so long that I would not have your
damnation upon my soul.”

He raised his bow as he spoke, and the string twanged with a rich deep
musical note. Aylward leaned upon his bow-stave as he keenly watched
the long swift flight of his shaft, skimming smoothly down the wind.

“On him, on him! No, over him, by my hilt!” he cried. “There is more
wind than I had thought. Nay, nay, friend, now that I have the length
of you, you can scarce hope to loose again.”

Black Will had notched an arrow and was raising his bow when Aylward’s
second shaft passed through the shoulder of his drawing arm. With a
shout of anger and pain he dropped his weapon, and dancing in his fury
he shook his fist and roared curses at his rival.

“I could slay him; but I will not, for good bowmen are not so common,”
said Aylward. “And now, fair sir, we must on, for they are spreading
round on either side, and if once they get behind us, then indeed our
journey has come to a sudden end. But ere we go I would send a shaft
through yonder horseman who leads them on.”

“Nay, Aylward, I pray you to leave him,” said Nigel. “Villain as he is,
he is none the less a gentleman of coat-armor, and should die by some
other weapon than thine.”

“As you will,” said Aylward, with a clouded brow. “I have been told
that in the late wars many a French prince and baron has not been too
proud to take his death wound from an English yeoman’s shaft, and that
nobles of England have been glad enough to stand by and see it done.”

Nigel shook his head sadly. “It is sooth you say, archer, and indeed it
is no new thing, for that good knight Richard of the Lion Heart met his
end in such a lowly fashion, and so also did Harold the Saxon. But this
is a private matter, and I would not have you draw your bow against
him. Neither can I ride at him myself, for he is weak in body, though
dangerous in spirit. Therefore, we will go upon our way, since there is
neither profit nor honor to be gained, nor any hope of advancement.”

Aylward, having unstrung his bow, had remounted his horse during this
conversation, and the two rode swiftly past the little squat Chapel of
the Martyr and over the brow of the hill. From the summit they looked
back. The injured archer lay upon the ground, with several of his
comrades gathered in a knot around him. Others ran aimlessly up the
hill, but were already far behind. The leader sat motionless upon his
horse, and as he saw them look back he raised his hand and shrieked his
curses at them. An instant later the curve of the ground had hid them
from view. So, amid love and hate, Nigel bade adieu to the home of his
youth.

And now the comrades were journeying upon that old, old road which runs
across the south of England and yet never turns toward London, for the
good reason that the place was a poor hamlet when first the road was
laid. From Winchester, the Saxon capital, to Canterbury, the holy city
of Kent, ran that ancient highway, and on from Canterbury to the narrow
straits where, on a clear day, the farther shore can be seen. Along
this track as far back as history can trace the metals of the west have
been carried and passed the pack-horses which bore the goods which Gaul
sent in exchange. Older than the Christian faith and older than the
Romans, is the old road. North and south are the woods and the marshes,
so that only on the high dry turf of the chalk land could a clear track
be found. The Pilgrim’s Way, it still is called; but the pilgrims were
the last who ever trod it, for it was already of immemorial age before
the death of Thomas a Becket gave a new reason why folk should journey
to the scene of his murder.

From the hill of Weston Wood the travelers could see the long white
band which dipped and curved and rose over the green downland, its
course marked even in the hollows by the line of the old yew-trees
which flanked it. Neither Nigel nor Aylward had wandered far from their
own country, and now they rode with light hearts and eager eyes taking
note of all the varied pictures of nature and of man which passed
before them. To their left was a hilly country, a land of rolling
heaths and woods, broken here and there into open spaces round the
occasional farm-house of a franklin. Hackhurst Down, Dunley Hill, and
Ranmore Common swelled and sank, each merging into the other. But on
the right, after passing the village of Shere and the old church of
Gomshall, the whole south country lay like a map at their feet. There
was the huge wood of the Weald, one unbroken forest of oak-trees
stretching away to the South Downs, which rose olive-green against the
deep blue sky. Under this great canopy of trees strange folk lived and
evil deeds were done. In its recesses were wild tribes, little changed
from their heathen ancestors, who danced round the altar of Thor, and
well was it for the peaceful traveler that he could tread the high open
road of the chalk land with no need to wander into so dangerous a
tract, where soft clay, tangled forest and wild men all barred his
progress.

But apart from the rolling country upon the left and the great
forest-hidden plain upon the right, there was much upon the road itself
to engage the attention of the wayfarers. It was crowded with people.
As far as their eyes could carry they could see the black dots
scattered thickly upon the thin white band, sometimes single, sometimes
several abreast, sometimes in moving crowds, where a drove of pilgrims
held together for mutual protection, or a nobleman showed his greatness
by the number of retainers who trailed at his heels. At that time the
main roads were very crowded, for there were many wandering people in
the land. Of all sorts and kinds, they passed in an unbroken stream
before the eyes of Nigel and of Aylward, alike only in the fact that
one and all were powdered from their hair to their shoes with the gray
dust of the chalk.

There were monks journeying from one cell to another, Benedictines with
their black gowns looped up to show their white skirts, Carthusians in
white, and pied Cistercians. Friars also of the three wandering
orders—Dominicans in black, Carmelites in white and Franciscans in
gray. There was no love lost between the cloistered monks and the free
friars, each looking on the other as a rival who took from him the
oblations of the faithful; so they passed on the high road as cat
passes dog, with eyes askance and angry faces.

Then besides the men of the church there were the men of trade, the
merchant in dusty broadcloth and Flanders hat riding at the head of his
line of pack-horses. He carried Cornish tin, Welt-country wool, or
Sussex iron if he traded eastward, or if his head should be turned
westward then he bore with him the velvets of Genoa, the ware of
Venice, the wine of France, or the armor of Italy and Spain. Pilgrims
were everywhere, poor people for the most part, plodding wearily along
with trailing feet and bowed heads, thick staves in their hands and
bundles over their shoulders. Here and there on a gaily caparisoned
palfrey, or in the greater luxury of a horse-litter, some West-country
lady might be seen making her easy way to the shrine of Saint Thomas.

Besides all these a constant stream of strange vagabonds drifted along
the road: minstrels who wandered from fair to fair, a foul and
pestilent crew; jugglers and acrobats, quack doctors and tooth-drawers,
students and beggars, free workmen in search of better wages, and
escaped bondsmen who would welcome any wages at all. Such was the
throng which set the old road smoking in a haze of white dust from
Winchester to the narrow sea.

But of all the wayfarers those which interested Nigel most were the
soldiers. Several times they passed little knots of archers or
men-at-arms, veterans from France, who had received their discharge and
were now making their way to their southland homes. They were half
drunk all of them, for the wayfarers treated them to beer at the
frequent inns and ale-stakes which lined the road, so that they cheered
and sang lustily as they passed. They roared rude pleasantries at
Aylward, who turned in his saddle and shouted his opinion of them until
they were out of hearing.

Once, late in the afternoon, they overtook a body of a hundred archers
all marching together with two knights riding at their head. They were
passing from Guildford Castle to Reigate Castle, where they were in
garrison. Nigel rode with the knights for some distance, and hinted
that if either was in search of honorable advancement, or wished to do
some small deed, or to relieve himself of any vow, it might be possible
to find some means of achieving it. They were both, however, grave and
elderly men, intent upon their business and with no mind for fond
wayside adventures, so Nigel quickened his pace and left them behind.

They had left Boxhill and Headley Heath upon the left, and the towers
of Reigate were rising amid the trees in front of them, when they
overtook a large, cheery, red-faced man, with a forked beard, riding
upon a good horse and exchanging a nod or a merry word with all who
passed him. With him they rode nearly as far as Bletchingley, and Nigel
laughed much to hear him talk; but always under the raillery there was
much earnestness and much wisdom in all his words. He rode at his ease
about the country, he said, having sufficient money to keep him from
want and to furnish him for the road. He could speak all the three
languages of England, the north, the middle and the south, so that he
was at home with the people of every shire and could hear their
troubles and their joys. In all parts in town and in country there was
unrest, he said; for the poor folk were weary of their masters both of
the Church and State, and soon there would be such doings in England as
had never been seen before.

But above all this man was earnest against the Church its enormous
wealth, its possession of nearly one-third of the whole land of the
country, its insatiable greed for more at the very time when it claimed
to be poor and lowly. The monks and friars, too, he lashed with his
tongue: their roguish ways, their laziness and their cunning. He showed
how their wealth and that of the haughty lord must always be founded
upon the toil of poor humble Peter the Plowman, who worked and strove
in rain and cold out in the fields, the butt and laughing-stock of
everyone, and still bearing up the whole world upon his weary
shoulders. He had set it all out in a fair parable; so now as he rode
he repeated some of the verses, chanting them and marking time with his
forefinger, while Nigel and Aylward on either side of him with their
heads inclined inward listened with the same attention, but with very
different feelings—Nigel shocked at such an attack upon authority, and
Aylward chuckling as he heard the sentiments of his class so shrewdly
expressed. At last the stranger halted his horse outside the “Five
Angels” at Gatton.

“It is a good inn, and I know the ale of old,” said he. “When I had
finished that ‘Dream of Piers the Plowman’ from which I have recited to
you, the last verses were thus:

“‘Now have I brought my little booke to an ende
God’s blessing be on him who a drinke will me sende’—


“I pray you come in with me and share it.”

“Nay,” said Nigel, “we must on our way, for we have far to go. But give
me your name, my friend, for indeed we have passed a merry hour
listening to your words.”

“Have a care!” the stranger answered, shaking his head. “You and your
class will not spend a merry hour when these words are turned into
deeds and Peter the Plowman grows weary of swinking in the fields and
takes up his bow and his staff in order to set this land in order.”

“By Saint Paul! I expect that we shall bring Peter to reason and also
those who have put such evil thoughts into his head,” said Nigel. “So
once more I ask your name, that I may know it if ever I chance to hear
that you have been hanged?”

The stranger laughed good-humoredly. “You can call me Thomas Lackland,”
said he. “I should be Thomas Lack-brain if I were indeed to give my
true name, since a good many robbers, some in black gowns and some in
steel, would be glad to help me upwards in the way you speak of. So
good-day to you, Squire, and to you also, archer, and may you find your
way back with whole bones from the wars!”

That night the comrades slept in Godstone Priory, and early next
morning they were well upon their road down the Pilgrim’s Way. At
Titsey it was said that a band of villeins were out in Westerham Wood
and had murdered three men the day before; so that Nigel had high hopes
of an encounter; but the brigands showed no sign, though the travelers
went out of their way to ride their horses along the edges of the
forest. Farther on they found traces of their work, for the path ran
along the hillside at the base of a chalk quarry, and there in the
cutting a man was lying dead. From his twisted limbs and shattered
frame it was easy to see that he had been thrown over from above, while
his pockets turned outward showed the reason for his murder. The
comrades rode past without too close a survey, for dead men were no
very uncommon objects on the King’s highway, and if sheriff or bailiff
should chance upon you near the body you might find yourself caught in
the meshes of the law.

Near Sevenoaks their road turned out of the old Canterbury way and
pointed south toward the coast, leaving the chalk lands and coming down
into the clay of the Weald. It was a wretched, rutted mule-track
running through thick forests with occasional clearings in which lay
the small Kentish villages, where rude shock-headed peasants with
smocks and galligaskins stared with bold, greedy eyes at the travelers.
Once on the right they caught a distant view of the Towers of
Penshurst, and once they heard the deep tolling of the bells of Bayham
Abbey, but for the rest of their day’s journey savage peasants and
squalid cottages were all that met their eyes, with endless droves of
pigs who fed upon the litter of acorns. The throng of travelers who
crowded the old road were all gone, and only here and there did they
meet or overtake some occasional merchant or messenger bound for Battle
Abbey, Pevensey Castle or the towns of the south.

That night they slept in a sordid inn, overrun with rats and with
fleas, one mile south of the hamlet of Mayfield. Aylward scratched
vigorously and cursed with fervor. Nigel lay without movement or sound.
To the man who had learned the old rule of chivalry there were no small
ills in life. It was beneath the dignity of his soul to stoop to
observe them. Cold and heat, hunger and thirst, such things did not
exist for the gentleman. The armor of his soul was so complete that it
was proof not only against the great ills of life but even against the
small ones; so the flea-bitten Nigel lay grimly still while Aylward
writhed upon his couch.

They were now but a short distance from their destination; but they had
hardly started on their journey through the forest next morning, when
an adventure befell them which filled Nigel with the wildest hopes.

Along the narrow winding path between the great oak trees there rode a
dark sallow man in a scarlet tabard who blew so loudly upon a silver
trumpet that they heard the clanging call long before they set eyes on
him. Slowly he advanced, pulling up every fifty paces to make the
forest ring with another warlike blast. The comrades rode forward to
meet him.

“I pray you,” said Nigel, “to tell me who you are and why you blow upon
this trumpet.”

The fellow shook his head, so Nigel repeated the question in French,
the common language of chivalry, spoken at that age by every gentleman
in Western Europe.

The man put his lips to the trumpet and blew another long note before
he answered. “I am Gaston de Castrier,” said he, “the humble Squire of
the most worthy and valiant knight Raoul de Tubiers, de Pestels, de
Grimsard, de Mersac, de Leoy, de Bastanac, who also writes himself Lord
of Pons. It is his order that I ride always a mile in front of him to
prepare all to receive him, and he desires me to blow upon a trumpet
not out of vainglory, but out of greatness of spirit, so that none may
be ignorant of his coming should they desire to encounter him.”

Nigel sprang from his horse with a cry of joy, and began to unbutton
his doublet. “Quick, Aylward, quick!” he said. “He comes, a knight
errant comes! Was there ever such a chance of worshipfully winning
worship? Untruss the harness whilst I loose my clothes! Good sir, I beg
you to warn your noble and valiant master that a poor Squire of England
would implore him to take notice of him and to do some small deed upon
him as he passes.”

But already the Lord of Pons had come in sight. He was a huge man upon
an enormous horse, so that together they seemed to fill up the whole
long dark archway under the oaks. He was clad in full armor of a brazen
hue with only his face exposed, and of this face there was little
visible save a pair of arrogant eyes and a great black beard, which
flowed through the open visor and down over his breastplate. To the
crest of his helmet was tied a small brown glove, nodding and swinging
above him. He bore a long lance with a red square banner at the end,
charged with a black boar’s head, and the same symbol was engraved upon
his shield. Slowly he rode through the forest, ponderous, menacing,
with dull thudding of his charger’s hoofs and constant clank of metal,
while always in front of him came the distant peal of the silver
trumpet calling all men to admit his majesty and to clear his path ere
they be cleared from it.

Never in his dreams had so perfect a vision come to cheer Nigel’s
heart, and as he struggled with his clothes, glancing up continually at
this wondrous traveler, he pattered forth prayers of thanksgiving to
the good Saint Paul who had shown such loving-kindness to his unworthy
servant and thrown him in the path of so excellent and debonair a
gentleman.

But alas! how often at the last instant the cup is dashed from the
lips! This joyful chance was destined to change suddenly to unexpected
and grotesque disaster—disaster so strange and so complete that through
all his life Nigel flushed crimson when he thought of it. He was busily
stripping his hunting-costume, and with feverish haste he had doffed
boots, hat, hose, doublet and cloak, so that nothing remained save a
pink jupon and pair of silken drawers. At the same time Aylward was
hastily unbuckling the load with the intention of handing his master
his armor piece by piece, when the Squire gave one last challenging
peal from his silver trumpet into the very ear of the spare horse.

In an instant it had taken to its heels, the precious armor upon its
back, and thundered away down the road which they had traversed.
Aylward jumped upon his mare, drove his prick spurs into her sides and
galloped after the runaway as hard as he could ride. Thus it came about
that in an instant Nigel was shorn of all his little dignity, had lost
his two horses, his attendant and his outfit, and found himself a
lonely and unarmed man standing in his shirt and drawers upon the
pathway down which the burly figure of the Lord of Pons was slowly
advancing.

The knight errant, whose mind had been filled by the thought of the
maiden whom he had left behind at St. Jean—the same whose glove dangled
from his helmet—had observed nothing that had occurred. Hence, all that
met his eyes was a noble yellow horse, which was tethered by the track,
and a small young man, who appeared to be a lunatic since he had
undressed hastily in the heart of the forest, and stood now with an
eager anxious face clad in his underlinen amid the scattered débris of
his garments. Of such a person the high Lord of Pons could take no
notice, and so he pursued his inexorable way, his arrogant eyes looking
out into the distance and his thoughts set intently upon the maiden of
St. Jean. He was dimly aware that the little crazy man in the
undershirt ran a long way beside him in his stockings, begging,
imploring and arguing.

“Just one hour, most fair sir, just one hour at the longest, and a poor
Squire of England shall ever hold himself your debtor! Do but
condescend to rein your horse until my harness comes back to me! Will
you not stoop to show me some small deed of arms? I implore you, fair
sir, to spare me a little of your time and a handstroke or two ere you
go upon your way!”

Lord de Pons motioned impatiently with his gauntleted hand, as one
might brush away an importunate fly, but when at last Nigel became
desperate in his clamor he thrust his spurs into his great war-horse,
and clashing like a pair of cymbals he thundered off through the
forest. So he rode upon his majestic way, until two days later he was
slain by Lord Reginald Cobham in a field near Weybridge.

When after a long chase Aylward secured the spare horse and brought it
back, he found his master seated upon a fallen tree, his face buried in
his hands and his mind clouded with humiliation and grief. Nothing was
said, for the matter was beyond words, and so in moody silence they
rode upon their way.

But soon they came upon a scene which drew Nigel’s thoughts away from
his bitter trouble, for in front of them there rose the towers of a
great building with a small gray sloping village around it, and they
learned from a passing hind that this was the hamlet and Abbey of
Battle. Together they drew rein upon the low ridge and looked down into
that valley of death from which even now the reek of blood seems to
rise. Down beside that sinister lake and amid those scattered bushes
sprinkled over the naked flank of the long ridge was fought that
long-drawn struggle betwixt two most noble foes with broad England as
the prize of victory. Here, up and down the low hill, hour by hour the
grim struggle had waxed and waned, until the Saxon army had died where
it stood, King, court, house-carl and fyrdsman, each in their ranks
even as they had fought. And now, after all the stress and toil, the
tyranny, the savage revolt, the fierce suppression, God had made His
purpose complete, for here were Nigel the Norman and Aylward the Saxon
with good-fellowship in their hearts and a common respect in their
minds, with the same banner and the same cause, riding forth to do
battle for their old mother England.

And now the long ride drew to an end. In front of them was the blue
sea, flecked with the white sails of ships. Once more the road passed
upward from the heavy-wooded plain to the springy turf of the chalk
downs. Far to the right rose the grim fortalice of Pevensey, squat and
powerful, like one great block of rugged stone, the parapet twinkling
with steel caps and crowned by the royal banner of England. A flat
expanse of reeded marshland lay before them, out of which rose a single
wooded hill, crowned with towers, with a bristle of masts rising out of
the green plain some distance to the south of it. Nigel looked at it
with his hand shading his eyes, and then urged Pommers to a trot. The
town was Winchelsea, and there amid that cluster of houses on the hill
the gallant Chandos must be awaiting him.




XIV.
HOW NIGEL CHASED THE RED FERRET


They passed a ferry, wound upward by a curving path, and then, having
satisfied a guard of men-at-arms, were admitted through the frowning
arch of the Pipewell Gate. There waiting for them, in the middle of the
east street, the sun gleaming upon his lemon-colored beard, and
puckering his single eye, stood Chandos himself, his legs apart, his
hands behind his back, and a welcoming smile upon his quaint high-nosed
face. Behind him a crowd of little boys were gazing with reverent eyes
at the famous soldier.

“Welcome, Nigel!” said he, “and you also, good archer! I chanced to be
walking on the city wall, and I thought from the color of your horse
that it was indeed you upon the Udimore Road. How have you fared, young
squire errant? Have you held bridges or rescued damsels or slain
oppressors on your way from Tilford?”

“Nay, my fair lord, I have accomplished nothing; but I once had hopes—”
Nigel flushed at the remembrance.

“I will give you more than hopes, Nigel. I will put you where you can
dip both arms to the elbow into danger and honor, where peril will
sleep with you at night and rise with you in the morning and the very
air you breathe be laden with it. Are you ready for that, young sir?”

“I can but pray, fair lord, that my spirit will rise to it.”

Chandos smiled his approval and laid his thin brown hand on the youth’s
shoulder. “Good!” said he. “It is the mute hound which bites the
hardest. The babbler is ever the hang-back. Bide with me here, Nigel,
and walk upon the ramparts. Archer, do you lead the horses to the ‘Sign
of the Broom Pod’ in the high street, and tell my varlets to see them
aboard the cog Thomas before nightfall. We sail at the second hour
after curfew. Come hither, Nigel, to the crest of the corner turret,
for from it I will show you what you have never seen.”

It was but a dim and distant white cloud upon the blue water seen far
off over the Dungeness Point, and yet the sight of it flushed the young
Squire’s cheeks and sent the blood hot through his veins. It was the
fringe of France, that land of chivalry and glory, the stage where name
and fame were to be won. With burning eyes he gazed across at it, his
heart rejoicing to think that the hour was at hand when he might tread
that sacred soil. Then his gaze crossed the immense stretch of the blue
sea, dotted over with the sails of fishing-boats, until it rested upon
the double harbor beneath packed with vessels of every size and shape,
from the pessoners and creyers which plied up and down the coast to the
great cogs and galleys which were used either as war-ships or
merchantmen as the occasion served. One of them was at that instant
passing out to sea, a huge galleass, with trumpets blowing and nakers
banging, the flag of Saint George flaunting over the broad purple sail,
and the decks sparkling from end to end with steel. Nigel gave a cry of
pleasure at the splendor of the sight.

“Aye, lad,” said Chandos, “it is the Trinity of Rye, the very ship on
which I fought at Sluys. Her deck ran blood from stem to stern that
day. But turn your eyes this way, I beg you, and tell me if you see
aught strange about this town.”

Nigel looked down at the noble straight street, at the Roundel Tower,
at the fine church of Saint Thomas, and the other fair buildings of
Winchelsea. “It is all new,” said he—“church, castle, houses, all are
new.”

“You are right, fair son. My grandfather can call to mind the time when
only the conies lived upon this rock. The town was down yonder by the
sea, until one night the waves rose upon it and not a house was left.
See, yonder is Rye, huddling also on a hill, the two towns like poor
sheep when the waters are out. But down there under the blue water and
below the Camber Sand lies the true Winchelsea—tower, cathedral, walls
and all, even as my grandfather knew it, when the first Edward was
young upon the throne.”

For an hour or more Chandos paced upon the ramparts with his young
Squire at his elbow and talked to him of his duties and of the secrets
and craft of warfare, Nigel drinking in and storing in his memory every
word from so revered a teacher. Many a time in after life, in stress
and in danger, he strengthened himself by the memory of that slow walk
with the blue sea on one side and the fair town on the other, when the
wise soldier and noble-hearted knight poured forth his precept and
advice as the master workman to the apprentice.

“Perhaps, fair son,” said he, “you are like so many other lads who ride
to the wars, and know so much already that it is waste of breath to
advise them?”

“Nay, my fair lord, I know nothing save that I would fain do my duty
and either win honorable advancement or die worshipful on the field.”

“You are wise to be humble,” said Chandos; “for indeed he who knows
most of war knows best that there is much to learn. As there is a
mystery of the rivers and a mystery of woodcraft, even so there is a
mystery of warfare by which battles may be lost and gained; for all
nations are brave, and where the brave meets the brave it is he who is
crafty and war-wise who will win the day. The best hound will run at
fault if he be ill laid on, and the best hawk will fly at check if he
be badly loosed, and even so the bravest army may go awry if it be ill
handled. There are not in Christendom better knights and squires than
those of the French, and yet we have had the better of them, for in our
Scottish Wars and elsewhere we have learned more of this same mystery
of which I speak.”

“And wherein lies our wisdom, honored sir?” asked Nigel. “I also would
fain be war-wise and learn to fight with my wits as well as with my
sword.”

Chandos shook his head and smiled. “It is in the forest and on the down
that you learn to fly the hawk and loose the hound,” said he. “So also
it is in camp and on the field that the mystery of war can be learned.
There only has every great captain come to be its master. To start he
must have a cool head, quick to think, soft as wax before his purpose
is formed, hard as steel when once he sees it before him. Ever alert he
must be, and cautious also, but with judgment to turn his caution into
rashness where a large gain may be put against a small stake. An eye
for country also, for the trend of the rivers, the slope of the hills,
the cover of the woods, and the light green of the bog-land.”

Poor Nigel, who had trusted to his lance and to Pommers to break his
path to glory, stood aghast at this list of needs. “Alas!” he cried.
“How am I to gain all this?—I, who could scarce learn to read or write
though the good Father Matthew broke a hazel stick a day across my
shoulders?”

“You will gain it, fair son, where others have gained it before you.
You have that which is the first thing of all, a heart of fire from
which other colder hearts may catch a spark. But you must have
knowledge also of that which warfare has taught us in olden times. We
know, par exemple, that horsemen alone cannot hope to win against good
foot-soldiers. Has it not been tried at Courtrai, at Stirling, and
again under my own eyes at Crécy, where the chivalry of France went
down before our bowmen?”

Nigel stared at him, with a perplexed brow. “Fair sir, my heart grows
heavy as I hear you. Do you then say that our chivalry can make no head
against archers, billmen and the like?”

“Nay, Nigel, for it has also been very clearly shown that the best
foot-soldiers unsupported cannot hold their own against the mailed
horsemen.”

“To whom then is the victory?” asked Nigel.

“To him who can mix his horse and foot, using each to strengthen the
other. Apart they are weak. Together they are strong. The archer who
can weaken the enemy’s line, the horseman who can break it when it is
weakened, as was done at Falkirk and Duplin, there is the secret of our
strength. Now touching this same battle of Falkirk, I pray you for one
instant to give it your attention.”

With his whip he began to trace a plan of the Scottish battle upon the
dust, and Nigel with knitted brows was trying hard to muster his small
stock of brains and to profit by the lecture, when their conversation
was interrupted by a strange new arrival.

It was a very stout little man, wheezy and purple with haste, who
scudded down the rampart as if he were blown by the wind, his grizzled
hair flying and his long black gown floating behind him. He was clad in
the dress of a respectable citizen, a black jerkin trimmed with sable,
a black-velvet beaver hat and a white feather. At the sight of Chandos
he gave a cry of joy and quickened his pace so that when he did at last
reach him he could only stand gasping and waving his hands.

“Give yourself time, good Master Wintersole, give yourself time!” said
Chandos in a soothing voice.

“The papers!” gasped the little man. “Oh, my Lord Chandos, the papers—”

“What of the papers, my worthy sir?”

“I swear by our good patron Saint Leonard, it is no fault of mine! I
had locked them in my coffer. But the lock was forced and the coffer
rifled.”

A shadow of anger passed over the soldier’s keen face.

“How now, Master Mayor? Pull your wits together and do not stand there
babbling like a three-year child. Do you say that some one hath taken
the papers?”

“It is sooth, fair sir! Thrice I have been Mayor of the town, and
fifteen years burgess and jurat, but never once has any public matter
gone awry through me. Only last month there came an order from Windsor
on a Tuesday for a Friday banquet, a thousand soles, four thousand
plaice, two thousand mackerel, five hundred crabs, a thousand lobsters,
five thousand whiting—”

“I doubt not, Master Mayor, that you are an excellent fishmonger; but
the matter concerns the papers I gave into your keeping. Where are
they?”

“Taken, fair sir—gone!”

“And who hath dared to take them?”

“Alas! I know not. It was but for as long as you would say an angelus
that I left the chamber, and when I came back there was the coffer,
broken and empty, upon my table.”

“Do you suspect no one?”

“There was a varlet who hath come with the last few days into my
employ. He is not to be found, and I have sent horsemen along both the
Udimore road and that to Rye, that they may seize him. By the help of
Saint Leonard they can scarce miss him, for one can tell him a bow-shot
off by his hair.”

“Is it red?” asked Chandos eagerly. “Is it fox-red, and the man a small
man pocked with sun-spots, and very quick in his movements?”

“It is the man himself.”

Chandos shook his clenched hand with annoyance, and then set off
swiftly down the street.

“It is Peter the Red Ferret once more!” said he. “I knew him of old in
France, where he has done us more harm than a company of men-at-arms.
He speaks English as he speaks French, and he is of such daring and
cunning that nothing is secret from him. In all France there is no more
dangerous man, for though he is a gentleman of blood and coat-armor he
takes the part of a spy, because it hath the more danger and therefore
the more honor.”

“But, my fair lord,” cried the Mayor, as he hurried along, keeping pace
with the long strides of the soldier, “I knew that you warned me to
take all care of the papers; but surely there was no matter of great
import in it? It was but to say what stores were to be sent after you
to Calais?”

“Is that not everything?” cried Chandos impatiently. “Can you not see,
oh foolish Master Wintersole, that the French suspect we are about to
make some attempt and that they have sent Peter the Red Ferret, as they
have sent him many times before, to get tidings of whither we are
bound? Now that he knows that the stores are for Calais, then the
French near Calais will take his warning, and so the King’s whole plan
come to nothing.”

“Then he will fly by water. We can stop him yet. He has not an hour’s
start.”

“It may be that a boat awaits him at Rye or Hythe; but it is more like
that he has all ready to depart from here. Ah, see yonder! I’ll warrant
that the Red Ferret is on board!”

Chandos had halted in front of his inn, and now he pointed down to the
outer harbor, which lay two miles off across the green plain. It was
connected by a long winding canal with the inner dock at the base of
the hill, upon which the town was built. Between the two horns formed
by the short curving piers a small schooner was running out to sea,
dipping and rising before a sharp southerly breeze.

“It is no Winchelsea boat,” said the Mayor. “She is longer and broader
in the beam than ours.”

“Horses! bring horses!” cried Chandos. “Come, Nigel, let us go further
into the matter.”

A busy crowd of varlets, archers, and men-at-arms swarmed round the
gateway of the “Sign of the Broom Pod,” singing, shouting, and jostling
in rough good-fellowship. The sight of the tall thin figure of Chandos
brought order amongst them, and a few minutes later the horses were
ready and saddled. A breakneck ride down a steep declivity, and then a
gallop of two miles over the sedgy plain carried them to the outer
harbor. A dozen vessels were lying there, ready to start for Bordeaux
or Rochelle, and the quay was thick with sailors, laborers and townsmen
and heaped with wine-barrels and wool-packs.

“Who is warden here?” asked Chandos, springing from his horse.

“Badding! Where is Cock Badding? Badding is warden!” shouted the crowd.

A moment later a short swarthy man, bull-necked and deep-chested,
pushed through the people. He was clad in rough russet wool with a
scarlet cloth tied round his black curly head. His sleeves were rolled
up to his shoulders, and his brown arms, all stained with grease and
tar, were like two thick gnarled branches from an oaken stump. His
savage brown face was fierce and frowning, and was split from chin to
temple with the long white wale of an ill-healed wound.

“How now, gentles, will you never wait your turn?” he rumbled in a deep
angry voice. “Can you not see that we are warping the Rose of Guienne
into midstream for the ebb-tide? Is this a time to break in upon us?
Your goods will go aboard in due season, I promise you; so ride back
into the town and find such pleasure as you may, while I and my mates
do our work without let or hindrance.”

“It is the gentle Chandos!” cried some one in the crowd. “It is the
good Sir John.”

The rough harbor-master changed his gruffness to smiles in an instant.
“Nay, Sir John, what would you? I pray you to hold me excused if I was
short of speech, but we port-wardens are sore plagued with foolish
young lordlings, who get betwixt us and our work and blame us because
we do not turn an ebb-tide into a flood, or a south wind into a north.
I pray you to tell me how I can serve you.”

“That boat!” said Chandos, pointing to the already distant sail rising
and falling on the waves. “What is it?”

Cock Badding shaded his keen eyes with his strong brows hand. “She has
but just gone out,” said he. “She is La Pucelle, a small wine-sloop
from Gascony, home-bound and laden with barrel-staves.”

“I pray you did any man join her at the very last?”

“Nay, I know not. I saw no one.”

“But I know,” cried a seaman in the crowd. “I was standing at the
wharf-side and was nigh knocked into the water by a little red-headed
fellow, who breathed as though he had run from the town. Ere I had time
to give him a cuff he had jumped aboard, the ropes were cast off, and
her nose was seaward.”

In a few words Chandos made all clear to Badding, the crowd pressing
eagerly round.

“Aye, aye!” cried a seaman, “the good Sir John is right. See how she
points. It is Picardy and not Gascony that she will fetch this journey
in spite of her wine-staves.”

“Then we must lay her aboard!” cried Cock Badding. “Come, lads, here is
my own Marie Rose ready to cast off. Who’s for a trip with a fight at
the end of it?”

There was a rush for the boat; but the stout little seaman picked his
men. “Go back, Jerry! Your heart is good, but you are overfat for the
work. You, Luke, and you, Thomas, and the two Deedes, and William of
Sandgate. You will work the boat. And now we need a few men of their
hands. Do you come, little sir?”

“I pray you, my dear lord, to let me go!” cried Nigel.

“Yes, Nigel, you can go, and I will bring your gear over to Calais this
night.”

“I will join you there, fair sir, and with the help of Saint Paul I
will bring this Red Ferret with me.”

“Aboard, aboard! Time passes!” cried Badding impatiently, while already
his seamen were hauling on the line and raising the mainsail. “Now
then, sirrah! who are you?” It was Aylward, who had followed Nigel and
was pushing his way aboard.

“Where my master goes I go also,” cried Aylward, “so stand clear,
master-shipman, or you may come by a hurt.”

“By Saint Leonard! archer,” said Cock Badding, “had I more time I would
give you a lesson ere I leave land. Stand back and give place to
others!”

“Nay, stand back and give place to me!” cried Aylward, and seizing
Badding round the waist he slung him into the dock.

There was a cry of anger from the crowd, for Badding was the hero of
all the Cinque Ports and had never yet met his match in manhood. The
epitaph still lingers in which it was said that he “could never rest
until he had foughten his fill.” When, therefore, swimming like a duck,
he reached a rope and pulled himself hand over hand up to the quay, all
stood aghast to see what fell fate would befall this bold stranger. But
Badding laughed loudly, dashing the saltwater from his eyes and hair.

“You have fairly won your place, archer,” said he. “You are the very
man for our work. Where is Black Simon of Norwich?”

A tall dark young man with a long, stern, lean face came forward. “I am
with you, Cock,” said he, “and I thank you for my place.”

“You can come, Hugh Baddlesmere, and you, Hal Masters, and you, Dicon
of Rye. That is enough. Now off, in God’s name, or it will be night ere
we can come up with them!”

Already the head-sails and the main-sail had been raised, while a
hundred willing hands poled her off from the wharf. Now the wind caught
her; heeling over, and quivering with eagerness like an unleashed hound
she flew through the opening and out into the Channel. She was a famous
little schooner, the Marie Rose of Winchelsea, and under her daring
owner Cock Badding, half trader and half pirate, had brought back into
port many a rich cargo taken in mid-Channel, and paid for in blood
rather than money. Small as she was, her great speed and the fierce
character of her master had made her a name of terror along the French
coast, and many a bulky Eastlander or Fleming as he passed the narrow
seas had scanned the distant Kentish shore, fearing lest that
ill-omened purple sail with a gold Christopher upon it should shoot out
suddenly from the dim gray cliffs. Now she was clear of the land, with
the wind on her larboard quarter, every inch of canvas set, and her
high sharp bows smothered in foam, as she dug through the waves.

Cock Badding trod the deck with head erect and jaunty bearing, glancing
up at the swelling sails and then ahead at the little tilted white
triangle, which stood out clear and hard against the bright blue sky.
Behind was the lowland of the Camber marshes, with the bluffs of Rye
and Winchelsea, and the line of cliffs behind them. On the larboard bow
rose the great white walls of Folkestone and of Dover, and far on the
distant sky-line the gray shimmer of those French cliffs for which the
fugitives were making.

“By Saint Paul!” cried Nigel, looking with eager eyes over the tossing
waters, “it seems to me, Master Badding, that already we draw in upon
them.”

The master measured the distance with his keen steady gaze, and then
looked up at the sinking sun. “We have still four hours of daylight,”
said he; “but if we do not lay her aboard ere darkness falls she will
save herself, for the nights are as black as a wolf’s mouth, and if she
alter her course I know not how we may follow her.”

“Unless, indeed, you might guess to which port she was bound and reach
it before her.”

“Well thought of, little master!” cried Badding. “If the news be for
the French outside Calais, then Ambleteuse would be nearest to Saint
Omer. But my sweeting sails three paces to that lubber’s two, and if
the wind holds we shall have time and to spare. How now, archer? You do
not seem so eager as when you made your way aboard this boat by
slinging me into the sea.”

Aylward sat on the upturned keel of a skiff which lay upon the deck. He
groaned sadly and held his green face between his two hands. “I would
gladly sling you into the sea once more, master-shipman,” said he, “if
by so doing I could get off this most accursed vessel of thine. Or if
you would wish to have your turn, then I would thank you if you would
lend me a hand over the side, for indeed I am but a useless weight upon
your deck. Little did I think that Samkin Aylward could be turned into
a weakling by an hour of salt water. Alas the day that ever my foot
wandered from the good red heather of Crooksbury!”

Cock Badding laughed loud and long. “Nay, take it not to heart,
archer,” he cried; “for better men than you or I have groaned upon this
deck. The Prince himself with ten of his chosen knights crossed with me
once, and eleven sadder faces I never saw. Yet within a month they had
shown at Crécy that they were no weaklings, as you will do also, I dare
swear, when the time comes. Keep that thick head of thine down upon the
planks, and all will be well anon. But we raise her, we raise her with
every blast of the wind!”

It was indeed evident, even to the inexperienced eyes of Nigel, that
the Marie Rose was closing in swiftly upon the stranger. She was a
heavy, bluff-bowed, broad-sterned vessel which labored clumsily through
the seas. The swift, fierce little Winchelsea boat swooping and hissing
through the waters behind her was like some keen hawk whizzing down
wind at the back of a flapping heavy-bodied duck. Half an hour before
La Pucelle had been a distant patch of canvas. Now they could see the
black hull, and soon the cut of her sails and the lines of her
bulwarks. There were at least a dozen men upon her deck, and the
twinkle of weapons from amongst them showed that they were preparing to
resist. Cock Badding began to muster his own forces.

He had a crew of seven rough, hardy mariners, who had been at his back
in many a skirmish. They were armed with short swords, but Cock Badding
carried a weapon peculiar to himself, a twenty-pound blacksmith’s
hammer, the memory of which, as “Badding’s cracker,” still lingers in
the Cinque Ports. Then there were the eager Nigel, the melancholy
Aylward, Black Simon who was a tried swordsman, and three archers,
Baddlesmere, Masters and Dicon of Rye, all veterans of the French War.
The numbers in the two vessels might be about equal; but Badding as he
glanced at the bold harsh faces which looked to him for orders had
little fear for the result.

Glancing round, however, he saw something which was more dangerous to
his plans than the resistance of the enemy. The wind, which had become
more fitful and feebler, now fell suddenly away, until the sails hung
limp and straight above them. A belt of calm lay along the horizon, and
the waves around had smoothed down into a long oily swell on which the
two little vessels rose and fell. The great boom of the Marie Rose
rattled and jarred with every lurch, and the high thin prow pointed
skyward one instant and seaward the next in a way that drew fresh
groans from the unhappy Aylward. In vain Cock Badding pulled on his
sheets and tried hard to husband every little wandering gust which
ruffled for an instant the sleek rollers. The French master was as
adroit a sailor, and his boom swung round also as each breath of wind
came up from astern.

At last even these fitful puffs died finally away, and a cloudless sky
overhung a glassy sea. The sun was almost upon the horizon behind
Dungeness Point, and the whole western heaven was bright with the glory
of the sunset, which blended sea and sky in one blaze of ruddy light.
Like rollers of molten gold, the long swell heaved up Channel from the
great ocean beyond. In the midst of the immense beauty and peace of
nature the two little dark specks with the white sail and the purple
rose and fell, so small upon the vast shining bosom of the waters, and
yet so charged with all the unrest and the passion of life.

The experienced eye of the seaman told him that it was hopeless to
expect a breeze before nightfall. He looked across at the Frenchman,
which lay less than a quarter of a mile ahead, and shook his gnarled
fist at the line of heads which could be seen looking back over her
stern. One of them waved a white kerchief in derision, and Cock Badding
swore a bitter oath at the sight.

“By Saint Leonard of Winchelsea,” he cried, “I will rub my side up
against her yet! Out with the skiff, lads, and two of you to the oars.
Make fast the line to the mast, Will. Do you go in the boat, Hugh, and
I’ll make the second. Now if we bend our backs to it we may have them
yet ere night cover them.”

The little skiff was swiftly lowered over the side and the slack end of
the cable fastened to the after thwart. Cock Badding and his comrades
pulled as if they would snap their oars, and the little vessel began
slowly to lurch forward over the rollers. But the next moment a larger
skiff had splashed over the side of the Frenchman, and no less than
four seamen were hard at work under her bows. If the Marie Rose
advanced a yard the Frenchman was going two. Again Cock Badding raved
and shook his fist. He clambered aboard, his face wet with sweat and
dark with anger.

“Curse them! they have had the best of us!” he cried. “I can do no
more. Sir John has lost his papers, for indeed now that night is at
hand I can see no way in which we can gain them.”

Nigel had leaned against the bulwark during these events, watching with
keen attention the doings of the sailors, and praying alternately to
Saint Paul, Saint George, and Saint Thomas for a slant of wind which
would put them along side their enemy. He was silent; but his hot heart
was simmering within him. His spirit had risen even above the
discomfort of the sea, and his mind was too absorbed in his mission to
have a thought for that which had laid Aylward flat upon the deck. He
had never doubted that Cock Badding in one way or another would
accomplish his end, but when he heard his speech of despair he bounded
off the bulwark and stood before the seaman with his face flushed and
all his soul afire.

“By Saint Paul! master-shipman,” he cried, “we should never hold up our
heads in honor if we did not go further into the matter! Let us do some
small deed this night upon the water, or let us never see land again,
for indeed we could not wish fairer prospect of winning honorable
advancement.”

“With your leave, little master, you speak like a fool,” said the gruff
seaman. “You and all your kind are as children when once the blue water
is beneath you. Can you not see that there is no wind, and that the
Frenchman can warp her as swiftly as we? What then would you do?”

Nigel pointed to the boat which towed astern. “Let us venture forth in
her,” said he, “and let us take this ship or die worshipful in the
attempt.”

His bold and fiery words found their echo in the brave rough hearts
around him. There was a deep-chested shout from both archers and
seamen. Even Aylward sat up, with a wan smile upon his green face.

But Cock Badding shook his head. “I have never met the man who could
lead where I would not follow,” said he; “but by Saint Leonard! this is
a mad business, and I should be a fool if I were to risk my men and my
ship. Bethink you, little master, that the skiff can hold only five,
though you load her to the water’s edge. If there is a man yonder,
there are fourteen, and you have to climb their side from the boat.
What chance would you have? Your boat stove and you in the water—there
is the end of it. No man of mine goes on such a fool’s errand, and so I
swear!”

“Then, Master Badding, I must crave the loan of your skiff, for by
Saint Paul! the good Lord Chandos’ papers are not to be so lightly
lost. If no one else will come, then I will go alone.”

The shipman smiled at the words; but the smile died away from his lips
when Nigel, with features set like ivory and eyes as hard as steel,
pulled on the rope so as to bring the skiff under the counter. It was
very clear that he would do even as he said. At the same time Aylward
raised his bulky form from the deck, leaned for a moment against the
bulwarks, and then tottered aft to his master’s side.

“Here is one that will go with you,” said he, “or he would never dare
show his face to the girls of Tilford again. Come, archers, let us
leave these salt herrings in their pickle tub and try our luck out on
the water.”

The three archers at once ranged themselves on the same side as their
comrade. They were bronzed, bearded men, short in stature, as were most
Englishmen of that day, but hardy, strong and skilled with their
weapons. Each drew his string from its waterproof case and bent the
huge arc of his war-bow as he fitted it into the nocks.

“Now, master, we are at your back,” said they as they pulled and
tightened their sword-belts.

But already Cock Badding had been carried away by the hot lust of
battle and had thrown aside every fear and doubt which had clouded him.
To see a fight and not to be in it was more than he could bear.

“Nay, have it your own way!” he cried, “and may Saint Leonard help us,
for a madder venture I have never seen! And yet it may be worth the
trial. But if it be done let me have the handling of it, little master,
for you know no more of a boat than I do of a war-horse. The skiff can
bear five and not a man more. Now, who will come?”

They had all caught fire, and there was not one who would be left out.

Badding picked up his hammer. “I will come myself,” said he, “and you
also, little master, since it is your hot head that has planned it.
Then there is Black Simon, the best sword of the Cinque Ports. Two
archers can pull on the oars, and it may be that they can pick off two
or three of these Frenchmen before we close with them. Hugh
Baddlesmere, and you, Dicon of Rye—into the boat with you!”

“What?” cried Aylward. “Am I to be left behind? I, who am the Squire’s
own man? Ill fare the bowman who comes betwixt me and yonder boat!”

“Nay, Aylward,” said his master, “I order that you stay, for indeed you
are a sick man.”

“But now that the waves have sunk I am myself again. Nay, fair sir, I
pray that you will not leave me behind.”

“You must needs take the space of a better man; for what do you know of
the handling of a boat?” said Badding shortly. “No more fool’s talk, I
pray you, for the night will soon fall. Stand aside!”

Aylward looked hard at the French boat. “I could swim ten times up and
down Frensham pond,” said he, “and it will be strange if I cannot go as
far as that. By these finger-bones, Samkin Aylward may be there as soon
as you!”

The little boat with its five occupants pushed off from the side of the
schooner, and dipping and rising, made its slow way toward the
Frenchman. Badding and one archer had single oars, the second archer
was in the prow, while Black Simon and Nigel huddled into the stern
with the water lapping and hissing at their very elbows. A shout of
defiance rose from the Frenchmen, and they stood in a line along the
side of their vessel shaking their fists and waving their weapons.
Already the sun was level with Dungeness, and the gray of evening was
blurring sky and water into one dim haze. A great silence hung over the
broad expanse of nature, and no sound broke it save the dip and splash
of the oars and the slow deep surge of the boat upon the swell. Behind
them their comrades of the Marie Rose stood motionless and silent,
watching their progress with eager eyes.

They were near enough now to have a good look at the Frenchmen. One was
a big swarthy man with a long black beard. He had a red cap and an ax
over his shoulder. There were ten other hardy-looking fellows, all of
them well armed, and there were three who seemed to be boys.

“Shall we try a shaft upon them?” asked Hugh Baddlesmere. “They are
well within our bowshot.”

“Only one of you can shoot at a time, for you have no footing,” said
Badding. “With one foot in the prow and one over the thwart you will
get your stance. Do what you may, and then we will close in upon them.”

The archer balanced himself in the rolling boat with the deftness of a
man who has been trained upon the sea, for he was born and bred in the
Cinque Ports. Carefully he nocked his arrow, strongly he drew it,
steadily he loosed it, but the boat swooped at the instant, and it
buried itself in the waves. The second passed over the little ship, and
the third struck in her black side. Then in quick succession so quick
that two shafts were often in the air at the same instant—he discharged
a dozen arrows, most of which just cleared the bulwarks and dropped
upon the deck. There was a cry on the Frenchman, and the heads vanished
from the side.

“Enough!” cried Badding. “One is down, and it may be two. Close in,
close in, in God’s name, before they rally!”

He and the other bent to their oars; but at the same instant there was
a sharp zip in the air and a hard clear sound like a stone striking a
wall. Baddlesmere clapped his hand to his head, groaned and fell
forward out of the boat, leaving a swirl of blood upon the surface. A
moment later the same fierce hiss ended in a loud wooden crash, and a
short, thick crossbow-bolt was buried deep in the side of their boat.

“Close in, close in!” roared Badding, tugging at his oar. “Saint George
for England! Saint Leonard for Winchelsea! Close in!”

But again that fatal crossbow twanged. Dicon of Rye fell back with a
shaft through his shoulder. “God help me, I can no more!” said he.

Badding seized the oar from his hand; but it was only to sweep the
boat’s head round and pull her back to the Marie Rose. The attack had
failed.

“What now, master-shipman?” cried Nigel. “What has befallen to stop us?
Surely the matter does not end here?”

“Two down out of five,” said Badding, “and twelve at the least against
us. The odds are too long, little master. Let us at least go back, fill
up once more, and raise a mantelet against the bolts, for they have an
arbalist which shoots both straight and hard. But what we do we must do
quickly, for the darkness falls apace.”

Their repulse had been hailed by wild yells of delight from the
Frenchmen, who danced with joy and waved their weapons madly over their
heads. But before their rejoicings had finished they saw the little
boat creeping out once more from the shadow of the Marie Rose, a great
wooden screen in her bows to protect her from the arrows. Without a
pause she came straight and fast for her enemy. The wounded archer had
been put on board, and Aylward would have had his place had Nigel been
able to see him upon the deck. The third archer, Hal Masters, had
sprung in, and one of the seamen, Wat Finnis of Hythe. With their
hearts hardened to conquer or to die, the five ran alongside the
Frenchman and sprang upon her deck. At the same instant a great iron
weight crashed through the bottom of their skiff, and their feet had
hardly left her before she was gone. There was no hope and no escape
save victory.

The crossbowman stood under the mast, his terrible weapon at his
shoulder, the steel string stretched taut, the heavy bolt shining upon
the nut. One life at least he would claim out of this little band. Just
for one instant too long did he dwell upon his aim, shifting from the
seaman to Cock Badding, whose formidable appearance showed him to be
the better prize. In that second of time Hal Masters’ string twanged
and his long arrow sped through the arbalister’s throat. He dropped on
the deck, with blood and curses pouring from his mouth.

A moment later Nigel’s sword and Badding’s hammer had each claimed a
victim and driven back the rush of assailants. The five were safe upon
the deck, but it was hard for them to keep a footing there. The French
seamen, Bretons and Normans, were stout, powerful fellows, armed with
axes and swords, fierce fighters and brave men. They swarmed round the
little band, attacking them from all sides. Black Simon felled the
black-bearded French Captain, and at the same instant was cut over the
head and lay with his scalp open upon the deck. The seaman Wat of Hythe
was killed by a crashing blow from an ax. Nigel was struck down, but
was up again like a flash, and drove his sword through the man who had
felled him.

But Badding, Masters the archer and he had been hustled back to the
bulwark and were barely holding their own from minute to minute against
the fierce crowd who assailed them, when an arrow coming apparently
from the sea struck the foremost Frenchman to the heart. A moment later
a boat dashed up alongside and four more men from the Marie Rose
scrambled on to the blood-stained deck. With one fierce rush the
remaining Frenchmen were struck down or were seized by their
assailants. Nine prostrate men upon the deck showed how fierce had been
the attack, how desperate the resistance.

Badding leaned panting upon his blood-clotted hammer. “By Saint
Leonard!” he cried, “I thought that this little master had been the
death of us all. God wot you were but just in time, and how you came I
know not. This archer has had a hand in it, by the look of him.”

Aylward, still pale from his seasickness and dripping from head to foot
with water, had been the first man in the rescue party.

Nigel looked at him in amazement. “I sought you aboard the ship,
Aylward, but I could not lay eyes on you,” said he.

“It was because I was in the water, fair sir, and by my hilt! it suits
my stomach better than being on it,” he answered. “When you first set
forth I swam behind you, for I saw that the Frenchman’s boat hung by a
rope, and I thought that while you kept him in play I might gain it. I
had reached it when you were driven back, so I hid behind it in the
water and said my prayers as I have not said them for many a day. Then
you came again, and no one had an eye for me, so I clambered into it,
cut the rope, took the oars which I found there and brought her back
for more men.”

“By Saint Paul! you have acted very wisely and well,” said Nigel, “and
I think that of all of us it is you who have won most honor this day.
But of all these men dead and alive I see none who resembles that Red
Ferret whom my Lord Chandos has described and who has worked such
despite upon us in the past: It would indeed be an evil chance if he
has in spite of all our pains made his way to France in some other
boat.”

“That we shall soon find out,” said Badding. “Come with me and we will
search the ship from truck to keel ere he escapes us.”

There was a scuttle at the base of the mast which led down into the
body of the vessel, and the Englishmen were approaching this when a
strange sight brought them to a stand. A round brazen head had appeared
in the square dark opening. An instant afterward a pair of shining
shoulders followed. Then slowly the whole figure of a man in complete
plate-armor emerged on the deck. In his gauntleted hand he carried a
heavy steel mace. With this uplifted he moved toward his enemies,
silent save for the ponderous clank of his footfall. It was an inhuman,
machine-like figure, menacing and terrible, devoid of all expression,
slow-moving, inexorable and awesome.

A sudden wave of terror passed over the English seamen. One of them
tried to pass and get behind the brazen man, but he was pinned against
the side by a quick movement and his brains dashed out by a smashing
blow from the heavy mace. Wild panic seized the others, and they rushed
back to the boat. Aylward strung an arrow, but his bowstring was damp
and the shaft rang loudly upon the shining breast-plate and glanced off
into the sea. Masters struck the brazen head with a sword, but the
blade snapped without injuring the helmet, and an instant later the
bowman was stretched senseless on the deck. The seamen shrank from this
terrible silent creature and huddled in the stern, all the fight gone
out of them.

Again he raised his mace and was advancing on the helpless crowd where
the brave were encumbered and hampered by the weaklings, when Nigel
shook himself clear and bounded forward into the open, his sword in his
hand and a smile of welcome upon his lips.

The sun had set, and one long mauve gash across the western Channel was
closing swiftly into the dull grays of early night. Above, a few stars
began to faintly twinkle; yet the twilight was still bright enough for
an observer to see every detail of the scene: the Marie Rose, dipping
and rising on the long rollers astern; the broad French boat with its
white deck blotched with blood and littered with bodies; the group of
men in the stern, some trying to advance and some seeking to escape—all
a confused, disorderly, struggling rabble.

Then betwixt them and the mast the two figures: the armed shining man
of metal, with hand upraised, watchful, silent, motionless, and Nigel,
bareheaded and crouching, with quick foot, eager eyes and fearless
happy face, moving this way and that, in and out, his sword flashing
like a gleam of light as he sought at all points for some opening in
the brazen shell before him.

It was clear to the man in armor that if he could but pen his
antagonist in a corner he would beat him down without fail. But it was
not to be done. The unhampered man had the advantage of speed. With a
few quick steps he could always glide to either side and escape the
clumsy rush. Aylward and Badding had sprung out to Nigel’s assistance;
but he shouted to them to stand back, with such authority and anger in
his voice that their weapons dropped to their sides. With staring eyes
and set features they stood watching that unequal fight.

Once it seemed that all was over with the Squire, for in springing back
from his enemy he tripped over one of the bodies which strewed the deck
and fell flat upon his back, but with a swift wriggle he escaped the
heavy blow which thundered down upon him, and springing to his feet he
bit deeply into the Frenchman’s helmet with a sweeping cut in return.
Again the mace fell, and this time Nigel had not quite cleared himself.
His sword was beaten down and the blow fell partly upon his left
shoulder. He staggered, and once more the iron club whirled upward to
dash him to the ground.

Quick as a flash it passed through his mind that he could not leap
beyond its reach. But he might get within it. In an instant he had
dropped his sword, and springing in he had seized the brazen man round
the waist. The mace was shortened and the handle jobbed down once upon
the bare flaxen head. Then, with a sonorous clang, and a yell of
delight from the spectators, Nigel with one mighty wrench tore his
enemy from the deck and hurled him down upon his back. His own head was
whirling and he felt that his senses were slipping away, but already
his hunting-knife was out and pointing through the slit in the brazen
helmet.

“Give yourself up, fair sir!” said he.

“Never to fishermen and to archers! I am a gentleman of coat-armor.
Kill me!”

“I also am a gentleman of coat-armor. I promise you quarter.”

“Then, sir, I surrender myself to you.”

The dagger tinkled down upon the deck. Seamen and archers ran forward,
to find Nigel half senseless upon his face. They drew him off, and a
few deft blows struck off the helmet of his enemy. A head,
sharp-featured, freckled and foxy-red, disclosed itself beneath it.
Nigel raised himself on his elbow for an instant.

“You are the Red Ferret?” said he.

“So my enemies call me,” said the Frenchman, with a smile. “I rejoice,
sir, that I have fallen to so valiant and honorable a gentleman.”

“I thank you, fair sir,” said Nigel feebly. “I also rejoice that I have
encountered so debonair a person, and I shall ever bear in mind the
pleasure which I have had from our meeting.”

So saying, he laid his bleeding head upon his enemy’s brazen front and
sank into a dead faint.




XV.
HOW THE RED FERRET CAME TO COSFORD


The old chronicler in his “_Gestes du Sieur Nigel_” has bewailed his
broken narrative, which rose from the fact that out of thirty-one years
of warfare no less than seven were spent by his hero at one time or
another in the recovery from his wounds or from those illnesses which
arose from privation and fatigue. Here at the very threshold of his
career, on the eve of a great enterprise, this very fate befell him.

Stretched upon a couch in a low-roofed and ill-furnished chamber, which
looks down from under the machicolated corner turret upon the inner
court of the Castle of Calais, he lay half-unconscious and impotent,
while great deeds were doing under his window. Wounded in three places,
and with his head splintered by the sharp pommel of the Ferret’s mace,
he hovered betwixt life and death, his shattered body drawing him
downward, his youthful spirit plucking him up.

As in some strange dream he was aware of that deed of arms within the
courtyard below. Dimly it came back to his memory afterwards the sudden
startled shout, the crash of metal, the slamming of great gates, the
roar of many voices, the clang, clang, clang, as of fifty lusty smiths
upon their anvils, and then at last the dwindling of the hubbub, the
low groans and sudden shrill cries to the saints, the measured murmur
of many voices, the heavy clanking of armored feet.

Sometime in that fell struggle he must have drawn his weakened body as
far as the narrow window, and hanging to the iron bars have looked down
on the wild scene beneath him. In the red glare of torches held from
windows and from roof he saw the rush and swirl of men below, the ruddy
light shining back from glowing brass and gleaming steel. As a wild
vision it came to him afterward, the beauty and the splendor, the
flying lambrequins, the jeweled crests, the blazonry and richness of
surcoat and of shield, where sable and gules, argent and vair, in every
pattern of saltire, bend or chevron, glowed beneath him like a drift of
many-colored blossoms, tossing, sinking, stooping into shadow,
springing into light. There glared the blood-red gules of Chandos, and
he saw the tall figure of his master, a thunderbolt of war, raging in
the van. There too were the three black chevrons on the golden shield
which marked the noble Manny. That strong swordsman must surely be the
royal Edward himself, since only he and the black-armored swift-footed
youth at his side were marked by no symbol of heraldry. “Manny! Manny!
George for England!” rose the deep-throated bay, and ever the gallant
counter-cry: “A Chargny! A Chargny! Saint Denis for France!” thundered
amid the clash and thudding of the battle.

Such was the vague whirling memory still lingering in Nigel’s mind when
at last the mists cleared away from it and he found himself weak but
clear on the low couch in the corner turret. Beside him, crushing
lavender betwixt his rough fingers and strewing it over floor and
sheets, was Aylward the archer. His longbow leaned at the foot of the
bed, and his steel cap was balanced on the top of it, while he himself,
sitting in his shirt sleeves, fanned off the flies and scattered the
fragrant herbs over his helpless master.

“By my hilt!” he cried with a sudden shout, every tooth in his head
gleaming with joy, “I thank the Virgin and all the saints for this
blessed sight! I had not dared to go back to Tilford had I lost you.
Three weeks have you lain there and babbled like a babe, but now I see
in your eyes that you are your own man again.”

“I have indeed had some small hurt,” said Nigel feebly; “but it is
shame and sorrow that I should lie here if there is work for my hands.
Whither go you, archer?”

“To tell the good Sir John that you are mending.”

“Nay, bide with me a little longer, Aylward. I can call to mind all
that has passed. There was a bickering of small boats, was there not,
and I chanced upon a most worthy person and exchanged handstrokes with
him? He was my prisoner, was he not?”

“He was, fair sir.”

“And where is he now?”

“Below in the castle.”

A smile stole over Nigel’s pale face. “I know what I will do with him,”
said he.

“I pray you to rest, fair sir,” said Aylward anxiously. “The King’s own
leech saw you this morning, and he said that if the bandage was torn
from your head you would surely die.”

“Nay, good archer, I will not move. But tell me what befell upon the
boat?”

“There is little to tell, fair sir. Had this Ferret not been his own
squire and taken so long a time to don his harness it is likely that
they would have had the better of us. He did not reach the battle till
his comrades were on their backs. Him we took to the Marie Rose,
because he was your man. The others were of no worth, so we threw them
into the sea.”

“The quick and the dead?”

“Every man of them.”

“It was an evil deed.”

Aylward shrugged his shoulders. “I tried to save one boy,” said he;
“but Cock Badding would not have it, and he had Black Simon and the
others at his back. ‘It is the custom of the Narrow Seas,’ said they:
‘To-day for them; to-morrow for us.’—Then they tore him from his hold
and cast him screaming over the side. By my hilt! I have no love for
the sea and its customs, so I care not if I never set foot on it again
when it has once borne me back to England.”

“Nay, there are great happenings upon the sea, and many worthy people
to be found upon ships,” said Nigel. “In all parts, if one goes far
enough upon the water, one would find those whom it would be joy to
meet. If one crosses over the Narrow Sea, as we have done, we come on
the French who are so needful to us; for how else would we win worship?
Or if you go south, then in time one may hope to come to the land of
the unbelievers, where there is fine skirmishing and much honor for him
who will venture his person. Bethink you, archer, how fair a life it
must be when one can ride forth in search of advancement with some hope
of finding many debonair cavaliers upon the same quest, and then if one
be overborne one has died for the faith, and the gates of Heaven are
open before you. So also the sea to the north is a help to him who
seeks honor, for it leads to the country of the Eastlanders and to
those parts where the heathen still dwell who turn their faces from the
blessed Gospel. There also a man might find some small deeds to do, and
by Saint Paul! Aylward, if the French hold the truce and the good Sir
John permits us, I would fain go down into those parts. The sea is a
good friend to the cavalier, for it takes him where he may fulfil his
vows.”

Aylward shook his head, for his memories were too recent; but he said
nothing, because at this instant the door opened and Chandos entered.
With joy in his face he stepped forward to the couch and took Nigel’s
hand in his. Then he whispered a word in Aylward’s ear, who hurried
from the room.

“_Pardieu!_ this is a good sight,” said the knight. “I trust that you
will soon be on your feet again.”

“I crave your pardon, my honored lord, that I have been absent from
your side,” said Nigel.

“In truth my heart was sore for you, Nigel; for you have missed such a
night as comes seldom in any man’s life. All went even as we had
planned. The postern gate was opened, and a party made their way in;
but we awaited them, and all were taken or slain. But the greater part
of the French had remained without upon the plain of Nieullet, so we
took horse and went out against them. When we drew near them they were
surprised, but they made good cheer among themselves, calling out to
each other: ‘If we fly we lose all. It is better to fight on, in the
hopes that the day may be ours.’ This was heard by our people in the
van, who cried out to them: ‘By Saint George! you speak truth. Evil
befall him who thinks of flying!’ So they held their ground like worthy
people for the space of an hour, and there were many there whom it is
always good to meet: Sir Geoffrey himself, and Sir Pepin de Werre, with
Sir John de Landas, old Ballieul of the Yellow Tooth, and his brother
Hector the Leopard. But above all Sir Eustace de Ribeaumont was at
great pains to meet us worthily, and he was at handstrokes with the
King for a long time. Then, when we had slain or taken them, all the
prisoners were brought to a feast which was ready for them, and the
knights of England waited upon them at the table and made good cheer
with them. And all this, Nigel, we owe to you.”

The Squire flushed with pleasure at the words. “Nay, most honored lord,
it was but a small thing which I have been able to do. But I thank God
and our Lady that I have done some service, since it has pleased you to
take me with you to the wars. Should it chance—”

But the words were cut short upon Nigel’s lips, and he lay back with
amazed eyes staring from his pallid face. The door of his little
chamber had opened, and who was this, the tall stately man with the
noble presence, the high forehead, the long handsome face, the dark,
brooding eyes—who but the noble Edward of England?

“Ha, my little cock of Tilford Bridge, I still bear you in mind,” said
he. “Right glad I was to hear that you had found your wits again, and I
trust that I have not helped to make you take leave of them once more.”

Nigel’s stare of astonishment had brought a smile to the King’s lips.
Now the Squire stammered forth some halting words of gratitude at the
honor done to him.

“Nay, not a word,” said the King. “But in sooth it is a joy to my heart
to see the son of my old comrade Eustace Loring carry himself so
bravely. Had this boat got before us with news of our coming, then all
our labor had been in vain, and no Frenchman ventured to Calais that
night. But above all I thank you for that you have delivered into my
hands one whom I had vowed to punish in that he has caused us more
scathe by fouler means than any living man. Twice have I sworn that
Peter the Red Ferret shall hang, for all his noble blood and
coat-armor, if ever he should fall into my hands. Now at last his time
has come; but I would not put him to death until you, who had taken
him, could be there to see it done. Nay, thank me not, for I could do
no less, seeing that it is to you that I owe him.”

But it was not thanks which Nigel was trying to utter. It was hard to
frame his words, and yet they must be said. “Sire,” he murmured, “it
ill becomes me to cross your royal will—”

The dark Plantagenet wrath gathered upon the King’s high brow and
gloomed in his fierce deep-set eyes. “By God’s dignity! no man has ever
crossed it yet and lived unscathed. How now, young sir, what mean such
words, to which we are little wont? Have a care, for this is no light
thing which you venture.”

“Sire,” said Nigel, “in all matters in which I am a free man I am ever
your faithful liege, but some things there are which may not be done.”

“How?” cried the King. “In spite of my will?”

“In spite of your will, sire,” said Nigel, sitting up on his couch,
with white face and blazing eyes.

“By the Virgin!” the angry King thundered, “we are come to a pretty
pass! You have been held too long at home, young man. The overstabled
horse will kick. The unweathered hawk will fly at check. See to it,
Master Chandos! He is thine to break, and I hold you to it that you
break him. And what is it that Edward of England may not do, Master
Loring?”

Nigel faced the King with a face as grim as his own. “You may not put
to death the Red Ferret.”

“_Pardieu!_ And why?”

“Because he is not thine to slay, sire. Because he is mine. Because I
promised him his life, and it is not for you, King though you be, to
constrain a man of gentle blood to break his plighted word and lose his
honor.”

Chandos laid his soothing hand upon his Squire’s shoulder. “Excuse him,
sire; he is weak from his wounds,” said he. “Perhaps we have stayed
overlong, for the leech has ordered repose.”

But the angry King was not easily to be appeased. “I am not wont to be
so browbeat,” said he hotly. “This is your Squire, Master John. How
comes it that you can stand there and listen to his pert talk, and say
no word to chide him? Is this how you guide your household? Have you
not taught him that every promise given is subject to the King’s
consent, and that with him only lie the springs of life and death? If
he is sick, you at least are hale. Why stand you there in silence?”

“My liege,” said Chandos gravely, “I have served you for over a score
of years, and have shed my blood through as many wounds in your cause,
so that you should not take my words amiss. But indeed I should feel
myself to be no true man if I did not tell you that my Squire Nigel,
though perchance he has spoken more bluntly than becomes him, is none
the less right in this matter, and that you are wrong. For bethink you,
sire—”

“Enough!” cried the King, more furious than ever. “Like master, like
man, and I might have known why it is that this saucy Squire dares to
bandy words with his sovereign lord. He does but give out what he hath
taken in. John, John, you grow overbold. But this I tell you, and you
also, young man, that as God is my help, ere the sun has set this night
the Red Ferret will hang as a warning to all spies and traitors from
the highest tower of Calais, that every ship upon the Narrow Seas, and
every man for ten miles round may see him as he swings and know how
heavy is the hand of the English King. Do you bear it in mind, lest you
also may feel its weight!” With a glare like an angry lion he walked
from the room, and the iron-clamped door clanged loudly behind him.

Chandos and Nigel looked ruefully at each other. Then the knight patted
his Squire upon his bandaged head.

“You have carried yourself right well, Nigel. I could not wish for
better. Fear not. All will be well.”

“My fair and honored lord,” cried Nigel, “I am heavy at heart, for
indeed I could do no other, and yet I have brought trouble upon you.”

“Nay, the clouds will soon pass. If he does indeed slay this Frenchman,
you have done all that lay within your power, and your mind may rest
easy.”

“I pray that it will rest easy in Paradise,” said Nigel; “for at the
hour that I hear that I am dishonored and my prisoner slain I tear this
bandage from my head and so end all things. I will not live when once
my word is broken.”

“Nay, fair son, you take this thing too heavily,” said Chandos, with a
grave face. “When a man has done all he may there remains no dishonor;
but the King hath a kind heart for all his hot head, and it may be that
if I see him I will prevail upon him. Bethink you how he swore to hang
the six burghers of this very town, and yet he pardoned them. So keep a
high heart, fair son, and I will come with good news ere evening.”

For three hours, as the sinking sun traced the shadow higher and ever
higher upon the chamber wall, Nigel tossed feverishly upon his couch,
his ears straining for the footfall of Aylward or of Chandos, bringing
news of the fate of the prisoner. At last the door flew open, and there
before him stood the one man whom he least expected, and yet would most
gladly have seen. It was the Red Ferret himself, free and joyous.

With swift furtive steps he was across the room and on his knees beside
the couch, kissing the pendent hand. “You have saved me, most noble
sir!” he cried. “The gallows was fixed and the rope slung, when the
good Lord Chandos told the King that you would die by your own hand if
I were slain. ‘Curse this mule-headed Squire!’ he cried. ‘In God’s name
let him have his prisoner, and let him do what he will with him so long
as he troubles me no more!’ So here I have come, fair sir, to ask you
what I shall do.”

“I pray you to sit beside me and be at your ease,” said Nigel. “In a
few words I will tell you what I would have you do. Your armor I will
keep, that I may have some remembrance of my good fortune in meeting so
valiant a gentleman. We are of a size, and I make little doubt that I
can wear it. Of ransom I would ask a thousand crowns.”

“Nay, nay!” cried the Ferret. “It would be a sad thing if a man of my
position was worth less than five thousand.”

“A thousand will suffice, fair sir, to pay my charges for the war. You
will not again play the spy, nor do us harm until the truce is broken.”

“That I will swear.”

“And lastly there is a journey that you shall make.”

The Frenchman’s face lengthened. “Where you order I must go,” said he;
“but I pray you that it is not to the Holy Land.”

“Nay,” said Nigel; “but it is to a land which is holy to me. You will
make your way back to Southampton.”

“I know it well. I helped to burn it down some years ago.”

“I rede you to say nothing of that matter when you get there. You will
then journey as though to London until you come to a fair town named
Guildford.”

“I have heard of it. The King hath a hunt there.”

“The same. You will then ask for a house named Cosford, two leagues
from the town on the side of a long hill.”

“I will bear it in mind.”

“At Cosford you will see a good knight named Sir John Buttesthorn, and
you will ask to have speech with his daughter, the Lady Mary.”

“I will do so; and what shall I say to the Lady Mary, who lives at
Cosford on the slope of a long hill two leagues from the fair town of
Guildford?”

“Say only that I sent my greeting, and that Saint Catharine has been my
friend—only that and nothing more. And now leave me, I pray you, for my
head is weary and I would fain have sleep.”

Thus it came about that a month later on the eve of the Feast of Saint
Matthew, the Lady Mary, as she walked front Cosford gates, met with a
strange horseman, richly clad, a serving-man behind him, looking
shrewdly about him with quick blue eyes, which twinkled from a red and
freckled face. At sight of her he doffed his hat and reined his horse.

“This house should be Cosford,” said he. “Are you by chance the Lady
Mary who dwells there?”

The lady bowed her proud dark head.

“Then,” said he, “Squire Nigel Loring sends you greeting and tells you
that Saint Catharine has been his friend.” Then turning to his servant
he cried: “Heh, Raoul, our task is done! Your master is a free man once
more. Come, lad, come, the nearest port to France! Hola! Hola! Hola!”
And so without a word more the two, master and man, set spurs to their
horses and galloped like madmen down the long slope of Hindhead, until
as she looked after them they were but two dark dots in the distance,
waist-high in the ling and the bracken.

She turned back to the house, a smile upon her face. Nigel had sent her
greeting. A Frenchman had brought it. His bringing it had made him a
freeman. And Saint Catherine had been Nigel’s friend. It was at her
shrine that he had sworn that three deeds should be done ere he should
set eyes upon her again. In the privacy of her room the Lady Mary sank
upon her prie-dieu and poured forth the thanks of her heart to the
Virgin that one deed was accomplished; but even as she did so her joy
was overcast by the thought of those two others which lay before him.




XVI.
HOW THE KING’S COURT FEASTED IN CALAIS CASTLE


It was a bright sunshiny morning when Nigel found himself at last able
to leave his turret chamber and to walk upon the rampart of the castle.
There was a brisk northern wind, heavy and wet with the salt of the
sea, and he felt, as he turned his face to it, fresh life and strength
surging in his blood and bracing his limbs. He took his hand from
Aylward’s supporting arm and stood with his cap off, leaning on the
rampart and breathing in the cool strong air. Far off upon the distant
sky-line, half hidden by the heave of the waves, was the low white
fringe of cliffs which skirted England. Between him and them lay the
broad blue Channel, seamed and flecked with flashing foam, for a sharp
sea was running and the few ships in sight were laboring heavily.
Nigel’s eyes traversed the wide-spread view, rejoicing in the change
from the gray wall of his cramped chamber. Finally they settled upon a
strange object at his very feet.

It was a long trumpet-shaped engine of leather and iron bolted into a
rude wooden stand and fitted with wheels. Beside it lay a heap of metal
slugs and lumps of stone. The end of the machine was raised and pointed
over the battlement. Behind it stood an iron box which Nigel opened. It
was filled with a black coarse powder, like gritty charcoal.

“By Saint Paul!” said he, passing his hands over the engine, “I have
heard men talk of these things, but never before have I seen one. It is
none other than one of those wondrous new-made bombards.”

“In sooth, it is even as you say,” Aylward answered, looking at it with
contempt and dislike in his face. “I have seen them here upon the
ramparts, and have also exchanged a buffet or two with him who had
charge of them. He was jack-fool enough to think that with this leather
pipe he could outshoot the best archer in Christendom. I lent him a
cuff on the ear that laid him across his foolish engine.”

“It is a fearsome thing,” said Nigel, who had stooped to examine it.
“We live in strange times when such things can be made. It is loosed by
fire, is it not, which springs from the black dust?”

“By my hilt! fair sir, I know not. And yet I call to mind that ere we
fell out this foolish bombardman did say something of the matter. The
fire-dust is within and so also is the ball. Then you take more dust
from this iron box and place it in the hole at the farther end—so. It
is now ready. I have never seen one fired, but I wot that this one
could be fired now.”

“It makes a strange sound, archer, does it not?” said Nigel wistfully.

“So I have heard, fair sir—even as the bow twangs, so it also has a
sound when you loose it.”

“There is no one to hear, since we are alone upon the rampart, nor can
it do scathe, since it points to sea. I pray you to loose it and I will
listen to the sound.” He bent over the bombard with an attentive ear,
while Aylward, stooping his earnest brown face over the touch-hole,
scraped away diligently with a flint and steel. A moment later both he
and Nigel were seated some distance off upon the ground while amid the
roar of the discharge and the thick cloud of smoke they had a vision of
the long black snakelike engine shooting back upon the recoil. For a
minute or more they were struck motionless with astonishment while the
reverberations died away and the smoke wreaths curled slowly up to the
blue heavens.

“Good lack!” cried Nigel at last, picking himself up and looking round
him. “Good lack, and Heaven be my aid! I thank the Virgin that all
stands as it did before. I thought that the castle had fallen.”

“Such a bull’s bellow I have never heard,” cried Aylward, rubbing his
injured limbs. “One could hear it from Frensham Pond to Guildford
Castle. I would not touch one again—not for a hide of the best land in
Puttenham!”

“It may fare ill with your own hide, archer, if you do,” said an angry
voice behind them. Chandos had stepped from the open door of the corner
turret and stood looking at them with a harsh gaze. Presently, as the
matter was made clear to him his face relaxed into a smile.

“Hasten to the warden, archer, and tell him how it befell. You will
have the castle and the town in arms. I know not what the King may
think of so sudden an alarm. And you, Nigel, how in the name of the
saints came you to play the child like this?”

“I knew not its power, fair lord.”

“By my soul, Nigel, I think that none of us know its power. I can see
the day when all that we delight in, the splendor and glory of war, may
all go down before that which beats through the plate of steel as
easily as the leathern jacket. I have bestrode my warhorse in my armor
and have looked down at the sooty, smoky bombardman beside me, and I
have thought that perhaps I was the last of the old and he the first of
the new; that there would come a time when he and his engines would
sweep you and me and the rest of us from the field.”

“But not yet, I trust, honored sir?”

“No, not yet, Nigel. You are still in time to win your spurs even as
your fathers did. How is your strength?”

“I am ready for any task, my good and honored lord.”

“It is well, for work awaits us—good work, pressing work, work of peril
and of honor. Your eyes shine and your face flushes, Nigel. I live my
own youth over again as I look at you. Know then that though there is
truce with the French here, there is not truce in Brittany where the
houses of Blois and of Montfort still struggle for the dukedom. Half
Brittany fights for one, and half for the other. The French have taken
up the cause of Blois, and we of Montfort, and it is such a war that
many a great leader, such as Sir Walter Manny, has first earned his
name there. Of late the war has gone against us, and the bloody hands
of the Rohans, of Gaptooth Beaumanoir, of Oliver the Flesher and others
have been heavy upon our people. The last tidings have been of
disaster, and the King’s soul is dark with wrath for that his friend
and comrade Gilles de St. Pol has been done to death in the Castle of
La Brohinière. He will send succors to the country, and we go at their
head. How like you that, Nigel?”

“My honored lord, what could I ask for better?”

“Then have your harness ready, for we start within the week. Our path
by land is blocked by the French, and we go by sea. This night the King
gives a banquet ere he returns to England, and your place is behind my
chair. Be in my chamber that you may help me to dress, and so we will
to the hall together.”

With satin and with samite, with velvet and with fur, the noble Chandos
was dressed for the King’s feast, and Nigel too had donned his best
silk jupon, faced with the five scarlet roses, that he might wait upon
him. In the great hall of Calais Castle the tables were set, a high
table for the lords, a second one for the less distinguished knights,
and a third at which the squires might feast when their masters were
seated.

Never had Nigel in his simple life at Tilford pictured a scene of such
pomp and wondrous luxury. The grim gray walls were covered from ceiling
to floor with priceless tapestry of Arras, where hart, hounds and
huntsmen circled the great hall with one long living image of the
chase. Over the principal table drooped a line of banners, and beneath
them rows of emblazoned shields upon the wall carried the arms of the
high noblemen who sat beneath. The red light of cressets and of torches
burned upon the badges of the great captains of England. The lions and
lilies shone over the high dorseret chair in the center, and the same
august device marked with the cadency label indicated the seat of the
Prince, while glowing to right and to left were the long lines of noble
insignia, honored in peace and terrible in war. There shone the gold
and sable of Manny, the engrailed cross of Suffolk, the red chevron of
Stafford, the scarlet and gold of Audley, the blue lion rampant of the
Percies, the silver swallows of Arundel, the red roebuck of the
Montacutes, the star of the de Veres, the silver scallops of Russell,
the purple lion of de Lacy, and the black crosses of Clinton.

A friendly Squire at Nigel’s elbow whispered the names of the famous
warriors beneath. “You are young Loring of Tilford, the Squire of
Chandos, are you not?” said he. “My name is Delves, and I come from
Doddington in Cheshire. I am the Squire of Sir James Audley, yonder
round-backed man with the dark face and close-cropped beard, who hath
the Saracen head as a crest above him.”

“I have heard of him as a man of great valor,” said Nigel, gazing at
him with interest.

“Indeed, you may well say so, Master Loring. He is the bravest knight
in England, and in Christendom also, as I believe. No man hath done
such deeds of valor.”

Nigel looked at his new acquaintance with hope in his eyes. “You speak
as it becomes you to speak when you uphold your own master,” said he.
“For the same reason, Master Delves, and in no spirit of ill-will to
you, it behooves me to tell you that he is not to be compared in name
or fame with the noble knight on whom I wait. Should you hold
otherwise, then surely we can debate the matter in whatever way or time
may please you best.”

Delves smiled good-humoredly. “Nay, be not so hot,” said he. “Had you
upheld any other knight, save perhaps Sir Walter Manny, I had taken you
at your word, and your master or mine would have had place for a new
Squire. But indeed it is only truth that no knight is second to
Chandos, nor would I draw my sword to lower his pride of place. Ha, Sir
James’ cup is low! I must see to it!” He darted off, a flagon of
Gascony in his hand. “The King hath had good news to-night,” he
continued when he returned. “I have not seen him in so merry a mind
since the night when we took the Frenchmen and he laid his pearl
chaplet upon the head of de Ribeaumont. See how he laughs, and the
Prince also. That laugh bodes some one little good, or I am the more
mistaken. Have a care! Sir John’s plate is empty.”

It was Nigel’s turn to dart away; but ever in the intervals he returned
to the corner whence he could look down the hall and listen to the
words of the older Squire. Delves was a short, thick-set man past
middle age, weather-beaten and scarred, with a rough manner and bearing
which showed that he was more at his ease in a tent than a hall. But
ten years of service had taught him much, and Nigel listened eagerly to
his talk.

“Indeed the King hath some good tidings,” he continued. “See now, he
has whispered it to Chandos and to Manny. Manny spreads it on to Sir
Reginald Cobham, and he to Robert Knolles, each smiling like the Devil
over a friar.”

“Which is Sir Robert Knolles?” asked Nigel with interest. “I have heard
much of him and his deeds.”

“He is the tall hard-faced man in yellow silk, he with the hairless
cheeks and the split lip. He is little older than yourself, and his
father was a cobbler in Chester, yet he has already won the golden
spurs. See how he dabs his great hand in the dish and hands forth the
gobbets. He is more used to a camp-kettle than a silver plate. The big
man with the black beard is Sir Bartholomew Berghersh, whose brother is
the Abbot of Beaulieu. Haste, haste! for the boar’s head is come and
the plate’s to be cleaned.”

The table manners of our ancestors at this period would have furnished
to the modern eye the strangest mixture of luxury and of barbarism.
Forks were still unknown, and the courtesy fingers, the index and the
middle of the left hand, took their place. To use any others was
accounted the worst of manners. A crowd of dogs lay among the rushes
growling at each other and quarreling over the gnawed bones which were
thrown to them by the feasters. A slice of coarse bread served usually
as a plate, but the King’s own high table was provided with silver
platters, which were wiped by the Squire or page after each course. On
the other hand the table-linen was costly, and the courses, served with
a pomp and dignity now unknown, comprised such a variety of dishes and
such complex marvels of cookery as no modern banquet could show.
Besides all our domestic animals and every kind of game, such strange
delicacies as hedgehogs, bustards, porpoises, squirrels, bitterns and
cranes lent variety to the feast.

Each new course, heralded by a flourish of silver trumpets, was borne
in by liveried servants walking two and two, with rubicund marshals
strutting in front and behind, bearing white wands in their hands, not
only as badges of their office, but also as weapons with which to repel
any impertinent inroad upon the dishes in the journey from the kitchen
to the hall. Boar’s heads, enarmed and endored with gilt tusks and
flaming mouths, were followed by wondrous pasties molded to the shape
of ships, castles and other devices with sugar seamen or soldiers who
lost their own bodies in their fruitless defense against the hungry
attack. Finally came the great nef, a silver vessel upon wheels laden
with fruit and sweetmeats which rolled with its luscious cargo down the
line of guests. Flagons of Gascony, of Rhine wine, of Canary and of
Rochelle were held in readiness by the attendants; but the age, though
luxurious, was not drunken, and the sober habits of the Norman had
happily prevailed over the license of those Saxon banquets where no
guest might walk from the table without a slur upon his host. Honor and
hardihood go ill with a shaking hand or a blurred eye.

Whilst wine, fruit and spices were handed round the high tables the
squires had been served in turn at the farther end of the hall.
Meanwhile round the King there had gathered a group of statesmen and
soldiers, talking eagerly among themselves. The Earl of Stafford, the
Earl of Warwick, the Earl of Arundel, Lord Beauchamp and Lord Neville
were assembled at the back of his chair, with Lord Percy and Lord
Mowbray at either side. The little group blazed with golden chains and
jeweled chaplets, flame colored paltocks and purple tunics.

Of a sudden the King said something over his shoulder to Sir William de
Pakyngton the herald, who advanced and stood by the royal chair. He was
a tall and noble-featured man, with long grizzled beard which rippled
down to the gold-linked belt girdling his many-colored tabard. On his
head he had placed the heraldic barret-cap which bespoke his dignity,
and he slowly raised his white wand high in the air, while a great hush
fell upon the hall.

“My lords of England,” said he, “knight bannerets, knights, squires,
and all others here present of gentle birth and coat-armor, know that
your dread and sovereign lord, Edward, King of England and of France,
bids me give you greeting and commands you to come hither that he may
have speech with you.”

In an instant the tables were deserted and the whole company had
clustered in front of the King’s chair. Those who had sat on either
side of him crowded inward so that his tall dark figure upreared itself
amid the dense circle of his guests.

With a flush upon his olive cheeks and with pride smoldering in his
dark eyes, he looked round him at the eager faces of the men who had
been his comrades from Sluys and Cadsand to Crécy and Calais. They
caught fire from that warlike gleam in his masterful gaze, and a sudden
wild, fierce shout pealed up to the vaulted ceiling, a soldierly thanks
for what was passed and a promise for what was to come. The King’s
teeth gleamed in a quick smile, and his large white hand played with
the jeweled dagger in his belt.

“By the splendor of God!” said he in a loud clear voice, “I have little
doubt that you will rejoice with me this night, for such tidings have
come to my ears as may well bring joy to everyone of you. You know well
that our ships have suffered great scathe from the Spaniards, who for
many years have slain without grace or ruth all of my people who have
fallen into their cruel hands. Of late they have sent their ships into
Flanders, and thirty great cogs and galleys lie now at Sluys
well-filled with archers and men-at-arms and ready in all ways for
battle. I have it to-day from a sure hand that, having taken their
merchandise aboard, these ships will sail upon the next Sunday and will
make their way through our Narrow Sea. We have for a great time been
long-suffering to these people, for which they have done us many
contraries and despites, growing ever more arrogant as we grow more
patient. It is in my mind therefore that we hie us to-morrow to
Winchelsea, where we have twenty ships, and make ready to sally out
upon them as they pass. May God and Saint George defend the right!”

A second shout, far louder and fiercer than the first, came like a
thunderclap after the King’s words. It was the bay of a fierce pack to
their trusted huntsman.

Edward laughed again as he looked round at the gleaming eyes, the
waving arms and the flushed joyful faces of his liegemen. “Who hath
fought against these Spaniards?” he asked. “Is there anyone here who
can tell us what manner of men they be?”

A dozen hands went up into the air; but the King turned to the Earl of
Suffolk at his elbow.

“You have fought them, Thomas?” said he.

“Yes, sire, I was in the great sea-fight eight years ago at the Island
of Guernsey, when Lord Lewis of Spain held the sea against the Earl of
Pembroke.”

“How found you them, Thomas?”

“Very excellent people, sire, and no man could ask for better. On every
ship they have a hundred crossbowmen of Genoa, the best in the world,
and their spearmen also are very hardy men. They would throw great
cantles of iron from the tops of the masts, and many of our people met
their death through it. If we can bar their way in the Narrow Sea, then
there will be much hope of honor for all of us.”

“Your words are very welcome, Thomas,” said the King, “and I make no
doubt that they will show themselves to be very worthy of what we
prepare for them. To you I give a ship, that you may have the handling
of it. You also, my dear son, shall have a ship, that evermore honor
may be thine.”

“I thank you, my fair and sweet father,” said the Prince, with joy
flushing his handsome boyish face.

“The leading ship shall be mine. But you shall have one, Walter Manny,
and you, Stafford, and you, Arundel, and you, Audley, and you, Sir
Thomas Holland, and you, Brocas, and you, Berkeley, and you, Reginald.
The rest shall be awarded at Winchelsea, whither we sail to-morrow.
Nay, John, why do you pluck so at my sleeve?”

Chandos was leaning forward, with an anxious face. “Surely, my honored
lord, I have not served you so long and so faithfully that you should
forget me now. Is there then no ship for me?”

The King smiled, but shook his head. “Nay, John, have I not given you
two hundred archers and a hundred men-at-arms to take with you into
Brittany? I trust that your ships will be lying in Saint Malo Bay ere
the Spaniards are abreast of Winchelsea. What more would you have, old
war-dog? Wouldst be in two battles at once?”

“I would be at your side, my liege, when the lion banner is in the wind
once more. I have ever been there. Why should you cast me now? I ask
little, dear lord—a galley, a balinger, even a pinnace, so that I may
only be there.”

“Nay, John, you shall come. I cannot find it in my heart to say you
nay. I will find you place in my own ship, that you may indeed be by my
side.”

Chandos stooped and kissed the King’s hand. “My Squire?” he asked.

The King’s brows knotted into a frown. “Nay, let him go to Brittany
with the others,” said he harshly. “I wonder, John, that you should
bring back to my memory this youth whose pertness is too fresh that I
should forget it. But some one must go to Brittany in your stead, for
the matter presses and our people are hard put to it to hold their
own.” He cast his eyes over the assembly, and they rested upon the
stern features of Sir Robert Knolles.

“Sir Robert,” he said, “though you are young in years you are already
old in war, and I have heard that you are as prudent in council as you
are valiant in the field. To you I commit the charge of this venture to
Brittany in place of Sir John Chandos, who will follow thither when our
work has been done upon the waters. Three ships lie in Calais port and
three hundred men are ready to your hand. Sir John will tell you what
our mind is in the matter. And now, my friends and good comrades, you
will haste you each to his own quarters, and you will make swiftly such
preparations as are needful, for, as God is my aid, I will sail with
you to Winchelsea to-morrow!”

Beckoning to Chandos, Manny and a few of his chosen leaders, the King
led them away to an inner chamber, where they might discuss the plans
for the future. At the same time the assembly broke up, the knights in
silence and dignity, the squires in mirth and noise, but all joyful at
heart for the thought of the great days which lay before them.




XVII.
THE SPANIARDS ON THE SEA


Day had not yet dawned when Nigel was in the chamber of Chandos
preparing him for his departure and listening to the last cheery words
of advice and direction from his noble master. That same morning,
before the sun was half-way up the heaven, the King’s great nef
Philippa, bearing within it the most of those present at his banquet
the night before, set its huge sail, adorned with the lions and the
lilies, and turned its brazen beak for England. Behind it went five
smaller cogs crammed with squires, archers and men-at-arms.

Nigel and his companions lined the ramparts of the castle and waved
their caps as the bluff, burly vessels, with drums beating and trumpets
clanging, a hundred knightly pennons streaming from their decks and the
red cross of England over all, rolled slowly out to the open sea. Then
when they had watched them until they were hull down they turned, with
hearts heavy at being left behind, to make ready for their own more
distant venture.

It took them four days of hard work ere their preparations were
complete, for many were the needs of a small force sailing to a strange
country. Three ships had been left to them, the cog Thomas of Romney,
the Grace Dieu of Hythe, and the Basilisk of Southampton, into each of
which one hundred men were stowed, besides the thirty seamen who formed
the crew. In the hold were forty horses, amongst them Pommers, much
wearied by his long idleness, and homesick for the slopes of Surrey
where his great limbs might find the work he craved. Then the food and
the water, the bow-staves and the sheaves of arrows, the horseshoes,
the nails, the hammers, the knives, the axes, the ropes, the vats of
hay, the green fodder and a score of other things were packed aboard.
Always by the side of the ships stood the stern young knight Sir
Robert, checking, testing, watching and controlling, saying little, for
he was a man of few words, but with his eyes, his hands, and if need be
his heavy dog-whip, wherever they were wanted.

The seamen of the Basilisk, being from a free port, had the old feud
against the men of the Cinque Ports, who were looked upon by the other
mariners of England as being unduly favored by the King. A ship of the
West Country could scarce meet with one from the Narrow Seas without
blood flowing. Hence sprang sudden broils on the quay side, when with
yell and blow the Thomases and Grace Dieus, Saint Leonard on their lips
and murder in their hearts, would fall upon the Basilisks. Then amid
the whirl of cudgels and the clash of knives would spring the tiger
figure of the young leader, lashing mercilessly to right and left like
a tamer among his wolves, until he had beaten them howling back to
their work. Upon the morning of the fourth day all was ready, and the
ropes being cast off the three little ships were warped down the harbor
by their own pinnaces until they were swallowed up in the swirling
folds of a Channel mist.

Though small in numbers, it was no mean force which Edward had
dispatched to succor the hard-pressed English garrisons in Brittany.
There was scarce a man among them who was not an old soldier, and their
leaders were men of note in council and in war. Knolles flew his flag
of the black raven aboard the Basilisk. With him were Nigel and his own
Squire John Hawthorn. Of his hundred men, forty were Yorkshire Dalesmen
and forty were men of Lincoln, all noted archers, with old Wat of
Carlisle, a grizzled veteran of border warfare, to lead them.

Already Aylward by his skill and strength had won his way to an
under-officership amongst them, and shared with Long Ned Widdington, a
huge North Countryman, the reputation of coming next to famous Wat
Carlisle in all that makes an archer. The men-at-arms too were
war-hardened soldiers, with Black Simon of Norwich, the same who had
sailed from Winchelsea, to lead them. With his heart filled with hatred
for the French who had slain all who were dear to him, he followed like
a bloodhound over land and sea to any spot where he might glut his
vengeance. Such also were the men who sailed in the other ships,
Cheshire men from the Welsh borders in the cog Thomas, and Cumberland
men, used to Scottish warfare, in the Grace Dieu.

Sir James Astley hung his shield of cinquefoil ermine over the quarter
of the Thomas. Lord Thomas Percy, a cadet of Alnwick, famous already
for the high spirit of that house which for ages was the bar upon the
landward gate of England, showed his blue lion rampant as leader of the
Grace Dieu. Such was the goodly company Saint-Malo bound, who warped
from Calais Harbor to plunge into the thick reek of a Channel mist.

A slight breeze blew from the eastward, and the highended, round-bodied
craft rolled slowly down the Channel. The mist rose a little at times,
so that they had sight of each other dipping and rising upon a sleek,
oily sea, but again it would sink down, settling over the top,
shrouding the great yard, and finally frothing over the deck until even
the water alongside had vanished from their view and they were afloat
on a little raft in an ocean of vapor. A thin cold rain was falling,
and the archers were crowded under the shelter of the overhanging poop
and forecastle, where some spent the hours at dice, some in sleep, and
many in trimming their arrows or polishing their weapons.

At the farther end, seated on a barrel as a throne of honor, with trays
and boxes of feathers around him, was Bartholomew the bowyer and
Fletcher, a fat, bald-headed man, whose task it was to see that every
man’s tackle was as it should be, and who had the privilege of selling
such extras as they might need. A group of archers with their staves
and quivers filed before him with complaints or requests, while half a
dozen of the seniors gathered at his back and listened with grinning
faces to his comments and rebukes.

“Canst not string it?” he was saying to a young bowman. “Then surely
the string is overshort or the stave overlong. It could not by chance
be the fault of thy own baby arms more fit to draw on thy hosen than to
dress a warbow. Thou lazy lurdan, thus is it strung!” He seized the
stave by the center in his right hand, leaned the end on the inside of
his right foot, and then, pulling the upper nock down with the left
hand, slid the eye of the string easily into place. “Now I pray thee to
unstring it again,” handing it to the bowman.

The youth with an effort did so, but he was too slow in disengaging his
fingers, and the string sliding down with a snap from the upper nock
caught and pinched them sorely against the stave. A roar of laughter,
like the clap of a wave, swept down the deck as the luckless bowman
danced and wrung his hand.

“Serve thee well right, thou redeless fool!” growled the old bowyer.
“So fine a bow is wasted in such hands. How now, Samkin? I can teach
you little of your trade, I trow. Here is a bow dressed as it should
be; but it would, as you say, be the better for a white band to mark
the true nocking point in the center of this red wrapping of silk.
Leave it and I will tend to it anon. And you, Wat? A fresh head on
yonder stele? Lord, that a man should carry four trades under one hat,
and be bowyer, fletcher, stringer and headmaker! Four men’s work for
old Bartholomew and one man’s pay!”

“Nay, say no more about that,” growled an old wizened bowman, with a
brown-parchment skin and little beady eyes. “It is better in these days
to mend a bow than to bend one. You who never looked a Frenchman in the
face are pricked off for ninepence a day, and I, who have fought five
stricken fields, can earn but fourpence.”

“It is in my mind, John of Tuxford, that you have looked in the face
more pots of mead than Frenchmen,” said the old bowyer. “I am swinking
from dawn to night, while you are guzzling in an alestake. How now,
youngster? Overbowed? Put your bow in the tiller. It draws at sixty
pounds—not a pennyweight too much for a man of your inches. Lay more
body to it, lad, and it will come to you. If your bow be not stiff, how
can you hope for a twenty-score flight. Feathers? Aye, plenty and of
the best. Here, peacock at a groat each. Surely a dandy archer like
you, Tom Beverley, with gold earrings in your ears, would have no
feathering but peacocks?”

“So the shaft fly straight, I care not of the feather,” said the
bowman, a tall young Yorkshireman, counting out pennies on the palm of
his horny hand.

“Gray goose-feathers are but a farthing. These on the left are a
halfpenny, for they are of the wild goose, and the second feather of a
fenny goose is worth more than the pinion of a tame one. These in the
brass tray are dropped feathers, and a dropped feather is better than a
plucked one. Buy a score of these, lad, and cut them saddle-backed or
swine-backed, the one for a dead shaft and the other for a smooth
flyer, and no man in the company will swing a better-fletched quiver
over his shoulder.”

It chanced that the opinion of the bowyer on this and other points
differed from that of Long Ned of Widdington, a surly straw-bearded
Yorkshireman, who had listened with a sneering face to his counsel. Now
he broke in suddenly upon the bowyer’s talk. “You would do better to
sell bows than to try to teach others how to use them,” said he; “for
indeed, Bartholomew, that head of thine has no more sense within it
than it has hairs without. If you had drawn string for as many months
as I have years you would know that a straight-cut feather flies
smoother than a swine-backed, and pity it is that these young bowmen
have none to teach them better!”

This attack upon his professional knowledge touched the old bowyer on
the raw. His fat face became suffused with blood and his eyes glared
with fury as he turned upon the archer. “You seven-foot barrel of
lies!” he cried. “All-hallows be my aid, and I will teach you to open
your slabbing mouth against me! Pluck forth your sword and stand out on
yonder deck, that we may see who is the man of us twain. May I never
twirl a shaft over my thumb nail if I do not put Bartholomew’s mark
upon your thick head!”

A score of rough voices joined at once in the quarrel, some upholding
the bowyer and others taking the part of the North Countryman. A
red-headed Dalesman snatched up a sword, but was felled by a blow from
the fist of his neighbor. Instantly, with a buzz like a swarm of angry
hornets, the bowmen were out on the deck; but ere a blow was struck
Knolles was amongst them with granite face and eyes of fire.

“Stand apart, I say! I will warrant you enough fighting to cool your
blood ere you see England once more. Loring, Hawthorn, cut any man down
who raises his hand. Have you aught to say, you fox-haired rascal?” He
thrust his face within two inches of that of the red man who had first
seized his sword. The fellow shrank back, cowed, from his fierce eyes.
“Now stint your noise, all of you, and stretch your long ears.
Trumpeter, blow once more!”

A bugle call had been sounded every quarter of an hour so as to keep in
touch with the other two vessels who were invisible in the fog. Now the
high clear note rang out once more, the call of a fierce sea-creature
to its mates, but no answer came back from the thick wall which pent
them in. Again and again they called, and again and again with bated
breath they waited for an answer.

“Where is the Shipman?” asked Knolles. “What is your name, fellow? Do
you dare call yourself master-mariner?”

“My name is Nat Dennis, fair sir,” said the gray-bearded old seaman.
“It is thirty years since first I showed my cartel and blew trumpet for
a crew at the water-gate of Southampton. If any man may call himself
master-mariner, it is surely I.”

“Where are our two ships?”

“Nay, sir, who can say in this fog?”

“Fellow, it was your place to hold them together.”

“I have but the eyes God gave me, fair sir, and they cannot see through
a cloud.”

“Had it been fair, I, who am a soldier, could have kept them in
company. Since it was foul, we looked to you, who are called a mariner,
to do so. You have not done it. You have lost two of my ships ere the
venture is begun.”

“Nay, fair sir, I pray you to consider—”

“Enough words!” said Knolles sternly. “Words will not give me back my
two hundred men. Unless I find them before I come to Saint-Malo, I
swear by Saint Wilfrid of Ripon that it will be an evil day for you!
Enough! Go forth and do what you may!”

For five hours with a light breeze behind them they lurched through the
heavy fog, the cold rain still matting their beards and shining on
their faces. Sometimes they could see a circle of tossing water for a
bowshot or so in each direction, and then the wreaths would crawl in
upon them once more and bank them thickly round. They had long ceased
to blow the trumpet for their missing comrades, but had hopes when
clear weather came to find them still in sight. By the shipman’s
reckoning they were now about midway between the two shores.

Nigel was leaning against the bulwarks, his thoughts away in the dingle
at Cosford and out on the heather-clad slopes of Hindhead, when
something struck his ear. It was a thin clear clang of metal, pealing
out high above the dull murmur of the sea, the creak of the boom and
the flap of the sail. He listened, and again it was borne to his ear.

“Hark, my lord!” said he to Sir Robert. “Is there not a sound in the
fog?”

They both listened together with sidelong heads. Then it rang clearly
forth once more, but this time in another direction. It had been on the
bow; now it was on the quarter. Again it sounded, and again. Now it had
moved to the other bow; now back to the quarter again; now it was near;
and now so far that it was but a faint tinkle on the ear. By this time
every man on board, seamen, archers and men-at-arms, were crowding the
sides of the vessel. All round them there were noises in the darkness,
and yet the wall of fog lay wet against their very faces. And the
noises were such as were strange to their ears, always the same high
musical clashing.

The old shipman shook his head and crossed himself.

“In thirty years upon the waters I have never heard the like,” said he.
“The Devil is ever loose in a fog. Well is he named the Prince of
Darkness.”

A wave of panic passed over the vessel, and these rough and hardy men
who feared no mortal foe shook with terror at the shadows of their own
minds. They stared into the cloud with blanched faces and fixed eyes,
as though each instant some fearsome shape might break in upon them.
And as they stared there came a gust of wind. For a moment the fog-bank
rose and a circle of ocean lay before them.

It was covered with vessels. On all sides they lay thick upon its
surface. They were huge caracks, high-ended and portly, with red sides
and bulwarks carved and crusted with gold. Each had one great sail set
and was driving down channel on the same course at the Basilisk. Their
decks were thick with men, and from their high poops came the weird
clashing which filled the air. For one moment they lay there, this
wondrous fleet, surging slowly forward, framed in gray vapor. The next
the clouds closed in and they had vanished from view. There was a long
hush, and then a buzz of excited voices.

“The Spaniards!” cried a dozen bowmen and sailors.

“I should have known it,” said the shipman. “I call to mind on the
Biscay Coast how they would clash their cymbals after the fashion of
the heathen Moor with whom they fight; but what would you have me do,
fair sir? If the fog rises we are all dead men.”

“There were thirty ships at the least,” said Knolles, with a moody
brow. “If we have seen them I trow that they have also seen us. They
will lay us aboard.”

“Nay, fair sir, it is in my mind that our ship is lighter and faster
than theirs. If the fog hold another hour we should be through them.”

“Stand to your arms!” yelled Knolles. “Stand to your arms—! They are on
us!”

The Basilisk had indeed been spied from the Spanish Admiral’s ship
before the fog closed down. With so light a breeze, and such a fog, he
could not hope to find her under sail. But by an evil chance not a
bowshot from the great Spanish carack was a low galley, thin and swift,
with oars which could speed her against wind or tide. She also had seen
the Basilisk and it was to her that the Spanish leader shouted his
orders. For a few minutes she hunted through the fog, and then sprang
out of it like a lean and stealthy beast upon its prey. It was the
sight of the long dark shadow gliding after them which had brought that
wild shout of alarm from the lips of the English knight. In another
instant the starboard oars of the galley had been shipped, the sides of
the two vessels grated together, and a stream of swarthy, red-capped
Spaniards were swarming up the sides of the Basilisk and dropped with
yells of triumph upon her deck.

For a moment it seemed as if the vessel was captured without a blow
being struck, for the men of the English ship had run wildly in all
directions to look for their arms. Scores of archers might be seen
under the shadow of the forecastle and the poop bending their bowstaves
to string them with the cords from their waterproof cases. Others were
scrambling over saddles, barrels and cases in wild search of their
quivers. Each as he came upon his arrows pulled out a few to lend to
his less fortunate comrades. In mad haste the men-at-arms also were
feeling and grasping in the dark corners, picking up steel caps which
would not fit them, hurling them down on the deck, and snatching
eagerly at any swords or spears that came their way.

The center of the ship was held by the Spaniards; and having slain all
who stood before them, they were pressing up to either end before they
were made to understand that it was no fat sheep but a most fierce old
wolf which they had taken by the ears.

If the lesson was late, it was the more thorough. Attacked on both
sides and hopelessly outnumbered, the Spaniards, who had never doubted
that this little craft was a merchant-ship, were cut off to the last
man. It was no fight, but a butchery. In vain the survivors ran
screaming prayers to the saints and threw themselves down into the
galley alongside. It also had been riddled with arrows from the poop of
the Basilisk, and both the crew on the deck and the galley-slaves in
the outriggers at either side lay dead in rows under the overwhelming
shower from above. From stem to rudder every foot of her was furred
with arrows. It was but a floating coffin piled with dead and dying
men, which wallowed in the waves behind them as the Basilisk lurched
onward and left her in the fog.

In their first rush on to the Basilisk, the Spaniards had seized six of
the crew and four unarmed archers. Their throats had been cut and their
bodies tossed overboard. Now the Spaniards who littered the deck,
wounded and dead, were thrust over the side in the same fashion. One
ran down into the hold and had to be hunted and killed squealing under
the blows like a rat in the darkness. Within half an hour no sign was
left of this grim meeting in the fog save for the crimson splashes upon
bulwarks and deck. The archers, flushed and merry, were unstringing
their bows once more, for in spite of the water glue the damp air took
the strength from the cords. Some were hunting about for arrows which
might have stuck inboard, and some tying up small injuries received in
the scuffle. But an anxious shadow still lingered upon the face of Sir
Robert, and he peered fixedly about him through the fog.

“Go among the archers, Hawthorne,” said he to his Squire. “Charge them
on their lives to make no sound! You also, Loring. Go to the afterguard
and say the same to them. We are lost if one of these great ships
should spy us.”

For an hour with bated breath they stole through the fleet, still
hearing the cymbals clashing all round them, for in this way the
Spaniards held themselves together. Once the wild music came from above
their very prow, and so warned them to change their course. Once also a
huge vessel loomed for an instant upon their quarter, but they turned
two points away from her, and she blurred and vanished. Soon the
cymbals were but a distant tinkling, and at last they died gradually
away.

“It is none too soon,” said the old shipman, pointing to a yellowish
tint in the haze above them. “See yonder! It is the sun which wins
through. It will be here anon. Ah! said I not so?”

A sickly sun, no larger and far dimmer than the moon, had indeed shown
its face, with cloud-wreaths smoking across it. As they looked up it
waxed larger and brighter before their eyes—a yellow halo spread round
it, one ray broke through, and then a funnel of golden light poured
down upon them, widening swiftly at the base. A minute later they were
sailing on a clear blue sea with an azure cloud-flecked sky above their
heads, and such a scene beneath it as each of them would carry in his
memory while memory remained.

They were in mid-channel. The white and green coasts of Picardy and of
Kent lay clear upon either side of them. The wide channel stretched in
front, deepening from the light blue beneath their prow to purple on
the far sky-line. Behind them was that thick bank of cloud from which
they had just burst. It lay like a gray wall from east to west, and
through it were breaking the high shadowy forms of the ships of Spain.
Four of them had already emerged, their red bodies, gilded sides and
painted sails shining gloriously in the evening sun. Every instant a
fresh golden spot grew out of the fog, which blazed like a star for an
instant, and then surged forward to show itself as the brazen beak of
the great red vessel which bore it. Looking back, the whole bank of
cloud was broken by the widespread line of noble ships which were
bursting through it. The Basilisk lay a mile or more in front of them
and two miles clear of their wing. Five miles farther off, in the
direction of the French coast, two other small ships were running down
Channel. A cry of joy from Robert Knolles and a hearty prayer of
gratitude to the saints from the old shipman hailed them as their
missing comrades, the cog Thomas and the Grace Dieu.

But fair as was the view of their lost friends, and wondrous the
appearance of the Spanish ships, it was not on those that the eyes of
the men of the Basilisk were chiefly bent. A greater sight lay before
them—a sight which brought them clustering to the forecastle with eager
eyes and pointing fingers. The English fleet was coming forth from the
Winchelsea Coast. Already before the fog lifted a fast galleass had
brought the news down Channel that the Spanish were on the sea, and the
King’s fleet was under way. Now their long array of sails, gay with the
coats and colors of the towns which had furnished them, lay bright
against the Kentish coast from Dungeness Point to Rye. Nine and twenty
ships were there from Southampton, Shoreham, Winchelsea, Hastings, Rye,
Hythe, Romney, Folkestone, Deal, Dover and Sandwich. With their great
sails slued round to catch the wind they ran out, whilst the Spanish,
like the gallant foes that they have ever been, turned their heads
landward to meet them. With flaunting banners and painted sails,
blaring trumpets and clashing cymbals, the two glittering fleets,
dipping and rising on the long Channel swell, drew slowly together.

King Edward had been lying all day in his great ship the Philippa, a
mile out from the Camber Sands, waiting for the coming of the
Spaniards. Above the huge sail which bore the royal arms flew the red
cross of England. Along the bulwarks were shown the shields of forty
knights, the flower of English chivalry, and as many pennons floated
from the deck. The high ends of the ship glittered with the weapons of
the men-at-arms, and the waist was crammed with the archers. From time
to time a crash of nakers and blare of trumpets burst from the royal
ship, and was answered by her great neighbors, the Lion on which the
Black Prince flew his flag, the Christopher with the Earl of Suffolk,
the Salle du Roi of Robert of Namur, and the Grace Marie of Sir Thomas
Holland. Farther off lay the White Swan, bearing the arms of Mowbray,
the Palmer of Deal, flying the Black Head of Audley, and the Kentish
man under the Lord Beauchamp. The rest lay, anchored but ready, at the
mouth of Winchelsea Creek.

The King sat upon a keg in the fore part of his ship, with little John
of Richmond, who was no more than a schoolboy, perched upon his knee.
Edward was clad in the black velvet jacket which was his favorite garb,
and wore a small brown-beaver hat with a white plume at the side. A
rich cloak of fur turned up with miniver drooped from his shoulders.
Behind him were a score of his knights, brilliant in silks and
sarcenets, some seated on an upturned boat and some swinging their legs
from the bulwark.

In front stood John Chandos in a party-colored jupon, one foot raised
upon the anchor-stock, picking at the strings of his guitar and singing
a song which he had learned at Marienburg when last he helped the
Teutonic knights against the heathen. The King, his knights, and even
the archers in the waist below them, laughed at the merry lilt and
joined lustily in the chorus, while the men of the neighboring ships
leaned over the side to hearken to the deep chant rolling over the
waters.

But there came a sudden interruption to the song. A sharp, harsh shout
came down from the lookout stationed in the circular top at the end of
the mast. “I spy a sail—two sails!” he cried.

John Bunce the King’s shipman shaded his eyes and stared at the long
fog-bank which shrouded the northern channel. Chandos, with his fingers
over the strings of his guitar, the King, the knights, all gazed in the
same direction. Two small dark shapes had burst forth, and then after
some minutes a third.

“Surely they are the Spaniards?” said the King.

“Nay, sire,” the seaman answered, “the Spaniards are greater ships and
are painted red. I know not what these may be.”

“But I could hazard a guess!” cried Chandos. “Surely they are the three
ships with my own men on their way to Brittany.”

“You have hit it, John,” said the King. “But look, I pray you! What in
the name of the Virgin is that?”

Four brilliant stars of flashing light had shone out from different
points of the cloud-bank. The next instant as many tall ships had
swooped forth into the sunshine. A fierce shout rang from the King’s
ship, and was taken up all down the line, until the whole coast from
Dungeness to Winchelsea echoed the warlike greeting. The King sprang up
with a joyous face.

“The game is afoot, my friends!” said he. “Dress, John! Dress, Walter!
Quick all of you! Squires, bring the harness! Let each tend to himself,
for the time is short.”

A strange sight it was to see these forty nobles tearing off their
clothes and littering the deck with velvets and satins, whilst the
squire of each, as busy as an ostler before a race, stooped and pulled
and strained and riveted, fastening the bassinets, the legpieces, the
front and the back plates, until the silken courtier had become the man
of steel. When their work was finished, there stood a stern group of
warriors where the light dandies had sung and jested round Sir John’s
guitar. Below in orderly silence the archers were mustering under their
officers and taking their allotted stations. A dozen had swarmed up to
their hazardous post in the little tower in the tops.

“Bring wine, Nicholas!” cried the King. “Gentlemen, ere you close your
visors I pray you to take a last rouse with me. You will be dry enough,
I promise you, before your lips are free once more. To what shall we
drink, John?”

“To the men of Spain,” said Chandos, his sharp face peering like a
gaunt bird through the gap in his helmet. “May their hearts be stout
and their spirits high this day!”

“Well said, John!” cried the King, and the knights laughed joyously as
they drank. “Now, fair sirs, let each to his post! I am warden here on
the forecastle. Do you, John, take charge of the afterguard. Walter,
James, William, Fitzallan, Goldesborough, Reginald—you will stay with
me! John, you may pick whom you will and the others will bide with the
archers. Now bear straight at the center, master-shipman. Ere yonder
sun sets we will bring a red ship back as a gift to our ladies, or
never look upon a lady’s face again.”

The art of sailing into a wind had not yet been invented, nor was there
any fore-and-aft canvas, save for small headsails with which a vessel
could be turned. Hence the English fleet had to take a long slant down
channel to meet their enemies; but as the Spaniards coming before the
wind were equally anxious to engage there was the less delay. With
stately pomp and dignity, the two great fleets approached.

It chanced that one fine carack had outstripped its consorts and came
sweeping along, all red and gold, with a fringe of twinkling steel, a
good half-mile before the fleet. Edward looked at her with a kindling
eye, for indeed she was a noble sight with the blue water creaming
under her gilded prow.

“This is a most worthy and debonair vessel, Master Bunce,” said he to
the shipman beside him. “I would fain have a tilt with her. I pray you
to hold us straight that we may bear her down.”

“If I hold her straight, then one or other must sink, and it may be
both,” the seaman answered.

“I doubt not that with the help of our Lady we shall do our part,” said
the King. “Hold her straight, master-shipman, as I have told you.”

Now the two vessels were within arrow flight, and the bolts from the
crossbowmen pattered upon the English ship. These short thick devil’s
darts were everywhere humming like great wasps through the air,
crashing against the bulwarks, beating upon the deck, ringing loudly on
the armor of the knights, or with a soft muffled thud sinking to the
socket in a victim.

The bowmen along either side of the Philippa had stood motionless
waiting for their orders, but now there was a sharp shout from their
leader, and every string twanged together. The air was full of their
harping, together with the swish of the arrows, the long-drawn keening
of the bowmen and the short deep bark of the under-officers. “Steady,
steady! Loose steady! Shoot wholly together! Twelve score paces! Ten
score! Now eight! Shoot wholly together!” Their gruff shouts broke
through the high shrill cry like the deep roar of a wave through the
howl of the wind.

As the two great ships hurtled together the Spaniard turned away a few
points so that the blow should be a glancing one. None the less it was
terrific. A dozen men in the tops of the carack were balancing a huge
stone with the intention of dropping it over on the English deck. With
a scream of horror they saw the mast cracking beneath them. Over it
went, slowly at first, then faster, until with a crash it came down on
its side, sending them flying like stones from a sling far out into the
sea. A swath of crushed bodies lay across the deck where the mast had
fallen. But the English ship had not escaped unscathed. Her mast held,
it is true, but the mighty shock not only stretched every man flat upon
the deck, but had shaken a score of those who lined her sides into the
sea. One bowman was hurled from the top, and his body fell with a
dreadful crash at the very side of the prostrate King upon the
forecastle. Many were thrown down with broken arms and legs from the
high castles at either end into the waist of the ship. Worst of all,
the seams had been opened by the crash and the water was gushing in at
a dozen places.

But these were men of experience and of discipline, men who had already
fought together by sea and by land, so that each knew his place and his
duty. Those who could staggered to their feet and helped up a score or
more of knights who were rolling and clashing in the scuppers unable to
rise for the weight of their armor. The bowmen formed up as before. The
seamen ran to the gaping seams with oakum and with tar. In ten minutes
order had been restored and the Philippa, though shaken and weakened,
was ready for battle once more. The King was glaring round him like a
wounded boar.

“Grapple my ship with that,” he cried, pointing to the crippled
Spaniard, “for I would have possession of her!”

But already the breeze had carried them past it, and a dozen Spanish
ships were bearing down full upon them.

“We cannot win back to her, lest we show our flank to these others,”
said the shipman.

“Let her go her way!” cried the knights. “You shall have better than
her.”

“By Saint George! you speak the truth,” said the King, “for she is ours
when we have time to take her. These also seem very worthy ships which
are drawing up to us, and I pray you, master-shipman, that you will
have a tilt with the nearest.”

A great carack was within a bowshot of them and crossing their bows.
Bunce looked up at his mast, and he saw that already it was shaken and
drooping. Another blow and it would be over the side and his ship a
helpless log upon the water. He jammed his helm round therefore, and
ran his ship alongside the Spaniard, throwing out his hooks and iron
chains as he did so.

They, no less eager, grappled the Philippa both fore and aft, and the
two vessels, linked tightly together, surged slowly over the long blue
rollers. Over their bulwarks hung a cloud of men locked together in a
desperate struggle, sometimes surging forward on to the deck of the
Spaniard, sometimes recoiling back on to the King’s ship, reeling this
way and that, with the swords flickering like silver flames above them,
while the long-drawn cry of rage and agony swelled up like a wolf’s
howl to the calm blue heaven above them.

But now ship after ship of the English had come up, each throwing its
iron over the nearest Spaniard and striving to board her high red
sides. Twenty ships were drifting in furious single combat after the
manner of the Philippa, until the whole surface of the sea was covered
with a succession of these desperate duels. The dismasted carack, which
the King’s ship had left behind it, had been carried by the Earl of
Suffolk’s Christopher, and the water was dotted with the heads of her
crew. An English ship had been sunk by a huge stone discharged from an
engine, and her men also were struggling in the waves, none having
leisure to lend them a hand. A second English ship was caught between
two of the Spanish vessels and overwhelmed by a rush of boarders so
that not a man of her was left alive. On the other hand, Mowbray and
Audley had each taken the caracks which were opposed to them, and the
battle in the center, after swaying this way and that, was turning now
in favor of the Islanders.

The Black Prince, with the Lion, the Grace Marie and four other ships
had swept round to turn the Spanish flank; but the movement was seen,
and the Spaniards had ten ships with which to meet it, one of them
their great carack the St. Iago di Compostella. To this ship the Prince
had attached his little cog and strove desperately to board her, but
her side was so high and the defense so desperate that his men could
never get beyond her bulwarks but were hurled down again and again with
a clang and clash to the deck beneath. Her side bristled with
crossbowmen, who shot straight down on to the packed waist of the Lion,
so that the dead lay there in heaps. But the most dangerous of all was
a swarthy black-bearded giant in the tops, who crouched so that none
could see him, but rising every now and then with a huge lump of iron
between his hands, hurled it down with such force that nothing would
stop it. Again and again these ponderous bolts crashed through the deck
and hurtled down into the bottom of the ship, starting the planks and
shattering all that came in their way.

The Prince, clad in that dark armor which gave him his name, was
directing the attack from the poop when the shipman rushed wildly up to
him with fear on his face.

“Sire!” he cried. “The ship may not stand against these blows. A few
more will sink her! Already the water floods inboard.”

The Prince looked up, and as he did so the shaggy beard showed once
more and two brawny arms swept downward. A great slug, whizzing down,
beat a gaping hole in the deck, and fell rending and riving into the
hold below. The master-mariner tore his grizzled hair.

“Another leak!” he cried. “I pray to Saint Leonard to bear us up this
day! Twenty of my shipmen are bailing with buckets, but the water rises
on them fast. The vessel may not float another hour.”

The Prince had snatched a crossbow from one of his attendants and
leveled it at the Spaniard’s tops. At the very instant when the seaman
stood erect with a fresh bar in his hands, the bolt took him full in
the face, and his body fell forward over the parapet, hanging there
head downward. A howl of exultation burst from the English at the
sight, answered by a wild roar of anger from the Spaniards. A seaman
had run from the Lion’s hold and whispered in the ear of the shipman.
He turned an ashen face upon the Prince.

“It is even as I say, sire. The ship is sinking beneath our feet!” he
cried.

“The more need that we should gain another,” said he. “Sir Henry
Stokes, Sir Thomas Stourton, William, John of Clifton, here lies our
road! Advance my banner, Thomas de Mohun! On, and the day is ours!”

By a desperate scramble a dozen men, the Prince at their head, gained a
footing on the edge of the Spaniard’s deck. Some slashed furiously to
clear a space, others hung over, clutching the rail with one hand and
pulling up their comrades from below. Every instant that they could
hold their own their strength increased, till twenty had become thirty
and thirty forty, when of a sudden the newcomers, still reaching forth
to their comrades below, saw the deck beneath them reel and vanish in a
swirling sheet of foam. The Prince’s ship had foundered.

A yell went up from the Spaniards as they turned furiously upon the
small band who had reached their deck. Already the Prince and his men
had carried the poop, and from that high station they beat back their
swarming enemies. But crossbow darts pelted and thudded among their
ranks till a third of their number were stretched upon the planks.
Lined across the deck they could hardly keep an unbroken front to the
leaping, surging crowd who pressed upon them. Another rush, or another
after that, must assuredly break them, for these dark men of Spain,
hardened by an endless struggle with the Moors, were fierce and
stubborn fighters. But hark to this sudden roar upon the farther side
of them—

“Saint George! Saint George! A Knolles to the rescue!” A small craft
had run alongside and sixty men had swarmed on the deck of the St.
Iago. Caught between two fires, the Spaniards wavered and broke. The
fight became a massacre. Down from the poop sprang the Prince’s men. Up
from the waist rushed the new-corners. There were five dreadful minutes
of blows and screams and prayers with struggling figures clinging to
the bulwarks and sullen splashes into the water below. Then it was
over, and a crowd of weary, overstrained men leaned panting upon their
weapons, or lay breathless and exhausted upon the deck of the captured
carack.

The Prince had pulled up his visor and lowered his beaver. He smiled
proudly as he gazed around him and wiped his streaming face. “Where is
the shipman?” he asked. “Let him lead us against another ship.”

“Nay, sire, the shipman and all his men have sunk in the Lion,” said
Thomas de Mohun, a young knight of the West Country, who carried the
standard. “We have lost our ship and the half of our following. I fear
that we can fight no more.”

“It matters the less since the day is already ours,” said the Prince,
looking over the sea. “My noble father’s royal banner flies upon yonder
Spaniard. Mowbray, Audley, Suffolk, Beauchamp, Namur, Tracey, Stafford,
Arundel, each has his flag over a scarlet carack, even as mine floats
over this. See, yonder squadron is already far beyond our reach. But
surely we owe thanks to you who came at so perilous a moment to our
aid. Your face I have seen, and your coat-armor also, young sir, though
I cannot lay my tongue to your name. Let me know that I may thank you.”

He had turned to Nigel, who stood flushed and joyous at the head of the
boarders from the Basilisk.

“I am but a Squire, sire, and can claim no thanks, for there is nothing
that I have done. Here is our leader.”

The Prince’s eyes fell upon the shield charged with the Black Raven and
the stern young face of him who bore it. “Sir Robert Knolles,” said he,
“I had thought you were on your way to Brittany.”

“I was so, sire, when I had the fortune to see this battle as I
passed.”

The Prince laughed. “It would indeed be to ask too much, Robert, that
you should keep on your course when much honor was to be gathered so
close to you. But now I pray you that you will come back with us to
Winchelsea, for well I know that my father would fain thank you for
what you have done this day.”

But Robert Knolles shook his head. “I have your father’s command, sire,
and without his order I may not go against it. Our people are
hard-pressed in Brittany, and it is not for me to linger on the way. I
pray you, sire, if you must needs mention me to the King, to crave his
pardon that I should have broken my journey thus.”

“You are right, Robert. God-speed you on your way! And I would that I
were sailing under your banner, for I see clearly that you will take
your people where they may worshipfully win worship. Perchance I also
maybe in Brittany before the year is past.”

The Prince turned to the task of gathering his weary people together,
and the Basilisks passed over the side once more and dropped down on to
their own little ship. They poled her off from the captured Spaniard
and set their sail with their prow for the south. Far ahead of them
were their two consorts, beating towards them in the hope of giving
help, while down Channel were a score of Spanish ships with a few of
the English vessels hanging upon their skirts. The sun lay low on the
water, and its level beams glowed upon the scarlet and gold of fourteen
great caracks, each flying the cross of Saint George, and towering high
above the cluster of English ships which, with brave waving of flags
and blaring of music, were moving slowly towards the Kentish coast.




XVIII.
HOW BLACK SIMON CLAIMED FORFEIT FROM THE KING OF SARK


For a day and a half the small fleet made good progress, but on the
second morning, after sighting Cape de la Hague, there came a brisk
land wind which blew them out to sea. It grew into a squall with rain
and fog so that they were two more days beating back. Next morning they
found themselves in a dangerous rock studded sea with a small island
upon their starboard quarter. It was girdled with high granite cliffs
of a reddish hue, and slopes of bright green grassland lay above them.
A second smaller island lay beside it. Dennis the shipman shook his
head as he looked.

“That is Brechou,” said he, “and the larger one is the Island of Sark.
If ever I be cast away, I pray the saints that I may not be upon yonder
coast!”

Knolles gazed across at it. “You say well, master-shipman,” said he.
“It does appear to be a rocky and perilous spot.”

“Nay, it is the rocky hearts of those who dwell upon it that I had in
my mind,” the old sailor answered. “We are well safe in three goodly
vessels, but had we been here in a small craft I make no doubt that
they would have already had their boats out against us.”

“Who then are these people, and how do they live upon so small and
windswept an island?” asked the soldier.

“They do not live from the island, fair sir, but from what they can
gather upon the sea around it. They are broken folk from all countries,
justice-fliers, prison-breakers, reavers, escaped bondsmen, murderers
and staff-strikers who have made their way to this outland place and
hold it against all comers. There is one here who could tell you of
them and of their ways, for he was long time prisoner amongst them.”
The seaman pointed to Black Simon, the dark man from Norwich, who was
leaning against the side lost in moody thought and staring with a
brooding eye at the distant shore.

“How now, fellow?” asked Knolles. “What is this I hear? Is it indeed
sooth that you have been a captive upon this island?”

“It is true, fair sir. For eight months I have been servant to the man
whom they call their King. His name is La Muette, and he comes from
Jersey nor is there under God’s sky a man whom I have more desire to
see.”

“Has he then mishandled you?”

Black Simon gave a wry smile and pulled off his jerkin. His lean sinewy
back was waled and puckered with white scars. “He has left his sign of
hand upon me,” said he. “He swore that he would break me to his will,
and thus he tried to do it. But most I desire to see him because he
hath lost a wager to me and I would fain be paid.”

“This is a strange saying,” said Knolles. “What is this wager, and why
should he pay you?”

“It is but a small matter,” Simon answered; “but I am a poor man and
the payment would be welcome. Should it have chanced that we stopped at
this island I should have craved your leave that I go ashore and ask
for that which I have fairly won.”

Sir Robert Knolles laughed. “This business tickleth my fancy,” said he.
“As to stopping at the island, this shipman tells me that we must needs
wait a day and a night, for that we have strained our planks. But if
you should go ashore, how will you be sure that you will be free to
depart, or that you will see this King of whom you speak?”

Black Simon’s dark face was shining with a fierce joy. “Fair sir, I
will ever be your debtor if you will let me go. Concerning what you
ask, I know this island even as I know the streets of Norwich, as you
may well believe seeing that it is but a small place and I upon it for
near a year. Should I land after dark, I could win my way to the King’s
house, and if he be not dead or distraught with drink I could have
speech with him alone, for I know his ways and his hours and how he may
be found. I would ask only that Aylward the archer may go with me, that
I may have one friend at my side if things should chance to go awry.”

Knolles thought awhile. “It is much that you ask,” said he, “for by
God’s truth I reckon that you and this friend of yours are two of my
men whom I would be least ready to lose. I have seen you both at grips
with the Spaniards and I know you. But I trust you, and if we must
indeed stop at this accursed place, then you may do as you will. If you
have deceived me, or if this is a trick by which you design to leave
me, then God be your friend when next we meet, for man will be of small
avail!”

It proved that not only the seams had to be calked but that the cog
Thomas was out of fresh water. The ships moored therefore near the Isle
of Brechou, where springs were to be found. There were no people upon
this little patch, but over on the farther island many figures could be
seen watching them, and the twinkle of steel from among them showed
that they were armed men. One boat had ventured forth and taken a good
look at them, but had hurried back with the warning that they were too
strong to be touched.

Black Simon found Aylward seated under the poop with his back, against
Bartholomew the bowyer. He was whistling merrily as he carved a girl’s
face upon the horn of his bow.

“My friend,” said Simon, “will you come ashore to-night—for I have need
of your help?”

Aylward crowed lustily. “Will I come, Simon? By my hilt, I shall be
right glad to put my foot on the good brown earth once more. All my
life I have trod it, and yet I would never have learned its worth had I
not journeyed in these cursed ships. We will go on shore together,
Simon, and we will seek out the women, if there be any there, for it
seems a long year since I heard their gentle voices, and my eyes are
weary of such faces as Bartholomew’s or thine.”

Simon’s grim features relaxed into a smile. “The only face that you
will see ashore, Samkin, will bring you small comfort,” said he, “and I
warn you that this is no easy errand, but one which may be neither
sweet nor fair, for if these people take us our end will be a cruel
one.”

“By my hilt,” said Aylward, “I am with you, gossip, wherever you may
go! Say no more, therefore, for I am weary of living like a cony in a
hole, and I shall be right glad to stand by you in your venture.”

That night, two hours after dark, a small boat put forth from the
Basilisk. It contained Simon, Aylward and two seamen. The soldiers
carried their swords, and Black Simon bore a brown biscuit-bag over his
shoulder. Under his direction the rowers skirted the dangerous surf
which beat against the cliffs until they came to a spot where an
outlying reef formed a breakwater. Within was a belt of calm water and
a shallow cover with a sloping beach. Here the boat was dragged up and
the seamen were ordered to wait, while Simon and Aylward started on
their errand.

With the assured air of a man who knows exactly where he is and whither
he is going, the man-at-arms began to clamber up a narrow fern-lined
cleft among the rocks. It was no easy ascent in the darkness, but Simon
climbed on like an old dog hot upon a scent, and the panting Aylward
struggled after as best he might. At last they were at the summit and
the archer threw himself down upon the grass.

“Nay, Simon, I have not enough breath to blow out a candle,” said he.
“Stint your haste for a minute, since we have a long night before us.
Surely this man is a friend indeed, if you hasten so to see him.”

“Such a friend,” Simon answered, “that I have often dreamed of our next
meeting. Now before that moon has set it will have come.”

“Had it been a wench I could have understood it,” said Aylward. “By
these ten finger-bones, if Mary of the mill or little Kate of Compton
had waited me on the brow of this cliff, I should have come up it and
never known it was there. But surely I see houses and hear voices over
yonder in the shadow?”

“It is their town,” whispered Simon. “There are a hundred as
bloody-minded cutthroats as are to be found in Christendom beneath
those roofs. Hark to that!”

A fierce burst of laughter came out of the darkness, followed by a long
cry of pain.

“All-hallows be with us!” cried Aylward. “What is that?”

“As like as not some poor devil has fallen into their clutches, even as
I did. Come this way, Samkin, for there is a peat-cutting where we may
hide. Aye, here it is, but deeper and broader than of old. Now follow
me close, for if we keep within it we shall find ourselves a stone cast
off the King’s house.”

Together they crept along the dark cutting. Suddenly Simon seized
Aylward by the shoulder and pushed him into the shadow of the bank.
Crouching in the darkness, they heard footsteps and voices upon the
farther side of the trench. Two men sauntered along it and stopped
almost at the very spot where the comrades were lying. Aylward could
see their dark figures outlined against the starry sky.

“Why should you scold, Jacques,” said one of them, speaking a strange
half-French, half-English lingo. “_Le diable t’emporte_ for a grumbling
rascal. You won a woman and I got nothing. What more would you have?”

“You will have your chance off the next ship, _mon garçon_, but mine is
passed. A woman, it is true—an old peasant out of the fields, with a
face as yellow as a kite’s claw. But Gaston, who threw a nine against
my eight, got as fair a little Normandy lass as ever your eyes have
seen. Curse the dice, I say! And as to my woman, I will sell her to you
for a firkin of Gascony.”

“I have no wine to spare, but I will give you a keg of apples,” said
the other. “I had it out of the Peter and Paul, the Falmouth boat that
struck in Creux Bay.”

“Well, well your apples may be the worse for keeping, but so is old
Marie, and we can cry quits on that. Come round and drink a cup over
the bargain.”

They shuffled onward in the darkness.

“Heard you ever such villainy?” cried Aylward, breathing fierce and
hard. “Did you hear them, Simon? A woman for a keg of apples! And my
heart’s root is sad for the other one, the girl of Normandy. Surely we
can land to-morrow and burn all these water-rats out of their nest.”

“Nay, Sir Robert will not waste time or strength ere he reach
Brittany.”

“Sure I am that if my little master Squire Loring had the handling of
it, every woman on this island would be free ere another day had
passed.”

“I doubt it not,” said Simon. “He is one who makes an idol of woman,
after the manner of those crazy knight errants. But Sir Robert is a
true soldier and hath only his purpose in view.”

“Simon,” said Aylward, “the light is not overgood and the place is
cramped for sword-play, but if you will step out into the open I will
teach you whether my master is a true soldier or not.”

“Tut, man! you are as foolish yourself,” said Simon. “Here we are with
our work in hand, and yet you must needs fall out with me on our way to
it. I say nothing against your master save that he hath the way of his
fellows who follow dreams and fancies. But Knolles looks neither to
right nor left and walks forward to his mark. Now, let us on, for the
time passes.”

“Simon, your words are neither good nor fair. When we are back on
shipboard we will speak further of this matter. Now lead on, I pray
you, and let us see some more of this ten-devil island.”

For half a mile Simon led the way until they came to a large house
which stood by itself. Peering at it from the edge of the cutting,
Aylward could see that it was made from the wreckage of many vessels,
for at each corner a prow was thrust out. Lights blazed within, and
there came the sound of a strong voice singing a gay song which was
taken up by a dozen others in the chorus.

“All is well, lad!” whispered Simon in great delight. “That is the
voice of the King. It is the very song he used to sing. ‘_Les deux
filles de Pierre_.’ ’Fore God, my back tingles at the very sound of it.
Here we will wait until his company take their leave.”

Hour after hour they crouched in the peat-cutting, listening to the
noisy songs of the revelers within, some French, some English, and all
growing fouler and less articulate as the night wore on. Once a quarrel
broke out and the clamor was like a cageful of wild beasts at
feeding-time. Then a health was drunk and there was much stamping and
cheering.

Only once was the long vigil broken. A woman came forth from the house
and walked up and down, with her face sunk upon her breast. She was
tall and slender, but her features could not be seen for a wimple over
her head. Weary sadness could be read in her bowed back and dragging
steps. Once only they saw her throw her two hands up to Heaven as one
who is beyond human aid. Then she passed slowly into the house again. A
moment later the door of the hall was flung open, and a shouting
stumbling throng came crowding forth, with whoop and yell, into the
silent night. Linking arms and striking up a chorus, they marched past
the peat-cutting, their voices dwindling slowly away as they made for
their homes.

“Now, Samkin, now!” cried Simon, and jumping out from the hiding-place
he made for the door. It had not yet been fastened. The two comrades
sprang inside. Then Simon drew the bolts so that none might interrupt
them.

A long table littered with flagons and beakers lay before them. It was
lit up by a line of torches, which flickered and smoked in their iron
sconces. At the farther end a solitary man was seated. His head rested
upon his two hands, as if he were befuddled with wine, but at the harsh
sound of the snapping bolts he raised his face and looked angrily
around him. It was a strange powerful head, tawny and shaggy like a
lion’s, with a tangled beard and a large harsh face, bloated and
blotched with vice. He laughed as the newcomers entered, thinking that
two of his boon companions had returned to finish a flagon. Then he
stared hard and he passed his hand over his eyes like one who thinks he
may be dreaming.

“_Mon Dieu!_” he cried. “Who are you and whence come you at this hour
of the night? Is this the way to break into our royal presence?”

Simon approached up one side of the table and Aylward up the other.
When they were close to the King, the man-at-arms plucked a torch from
its socket and held it to his own face. The King staggered back with a
cry, as he gazed at that grim visage.

“_Le diable noir!_” he cried. “Simon, the Englishman! What make you
here?”

Simon put his hand upon his shoulder. “Sit here!” said he, and he
forced the King into his seat. “Do you sit on the farther side of him,
Aylward. We make a merry group, do we not? Often have I served at this
table, but never did I hope to drink at it. Fill your cup, Samkin, and
pass the flagon.”

The King looked from one to the other with terror in his bloodshot
eyes. “What would you do?” he asked. “Are you mad, that you should come
here. One shout and you are at my mercy.”

“Nay, my friend, I have lived too long in your house not to know the
ways of it. No man-servant ever slept beneath your roof, for you feared
lest your throat would be cut in the night-time. You may shout and
shout, if it so please you. It chanced that I was passing on my way
from England in those ships which lie off La Brechou, and I thought I
would come in and have speech with you.”

“Indeed, Simon, I am right glad to see you,” said the King, cringing
away from the fierce eyes of the soldier. “We were good friends in the
past, were we not, and I cannot call to mind that I have ever done you
injury. When you made your way to England by swimming to the Levantine
there was none more glad in heart than I!”

“If I cared to doff my doublet I could show you the marks of what your
friendship has done for me in the past,” said Simon. “It is printed on
my back as clearly as on my memory. Why, you foul dog, there are the
very rings upon the wall to which my hands were fastened, and there the
stains upon the boards on which my blood has dripped! Is it not so, you
king of butchers?”

The pirate chief turned whiter still. “It may be that life here was
somewhat rough, Simon, but if I have wronged you in anyway, I will
surely make amends. What do you ask?”

“I ask only one thing, and I have come hither that I may get it. It is
that you pay me forfeit for that you have lost your wager.”

“My wager, Simon! I call to mind no wager.”

“But I will call it to your mind, and then I will take my payment.
Often have you sworn that you would break my courage. ‘By my head!’ you
have cried to me. ‘You will crawl at my feet!’ and again: ‘I will wager
my head that I will tame you!’ Yes, yes, a score of times you have said
so. In my heart, as I listened, I have taken up your gage. And now,
dog, you have lost and I am here to claim the forfeit.”

His long heavy sword flew from its sheath. The King, with a howl of
despair, flung his arms round him, and they rolled together under the
table. Aylward sat with a ghastly face, and his toes curled with horror
at the sight, for he was still new to scenes of strife and his blood
was too cold for such a deed. When Simon rose he tossed something into
his bag and sheathed his bloody sword.

“Come, Samkin, our work is well done,” said he.

“By my hilt, if I had known what it was I would have been less ready to
come with you,” said the archer. “Could you not have clapped a sword in
his fist and let him take his chance in the hall?”

“Nay, Samkin, if you had such memories as I, you would have wished that
he should die like a sheep and not like a man. What chance did he give
me when he had the power? And why should I treat him better? But, Holy
Virgin, what have we here?”

At the farther end of the table a woman was standing. An open door
behind her showed that she had come from the inner room of the house.
By her tall figure the comrades knew that she was the same that they
had already seen. Her face had once been fair, but now was white and
haggard with wild dark eyes full of a hopeless terror and despair.
Slowly she paced up the room, her gaze fixed not upon the comrades, but
upon the dreadful thing beneath the table. Then as she stooped and was
sure she burst into loud laughter and clapped her hands.

“Who shall say there is no God?” she cried. “Who shall say that prayer
is unavailing? Great sir, brave sir, let me kiss that conquering hand!”

“Nay, nay, dame, stand back! Well, if you must needs have one of them,
take this which is the clean one.”

“It is the other I crave—that which is red with his blood! Oh! joyful
night when my lips have been wet with it! Now I can die in peace!”

“We must go, Aylward,” said Simon. “In another hour the dawn will have
broken. In daytime a rat could not cross this island and pass unseen.
Come, man, and at once!”

But Aylward was at the woman’s side. “Come with us, fair dame,” said
he. “Surely we can, at least, take you from this island, and no such
change can be for the worse.”

“Nay,” said she, “the saints in Heaven cannot help me now until they
take me to my rest. There is no place for me in the world beyond, and
all my friends were slain on the day I was taken. Leave me, brave men,
and let me care for myself. Already it lightens in the east, and black
will be your fate if you are taken. Go, and may the blessing of one who
was once a holy nun go with you and guard you from danger!”

Sir Robert Knolles was pacing the deck in the early morning, when he
heard the sound of oars, and there were his two night-birds climbing up
the side.

“So, fellow,” said he, “have you had speech with the King of Sark?”

“Fair sir, I have seen him.”

“And he has paid his forfeit?”

“He has paid it, sir!”

Knolles looked with curiosity at the bag which Simon bore. “What carry
you there?” he asked.

“The stake that he has lost.”

“What was it then? A goblet? A silver plate?”

For answer Simon opened his bag and shook it on the deck.

Sir Robert turned away with a whistle. “’Fore God!” said he, “it is in
my mind that I carry some hard men with me to Brittany.”




XIX.
HOW A SQUIRE OF ENGLAND MET A SQUIRE OF FRANCE


Sir Robert Knolles with his little fleet had sighted the Breton coast
near Cancale; they had rounded the Point du Grouin, and finally had
sailed past the port of St. Malo and down the long narrow estuary of
the Rance until they were close to the old walled city of Dinan, which
was held by that Montfort faction whose cause the English had espoused.
Here the horses had been disembarked, the stores were unloaded, and the
whole force encamped outside the city, whilst the leaders waited for
news as to the present state of affairs, and where there was most hope
of honor and profit.

The whole of France was feeling the effects of that war with England
which had already lasted some ten years, but no Province was in so
dreadful a condition as this unhappy land of Brittany. In Normandy or
Picardy the inroads of the English were periodical with intervals of
rest between; but Brittany was torn asunder by constant civil war apart
from the grapple of the two great combatants, so that there was no
surcease of her sufferings. The struggle had begun in 1341 through the
rival claims of Montfort and of Blois to the vacant dukedom. England
had taken the part of Montfort, France that of Blois. Neither faction
was strong enough to destroy the other, and so after ten years of
continual fighting, history recorded a long ineffectual list of
surprises and ambushes, of raids and skirmishes, of towns taken and
retaken, of alternate victory and defeat, in which neither party could
claim a supremacy. It mattered nothing that Montfort and Blois had both
disappeared from the scene, the one dead and the other taken by the
English. Their wives caught up the swords which had dropped from the
hands of their lords, and the long struggle went on even more savagely
than before.

In the south and east the Blois faction held the country, and Nantes
the capital was garrisoned and occupied by a strong French army. In the
north and west the Montfort party prevailed, for the island kingdom was
at their back and always fresh sails broke the northern sky-line
bearing adventurers from over the channel.

Between these two there lay a broad zone comprising all the center of
the country which was a land of blood and violence, where no law
prevailed save that of the sword. From end to end it was dotted with
castles, some held for one side, some for the other, and many mere
robber strongholds, the scenes of gross and monstrous deeds, whose
brute owners, knowing that they could never be called to account, made
war upon all mankind, and wrung with rack and with flame the last
shilling from all who fell into their savage hands. The fields had long
been untilled. Commerce was dead. From Rennes in the east to Hennebon
in the west, and from Dinan in the north to Nantes in the south, there
was no spot where a man’s life or a woman’s honor was safe. Such was
the land, full of darkness and blood, the saddest, blackest spot in
Christendom, into which Knolles and his men were now advancing.

But there was no sadness in the young heart of Nigel, as he rode by the
side of Knolles at the head of a clump of spears, nor did it seem to
him that Fate had led him into an unduly arduous path. On the contrary,
he blessed the good fortune which had sent him into so delightful a
country, and it seemed to him as he listened to dreadful stories of
robber barons, and looked round at the black scars of war which lay
branded upon the fair faces of the hills, that no hero of romances or
trouveur had ever journeyed through such a land of promise, with so
fair a chance of knightly venture and honorable advancement.

The Red Ferret was one deed toward his vow. Surely a second, and
perhaps a better, was to be found somewhere upon this glorious
countryside. He had borne himself as the others had in the sea-fight,
and could not count it to his credit where he had done no more than
mere duty. Something beyond this was needed for such a deed as could be
laid at the feet of the Lady Mary. But surely it was to be found here
in fermenting war-distracted Brittany. Then with two done it would be
strange if he could not find occasion for that third one, which would
complete his service and set him free to look her in the face once
more. With the great yellow horse curveting beneath him, his Guildford
armor gleaming in the sun, his sword clanking against his stirrup-iron,
and his father’s tough ash-spear in his hand, he rode with a light
heart and a smiling face, looking eagerly to right and to left for any
chance which his good Fate might send.

The road from Dinan to Caulnes, along which the small army was moving,
rose and dipped over undulating ground, with a bare marshy plain upon
the left where the river Rance ran down to the sea, while upon the
right lay a wooded country with a few wretched villages, so poor and
sordid that they had nothing with which to tempt the spoiler. The
peasants had left them at the first twinkle of a steel cap, and lurked
at the edges of the woods, ready in an instant to dive into those
secret recesses known only to themselves. These creatures suffered
sorely at the hands of both parties, but when the chance came they
revenged their wrongs on either in a savage way which brought fresh
brutalities upon their heads.

The new-comers soon had a chance of seeing to what lengths they would
go, for in the roadway near to Caulnes they came upon an English
man-at-arms who had been waylaid and slain by them. How they had
overcome him could not be told, but how they had slain him within his
armor was horribly apparent, for they had carried such a rock as eight
men could lift, and had dropped it upon him as he lay, so that he was
spread out in his shattered case like a crab beneath a stone. Many a
fist was shaken at the distant woods and many a curse hurled at those
who haunted them, as the column of scowling soldiers passed the
murdered man, whose badge of the Molene cross showed him to have been a
follower of that House of Bentley, whose head, Sir Walter, was at that
time leader of the British forces in the country.

Sir Robert Knolles had served in Brittany before, and he marshaled his
men on the march with the skill and caution of the veteran soldier, the
man who leaves as little as possible to chance, having too steadfast a
mind to heed the fool who may think him overcautious. He had recruited
a number of bowmen and men-at-arms at Dinan; so that his following was
now close upon five hundred men. In front under his own leadership were
fifty mounted lancers, fully armed and ready for any sudden attack.
Behind them on foot came the archers, and a second body of mounted men
closed up the rear. Out upon either flank moved small bodies of
cavalry, and a dozen scouts, spread fanwise, probed every gorge and
dingle in front of the column. So for three days he moved slowly down
the Southern Road.

Sir Thomas Percy and Sir James Astley had ridden to the head of the
column, and Knolles conferred with them as they marched concerning the
plan of their campaign. Percy and Astley were young and hot-headed with
wild visions of dashing deeds and knight errantry, but Knolles with
cold, clear brain and purpose of iron held ever his object in view.

“By the holy Dunstan and all the saints of Lindisfarne!” cried the
fiery Borderer, “it goes to my heart to ride forward when there are
such honorable chances on either side of us. Have I not heard that the
French are at Evran beyond the river, and is it not sooth that yonder
castle, the towers of which I see above the woods, is in the hands of a
traitor, who is false to his liege lord of Montford? There is little
profit to be gained upon this road, for the folk seem to have no heart
for war. Had we ventured as far over the marches of Scotland as we now
are in Brittany, we should not have lacked some honorable venture or
chance of winning worship.”

“You say truth, Thomas,” cried Astley, a red-faced and choleric young
man. “It is well certain that the French will not come to us, and
surely it is the more needful that we go to them. In sooth, any soldier
who sees us would smile that we should creep for three days along this
road as though a thousand dangers lay before us, when we have but poor
broken peasants to deal with.”

But Robert Knolles shook his head. “We know not what are in these
woods, or behind these hills,” said he, “and when I know nothing it is
my wont to prepare for the worst which may befall. It is but prudence
so to do.”

“Your enemies might find some harsher name for it,” said Astley with a
sneer. “Nay, you need not think to scare me by glaring at me, Sir
Robert, nor will your ill-pleasure change my thoughts. I have faced
fiercer eyes than thine, and I have not feared.”

“Your speech, Sir James, is neither courteous nor good,” said Knolles,
“and if I were a free man I would cram your words down your throat with
the point of my dagger. But I am here to lead these men in profit and
honor, not to quarrel with every fool who has not the wit to understand
how soldiers should be led. Can you not see that if I make attempts
here and there, as you would have me do, I shall have weakened my
strength before I come to that part where it can best be spent?”

“And where is that?” asked Percy. “’Fore God, Astley, it is in my mind
that we ride with one who knows more of war than you or I, and that we
would be wise to be guided by his rede. Tell us then what is in your
mind.”

“Thirty miles from here,” said Knolles, “there is, as I am told, a
fortalice named Ploermel, and within it is one Bambro, an Englishman,
with a good garrison. No great distance from him is the Castle of
Josselin where dwells Robert of Beaumanoir with a great following of
Bretons. It is my intention that we should join Bambro, and so be in
such strength that we may throw ourselves upon Josselin, and by taking
it become the masters of all mid-Brittany, and able to make head
against the Frenchmen in the south.”

“Indeed I think that you can do no better,” said Percy heartily, “and I
swear to you on jeopardy of my soul that I will stand by you in the
matter! I doubt not that when we come deep into their land they will
draw together and do what they may to make head against us; but up to
now I swear by all the saints of Lindisfarne that I should have seen
more war in a summer’s day in Liddesdale or at the Forest of Jedburgh
than any that Brittany has shown us. But see, yonder horsemen are
riding in. They are our own hobblers, are they not? And who are these
who are lashed to their stirrups?”

A small troop of mounted bowmen had ridden out of an oak grove upon the
left of the road. They trotted up to where the three knights had
halted. Two wretched peasants whose wrists had been tied to their
leathers came leaping and straining beside the horses in their effort
not to be dragged off their feet. One was a tall, gaunt, yellow-haired
man, the other short and swarthy, but both so crusted with dirt, so
matted and tangled and ragged, that they were more like beasts of the
wood than human beings.

“What is this?” asked Knolles. “Have I not ordered you to leave the
countryfolk at peace?”

The leader of the archers, old Wat of Carlisle, held up a sword, a
girdle and a dagger. “If it please you, fair sir,” said he, “I saw the
glint of these, and I thought them no fit tools for hands which were
made for the spade and the plow. But when we had ridden them down and
taken them, there was the Bentley cross upon each, and we knew that
they had belonged to yonder dead Englishman upon the road. Surely then,
these are two of the villains who have slain him, and it is right that
we do justice upon them.”

Sure enough, upon sword, girdle and dagger shone the silver Molene
cross which had gleamed on the dead man’s armor. Knolles looked at them
and then at the prisoners with a face of stone. At the sight of those
fell eyes they had dropped with inarticulate howls upon their knees,
screaming out their protests in a tongue which none could understand.

“We must have the roads safe for wandering Englishmen,” said Knolles.
“These men must surely die. Hang them to yonder tree.”

He pointed to a live-oak by the roadside, and rode onward upon his way
in converse with his fellow-knights. But the old bowman had ridden
after him.

“If it please you, Sir Robert, the bowmen would fain put these men to
death in their own fashion,” said he.

“So that they die, I care not how,” Knolles answered carelessly, and
looked back no more.

Human life was cheap in those stern days when the footmen of a stricken
army or the crew of a captured ship were slain without any question or
thought of mercy by the victors. War was a rude game with death for the
stake, and the forfeit was always claimed on the one side and paid on
the other without doubt or hesitation. Only the knight might be spared,
since his ransom made him worth more alive than dead. To men trained in
such a school, with death forever hanging over their own heads, it may
be well believed that the slaying of two peasant murderers was a small
matter.

And yet there was special reason why upon this occasion the bowmen
wished to keep the deed in their own hands. Ever since their dispute
aboard the Basilisk, there had been ill-feeling betwixt Bartholomew the
old bald-headed bowyer, and long Ned Widdington the Dalesman, which had
ended in a conflict at Dinan, in which not only they, but a dozen of
their friends had been laid upon the cobble-stones. The dispute raged
round their respective knowledge and skill with the bow, and now some
quick wit amongst the soldiers had suggested a grim fashion in which it
should be put to the proof, once for all, which could draw the surer
shaft.

A thick wood lay two hundred paces from the road upon which the archers
stood. A stretch of smooth grassy sward lay between. The two peasants
were led out fifty yards from the road, with their faces toward the
wood. There they stood, held on a leash, and casting many a wondering
frightened glance over their shoulders at the preparations which were
being made behind them.

Old Bartholomew and the big Yorkshireman had stepped out of the ranks
and stood side by side each with his strung bow in his left hand and a
single arrow in his right. With care they had drawn on and greased
their shooting-gloves and fastened their bracers. They plucked and cast
up a few blades of grass to measure the wind, examined every small
point of their tackle, turned their sides to the mark, and widened
their feet in a firmer stance. From all sides came chaff and counsel
from their comrades.

“A three-quarter wind, bowyer!” cried one. “Aim a body’s breadth to the
right!”

“But not thy body’s breadth, bowyer,” laughed another. “Else may you be
overwide.”

“Nay, this wind will scarce turn a well-drawn shaft,” said a third.
“Shoot dead upon him and you will be clap in the clout.”

“Steady, Ned, for the good name of the Dales,” cried a Yorkshireman.
“Loose easy and pluck not, or I am five crowns the poorer man.”

“A week’s pay on Bartholomew!” shouted another. “Now, old fat-pate,
fail me not!”

“Enough, enough! Stint your talk!” cried the old bowman, Wat of
Carlisle. “Were your shafts as quick as your tongues there would be no
facing you. Do you shoot upon the little one, Bartholomew, and you,
Ned, upon the other. Give them law until I cry the word, then loose in
your own fashion and at your own time. Are you ready! Hola, there,
Hayward, Beddington, let them run!”

The leashes were torn away, and the two men, stooping their heads, ran
madly for the shelter of the wood amid such a howl from the archers as
beaters may give when the hare starts from its form. The two bowmen,
each with his arrow drawn to the pile, stood like russet statues,
menacing, motionless, their eager eyes fixed upon the fugitives, their
bow-staves rising slowly as the distance between them lengthened. The
Bretons were half-way to the wood, and still Old Wat was silent. It may
have been mercy or it may have been mischief, but at least the chase
should have a fair chance of life. At six score paces he turned his
grizzled head at last.

“Loose!” he cried.

At the word the Yorkshireman’s bow-string twanged. It was not for
nothing that he had earned the name of being one of the deadliest
archers of the North and had twice borne away the silver arrow of
Selby. Swift and true flew the fatal shaft and buried itself to the
feather in the curved back of the long yellow-haired peasant. Without a
sound he fell upon his face and lay stone-dead upon the grass, the one
short white plume between his dark shoulders to mark where Death had
smote him.

The Yorkshireman threw his bowstave into the air and danced in triumph,
whilst his comrades roared their fierce delight in a shout of applause,
which changed suddenly into a tempest of hooting and of laughter.

The smaller peasant, more cunning, than his comrade, had run more
slowly, but with many a backward glance. He had marked his companion’s
fate and had waited with keen eyes until he saw the bowyer loose his
string. At the moment he had thrown himself flat upon the grass and had
heard the arrow scream above him,—and seen it quiver in the turf
beyond. Instantly he had sprung to his feet again and amid wild whoops
and halloos from the bowmen had made for the shelter of the wood. Now
he had reached it, and ten score good paces separated him from the
nearest of his persecutors. Surely they could not reach him here. With
the tangled brushwood behind him he was as safe as a rabbit at the
mouth of his burrow. In the joy of his heart he must needs dance in
derision and snap his fingers at the foolish men who had let him slip.
He threw back his head, howling at them like a dog, and at the instant
an arrow struck him full in the throat and laid him dead among the
bracken. There was a hush of surprised silence and then a loud cheer
burst from the archers.

“By the rood of Beverley!” cried old Wat, “I have not seen a finer
roving shaft this many a year. In my own best day I could not have
bettered it. Which of you loosed it?”

“It was Aylward of Tilford—Samkin Aylward,” cried a score of voices,
and the bowman, flushed at his own fame, was pushed to the front.

“Indeed I would that it had been at a nobler mark,” said he. “He might
have gone free for me, but I could not keep my fingers from the string
when he turned to jeer at us.”

“I see well that you are indeed a master-bowman,” said old Wat, “and it
is comfort to my soul to think that if I fall I leave such a man behind
me to hold high the credit of our craft. Now gather your shafts and on,
for Sir Robert awaits us on the brow of the hill.”

All day Knolles and his men marched through the same wild and deserted
country, inhabited only by these furtive creatures, hares to the strong
and wolves to the weak, who hovered in the shadows of the wood. Ever
and anon upon the tops of the hills they caught a glimpse of horsemen
who watched them from a distance and vanished when approached.
Sometimes bells rang an alarm from villages amongst the hills, and
twice they passed castles which drew up their drawbridges at their
approach and lined their walls with hooting soldiers as they passed.
The Englishmen gathered a few oxen and sheep from the pastures of each,
but Knolles had no mind to break his strength upon stone walls, and so
he went upon his way.

Once at St. Meen they passed a great nunnery, girt with a high gray
lichened wall, an oasis of peace in this desert of war, the black-robed
nuns basking in the sun or working in the gardens, with the strong
gentle hand of Holy Church shielding them ever from evil. The archers
doffed caps to them as they passed, for the boldest and roughest dared
not cross that line guarded by the dire ban and blight which was the
one only force in the whole steel-ridden earth which could stand
betwixt the weakling and the spoiler.

The little army halted at St. Meen and cooked its midday meal. It had
gathered into its ranks again and was about to start, when Knolles drew
Nigel to one side.

“Nigel,” said he, “it seems to me that I have seldom set eyes upon a
horse which hath more power and promise of speed than this great beast
of thine.”

“It is indeed a noble steed, fair sir,” said Nigel. Betwixt him and his
young leader there had sprung up great affection and respect since the
day that they set foot in the Basilisk.

“It will be the better if you stretch his limbs, for he grows
overheavy,” said the knight. “Now mark me, Nigel! Yonder betwixt the
ash-tree and the red rock what do you see on the side of the far hill?”

“There is a white dot upon it. Surely it is a horse.”

“I have marked it all morning, Nigel. This horseman has kept ever upon
our flank, spying upon us or waiting to make some attempt upon us. Now
I should be right glad to have a prisoner, for it is my wish to know
something of this country-side, and these peasants can speak neither
French nor English. I would have you linger here in hiding when we go
forward. This man will still follow us. When he does so, yonder wood
will lie betwixt you and him. Do you ride round it and come upon him
from behind. There is broad plain upon his left, and we will cut him
off upon the right. If your horse be indeed the swifter, then you
cannot fail to take him.”

Nigel had already sprung down and was tightening Pommers’ girth.

“Nay, there is no need of haste, for you cannot start until we are two
miles upon our way. And above all I pray you, Nigel, none of your
knight-errant ways. It is this roan that I want, him and the news that
he can bring me. Think little of your own advancement and much of the
needs of the army. When you get him, ride westwards upon the sun, and
you cannot fail to find the road.”

Nigel waited with Pommers under the shadow of the nunnery wall, horse
and man chafing with impatience, whilst above them six round-eyed
innocent nun-faces looked down on this strange and disturbing vision
from the outer world. At last the long column wound itself out of sight
round a curve of the road, and the white dot was gone from the bare
green flank of the hill. Nigel bowed his steel head to the nuns, gave
his bridle a shake, and bounded off upon his welcome mission. The
round-eyed sisters saw yellow horse and twinkling man sweep round the
skirt of the wood, caught a last glimmer of him through the
tree-trunks, and paced slowly back to their pruning and their planting,
their minds filled with the beauty and the terror of that outer world
beyond the high gray lichen-mottled wall.

Everything fell out even as Knolles had planned. As Nigel rounded the
oak forest, there upon the farther side of it, with only good
greensward between, was the rider upon the white horse. Already he was
so near that Nigel could see him clearly, a young cavalier, proud in
his bearing, clad in purple silk tunic with a red curling feather in
his low black cap. He wore no armor, but his sword gleamed at his side.
He rode easily and carelessly, as one who cares for no man, and his
eyes were forever fixed upon the English soldiers on the road. So
intent was he upon them that he gave no thought to his own safety, and
it was only when the low thunder of the great horse’s hoofs broke upon
his ears that he turned in his saddle, looked very coolly and steadily
at Nigel, then gave his own bridle a shake and darted off, swift as a
hawk, toward the hills upon the left.

Pommers had met his match that day. The white horse, two parts Arab,
bore the lighter weight, since Nigel was clad in full armor. For five
miles over the open neither gained a hundred yards upon the other. They
had topped the hill and flew down the farther side, the stranger
continually turning in his saddle to have a look at his pursuer. There
was no panic in his flight, but rather the amused rivalry with which a
good horseman who is proud of his mount contends with one who has
challenged him. Below the hill was a marshy plain, studded with great
Druidic stones, some prostrate, some erect, some bearing others across
their tops like the huge doors of some vanished building. A path ran
through the marsh with green rushes as a danger signal on either side
of it. Across this path many of the huge stones were lying, but the
white horse cleared them in its stride and Pommers followed close upon
his heels. Then came a mile of soft ground where the lighter weight
again drew to the front, but it ended in a dry upland and once again
Nigel gained. A sunken road crossed it, but the white cleared it with a
mighty spring, and again the yellow followed. Two small hills lay
before them with a narrow gorge of deep bushes between. Nigel saw the
white horse bounding chest-deep amid the underwood.

Next instant its hind legs were high in the air, and the rider had been
shot from its back. A howl of triumph rose from amidst the bushes, and
a dozen wild figures armed with club and with spear, rushed upon the
prostrate man.

“_À moi, Anglais, à moi!_” cried a voice, and Nigel saw the young rider
stagger to his feet, strike round him with his sword, and then fall
once more before the rush of his assailants.

There was a comradeship among men of gentle blood and bearing which
banded them together against all ruffianly or unchivalrous attack.
These rude fellows were no soldiers. Their dress and arms, their
uncouth cries and wild assault, marked them as banditti—such men as had
slain the Englishman upon the road. Waiting in narrow gorges with a
hidden rope across the path, they watched for the lonely horseman as a
fowler waits by his bird-trap, trusting that they could overthrow the
steed and then slay the rider ere he had recovered from his fall.

Such would have been the fate of the stranger, as of so many cavaliers
before him, had Nigel not chanced to be close upon his heels. In an
instant Pommers had burst through the group who struck at the prostrate
man, and in another two of the robbers had fallen before Nigel’s sword.
A spear rang on his breastplate, but one blow shore off its head, and a
second that of him who held it. In vain they thrust at the steel-girt
man. His sword played round them like lightning, and the fierce horse
ramped and swooped above them with pawing iron-shod hoofs and eyes of
fire. With cries and shrieks they flew off to right and left amidst the
bushes, springing over boulders and darting under branches where no
horseman could follow them. The foul crew had gone as swiftly and
suddenly as it had come, and save for four ragged figures littered
amongst the trampled bushes, no sign remaining of their passing.

Nigel tethered Pommers to a thorn-bush and then turned his attention to
the injured man. The white horse had regained his feet and stood
whinnying gently as he looked down on his prostrate master. A heavy
blow, half broken by his sword, had beaten him down and left a great
raw bruise upon his forehead. But a stream gurgled through the gorge,
and a capful of water dashed over his face brought the senses back to
the injured man. He was a mere stripling, with the delicate features of
a woman, and a pair of great violet-blue eyes which looked up presently
with a puzzled stare into Nigel’s face.

“Who are you?” he asked. “Ah yes! I call you to mind. You are the young
Englishman who chased me on the great yellow horse. By our Lady of
Rocamadour whose vernicle is round my neck! I could not have believed
that any horse could have kept at the heels of Charlemagne so long. But
I will wager you a hundred crowns, Englishman, that I lead you over a
five-mile course.”

“Nay,” said Nigel, “we will wait till you can back a horse ere we talk
of racing it. I am Nigel of Tilford, of the family of Loring, a squire
by rank and the son of a knight. How are you called, young sir?”

“I also am a squire by rank and the son of a knight. I am Raoul de la
Roche Pierre de Bras, whose father writes himself Lord of Grosbois, a
free vavasor of the noble Count of Toulouse, with the right of fossa
and of furca, the high justice, the middle and the low.” He sat up and
rubbed his eyes. “Englishman, you have saved my life as I would have
saved yours, had I seen such yelping dogs set upon a man of blood and
of coat-armor. But now I am yours, and what is your sweet will?”

“When you are fit to ride, you will come back with me to my people.”

“Alas! I feared that you would say so. Had I taken you, Nigel—that is
your name, is it not?—had I taken you, I would not have acted thus.”

“How then would you have ordered things?” asked Nigel, much taken with
the frank and debonair manner of his captive.

“I would not have taken advantage of such a mischance as has befallen
me which has put me in your power. I would give you a sword and beat
you in fair fight, so that I might send you to give greeting to my dear
lady and show her the deeds which I do for her fair sake.”

“Indeed, your words are both good and fair,” said Nigel. “By Saint
Paul! I cannot call to mind that I have ever met a man who bore himself
better. But since I am in my armor and you without, I see not how we
can debate the matter.”

“Surely, gentle Nigel, you could doff your armor.”

“Then have I only my underclothes.”

“Nay, there shall be no unfairness there, for I also will very gladly
strip to my underclothes.”

Nigel looked wistfully at the Frenchman; but he shook his head. “Alas!
it may not be,” said he. “The last words that Sir Robert said to me
were that I was to bring you to his side, for he would have speech with
you. Would that I could do what you ask, for I also have a fair lady to
whom I would fain send you. What use are you to me, Raoul, since I have
gained no honor in the taking of you? How is it with you now?”

The young Frenchman had risen to his feet. “Do not take my sword,” he
said. “I am yours, rescue or no rescue. I think now that I could mount
my horse, though indeed my head still rings like a cracked bell.”

Nigel had lost all traces of his comrades; but he remembered Sir
Robert’s words that he should ride upon the sun with the certainty that
sooner or later he would strike upon the road. As they jogged slowly
along over undulating hills, the Frenchman shook off his hurt and the
two chatted merrily together.

“I had but just come from France,” said he, “and I had hoped to win
honor in this country, for I have ever heard that the English are very
hardy men and excellent people to fight with. My mules and my baggage
are at Evran; but I rode forth to see what I could see, and I chanced
upon your army moving down the road, so I coasted it in the hopes of
some profit or adventure. Then you came after me and I would have given
all the gold goblets upon my father’s table if I had my harness so that
I could have turned upon you. I have promised the Countess Beatrice
that I will send her an Englishman or two to kiss her hands.”

“One might perchance have a worse fate,” said Nigel. “Is this fair dame
your betrothed?”

“She is my love,” answered the Frenchman. “We are but waiting for the
Count to be slain in the wars, and then we mean to marry. And this lady
of thine, Nigel? I would that I could see her.”

“Perchance you shall, fair sir,” said Nigel, “for all that I have seen
of you fills me with desire to go further with you. It is in my mind
that we might turn this thing to profit and to honor, for when Sir
Robert has spoken with you, I am free to do with you as I will.”

“And what will you do, Nigel?”

“We shall surely try some small deed upon each other, so that either I
shall see the Lady Beatrice, or you the Lady Mary. Nay, thank me not,
for like yourself, I have come to this country in search of honor, and
I know not where I may better find it than at the end of your
sword-point. My good lord and master, Sir John Chandos, has told me
many times that never yet did he meet French knight nor squire that he
did not find great pleasure and profit from their company, and now I
very clearly see that he has spoken the truth.”

For an hour these two friends rode together, the Frenchman pouring
forth the praises of his lady, whose glove he produced from one pocket,
her garter from his vest, and her shoe from his saddle-bag. She was
blond, and when he heard that Mary was dark, he would fain stop then
and there to fight the question of color. He talked too of his great
château at Lauta, by the head waters of the pleasant Garonne; of the
hundred horses in the stables, the seventy hounds in the kennels, the
fifty hawks in the mews. His English friend should come there when the
wars were over, and what golden days would be theirs! Nigel too, with
his English coldness thawing before this young sunbeam of the South,
found himself talking of the heather slopes of Surrey, of the forest of
Woolmer, even of the sacred chambers of Cosford.

But as they rode onward towards the sinking sun, their thoughts far
away in their distant homes, their horses striding together, there came
that which brought their minds back in an instant to the perilous
hillsides of Brittany.

It was the long blast of a trumpet blown from somewhere on the farther
side of a ridge toward which they were riding. A second long-drawn note
from a distance answered it.

“It is your camp,” said the Frenchman.

“Nay,” said Nigel; “we have pipes with us and a naker or two, but I
have heard no trumpet-call from our ranks. It behooves us to take heed,
for we know not what may be before us. Ride this way, I pray you, that
we may look over and yet be ourselves unseen.”

Some scattered boulders crowned the height, and from behind them the
two young Squires could see the long rocky valley beyond. Upon a knoll
was a small square building with a battlement round it. Some distance
from it towered a great dark castle, as massive as the rocks on which
it stood, with one strong keep at the corner, and four long lines of
machicolated walls. Above, a great banner flew proudly in the wind,
with some device which glowed red in the setting sun. Nigel shaded his
eyes and stared with wrinkled brow.

“It is not the arms of England, nor yet the lilies of France, nor is it
the ermine of Brittany,” said he. “He who holds this castle fights for
his own hand, since his own device flies above it. Surely it is a head
gules on an argent field.”

“The bloody head on a silver tray!” cried the Frenchman. “Was I not
warned against him? This is not a man, friend Nigel. It is a monster
who wars upon English, French and all Christendom. Have you not heard
of the Butcher of La Brohinière?”

“Nay, I have not heard of him.”

“His name is accursed in France. Have I not been told also that he put
to death this very year Gilles de St. Pol, a friend of the English
King?”

“Yes, in very truth it comes back to my mind now that I heard something
of this matter in Calais before we started.”

“Then there he dwells, and God guard you if ever you pass under yonder
portal, for no prisoner has ever come forth alive! Since these wars
began he hath been a king to himself, and the plunder of eleven years
lies in yonder cellars. How can justice come to him, when no man knows
who owns the land? But when we have packed you all back to your island,
by the Blessed Mother of God, we have a heavy debt to pay to the man
who dwells in yonder pile!”

But even as they watched, the trumpet-call burst forth once more. It
came not from the castle but from the farther end of the valley. It was
answered by a second call from the walls. Then in a long, straggling
line there came a wild troop of marauders streaming homeward from some
foray. In the van, at the head of a body of spearmen, rode a tall and
burly man, clad in brazen armor, so that he shone like a golden image
in the slanting rays of the sun. His helmet had been loosened from his
gorget and was held before him on his horse’s neck. A great tangled
beard flowed over his breastplate, and his hair hung down as far
behind. A squire at his elbow bore high the banner of the bleeding
head. Behind the spearmen were a line of heavily laden mules, and on
either side of them a drove of poor country folk, who were being herded
into the castle. Lastly came a second strong troop of mounted spearmen,
who conducted a score or more of prisoners who marched together in a
solid body.

Nigel stared at them and then, springing on his horse, he urged it
along the shelter of the ridge so as to reach unseen a spot which was
close to the castle gate. He had scarce taken up his new position when
the cavalcade reached the drawbridge, and amid yells of welcome from
those upon the wall, filed in a thin line across it. Nigel stared hard
once more at the prisoners in the rear, and so absorbed was he by the
sight that he had passed the rocks and was standing sheer upon the
summit.

“By Saint Paul!” he cried, “it must indeed be so. I see their russet
jackets. They are English archers!”

As he spoke, the hindmost one, a strongly built, broad-shouldered man,
looked round and saw the gleaming figure above him upon the hill, with
open helmet, and the five roses glowing upon his breast. With a sweep
of his hands he had thrust his guardians aside and for a moment was
clear of the throng.

“Squire Loring! Squire Loring!” he cried. “It is I, Aylward the archer!
It is I, Samkin Aylward!” The next minute a dozen hands had seized him,
his cries were muffled with a gag, and he was hurled, the last of the
band, through the black and threatening archway of the gate. Then with
a clang the two iron wings came together, the portcullis swung upward,
and captives and captors, robbers and booty, were all swallowed up
within the grim and silent fortress.




XX.
HOW THE ENGLISH ATTEMPTED THE CASTLE OF LA BROHINIÈRE


For some minutes Nigel remained motionless upon the crest of the hill,
his heart, like lead within him, and his eyes fixed upon the huge gray
walls which contained his unhappy henchman. He was roused by a
sympathetic hand upon his shoulder and the voice of his young prisoner
in his ear.

“_Peste!_” said he. “They have some of your birds in their cage, have
they not? What then, my friend? Keep your heart high! Is it not the
chance of war, to-day to them, to-morrow to thee, and death at last for
us all? And yet I had rather they were in any hands than those of
Oliver the Butcher.”

“By Saint Paul, we cannot suffer it!” cried Nigel distractedly. “This
man has come with me from my own home. He has stood between me and
death before now. It goes to my very heart that he should call upon me
in vain. I pray you, Raoul, to use your wits, for mine are all curdled
in my head. Tell me what I should do and how I may bring him help.”

The Frenchman shrugged his shoulders. “As easy to get a lamb unscathed
out of a wolves’ lair as a prisoner safe from La Brohinière. Nay,
Nigel, whither do you go? Have you indeed taken leave of your wits?”

The Squire had spurred his horse down the hillside and never halted
until he was within a bowshot of the gate. The French prisoner followed
hard behind him, with a buzz of reproaches and expostulations.

“You are mad, Nigel!” he cried. “What do you hope to do then? Would you
carry the castle with your own hands? Halt, man, halt, in the name of
the Virgin!”

But Nigel had no plan in his head and only obeyed the fevered impulse
to do something to ease his thoughts. He paced his horse up and down,
waving his spear, and shouting insults and challenges to the garrison.
Over the high wall a hundred jeering faces looked down upon him. So
rash and wild was his action that it seemed to those within to mean
some trap, so the drawbridge was still held high and none ventured
forth to seize him. A few long-range arrows pattered on the rocks, and
then with a deep booming sound a huge stone, hurled from a mangonel,
sang over the head of the two Squires and crushed into splinters
amongst the boulders behind them. The Frenchman seized Nigel’s bridle
and forced him farther from the gateway.

“By the dear Virgin!” he cried, “I care not to have those pebbles about
my ears, yet I cannot go back alone, so it is very clear, my crazy
comrade, that you must come also. Now we are beyond their reach! But
see, my friend Nigel, who are those who crown the height?”

The sun had sunk behind the western ridge, but the glowing sky was
fringed at its lower edge by a score of ruddy twinkling points. A body
of horsemen showed hard and black upon the bare hill. Then they dipped
down the slope into the valley, whilst a band of footmen followed
behind.

“They are my people,” cried Nigel joyously. “Come, my friend, hasten,
that we may take counsel what we shall do.”

Sir Robert Knolles rode a bowshot in front of his men, and his brow was
as black as night. Beside him, with crestfallen face, his horse
bleeding, his armor dinted and soiled, was the hot-headed knight, Sir
James Astley. A fierce discussion raged between them.

“I have done my devoir as best I might,” said Astley. “Alone I had ten
of them at my sword-point. I know not how I have lived to tell it.”

“What is your devoir to me? Where are my thirty bowmen?” cried Knolles
in bitter wrath. “Ten lie dead upon the ground and twenty are worse
than dead in yonder castle. And all because you must needs show all men
how bold you are, and ride into a bushment such as a child could see.
Alas for my own folly that ever I should have trusted such a one as you
with the handling of men!”

“By God, Sir Robert, you shall answer to me for those words!” cried
Astley with a choking voice. “Never has a man dared to speak to me as
you have done this day.”

“As long as I hold the King’s order I shall be master, and by the Lord
I will hang you, James, on a near tree if I have further cause of
offense! How now, Nigel? I see by yonder white horse that you at least
have not failed me. I will speak with you anon. Percy, bring up your
men, and let us gather round this castle, for, as I hope for my soul’s
salvation, I win not leave it until I have my archers, or the head of
him who holds them.”

That night the English lay thick round the fortress of La Brohinière so
that none might come forth from it. But if none could come forth it was
hard to see how any could win their way in, for it was full of men, the
walls were high and strong, and a deep dry ditch girt it round. But the
hatred and fear which its master had raised over the whole country-side
could now be plainly seen, for during the night the brushwood men and
the villagers came in from all parts with offers of such help as they
could give for the intaking of the castle. Knolles set them cutting
bushes and tying them into fagots. When morning came he rode out before
the wall and he held counsel with his knights and squires as to how he
should enter in.

“By noon,” said he, “we shall have so many fagots that we may make our
way over the ditch. Then we will beat in the gates and so win a
footing.”

The young Frenchman had come with Nigel to the conference, and now,
amid the silence which followed the leader’s proposal, he asked if he
might be heard. He was clad in the brazen armor which Nigel had taken
from the Red Ferret.

“It may be that it is not for me to join in your counsel,” said he,
“seeing that I am a prisoner and a Frenchman. But this man is the enemy
of all, and we of France owe him a debt even as you do, since many a
good Frenchman has died in his cellars. For this reason I crave to be
heard.”

“We will hear you,” said Knolles.

“I have come from Evran yesterday,” said he. “Sir Henry Spinnefort, Sir
Peter La Roye and many other brave knights and squires lie there, with
a good company of men, all of whom would very gladly join with you to
destroy this butcher and his castle, for it is well known amongst us
that his deeds are neither good nor fair. There are also bombards which
we could drag over the hills, and so beat down this iron gate. If you
so order it I will ride to Evran and bring my companions back with me.”

“Indeed, Robert,” said Percy, “it is in my mind that this Frenchman
speaks very wisely and well.”

“And when we have taken the castle—what then?” asked Knolles.

“Then you could go upon your way, fair sir, and we upon ours. Or if it
please you better you could draw together on yonder hill and we on this
one, so that the valley lies between us. Then if any cavalier wished to
advance himself or to shed a vow and exalt his lady, an opening might
be found for him. Surely it would be shame if so many brave men drew
together and no small deed were to come of it.”

Nigel clasped his captive’s hand to show his admiration and esteem, but
Knolles shook his head.

“Things are not ordered thus, save in the tales of the minstrels,” said
he. “I have no wish that your people at Evran should know our numbers
or our plans. I am not in this land for knight errantry, but I am here
to make head against the King’s enemies. Has no one aught else to say?”

Percy pointed to the small outlying fortalice upon the knoll, on which
also flew the flag of the bloody head. “This smaller castle, Robert, is
of no great strength and cannot hold more than fifty men. It is built,
as I conceive it, that no one should seize the high ground and shoot
down into the other. Why should we not turn all our strength upon it,
since it is the weaker of the twain?”

But again the young leader shook his head. “If I should take it,” said
he, “I am still no nearer to my desire, nor will it avail me in getting
back my bowmen. It may cost a score of men, and what profit shall I
have from it? Had I bombards, I might place them on yonder hill, but
having none it is of little use to me.”

“It may be,” said Nigel, “that they have scant food or water, and so
must come forth to fight us.”

“I have made inquiry of the peasants,” Knolles answered, “and they are
of one mind that there is a well within the castle, and good store of
food. Nay, gentlemen, there is no way before us save to take it by
arms, and no spot where we can attempt it save through the great gate.
Soon we will have so many fagots that we can cast them down into the
ditch, and so win our way across. I have ordered them to cut a
pine-tree on the hill and shear the branches so that we may beat down
the gate with it. But what is now amiss, and why do they run forward to
the castle?”

A buzz had risen from the soldiers in the camp, and they all crowded in
one direction, rushing toward the castle wall. The knights and squires
rode after them, and when in view of the main gate, the cause of the
disturbance lay before them. On the tower above the portal three men
were standing in the garb of English archers, ropes round their necks
and their hands bound behind them. Their comrades surged below them
with cries of recognition and of pity.

“It is Ambrose!” cried one. “Surely it is Ambrose of Ingleton.”

“Yes, in truth, I see his yellow hair. And the other, him with the
beard, it is Lockwood of Skipton. Alas for his wife who keeps the booth
by the bridge-head of Ribble! I wot not who the third may be.”

“It is little Johnny Alspaye, the youngest man in the company,” cried
old Wat, with the tears running down his cheeks, “’Twas I who brought
him from his home. Alas! Alas! Foul fare the day that ever I coaxed him
from his mother’s side that he might perish in a far land.”

There was a sudden flourish of a trumpet and the drawbridge fell.
Across it strode a portly man with a faded herald’s coat. He halted
warily upon the farther side and his voice boomed like a drum. “I would
speak with your leader.” he cried.

Knolles rode forward.

“Have I your knightly word that I may advance unscathed with all
courteous entreaty as befits a herald?”

Knolles nodded his head.

The man came slowly and pompously forward. “I am the messenger and
liege servant,” said he, “of the high baron, Oliver de St. Yvon, Lord
of La Brohinière. He bids me to say that if you continue your journey
and molest him no further he will engage upon his part to make no
further attack upon you. As to the men whom he holds, he will enroll
them in his own honorable service, for he has need of longbowmen, and
has heard much of their skill. But if you constrain him or cause him
further displeasure by remaining before his castle he hereby gives you
warning that he will hang these three men over his gateway and every
morning another three until all have been slain. This he has sworn upon
the rood of Calvary, and as he has said so he will do upon jeopardy of
his soul.”

Robert Knolles looked grimly at the messenger. “You may thank the
saints that you have had my promise,” said he, “else would I have
stripped that lying tabard from thy back and the skin beneath it from
thy bones, that thy master might have a fitting answer to his message.
Tell him that I hold him and all that are within his castle as hostage
for the lives of my men, and that should he dare to do them scathe he
and every man that is with him shall hang upon his battlements. Go, and
go quickly, lest my patience fail.”

There was that in Knolles’ cold gray eyes and in his manner of speaking
those last words which sent the portly envoy back at a quicker gait
than he had come. As he vanished into the gloomy arch of the gateway
the drawbridge swung up with creak and rattle behind him.

A few minutes later a rough-bearded fellow stepped out over the portal
where the condemned archers stood and seizing the first by the
shoulders he thrust him over the wall. A cry burst from the man’s lips
and a deep groan from those of his comrades below as he fell with a
jerk which sent him half-way up to the parapet again, and then after
dancing like a child’s toy swung slowly backward and forward with limp
limbs and twisted neck.

The hangman turned and bowed in mock reverence to the spectators
beneath him. He had not yet learned in a land of puny archers how sure
and how strong is the English bow. Half a dozen men, old Wat amongst
them, had run forward toward the wall. They were too late to save their
comrades, but at least their deaths were speedily avenged.

The man was in the act of pushing off the second prisoner when an arrow
crashed through his head, and he fell stone dead upon the parapet. But
even in falling he had given the fatal thrust and a second russet
figure swung beside the first against the dark background of the castle
wall.

There only remained the young lad, Johnny Alspaye, who stood shaking
with fear, an abyss below him, and the voices of those who would hurl
him over it behind. There was a long pause before anyone would come
forth to dare those deadly arrows. Then a fellow, crouching double, ran
forward from the shelter, keeping the young archer’s body as a shield
between him and danger.

“Aside, John! Aside!” cried his comrades from below.

The youth sprang as far as the rope would allow him, and slipped it
half over his face in the effort. Three arrows flashed past his side,
and two of them buried themselves in the body of the man behind. A howl
of delight burst from the spectators as he dropped first upon his knees
and then upon his face. A life for a life was no bad bargain.

But it was only a short respite which the skill of his comrades had
given to the young archer. Over the parapet there appeared a ball of
brass, then a pair of great brazen shoulders, and lastly the full
figure of an armored man. He walked to the edge and they heard his
hoarse guffaw of laughter as the arrows clanged and clattered against
his impenetrable mail. He slapped his breast-plate, as he jeered at
them. Well he knew that at the distance no dart ever sped by mortal
hands could cleave through his plates of metal. So he stood, the great
burly Butcher of La Brohinière, with head uptossed, laughing insolently
at his foes. Then with slow and ponderous tread he walked toward his
boy victim, seized him by the ear, and dragged him across so that the
rope might be straight. Seeing that the noose had slipped across the
face, he tried to push it down, but the mail glove hampering him he
pulled it off, and grasped the rope above the lad’s head with his naked
hand.

Quick as a flash old Wat’s arrow had sped, and the Butcher sprang back
with a howl of pain, his hand skewered by a cloth-yard shaft. As he
shook it furiously at his enemies a second grazed his knuckles. With a
brutal kick of his metal-shod feet he hurled young Alspaye over the
edge, looked down for a few moments at his death agonies, and then
walked slowly from the parapet, nursing his dripping hand, the arrows
still ringing loudly upon his back-piece as he went.

The archers below, enraged at the death of their comrades, leaped and
howled like a pack of ravening wolves.

“By Saint Dunstan,” said Percy, looking round at their flushed faces,
“if ever we are to carry it now is the moment, for these men will not
be stopped if hate can take them forward.”

“You are right, Thomas!” cried Knolles. “Gather together twenty
men-at-arms each with his shield to cover him. Astley, do you place the
bowmen so that no head may show at window or parapet. Nigel, I pray you
to order the countryfolk forward with their fardels of fagots. Let the
others bring up the lopped pine-tree which lies yonder behind the horse
lines. Ten men-at-arms can bear it on the right, and ten on the left,
having shields over their heads. The gate once down, let every man rush
in. And God help the better cause!”

Swiftly and yet quietly the dispositions were made, for these were old
soldiers whose daily trade was war. In little groups the archers formed
in front of each slit or crevice in the walls, whilst others scanned
the battlements with wary eyes, and sped an arrow at every face which
gleamed for an instant above them. The garrison shot forth a shower of
crossbow bolts and an occasional stone from their engine, but so deadly
was the hail which rained upon them that they had no time to dwell upon
their aim, and their discharges were wild and harmless. Under cover of
the shafts of the bowmen a line of peasants ran unscathed to the edge
of the ditch, each hurling in the bundle which he bore in his arms, and
then hurrying back for another one. In twenty minutes a broad pathway
of fagots lay level with the ground upon one side and the gate upon the
other. With the loss of two peasants slain by bolts and one archer
crushed by a stone, the ditch had been filled up. All was ready for the
battering-ram.

With a shout, twenty picked men rushed forward with the pine-tree under
their arms, the heavy end turned toward the gate. The arbalesters on
the tower leaned over and shot into the midst of them, but could not
stop their advance. Two dropped, but the others raising their shields
ran onward still shouting, crossed the bridge of fagots, and came with
a thundering crash against the door. It splintered from base to arch,
but kept its place.

Swinging their mighty weapon, the storming party thudded and crashed
upon the gate, every blow loosening and widening the cracks which rent
it from end to end. The three knights, with Nigel, the Frenchman Raoul
and the other squires, stood beside the ram, cheering on the men, and
chanting to the rhythm of the swing with a loud “Ha!” at every blow. A
great stone loosened from the parapet roared through the air and struck
Sir James Astley and another of the attackers, but Nigel and the
Frenchman had taken their places in an instant, and the ram thudded and
smashed with greater energy than ever. Another blow and another! the
lower part was staving inward, but the great central bar still held
firm. Surely another minute would beat it from its sockets.

But suddenly from above there came a great deluge of liquid. A hogshead
of it had been tilted from the battlement until soldiers, bridge, and
ram were equally drenched in yellow slime. Knolles rubbed his gauntlet
in it, held it to his visor, and smelled it.

“Back, back!” he cried. “Back before it is too late!”

There was a small barred window above their heads at the side of the
gate. A ruddy glare shone through it, and then a blazing torch was
tossed down upon them. In a moment the oil had caught and the whole
place was a sheet of flame. The fir-tree that they carried, the fagots
beneath them, their very weapons, were all in a blaze.

To right and left the men sprang down into the dry ditch, rolling with
screams upon the ground in their endeavor to extinguish the flames. The
knights and squires protected by their armor strove hard, stamping and
slapping, to help those who had but leather jacks to shield their
bodies. From above a ceaseless shower of darts and of stones were
poured down upon them, while on the other hand the archers, seeing the
greatness of the danger, ran up to the edge of the ditch, and shot fast
and true at every face which showed above the wall.

Scorched, wearied and bedraggled, the remains of the storming party
clambered out of the ditch as best they could, clutching at the
friendly hands held down to them, and so limped their way back amid the
taunts and howls of their enemies. A long pile of smoldering cinders
was all that remained of their bridge, and on it lay Astley and six
other red-hot men glowing in their armor.

Knolles clinched his hands as he looked back at the ruin that was
wrought, and then surveyed the group of men who stood or lay around him
nursing their burned limbs and scowling up at the exultant figures who
waved on the castle wall. Badly scorched himself, the young leader had
no thought for his own injuries in the rage and grief which racked his
soul. “We will build another bridge,” he cried. “Set the peasants
binding fagots once more.”

But a thought had flashed through Nigel’s mind. “See, fair sir,” said
he. “The nails of yonder door are red-hot and the wood as white as
ashes. Surely we can break our way through it.”

“By the Virgin, you speak truly!” cried the French Squire. “If we can
cross the ditch the gate will not stop us. Come, Nigel, for our fair
ladies’ sakes, I will race you who will reach it first, England or
France.”

Alas for all the wise words of the good Chandos! Alas for all the
lessons in order and discipline learned from the wary Knolles. In an
instant, forgetful of all things but this noble challenge, Nigel was
running at the top of his speed for the burning gate. Close at his
heels was the Frenchman, blowing and gasping, as he rushed along in his
brazen armor. Behind came a stream of howling archers and men-at-arms,
like a flood which has broken its dam. Down they slipped into the
ditch, rushed across it, and clambered on each other’s backs up the
opposite side. Nigel, Raoul and two archers gained a foothold in front
of the burning gate at the same moment. With blows and kicks they burst
it to pieces, and dashed with a yell of triumph through the dark
archway beyond. For a moment they thought with mad rapture that the
castle was carried. A dark tunnel lay before them, down which they
rushed. But alas! at the farther end it was blocked by a second gateway
as strong as that which had been burned. In vain they beat upon it with
their swords and axes. On each side the tunnel was pierced with slits,
and the crossbow bolts discharged at only a few yards’ distance crashed
through armor as if it were cloth and laid man after man upon the
stones. They raged and leaped before the great iron-clamped barrier,
but the wall itself was as easy to tear down.

It was bitter to draw back; but it was madness to remain. Nigel looked
round and saw that half his men were down. At the same moment Raoul
sank with a gasp at his feet, a bolt driven to its socket through the
links of the camail which guarded his neck. Some of the archers, seeing
that certain death awaited them, were already running back to escape
from the fatal passage.

“By Saint Paul!” cried Nigel hotly. “Would you leave our wounded where
this butcher may lay his hands upon them? Let the archers shoot inwards
and hold them back from the slits. Now let each man raise one of our
comrades, lest we leave our honor in the gate of this castle.”

With a mighty effort he had raised Raoul upon his shoulders and
staggered with him to the edge of the ditch. Several men were waiting
below where the steep bank shield them from the arrows, and to them
Nigel handed down his wounded friend, and each archer in turn did the
same. Again and again Nigel went back until no one lay in the tunnel
save seven who had died there. Thirteen wounded were laid in the
shelter of the ditch, and there they must remain until night came to
cover them. Meanwhile the bowmen on the farther side protected them
from attack, and also prevented the enemy from all attempts to build up
the outer gate. The gaping smoke-blackened arch was all that they could
show for a loss of thirty men, but that at least Knolles was determined
to keep.

Burned and bruised, but unconscious of either pain or fatigue for the
turmoil of his spirit within him, Nigel knelt by the Frenchman and
loosened his helmet. The girlish face of the young Squire was white as
chalk, and the haze of death was gathering over his violet eyes, but a
faint smile played round his lips as he looked up at his English
comrade.

“I shall never see Beatrice again,” he whispered. “I pray you, Nigel,
that when there is a truce you will journey as far as my father’s
château and tell him how his son died. Young Gaston will rejoice, for
to him come the land and the coat, the war-cry and the profit. See
them, Nigel, and tell them that I was as forward as the others.”

“Indeed Raoul, no man could have carried himself with more honor or won
more worship than you have done this day. I will do your behest when
the time comes.”

“Surely you are happy, Nigel,” the dying Squire murmured, “for this day
has given you one more deed which you may lay at the feet of your
lady-love.”

“It might have been so had we carried the gate,” Nigel answered sadly;
“but by Saint Paul! I cannot count it a deed where I have come back
with my purpose unfulfilled. But this is no time, Raoul, to talk of my
small affairs. If we take the castle and I bear a good part in it, then
perchance all this may indeed avail.”

The Frenchman sat up with that strange energy which comes often as the
harbinger of death. “You will win your Lady Mary, Nigel, and your great
deeds will be not three but a score, so that in all Christendom there
shall be no man of blood and coat-armor who has not heard your name and
your fame. This I tell you—I, Raoul de la Roche Pierre de Bras, dying
upon the field of honor. And now kiss me, sweet friend, and lay me
back, for the mists close round me and I am gone!”

With tender hands the Squire lowered his comrade’s head, but even as he
did so there came a choking rush of blood, and the soul had passed. So
died a gallant cavalier of France, and Nigel as he knelt in the ditch
beside him prayed that his own end might be as noble and as debonair.




XXI.
HOW THE SECOND MESSENGER WENT TO COSFORD


Under cover of night the wounded men were lifted from the ditch and
carried back, whilst pickets of archers were advanced to the very gate
so that none should rebuild it. Nigel, sick at heart over his own
failure, the death of his prisoner and his fears for Aylward, crept
back into the camp, but his cup was not yet full, for Knolles was
waiting for him with a tongue which cut like a whip-lash. Who was he, a
raw squire, that he should lead an attack without orders? See what his
crazy knight errantry had brought about. Twenty men had been destroyed
by it and nothing gained. Their blood was on his head. Chandos should
hear of his conduct. He should be sent back to England when the castle
had fallen.

Such were the bitter words of Knolles, the more bitter because Nigel
felt in his heart that he had indeed done wrong, and that Chandos would
have said the same though, perchance, in kinder words. He listened in
silent respect, as his duty was, and then having saluted his leader he
withdrew apart, threw himself down amongst the bushes, and wept the
hottest tears of his life, sobbing bitterly with his face between his
hands. He had striven hard, and yet everything had gone wrong with him.
He was bruised, burned and aching from head to foot. Yet so high is the
spirit above the body that all was nothing compared to the sorrow and
shame which racked his soul.

But a little thing changed the current of his thoughts and brought some
peace to his mind. He had slipped off his mail gauntlets, and as he did
so his fingers lighted upon the tiny bangle which Mary had fastened
there when they stood together upon St. Catharine’s Hill on the
Guildford Road. He remembered the motto curiously worked in filigree of
gold. It ran: “_Fais ce que dois, adviegne que pourra—c’est commandé au
chevalier_.”

The words rang in his weary brain. He had done what seemed right, come
what might. It had gone awry, it is true; but all things human may do
that. If he had carried the castle, he felt that Knolles would have
forgiven and forgotten all else. If he had not carried it, it was no
fault of his. No man could have done more. If Mary could see she would
surely have approved. Dropping into sleep, he saw her dark face,
shining with pride and with pity, stooping over him as he lay. She
stretched out her hand in his dream and touched him on the shoulder. He
sprang up and rubbed his eyes, for fact had woven itself into dream in
the strange way that it does, and some one was indeed leaning over him
in the gloom, and shaking him from his slumbers. But the gentle voice
and soft touch of the Lady Mary had changed suddenly to the harsh
accents and rough grip of Black Simon, the fierce Norfolk man-at-arms.

“Surely you are the Squire Loring,” he said, peering close to his face
in the darkness.

“I am he. What then?”

“I have searched through the camp for you, but when I saw the great
horse tethered near these bushes, I thought you would be found hard by.
I would have a word with you.”

“Speak on.”

“This man Aylward the bowman was my friend, and it is the nature that
God has given me to love my friends even as I hate my foes. He is also
thy servant, and it has seemed to me that you love him also.”

“I have good cause so to do.”

“Then you and I, Squire Loring, have more reason to strive on his
behalf than any of these others, who think more of taking the castle
than of saving those who are captives within. Do you not see that such
a man as this robber lord would, when all else had failed him, most
surely cut the throats of his prisoners at the last instant before the
castle fell, knowing well that come what might he would have short
shrift himself? Is that not certain?”

“By Saint Paul! I had not thought of it.”

“I was with you, hammering at the inner gate,” said Simon, “and yet
once when I thought that it was giving way I said in my heart:
‘Good-by, Samkin! I shall never see you more.’ This Baron has gall in
his soul, even as I have myself, and do you think that I would give up
my prisoners alive, if I were constrained so to do? No, no; had we won
our way this day it would have been the death-stroke for them all.”

“It may be that you are right, Simon,” said Nigel, “and the thought of
it should assuage our grief. But if we cannot save them by taking the
castle, then surely they are lost indeed.”

“It may be so, or it may not,” Simon answered slowly. “It is in my mind
that if the castle were taken very suddenly, and in such a fashion that
they could not foresee it, then perchance we might get the prisoners
before they could do them scathe.”

Nigel bent forward eagerly, his hand on the soldier’s arm.

“You have some plan in your mind, Simon. Tell me what it is.”

“I had wished to tell Sir Robert, but he is preparing the assault for
to-morrow and will not be turned from his purpose. I have indeed a
plan, but whether it be good or not I cannot say until I have tried it.
But first I will tell you what put it into my thoughts. Know then that
this morning when I was in yonder ditch I marked one of their men upon
the wall. He was a big man with a white face, red hair and a touch of
Saint Anthony’s fire upon the cheek.”

“But what has this to do with Aylward?”

“I will show you. This evening after the assault I chanced to walk with
some of my fellows, round yonder small fort upon the knoll to see if we
could spy a weak spot in it. Some of them came to the wall to curse us,
and among them whom should I see but a big man with a white face, red
hair and a touch of Anthony’s fire upon his cheek? What make you of
that, Squire Nigel?”

“That this man had crossed from the castle to the fort.”

“In good sooth, it must indeed be so. There are not two such
ken-speckled men in the world. But if he crossed from the castle to the
fort, it was not above the ground, for our own people were between.”

“By Saint Paul! I see your meaning!” cried Nigel. “It is in your mind
that there is a passage under the earth from one to the other.”

“I am well sure of it.”

“Then if we should take the small fort we may pass down this tunnel,
and so carry the great castle also.”

“Such a thing might happen,” said Simon, “and yet it is dangerous also,
for surely those in the castle would hear our assault upon the fort and
so be warned to bar the passage against us, and to slay the prisoners
before we could come.”

“What then is your rede?”

“Could we find where the tunnel lay, Squire Nigel, I know not what is
to prevent us from digging down upon it and breaking into it so that
both fort and castle are at our mercy before either knows that we are
there.”

Nigel clapped his hands with joy. “’Fore God!” he cried. “It is a most
noble plan! But alas! Simon, I see not how we can tell the course of
this passage or where we should dig.”

“I have peasants yonder with spades,” said Simon. “There are two of my
friends, Harding of Barnstable and West-country John who are waiting
for us with their gear. If you will come to lead us, Squire Nigel, we
are ready to venture our bodies in the attempt.”

What would Knolles say in case they failed? The thought flashed through
Nigel’s mind, but another came swiftly behind it. He would not venture
further unless he found hopes of success. And if he did venture further
he would put his life upon it. Giving that, he made amends for all
errors. And if on the other hand success crowned their efforts, then
Knolles would forgive his failure at the gateway. A minute later, every
doubt banished from his mind, he was making his way through the
darkness under the guidance of Black Simon.

Outside the camp the two other men-at-arms were waiting for them, and
the four advanced together. Presently a little group of figures loomed
up in the darkness. It was a cloudy night, and a thin rain was falling
which obscured both the castle and the fort; but a stone had been
placed by Simon in the daytime which assured that they were between the
two.

“Is blind Andreas there?” asked Simon.

“Yes, kind sir, I am here,” said a voice.

“This man,” said Simon, “was once rich and of good repute, but he was
beggared by this robber lord, who afterwards put out his eyes so that
he has lived for many years in darkness at the charity of others.”

“How can he help us in our enterprise if he be indeed blind?” asked
Nigel.

“It is for that very reason, fair lord, that he can be of greater
service than any other man,” Simon answered; “for it often happens that
when a man has lost a sense the good God will strengthen those that
remain. Hence it is that Andreas has such ears that he can hear the sap
in the trees or the cheep of the mouse in its burrow. He has come to
help us to find the tunnel.”

“And I have found it,” said the blind man proudly. “Here I have placed
my staff upon the line of it. Twice as I lay there with my ear to the
ground I have heard footsteps pass beneath me.”

“I trust you make no mistake, old man,” said Nigel.

For answer the blind man raised his staff and smote twice upon the
ground, once to the right and once to the left. The one gave a dull
thud, the other a hollow boom.

“Can you not hear that?” he asked. “Will you ask me now if I make a
mistake?”

“Indeed, we are much beholden to you!” cried Nigel. “Let the peasants
dig then, and as silently as they may. Do you keep your ear upon the
ground, Andreas, so that if anyone pass beneath us we shall be warned.”

So, amid the driving rain, the little group toiled in the darkness. The
blind man lay silent, flat upon his face, and twice they heard his
warning hiss and stopped their work, whilst some one passed beneath. In
an hour they had dug down to a stone arch which was clearly the outer
side of the tunnel roof. Here was a sad obstacle, for it might take
long to loosen a stone, and if their work was not done by the break of
day then their enterprise was indeed hopeless. They loosened the mortar
with a dagger, and at last dislodged one small stone which enabled them
to get at the others. Presently a dark hole blacker than the night
around them yawned at their feet, and their swords could touch no
bottom to it. They had opened the tunnel.

“I would fain enter it first,” said Nigel. “I pray you to lower me
down.” They held him to the full length of their arms and then letting
him drop they heard him land safely beneath them. An instant later the
blind man started up with a low cry of alarm.

“I hear steps coming,” said he. “They are far off, but they draw
nearer.”

Simon thrust his head and neck down the hole. “Squire Nigel,” he
whispered, “can you hear me?”

“I can hear you, Simon.”

“Andreas says that some one comes.”

“Then cover over the hole,” came the answer. “Quick, I pray you, cover
it over!”

A mantle was stretched across it, so that no glimmer of light should
warn the new-comer. The fear was that he might have heard, the sound of
Nigel’s descent. But soon it was clear that he had not done so, for
Andreas announced that he was still advancing. Presently Nigel could
hear the distant thud of his feet. If he bore a lantern all was lost.
But no gleam of light appeared in the black tunnel, and still the
footsteps drew nearer.

Nigel breathed a prayer of thanks to all his guardian saints as he
crouched close to the slimy wall and waited breathless, his dagger in
his hand. Nearer yet and nearer came the steps. He could hear the
stranger’s coarse breathing in the darkness. Then as he brushed past
Nigel bounded upon him with a tiger spring. There was one gasp of
astonishment, and not a sound more, for the Squire’s grip was on the
man’s throat and his body was pinned motionless against the wall.

“Simon! Simon!” cried Nigel loudly.

The mantle was moved from the hole.

“Have you a cord? Or your belts linked together may serve.”

One of the peasants had a rope, and Nigel soon felt it dangling against
his hand. He listened and there was no sound in the passage. For an
instant he released his captive’s throat. A torrent of prayers and
entreaties came forth. The man was shaking like a leaf in the wind.
Nigel pressed the point of his dagger against his face and dared him to
open his lips. Then he slipped the rope beneath his arms and tied it.

“Pull him up!” he whispered, and for an instant the gray glimmer above
him was obscured.

“We have him, fair sir,” said Simon.

“Then drop me the rope and hold it fast.”

A moment later Nigel stood among the group of men who had gathered
round their captive. It was too dark to see him, and they dare not
strike flint and steel.

Simon passed his hand roughly over him and felt a fat clean-shaven
face, and a cloth gabardine which hung to the ankles. “Who are you?” he
whispered. “Speak the truth and speak it low, if you would ever speak
again.”

The man’s teeth chattered in his head with cold and fright. “I speak no
English,” he murmured.

“French, then,” said Nigel.

“I am a holy priest of God. You court the ban of holy Church when you
lay hands upon me. I pray you let me go upon my way, for there are
those whom I would shrive and housel. If they should die in sin, their
damnation is upon you.”

“How are you called then?”

“I am Dom Peter de Cervolles.”

“De Cervolles, the arch-priest, he who heated the brazier when they
burned out my eyes,” cried old Andreas. “Of all the devils in hell
there is none fouler than this one. Friends, friends, if I have done
aught for you this night, I ask but one reward, that ye let me have my
will of this man.”

But Nigel pushed the old man back. “There is no time for this,” he
said. “Now hark you, priest—if priest indeed you be—your gown and
tonsure will not save you if you play us false, for we are here of a
set purpose and we will go forward with it, come what may. Answer me
and answer me truly or it will be an ill night for you. In what part of
the Castle does this tunnel enter?”

“In the lower cellar.”

“What is at the end?”

“An oaken door.”

“Is it barred?”

“Yes, it is barred.”

“How would you have entered?”

“I would have given the password.”

“Who then would have opened?”

“There is a guard within.”

“And beyond him?”

“Beyond him are the prison cells and the jailers.”

“Who else would be afoot?”

“No one save a guard at the gate and another on the battlement.”

“What then is the password?”

The man was silent.

“The password, fellow!”

The cold points of two daggers pricked his throat; but still he would
not speak.

“Where is the blind man?” asked Nigel. “Here, Andreas, you can have him
and do what you will with him.”

“Nay, nay,” the priest whimpered. “Keep him off me. Save me from blind
Andreas! I will tell you everything.”

“The password then, this instant?”

“It is ‘_Benedicite!_’”

“We have the password, Simon,” cried Nigel. “Come then, let us on to
the farther end. These peasants will guard the priest, and they will
remain here lest we wish to send a message.”

“Nay, fair sir, it is in my mind that we can do better,” said Simon.
“Let us take the priest with us, so that he who is within may know his
voice.”

“It is well thought of,” said Nigel, “and first let us pray together,
for indeed this night may well be our last.”

He and the three men-at-arms knelt in the rain and sent up their simple
orisons, Simon still clutching tight to his prisoner’s wrist.

The priest fumbled in his breast and drew something forth. “It is the
heart of the blessed confessor Saint Enogat,” said he. “It may be that
it will ease and assoil your souls if you would wish to handle it.”

The four Englishmen passed the flat silver case from hand to hand, each
pressing his lips devoutly upon it. Then they rose to their feet. Nigel
was the first to lower himself down the hole; then Simon; then the
priest, who was instantly seized by the other two. The men-at-arms
followed them. They had scarcely moved away from the hole when Nigel
stopped.

“Surely some one else came after us,” said he.

They listened, but no whisper or rustle came from behind them. For a
minute they paused and then resumed their journey through the dark. It
seemed a long, long way, though in truth it was but a few hundred yards
before they came to a door with a glimmer of yellow light around it,
which barred their passage. Nigel struck upon it with his hand.

There was the rasping of a bolt and then a loud voice “Is that you,
priest?”

“Yes, it is I,” said the prisoner in a quavering voice. “Open, Arnold!”

The voice was enough. There was no question of passwords. The door
swung inward, and in an instant the janitor was cut down by Nigel and
Simon. So sudden and so fierce was the attack that save for the thud of
his body no sound was heard. A flood of light burst outward into the
passage, and the Englishmen stood with blinking eyes in its glare.

In front of them lay a stone-flagged corridor, across which lay the
dead body of the janitor. It had doors on either side of it, and
another grated door at the farther end. A strange hubbub, a kind of low
droning and whining filled the air. The four men were standing
listening, full of wonder as to what this might mean, when a sharp cry
came from behind them. The priest lay in a shapeless heap upon the
ground, and the blood was rushing from his gaping throat. Down the
passage, a black shadow in the yellow light, there fled a crouching
man, who clattered with a stick as he went.

“It is Andreas,” cried West-country Will. “He has slain him.”

“Then it was he that I heard behind us,” said Nigel. “Doubtless he was
at our very heels in the darkness. I fear that the priest’s cry has
been heard.”

“Nay,” said Simon, “there are so many cries that one more may well
pass. Let us take this lamp from the wall and see what sort of devil’s
den we have around us.”

They opened the door upon the right, and so horrible a smell issued
from it that they were driven back from it. The lamp which Simon held
forward showed a monkeylike creature mowing and grimacing in the
corner, man or woman none could tell, but driven crazy by loneliness
and horror. In the other cell was a graybearded man fettered to the
wall, looking blankly before him, a body without a soul, yet with life
still in him, for his dull eyes turned slowly in their direction. But
it was from behind the central door at the end of the passage that the
chorus of sad cries came which filled the air.

“Simon,” said Nigel, “before we go farther we will take this outer door
from its hinges. With it we will block this passage so that at the
worst we may hold our ground here until help comes. Do you back to the
camp as fast as your feet can bear you. The peasants will draw you
upward through the hole. Give my greetings to Sir Robert and tell him
that the castle is taken without fail if he comes this way with fifty
men. Say that we have made a lodgment within the walls. And tell him
also, Simon, that I would counsel him to make a stir before the gateway
so that the guard may be held there whilst we make good our footing
behind them. Go, good Simon, and lose not a moment!”

But the man-at-arms shook his head. “It is I who have brought you here,
fair sir, and here I bide through fair and foul. But you speak wisely
and well, for Sir Robert should indeed be told what is going forward
now that we have gone so far. Harding, do you go with all speed and
bear the gentle Nigel’s message.”

Reluctantly the man-at-arms sped upon his errand. They could hear the
racing of his feet and the low jingle of his harness until they died
away in the tunnel. Then the three companions approached the door at
the end. It was their intention to wait where they were until help
should come, but suddenly amid the babel of cries within there broke
forth an English voice, shouting in torment.

“My God!” it cried, “I pray you, comrades, for a cup of water, as you
hope for Christ’s mercy!”

A shout of laughter and the thud of a heavy blow followed the appeal.

All the hot blood rushed to Nigel’s head at the sound, buzzing in his
ears and throbbing in his temples. There are times when the fiery heart
of a man must overbear the cold brain of a soldier. With one bound he
was at the door, with another he was through it, the men-at-arms at his
heels. So strange was the scene before them that for an instant all
three stood motionless with horror and surprise.

It was a great vaulted chamber, brightly lit by many torches. At the
farther end roared a great fire. In front of it three naked men were
chained to posts in such a way that flinch as they might they could
never get beyond the range of its scorching heat. Yet they were so far
from it that no actual burn would be inflicted if they could but keep
turning and shifting so as continually to present some fresh portion of
their flesh to the flames. Hence they danced and whirled in front of
the fire, tossing ceaselessly this way and that within the compass of
their chains, wearied to death, their protruding tongues cracked and
blackened with thirst, but unable for one instant to rest from their
writhings and contortions.

Even stranger was the sight at each side of the room, whence came that
chorus of groans which had first struck upon the ears of Nigel and his
companions. A line of great hogsheads were placed alongside the walls,
and within each sat a man, his head protruding from the top. As they
moved within there was a constant splashing and washing of water. The
white wan faces all turned together as the door flew open, and a cry of
amazement and of hope took the place of those long-drawn moans of
despair.

At the same instant two fellows clad in black, who had been seated with
a flagon of wine between them at a table near the fire, sprang wildly
to their feet, staring with blank amazement at this sudden inrush. That
instant of delay deprived them of their last chance of safety. Midway
down the room was a flight of stone steps which led to the main door.

Swift as a wildcat Nigel bounded toward it and gained the steps a
stride or two before the jailers. They turned and made for the other
which led to the passage, but Simon and his comrades were nearer to it
than they. Two sweeping blows, two dagger thrusts into writhing
figures, and the ruffians who worked the will of the Butcher lay dead
upon the floor of their slaughter-house.

Oh, the buzz of joy and of prayer from all those white lips! Oh, the
light of returning hope in all those sunken weary eyes! One wild shout
would have gone up had not Nigel’s outstretched hands and warning voice
hushed them to silence.

He opened the door behind him. A curving newel staircase wound upward
into the darkness. He listened, but no sound came down. There was a key
in the outer lock of the iron door. He whipped it out and turned it on
the inner side. The ground that they had gained was safe. Now they
could turn to the relief of these poor fellows beside them. A few
strong blows struck off the irons and freed the three dancers before
the fire. With a husky croak of joy, they rushed across to their
comrades’ water-barrels, plunged their heads in like horses, and drank
and drank and drank. Then in turn the poor shivering wretches were
taken out of the barrels, their skins bleached and wrinkled with long
soaking. Their bonds were torn from them; but, cramped and fixed, their
limbs refused to act, and they tumbled and twisted upon the floor in
their efforts to reach Nigel and to kiss his hand.

In a corner lay Aylward, dripping from his barrel and exhausted with
cold and hunger. Nigel ran to his side and raised his head. The jug of
wine from which the two jailers had drunk still stood upon their table.
The Squire placed it to the archer’s lips and he took a hearty pull at
it.

“How is it with you now, Aylward?”

“Better, Squire, better, but may I never touch water again as long as I
live! Alas! poor Dicon has gone, and Stephen also—the life chilled out
of them. The cold is in the very marrow of my bones. I pray you, let me
lean upon your arm as far as the fire, that I may warm the frozen blood
and set it running in my veins once more.”

A strange sight it was to see these twenty naked men crouching in a
half-circle round the fire with their trembling hands extended to the
blaze. Soon their tongues at least were thawed, and they poured out the
story of their troubles with many a prayer and ejaculation to the
saints for their safe delivery. No food had crossed their lips since
they had been taken. The Butcher had commanded them to join his
garrison and to shoot upon their comrades from the wall. When they
refused he had set aside three of them for execution.

The others had been dragged to the cellar, whither the leering tyrant
had followed them. Only one question he had asked them, whether they
were of a hot-blooded nature or of a cold. Blows were showered upon
them until they answered. Three had said cold, and had been condemned
to the torment of the fire. The rest who had said hot were delivered up
to the torture of the water-cask. Every few hours this man or fiend had
come down to exult over their sufferings and to ask them whether they
were ready yet to enter his service. Three had consented and were gone.
But the others had all of them stood firm, two of them even to their
death.

Such was the tale to which Nigel and his comrades listened whilst they
waited impatiently for the coming of Knolles and his men. Many an
anxious look did they cast down the black tunnel, but no glimmer of
light and no clash of steel came from its depths. Suddenly, however, a
loud and measured sound broke upon their ears. It was a dull metallic
clang, ponderous and slow, growing louder and ever louder—the tread of
an armored man. The poor wretches round the fire, all unnerved by
hunger and suffering, huddled together with wan, scared faces, their
eyes fixed in terror on the door.

“It is he!” they whispered. “It is the Butcher himself!”

Nigel had darted to the door and listened intently. There were no
footfalls save those of one man. Once sure of that, he softly turned
the key in the lock. At the same instant there came a bull’s bellow
from without.

“Ives! Bertrand!” cried the voice. “Can you not hear me coming, you
drunken varlets? You shall cool your own heads in the water-casks, you
lazy rascals! What, not even now! Open, you dogs. Open, I say!”

He had thrust down the latch, and with a kick he flung the door wide
and rushed inward. For an instant he stood motionless, a statue of dull
yellow metal, his eyes fixed upon the empty casks and the huddle of
naked men. Then with the roar of a trapped lion, he turned, but the
door had slammed behind him, and Black Simon, with grim figure and
sardonic face, stood between.

The Butcher looked round him helplessly, for he was unarmed save for
his dagger. Then his eyes fell upon Nigel’s roses.

“You are a gentleman of coat-armor,” he cried. “I surrender myself to
you.”

“I will not take your surrender, you black villain,” said Nigel. “Draw
and defend yourself. Simon, give him your sword.”

“Nay, this is madness,” said the blunt man-at-arms. “Why should I give
the wasp a sting?”

“Give it him, I say. I cannot kill him in cold blood.”

“But I can!” yelled Aylward, who had crept up from the fire. “Come,
comrades! By these ten finger-bones! has he not taught us how cold
blood should be warmed?”

Like a pack of wolves they were on him, and he clanged upon the floor
with a dozen frenzied naked figures clutching and clinging above him.
In vain Nigel tried to pull them off. They were mad with rage, these
tortured starving men, their eyes fixed and glaring, their hair on end,
their teeth gnashing with fury, while they tore at the howling,
writhing man. Then with a rattle and clatter they pulled him across the
room by his two ankles and dragged him into the fire.

Nigel shuddered and turned away his eyes as he saw the brazen figure
roll out and stagger to his knees, only to be hurled once more into the
heart of the blaze. His prisoners screamed with joy and clapped their
hands as they pushed him back with their feet until the armor was too
hot for them to touch. Then at last he lay still and glowed darkly red,
whilst the naked men danced in a wild half-circle round the fire.

But now at last the supports had come. Lights flashed and armor gleamed
down the tunnel. The cellar filled with armed men, while from above
came the cries and turmoil of the feigned assault upon the gate. Led by
Knolles and Nigel, the storming party rushed upward and seized the
courtyard. The guard of the gate taken in the rear threw down their
weapons and cried for mercy. The gate was thrown open and the
assailants rushed in, with hundreds of furious peasants at their heels.
Some of the robbers died in hot blood, many in cold; but all died, for
Knolles had vowed to give no quarter. Day was just breaking when the
last fugitive had been hunted out and slain. From all sides came the
yells and whoops of the soldiers with the rending and riving of doors
as they burst into the store-rooms and treasure-chambers. There was a
joyous scramble amongst them, for the plunder of eleven years, gold and
jewels, satins and velvets, rich plate and noble hangings were all to
be had for the taking.

The rescued prisoners, their hunger appeased and their clothes
restored, led the search for booty. Nigel, leaning on his sword by the
gateway, saw Aylward totter past, a huge bundle under each arm, another
slung over his back and a smaller packet hanging from his mouth. He
dropped it for a moment as he passed his young master.

“By these ten finger-bones! I am right glad that I came to the war, and
no man could ask for a more goodly life,” said he. “I have a present
here for every girl in Tilford, and my father need never fear the frown
of the sacrist of Waverley again. But how of you, Squire Loring? It
standeth not aright that we should gather the harvest whilst you, who
sowed it, go forth empty-handed. Come, gentle sir, take these things
that I have gathered, and I will go back and find more.”

But Nigel smiled and shook his head. “You have gained what your heart
desired, and perchance I have done so also,” said he.

An instant later Knolles strode up to him with outstretched hand. “I
ask your pardon, Nigel,” said he. “I have spoken too hotly in my
wrath.”

“Nay, fair sir, I was at fault.”

“If we stand here now within this castle, it is to you that I owe it.
The King shall know of it, and Chandos also. Can I do aught else,
Nigel, to prove to you the high esteem in which I hold you?”

The Squire flushed with pleasure. “Do you send a messenger home to
England, fair sir, with news of these doings?”

“Surely, I must do so. But do not tell me, Nigel, that you would be
that messenger. Ask me some other favor, for indeed I cannot let you
go.”

“Now God forbid!” cried Nigel. “By Saint Paul! I would not be so
caitiff and so thrall as to leave you, when some small deed might still
be done. But I would fain send a message by your messenger.”

“To whom?”

“It is to the Lady Mary, daughter of old Sir John Buttesthorn who
dwells near Guildford.”

“But you will write the message, Nigel. Such greetings as a cavalier
sends to his lady-love should be under seal.”

“Nay, he can carry my message by word of mouth.”

“Then I shall tell him for he goes this morning. What message, then,
shall he say to the lady?”

“He will give her my very humble greeting, and he will say to her that
for the second time Saint Catharine has been our friend.”




XXII.
HOW ROBERT OF BEAUMANOIR CAME TO PLOERMEL


Sir Robert Knolles and his men passed onward that day, looking back
many a time to see the two dark columns of smoke, one thicker and one
more slender, which arose from the castle and from the fort of La
Brohinière. There was not an archer nor a man-at-arms who did not bear
a great bundle of spoil upon his back, and Knolles frowned darkly as he
looked upon them. Gladly would he have thrown it all down by the
roadside, but he had tried such matters before, and he knew that it was
as safe to tear a half-gnawed bone from a bear as their blood-won
plunder from such men as these. In any case it was but two days’ march
to Ploermel, where he hoped to bring his journey to an end.

That night they camped at Mauron, where a small English and Breton
garrison held the castle. Right glad were the bowmen to see some of
their own countrymen once more, and they spent the night over wine and
dice, a crowd of Breton girls assisting, so that next morning their
bundles were much lighter, and most of the plunder of La Brohinière was
left with the men and women of Mauron. Next day their march lay with a
fair sluggish river upon their right, and a great rolling forest upon
their left which covered the whole country. At last toward evening the
towers of Ploermel rose before them and they saw against a darkening
sky the Red Cross of England waving in the wind. So blue was the river
Duc which skirted the road, and so green its banks, that they might
indeed have been back beside their own homely streams, the Oxford
Thames or the Midland Trent, but ever as the darkness deepened there
came in wild gusts the howling of wolves from the forest to remind them
that they were in a land of war. So busy had men been for many years in
hunting one another that the beasts of the chase had grown to a
monstrous degree, until the streets of the towns were no longer safe
from the wild inroads of the fierce creatures, the wolves and the
bears, who swarmed around them.

It was nightfall when the little army entered the outer gate of the
Castle of Ploermel and encamped in the broad Bailey yard. Ploermel was
at that time the center of British power in Mid-Brittany, as Hennebon
was in the West, and it was held by a garrison of five hundred men
under an old soldier, Richard of Bambro, a rugged Northumbrian, trained
in that great school of warriors, the border wars. He who had ridden
the marches of the most troubled frontier in Europe, and served his
time against the Liddlesdale and Nithsdale raiders was hardened for a
life in the field.

Of late, however, Bambro had been unable to undertake any enterprise,
for his reinforcements had failed him, and amid his following he had
but three English knights and seventy men. The rest were a mixed crew
of Bretons, Hainaulters and a few German mercenary soldiers, brave men
individually, as those of that stock have ever been, but lacking
interest in the cause, and bound together by no common tie of blood or
tradition.

On the other hand, the surrounding castles, and especially that of
Josselin, were held by strong forces of enthusiastic Bretons, inflamed
by a common patriotism, and full of warlike ardor. Robert of
Beaumanoir, the fierce seneschal of the house of Rohan, pushed constant
forays and excursions against Ploermel so that town and castle were
both in daily dread of being surrounded and besieged. Several small
parties of the English faction had been cut off and slain to a man, and
so straitened were the others that it was difficult for them to gather
provisions from the country round.

Such was the state of Bambro’s garrison when on that March evening
Knolles and his men streamed into the bailey-yard of his Castle.

In the glare of the torches at the inner gate Bambro was waiting to
receive them, a dry, hard, wizened man, small and fierce, with beady
black eyes and quick furtive ways.

Beside him, a strange contrast, stood his Squire, Croquart, a German,
whose name and fame as a man-at-arms were widespread, though like
Robert Knolles himself he had begun as a humble page. He was a very
tall man, with an enormous spread of shoulders, and a pair of huge
hands with which he could crack a horse-shoe. He was slow and
lethargic, save in moments of excitement, and his calm blond face, his
dreamy blue eyes and his long fair hair gave him so gentle an
appearance that none save those who had seen him in his berserk mood,
raging, an iron giant, in the forefront of the battle, could ever guess
how terrible a warrior he might be. Little knight and huge squire stood
together under the arch of the donjon and gave welcome to the
newcomers, whilst a swarm of soldiers crowded round to embrace their
comrades and to lead them off where they might feed and make merry
together.

Supper had been set in the hall of Ploermel wherein the knights and
squires assembled. Bambro and Croquart were there with Sir Hugh
Calverly, an old friend of Knolles and a fellow-townsman, for both were
men of Chester. Sir Hugh was a middle-sized flaxen man, with hard gray
eyes and fierce large-nosed face sliced across with the scar of a
sword-cut. There too were Geoffrey D’Ardaine, a young Breton seigneur,
Sir Thomas Belford, a burly thick-set Midland Englishman, Sir Thomas
Walton, whose surcoat of scarlet martlets showed that he was of the
Surrey Waltons, James Marshall and John Russell, young English squires,
and the two brothers, Richard and Hugh Le Galliard, who were of Gascon
blood. Besides these were several squires, unknown to fame, and of the
new-comers, Sir Robert Knolles, Sir Thomas Percy, Nigel Loring and two
other squires, Allington and Parsons. These were the company who
gathered in the torch-light round the table of the Seneschal of
Ploermel, and kept high revel with joyous hearts because they thought
that much honor and noble deeds lay before them.

But one sad face there was at the board, and that belonged to him at
the head of it. Sir Robert Bambro sat with his chin leaning upon his
hand and his eyes downcast upon the cloth, whilst all round him rose
the merry clatter of voices, everyone planning some fresh enterprise
which might now be attempted. Sir Robert Knolles was for an immediate
advance upon Josselin. Calverly thought that a raid might be made into
the South where the main French power lay. Others spoke of an attack
upon Vannes.

To all these eager opinions Bambro listened in a moody silence, which
he broke at last by a fierce execration which drew a hushed attention
from the company. “Say no more, fair sirs,” he cried; “for indeed your
words are like so many stabs in my heart. All this and more we might
indeed have done. But of a truth you are too late.”

“Too late?” cried Knolles. “What mean you, Richard?”

“Alas; that I should have to say it, but you and all these fair
soldiers might be back in England once more for all the profit that I
am like to have from your coming. Saw you a rider on a white horse ere
you reached the Castle?”

“Nay, I saw him not?”

“He came by the western road from Hennebon. Would that he had broken
his neck ere he came here. Not an hour ago he left his message and now
hath ridden on to warn the garrison of Malestroit. A truce has been
proclaimed for a year betwixt the French King and the English, and he
who breaks it forfeits life and estate.”

“A truce!” Here was an end to all their fine dreams. They looked
blankly at each other all round the table, whilst Croquart brought his
great fist down upon the board until the glasses rattled again. Knolles
sat with clenched hands as if he were a figure of stone, while Nigel’s
heart turned cold and heavy within him. A truce! Where then was his
third deed, and how might he return without it?

Even as they sat in moody silence there was the call of a bugle from
somewhere out in the darkness.

Sir Richard looked up with surprise. “We are not wont to be summoned
after once the portcullis is up,” said he. “Truce or no truce, we must
let no man within our walls until we have proved him. Croquart, see to
it!”

The huge German left the room. The company were still seated in
despondent silence when he returned.

“Sir Richard,” said he, “the brave knight Robert of Beaumanoir and his
Squire William de Montaubon are without the gate, and would fain have
speech with you.”

Bambro started in his chair. What could the fierce leader of the
Bretons, a man who was red to the elbow with English blood, have to say
to them? On what errand had he left his castle of Josselin to pay this
visit to his deadly enemies?

“Are they armed?” he asked.

“They are unarmed.”

“Then admit them and bring them hither, but double the guards and take
all heed against surprise.”

Places were set at the farther end of the table for these most
unexpected guests. Presently the door was swung open, and Croquart with
all form and courtesy announced the two Bretons, who entered with the
proud and lofty air of gallant warriors and high-bred gentlemen.

Beaumanoir was a tall dark man with raven hair and long swarthy beard.
He was strong and straight as a young oak, with fiery black eyes, and
no flaw in his comely features save that his front teeth had been
dashed from their sockets. His Squire, William of Montaubon, was also
tall, with a thin hatchet face, and two small gray eyes set very close
upon either side of a long fierce nose. In Beaumanoir’s expression one
read only gallantry and frankness; in Montaubon’s there was gallantry
also, but it was mixed with the cruelty and cunning of the wolf. They
bowed as they entered, and the little English seneschal advanced with
outstretched hand to meet them.

“Welcome, Robert, so long as you are beneath this roof,” said he.
“Perhaps the time may come in another place when we may speak to each
other in another fashion.”

“So I hope, Richard,” said Beaumanoir; “but indeed we of Josselin bear
you in high esteem and are much beholden to you and to your men for all
that you have done for us. We could not wish better neighbors nor any
from whom more honor is to be gained. I learn that Sir Robert Knolles
and others have joined you, and we are heavy-hearted to think that the
orders of our Kings should debar us from attempting a venture.” He and
his squire sat down at the places set for them, and filling their
glasses drank to the company.

“What you say is true, Robert,” said Bambro, “and before you came we
were discussing the matter among ourselves and grieving that it should
be so. When heard you of the truce?”

“Yester-evening a messenger rode from Nantes.”

“Our news came to-night from Hennebon. The King’s own seal was on the
order. So I fear that for a year at least you will bide at Josselin and
we at Ploermel, and kill time as we may. Perchance we may hunt the wolf
together in the great forest, or fly our hawks on the banks of the
Duc.”

“Doubtless we shall do all this, Richard,” said Beaumanoir; “but by
Saint Cadoc it is in my mind that with good-will upon both sides we may
please ourselves and yet stand excused before our Kings.”

Knights and squires leaned forward in their chairs, their eager eyes,
fixed upon him. He broke into a gap-toothed smile as he looked round at
the circle, the wizened seneschal, the blond giant, Nigel’s fresh young
face, the grim features of Knolles, and the yellow hawk-like Calverly,
all burning with the same desire.

“I see that I need not doubt the good-will,” said he, “and of that I
was very certain before I came upon this errand. Bethink you then that
this order applies to war but not to challenges, spear-runnings,
knightly exchanges or the like. King Edward is too good a knight, and
so is King John, that either of them should stand in the way of a
gentleman who desires to advance himself or to venture his body for the
exaltation of his lady. Is this not so?”

A murmur of eager assent rose from the table.

“If you as the garrison of Ploermel march upon the garrison of
Josselin, then it is very plain that we have broken the truce and upon
our heads be it. But if there be a private bickering betwixt me, for
example, and this young squire whose eyes show that he is very eager
for honor, and if thereafter others on each side join in and fight upon
the quarrel, it is in no sense war, but rather our own private business
which no king can alter.”

“Indeed, Robert,” said Bambro, “all that you say is very good and
fair.”

Beaumanoir leaned forward toward Nigel, his brimming glass in his hand.
“Your name, squire?” said he.

“My name is Nigel Loring.”

“I see that you are young and eager, so I choose you as I would fain
have been chosen when I was of your age.”

“I thank you, fair sir,” said Nigel. “It is great honor that one so
famous as yourself should condescend to do some small deed upon me.”

“But we must have cause for quarrel, Nigel. Now here I drink to the
ladies of Brittany, who of all ladies upon this earth are the most fair
and the most virtuous, so that the least worthy-amongst them is far
above the best of England. What say you to that, young sir?”

Nigel dipped his finger in his glass and leaning over he placed its wet
impress on the Breton’s hand. “This in your face!” said he.

Beaumanoir swept off the red drop of moisture and smiled his approval.
“It could not have been better done,” said he. “Why spoil my velvet
paltock as many a hot-headed fool would have done. It is in my mind,
young sir, that you will go far. And now, who follows up this quarrel?”

A growl ran round the table.

Beaumanoir ran his eye round and shook his head. “Alas!” said he,
“there are but twenty of you here, and I have thirty at Josselin who
are so eager to advance themselves that if I return without hope for
all of them there will be sore hearts amongst them. I pray you,
Richard, since we have been at these pains to arrange matters, that you
in turn will do what you may. Can you not find ten more men?”

“But not of gentle blood.”

“Nay, it matters not, if they will only fight.”

“Of that there can be no doubt, for the castle is full of archers and
men-at-arms who would gladly play a part in the matter.”

“Then choose ten,” said Beaumanoir.

But for the first time the wolf-like squire opened his thin lips.
“Surely, my lord, you will not allow archers,” said he.

“I fear not any man.”

“Nay, fair sir, consider that this is a trial of weapons betwixt us
where man faces man. You have seen these English archers, and you know
how fast and how strong are their shafts. Bethink you that if ten of
them were against us it is likely that half of us would be down before
ever we came to handstrokes.”

“By Saint Cadoc, William, I think that you are right,” cried the
Breton. “If we are to have such a fight as will remain in the memories
of men, you will bring no archers and we no crossbows. Let it be steel
upon steel. How say you then?”

“Surely we can bring ten men-at-arms to make up the thirty that you
desire, Robert. It is agreed then that we fight on no quarrel of
England and France, but over this matter of the ladies in which you and
Squire Loring have fallen out. And now the time?”

“At once.”

“Surely at once, or perchance a second messenger may come and this also
be forbidden. We will be ready with to-morrow’s sunrise.”

“Nay, a day later,” cried the Breton Squire. “Bethink you, my lord,
that the three lances of Radenac would take time to come over.”

“They are not of our garrison, and they shall not have a place.”

“But, fair sir, of all the lances of Brittany—”

“Nay, William, I will not have it an hour later. To-morrow it shall be,
Richard.”

“And where?”

“I marked a fitting place even as I rode here this evening. If you
cross the river and take the bridle-path through the fields which leads
to Josselin you come midway upon a mighty oak standing at the corner of
a fair and level meadow. There let us meet at midday to-morrow.”

“Agreed!” cried Bambro. “But I pray you not to rise, Robert! The night
is still young and the spices and hippocras will soon be served. Bide
with us, I pray you, for if you would fain hear the latest songs from
England, these gentlemen have doubtless brought them. To some of us
perchance it is the last night, so we would make it a full one.”

But the gallant Breton shook his head. “It may indeed be the last night
for many,” said he, “and it is but right that my comrades should know
it. I have no need of monk or friar, for I cannot think that harm will
ever come beyond the grave to one who has borne himself as a knight
should, but others have other thoughts upon these matters and would
fain have time for prayer and penitence. Adieu, fair sirs, and I drink
a last glass to a happy meeting at the midway oak.”




XXIII.
HOW THIRTY OF JOSSELIN ENCOUNTERED THIRTY OF PLOERMEL


All night the Castle of Ploermel rang with warlike preparations, for
the smiths were hammering and filing and riveting, preparing the armor
for the champions. In the stable yard hostlers were testing and
grooming the great war-horses, whilst in the chapel knights and squires
were easing their souls at the knees of old Father Benedict.

Down in the courtyard, meanwhile, the men-at-arms had been assembled,
and the volunteers weeded out until the best men had been selected.
Black Simon had obtained a place, and great was the joy which shone
upon his grim visage. With him were chosen young Nicholas Dagsworth, a
gentleman adventurer who was nephew to the famous Sir Thomas, Walter
the German, Hulbitee—a huge peasant whose massive frame gave promise
which his sluggish spirit failed to fulfil—John Alcock, Robin Adey and
Raoul Provost. These with three others made up the required thirty.
Great was the grumbling and evil the talk amongst the archers when it
was learned that none of them were to be included, but the bow had been
forbidden on either side. It is true that many of them were expert
fighters both with ax and with sword, but they were unused to carry
heavy armor, and a half-armed man would have short shrift in such a
hand-to-hand struggle as lay before them.

It was two hours after tierce, or one hour before noon, on the fourth
Wednesday of Lent in the year of Christ 1351 that the men of Ploermel
rode forth from their castle-gate and crossed the bridge of the Due. In
front was Bambro with his Squire Croquart, the latter on a great roan
horse bearing the banner of Ploermel, which was a black rampant lion
holding a blue flag upon a field of ermine. Behind him came Robert
Knolles and Nigel Loring, with an attendant at their side, who carried
the pennon of the black raven. Then rode Sir Thomas Percy with his blue
lion flaunting above him, and Sir Hugh Calverly, whose banner bore a
silver owl, followed by the massive Belford who carried a huge iron
club, weighing sixty pounds, upon his saddlebow, and Sir Thomas Walton
the knight of Surrey. Behind them were four brave Anglo-Bretons, Perrot
de Commelain, Le Gaillart, d’Aspremont and d’Ardaine, who fought
against their own countrymen because they were partisans of the
Countess of Montfort. Her engrailed silver cross upon a blue field was
carried at their head. In the rear were five German or Hainault
mercenaries, the tall Hulbitee, and the men-at-arms. Altogether of
these combatants twenty were of English birth, four were Breton and six
were of German blood.

So, with glitter of armor and flaunting of pennons, their warhorses
tossing and pawing, the champions rode down to the midway oak. Behind
them streamed hundreds of archers and men-at-arms whose weapons had
been wisely taken from them lest a general battle should ensue. With
them also went the townsfolk, men and women, together with
wine-sellers, provisions merchants, armorers, grooms and heralds, with
surgeons to tend the wounded and priests to shrive the dying. The path
was blocked by this throng, but all over the face of the country
horsemen and footmen, gentle and simple, men and women, could be seen
speeding their way to the scene of the encounter.

The journey was not a long one, for presently, as they threaded their
way through the fields, there appeared before them a great gray oak
which spread its gnarled leafless branches over the corner of a green
and level meadow. The tree was black with the peasants who had climbed
into it, and all round it was a huge throng, chattering and calling
like a rookery at sunset. A storm of hooting broke out from them at the
approach of the English, for Bambro was hated in the country where he
raised money for the Montfort cause by putting every parish to ransom
and maltreating those who refused to pay. There was little amenity in
the warlike ways which had been learned upon the Scottish border. The
champions rode onward without deigning to take notice of the taunts of
the rabble, but the archers turned that way and soon beat the mob to
silence. Then they resolved themselves into the keepers of the ground,
and pressed the people back until they formed a dense line along the
edge of the field, leaving the whole space clear for the warriors.

The Breton champions had not yet arrived, so the English tethered their
horses at one side of the ground, and then gathered round their leader.
Every man had his shield slung round his neck, and had cut his spear to
the length of five feet so that it might be more manageable for
fighting on foot. Besides the spear a sword or a battle-ax hung at the
side of each. They were clad from head to foot in armor, with devices
upon the crests and surcoats to distinguish them from their
antagonists. At present their visors were still up and they chatted
gayly with each other.

“By Saint Dunstan!” cried Percy, slapping his gauntleted hands together
and stamping his steel feet. “I shall be right glad to get to work, for
my blood is chilled.”

“I warrant you will be warm enough ere you get through,” said Calverly.

“Or cold forever. Candle shall burn and bell toll at Alnwick Chapel if
I leave this ground alive, but come what may, fair sirs, it should be a
famous joust and one which will help us forward. Surely each of us will
have worshipfully won worship, if we chance to come through.”

“You say truth, Thomas,” said Knolles, bracing his girdle. “For my own
part I have no joy in such encounters when there is warfare to be
carried out, for it standeth not aright that a man should think of his
own pleasure and advancement rather than of the King’s cause and the
weal of the army. But in times of truce I can think of no better way in
which a day may be profitably spent. Why so silent, Nigel?”

“Indeed, fair sir, I was looking toward Josselin, which lies as I
understand beyond those woods. I see no sign of this debonair gentleman
and of his following. It would be indeed grievous pity if any cause
came to hold them back.”

Hugh Calverly laughed at the words. “You need have no fear, young sir,”
said he. “Such a spirit lies in Robert de Beaumanoir that if he must
come alone he would ride against us none the less. I warrant that if he
were on a bed of death he would be borne here and die on the green
field.”

“You say truly, Hugh,” said Bambro. “I know him and those who ride
behind him. Thirty stouter men or more skilled in arms are not to be
found in Christendom. It is in my mind that come what may there will be
much honor for all of us this day. Ever in my head I have a rhyme which
the wife of a Welsh archer gave me when I crossed her hand with a
golden bracelet after the intaking of Bergerac. She was of the old
blood of Merlin with the power of sight. Thus she said—

“’Twixt the oak-tree and the river
Knightly fame aid brave endeavor
Make an honored name forever.’


Methinks I see the oak-tree, and yonder is the river. Surely this
should betide some good to us.”

The huge German Squire betrayed some impatience during this speech of
his leader. Though his rank was subordinate, no man present had more
experience of warfare or was more famous as a fighter than he. He new
broke brusquely into the talk. “We should be better employed in
ordering our line and making our plans than in talking of the rhymes of
Merlin or such old wives’ tales,” said he. “It is to our own strong
arms and good weapons that we must trust this day. And first I would
ask you, Sir Richard, what is your will if perchance you should fall in
the midst of the fight?”

Bambro turned to the others. “If such should be the case, fair sirs, I
desire that my Squire Croquart should command.”

There was a pause while the knights looked with some chagrin at each
other. The silence was broken by Knolles.

“I will do what you say, Richard,” said he, “though indeed it is bitter
that we who are knights should serve beneath a squire. Yet it is not
for us to fall out among ourselves now at this last moment, and I have
ever heard that Croquart is a very worthy and valiant man. Therefore, I
will pledge you on jeopardy of my soul that I will accept him as leader
if you fall.”

“So will I also, Richard,” said Calverly.

“And I too!” cried Belford. “But surely I hear music, and yonder are
their pennons amid the trees.”

They all turned, leaning upon their short spears, and watched the
advance of the men of Josselin, as their troop wound its way out from
the woodlands. In front rode three heralds with tabards of the ermine
of Brittany, blowing loudly upon silver trumpets. Behind them a great
man upon a white horse bore the banner of Josselin which carries nine
golden torteaus upon a scarlet field. Then came the champions riding
two and two, fifteen knights and fifteen squires, each with his pennon
displayed. Behind them on a litter was borne an aged priest, the Bishop
of Rennes, carrying in his hands the viaticum and the holy oils that he
might give the last aid and comfort of the Church to those who were
dying. The procession was terminated by hundreds of men and women from
Josselin, Guegon, and Helleon, and by the entire garrison of the
fortress, who came, as the English had done, without their arms. The
head of this long column had reached the field before the rear were
clear of the wood, but as they arrived the champions picketed their
horses on the farther side, behind which their banner was planted and
the people lined up until they had inclosed the whole lists with a
dense wall of spectators.

With keen eyes the English party had watched the armorial blazonry of
their antagonists, for those fluttering pennons and brilliant surcoats
carried a language which all men could read. In front was the banner of
Beaumanoir, blue with silver frets. His motto “_J’ayme qui m’ayme_” was
carried on a second flag by a little page.

“Whose is the shield behind him—silver with scarlet drops?” asked
Knolles.

“It is his Squire, William of Montaubon,” Calverly answered. “And there
are the golden lion of Rochefort and the silver cross of Du Bois the
Strong. I would not wish to meet a better company than are before us
this day. See, there are the blue rings of young Tintiniac, who slew my
Squire Hubert last Lammastide. With the aid of Saint George I will
avenge him ere nightfall.”

“By the three kings of Almain,” growled Croquart, “we will need to
fight hard this day, for never have I seen so many good soldiers
gathered together. Yonder is Yves Cheruel, whom they call the man of
iron, Caro de Bodegat also with whom I have had more than one
bickering—that is he with the three ermine circles on the scarlet
shield. There too is left-handed Alain de Karanais; bear in mind that
his stroke comes on the side where there is no shield.”

“Who is the small stout man”—asked Nigel—“he with the black and silver
shield? By Saint Paul! he seems a very worthy person and one from whom
much might be gained, for he is nigh as broad as he is long.”

“It is Sir Robert Raguenel,” said Calverly, whose long spell of service
in Brittany had made him familiar with the people. “It is said that he
can lift a horse upon his back. Beware a full stroke of that steel
mace, for the armor is not made that can abide it. But here is the good
Beaumanoir, and surely it is time that we came to grips.”

The Breton leader had marshaled his men in a line opposite to the
English, and now he strode forward and shook Bambro by the hand. “By
Saint Cadoc! this is a very joyous meeting, Richard,” said he, “and we
have certainly hit upon a very excellent way of keeping a truce.”

“Indeed, Robert,” said Bambro, “we owe you much thanks, for I can see
that you have been at great pains to bring a worthy company against us
this day. Surely if all should chance to perish there will be few noble
houses in Brittany who will not mourn.”

“Nay, we have none of the highest of Brittany,” Beaumanoir answered.
“Neither a Blois, nor a Leon, nor a Rohan, nor a Conan, fights in our
ranks this day. And yet we are all men of blood and coat-armor, who are
ready to venture our persons for the desire of our ladies and the love
of the high order of knighthood. And now, Richard, what is your sweet
will concerning this fight?”

“That we continue until one or other can endure no longer, for since it
is seldom that so many brave men draw together it is fitting that we
see as much as is possible of each other.”

“Richard, your words are fair and good. It shall be even as you say.
For the rest, each shall fight as pleases him best from the time that
the herald calls the word. If any man from without shall break in upon
us he shall be hanged on yonder oak.”

With a salute he drew down his visor and returned to his own men, who
were kneeling in a twinkling, many colored group whilst the old bishop
gave them his blessing.

The heralds rode round with a warning to the spectators. Then they
halted at the side of the two bands of men who now stood in a long line
facing each other with fifty yards of grass between. The visors had
been closed, and every man was now cased in metal from head to foot,
some few glowing in brass, the greater number shining in steel. Only
their fierce eyes could be seen smoldering in the dark shadow of their
helmets. So for an instant they stood glaring and crouching.

Then with a loud cry of “_Allez!_” the herald dropped his upraised
hand, and the two lines of men shuffled as fast as their heavy armor
would permit until they met with a sharp clang of metal in the middle
of the field. There was a sound as of sixty smiths working upon their
anvils. Then the babel of yells and shouts from the spectators,
cheering on this party or that, rose and swelled until even the uproar
of the combat was drowned in that mighty surge.

So eager were the combatants to engage that in a few moments all order
had been lost and the two bands were mixed up in one furious
scrambling, clattering throng, each man tossed hither and thither,
thrown against one adversary and then against another, beaten and
hustled and buffeted, with only the one thought in his mind to thrust
with his spear or to beat with his ax against anyone who came within
the narrow slit of vision left by his visor.

But alas for Nigel and his hopes of some great deed! His was at least
the fate of the brave, for he was the first to fall. With a high heart
he had placed himself in the line as nearly opposite to Beaumanoir as
he could, and had made straight for the Breton leader, remembering that
in the out set the quarrel had been so ordered that it lay between
them. But ere he could reach his goal he was caught in the swirl of his
own comrades, and being the lighter man was swept aside and dashed into
the arms of Alain de Karanais, the left-handed swordsman, with such a
crash that the two rolled upon the ground together. Light footed as a
cat, Nigel had sprung up first, and was stooping over the Breton Squire
when the powerful dwarf Raguenel brought his mace thudding down upon
the exposed back of his helmet. With a groan Nigel fell upon his face,
blood gushing from his mouth, nose, and ears. There he lay, trampled
over by either party, while that great fight for which his fiery soul
had panted was swaying back and forward above his unconscious form.

But Nigel was not long unavenged. The huge iron club of Belford struck
the dwarf Raguenel to the ground, while Belford in turn was felled by a
sweeping blow from Beaumanoir. Sometimes a dozen were on the ground at
one time, but so strong was the armor, and so deftly was the force of a
blow broken by guard and shield, that the stricken men were often
pulled to their feet once more by their comrades, and were able to
continue the fight.

Some, however, were beyond all aid. Croquart had cut at a Breton knight
named Jean Rousselot and had shorn away his shoulder-piece, exposing
his neck and the upper part of his arm. Vainly he tried to cover this
vulnerable surface with his shield. It was his right side, and he could
not stretch it far enough across, nor could he get away on account of
the press of men around him. For a time he held his foemen at bay, but
that bare patch of white shoulder was a mark for every weapon, until at
last a hatchet sank up to the socket in the knight’s chest. Almost at
the same moment a second Breton, a young Squire named Geoffrey Mellon,
was slain by a thrust from Black Simon which found the weak spot
beneath the armpit. Three other Bretons, Evan Cheruel, Caro de Bodegat,
and Tristan de Pestivien, the first two knights and the latter a
squire, became separated from their comrades, and were beaten to the
ground with English all around them, so that they had to choose between
instant death and surrender. They handed their swords to Bambro and
stood apart, each of them sorely wounded, watching with hot and bitter
hearts the melee which still surged up and down the field.

But now the combat had lasted half an hour without stint or rest, until
the warriors were so exhausted with the burden of their armor, the loss
of blood, the shock of blows, and their own furious exertions, that
they could scarce totter or raise their weapons. There must be a pause
if the combat was to have any decisive end. “_Cessez! Cessez!
Retirez!_” cried the heralds, as they spurred their horses between the
exhausted men.

Slowly the gallant Beaumanoir led the twenty-five men who were left to
their original station, where they opened their visors and threw
themselves down upon the grass, panting like weary dogs, and wiping the
sweat from their bloodshot eyes. A pitcher of wine of Anjou was carried
round by a page, and each in turn drained a cup, save only Beaumanoir
who kept his Lent with such strictness that neither food nor drink
might pass his lips before sunset. He paced slowly amongst his men,
croaking forth encouragement from his parched lips and pointing out to
them that among the English there was scarce a man who was not wounded,
and some so sorely that they could hardly stand. If the fight so far
had gone against them, there were still five hours of daylight, and
much might happen before the last of them was laid upon his back.

Varlets had rushed forth to draw away the two dead Bretons, and a brace
of English archers had carried Nigel from the field. With his own hands
Aylward had unlaced the crushed helmet and had wept to see the
bloodless and unconscious face of his young master. He still breathed,
however, and stretched upon the grass by the riverside the bowman
tended him with rude surgery, until the water upon his brow and the
wind upon his face had coaxed back the life into his battered frame. He
breathed with heavy gasps, and some tinge of blood crept hack into his
cheeks, but still he lay unconscious of the roar of the crowd and of
that great struggle which his comrades were now waging once again.

The English had lain for a space bleeding and breathless, in no better
case than their rivals, save that they were still twenty-nine in
number. But of this muster there were not nine who were hale men, and
some were so weak from loss of blood that they could scarce keep
standing. Yet, when the signal was at last given to reengage there was
not a man upon either side who did not totter to his feet and stagger
forward toward his enemies.

But the opening of this second phase of the combat brought one great
misfortune and discouragement to the English. Bambro like the others,
had undone his visor, but with his mind full of many cares he had
neglected to make it fast again. There was an opening an inch broad
betwixt it and the beaver. As the two lines met the left-handed Breton
squire, Alain de Karanais, caught sight of Bambro’s face, and in an
instant thrust his short spear through the opening. The English leader
gave a cry of pain and fell on his knees, but staggered to his feet
again, too weak to raise his shield. As he stood exposed the Breton
knight, Geoffrey Dubois the Strong, struck him such a blow with his ax
that he beat in the whole breast-plate with the breast behind it.
Bambro fell dead upon the ground and for a few minutes a fierce fight
raged round his body.

Then the English drew back, sullen and dogged, bearing Bambro with
them, and the Bretons, breathing hard, gathered again in their own
quarter. At the same instant the three prisoners picked up such weapons
as were scattered upon the grass and ran over to join their own party.

“Nay, nay!” cried Knolles, raising his visor and advancing. “This may
not be. You have been held to mercy when we might have slain you, and
by the Virgin I will hold you dishonored, all three, if you stand not
back.”

“Say not so, Robert Knolles,” Evan Cheruel answered. “Never yet has the
word dishonor been breathed with my name, but I should count myself
faineant if I did not fight beside my comrades when chance has made it
right and proper that I should do so.”

“By Saint Cadoc! he speaks truly,” croaked Beaumanoir, advancing in
front of his men. “You are well aware, Robert, that it is the law of
war and the usage of chivalry that if the knight to whom you have
surrendered is himself slain the prisoners thereby become released.”

There was no answer to this and Knolles, weary and spent, returned to
his comrades. “I would that we had slain them,” said he. “We have lost
our leader and they have gained three men by the same stroke.”

“If any more lay down their arms it is my order that you slay them
forthwith,” said Croquart, whose bent sword and bloody armor showed how
manfully he had borne himself in the fray. “And now, comrades, do not
be heavy-hearted because we have lost our leader. Indeed, his rhymes of
Merlin have availed him little. By the three kings of Almain! I can
teach you what is better than an old woman’s prophecies, and that is
that you should keep your shoulders together and your shields so close
that none can break between them. Then you will know what is on either
side of you, and you can fix your eyes upon the front. Also, if any be
so weak or wounded that he must sink his hands his comrades on right
and left can bear him up. Now advance all together in God’s name, for
the battle is still ours if we bear ourselves like men.”

In a solid line the English advanced, while the Bretons ran forward as
before to meet them. The swiftest of these was a certain Squire,
Geoffrey Poulart, who bore a helmet which was fashioned as a cock’s
head, with high comb above, and long pointed beak in front pierced with
the breathing-holes. He thrust with his sword at Calverly, but Belford
who was the next in the line raised his giant club and struck him a
crushing blow from the side. He staggered, and then pushing forth from
the crowd, he ran round and round in circles as one whose brain is
stricken, the blood dripping from the holes of his brazen beak. So for
a long time he ran, the crowd laughing and cock-crowing at the sight,
until at last he stumbled and fell stone-dead upon his face. But the
fighters had seen nothing of his fate, for desperate and unceasing was
the rush of the Bretons and the steady advance of the English line.

For a time it seemed as if nothing would break it, but gap-toothed
Beaumanoir was a general as well as a warrior. Whilst his weary,
bleeding, hard-breathing men still flung themselves upon the front of
the line, he himself with Raguenel, Tentiniac, Alain de Karanais, and
Dubois rushed round the flank and attacked the English with fury from
behind. There was a long and desperate melee until once more the
heralds, seeing the combatants stand gasping and unable to strike a
blow, rode in and called yet another interval of truce.

But in those few minutes whilst they had been assaulted upon both
sides, the losses of the English party had been heavy. The Anglo-Breton
D’Ardaine had fallen before Beaumanoir’s sword, but not before he had
cut deeply into his enemy’s shoulder. Sir Thomas Walton, Richard of
Ireland one of the Squires, and Hulbitee the big peasant had all fallen
before the mace of the dwarf Raguenel or the swords of his companions.
Some twenty men were still left standing upon either side, but all were
in the last state of exhaustion, gasping, reeling, hardly capable of
striking a blow.

It was strange to see them as they staggered with many a lurch and
stumble toward each other once again, for they moved like drunken men,
and the scales of their neck-armor and joints were as red as fishes’
gills when they raised them They left foul wet footprints behind them
on the green grass as they moved forward once more to their endless
contest.

Beaumanoir, faint with the drain of his blood and with a tongue of
leather, paused as he advanced. “I am fainting, comrades,” he cried. “I
must drink.”

“Drink your own blood, Beaumanoir!” cried Dubois, and the weary men all
croaked together in dreadful laughter.

But now the English had learned from experience, and under the guidance
of Croquart they fought no longer in a straight line, but in one so
bent that at last it became a circle. As the Bretons still pushed and
staggered against it they thrust it back on every side, until they had
turned it into the most dangerous formation of all, a solid block of
men, their faces turned outward, their weapons bristling forth to meet
every attack. Thus the English stood, and no assault could move them.
They could lean against each other back to back while they waited and
allowed their foemen to tire themselves out. Again and again the
gallant Bretons tried to make a way through. Again and again they were
beaten back by a shower of blows.

Beaumanoir, his head giddy with fatigue, opened his helmet and gazed in
despair at this terrible, unbreakable circle. Only too clearly he could
see the inevitable result. His men were wearing themselves out. Already
many of them could scarce stir hand or foot, and might be dead for any
aid which they could give him in winning the fight. Soon all would be
in the same plight. Then these cursed English would break their circle
to swarm over his helpless men and to strike them down. Do what he
might, he could see no way by which such an end might be prevented. He
cast his eyes round in his agony, and there was one of his Bretons
slinking away to the side of the lists. He could scarce credit his
senses when he saw by the scarlet and silver that the deserter was his
own well-tried squire, William of Montaubon.

“William! William!” he cried. “Surely you would not leave me?”

But the other’s helmet was closed and he could hear nothing. Beaumanoir
saw that he was staggering away as swiftly as he could. With a cry of
bitter despair, he drew into a knot as many of his braves as could
still move, and together they made a last rush upon the English spears.
This time he was firmly resolved, deep in his gallant soul, that he
would come no foot back, but would find his death there amongst his
foemen or carve a path into the heart of their ranks. The fire in his
breast spread from man to man of his followers, and amid the crashing
of blows they still locked themselves against the English shields and
drove hard for an opening in their ranks.

But all was vain! Beaumanoir’s head reeled. His senses were leaving
him. In another minute he and his men would have been stretched
senseless before this terrible circle of steel, when suddenly the whole
array fell in pieces before his eyes, his enemies Croquart, Knolles,
Calverly, Belford, all were stretched upon the ground together, their
weapons dashed from their hands and their bodies too exhausted to rise.
The surviving Bretons had but strength to fall upon them dagger in
hands, and to wring from them their surrender with the sharp point
stabbing through their visors. Then victors and vanquished lay groaning
and panting in one helpless and blood-smeared heap.

To Beaumanoir’s simple mind it had seemed that at the supreme moment
the Saints of Brittany had risen at their country’s call. Already, as
he lay gasping, his heart was pouring forth its thanks to his patron
Saint Cadoc. But the spectators had seen clearly enough the earthly
cause of this sudden victory, and a hurricane of applause from one
side, with a storm of hooting from the other showed how different was
the emotion which it raised in minds which sympathized with the victors
or the vanquished.

William of Montaubon, the cunning squire, had made his way across to
the spot where the steeds were tethered, and had mounted his own great
roussin. At first it was thought that he was about to ride from the
field, but the howl of execration from the Breton peasants changed
suddenly to a yell of applause and delight as he turned the beast’s
head for the English circle and thrust his long prick spurs into its
side. Those who faced him saw this sudden and unexpected appearance.
Time was when both horse and rider must have winced away from the
shower of their blows. But now they were in no state to meet such a
rush. They could scarce raise their arms. Their blows were too feeble
to hurt this mighty creature. In a moment it had plunged through the
ranks, and seven of them were on the grass. It turned and rushed
through them again, leaving five others helpless beneath its hoofs. No
need to do more! Already Beaumanoir and his companions were inside the
circle, the prostrate men were helpless, and Josselin had won.

That night a train of crestfallen archers, bearing many a prostrate
figure, marched sadly into Ploermel Castle. Behind them rode ten men,
all weary, all wounded, and all with burning hearts against William of
Montaubon for the foul trick that he had served them.

But over at Josselin, yellow gorse-blossoms in their helmets, the
victors were borne in on the shoulders of a shouting mob, amid the
fanfare of trumpets and the beating of drums. Such was the combat of
the Midway Oak, where brave men met brave men, and such honor was
gained that from that day he who had fought in the Battle of the Thirty
was ever given the highest place and the post of honor, nor was it easy
for any man to pretend to have been there, for it has been said by that
great chronicler who knew them all, that not one on either side failed
to carry to his grave the marks of that stern encounter.




XXIV.
HOW NIGEL WAS CALLED TO HIS MASTER


“My sweet ladye,” wrote Nigel in a script which it would take the eyes
of love to read, “there hath been a most noble meeting in the fourth
sennight of Lent betwixt some of our own people and sundry most worthy
persons of this country, which ended, by the grace of our Lady, in so
fine a joust that no man living can call to mind so fair an occasion.
Much honor was gained by the Sieurde Beaumanoir and also by an Almain
named Croquart, with whom I hope to have some speech when I am hale
again, for he is a most excellent person and very ready to advance
himself or to relieve another from a vow. For myself I had hoped, with
Godde’s help, to venture that third small deed which might set me free
to haste to your sweet side, but things have gone awry with me, and I
early met with such scathe and was of so small comfort to my friends
that my heart is heavy within me, and in sooth I feel that I have lost
honor rather than gained it. Here I have lain since the Feast of the
Virgin, and here I am like still to be, for I can move no limb, save
only my hand; but grieve not, sweet lady, for Saint Catharine hath been
our friend since in so short a time I had two such ventures as the Red
Ferret and the intaking of the Reaver’s fortalice. It needs but one
more deed, and sickerly when I am hale once more it will not be long
ere I seek it out. Till then, if my eyes may not rest upon you, my
heart at least is ever at thy feet.”

So he wrote from his sick-room in the Castle of Ploermel late in the
summer, but yet another summer had come before his crushed head had
mended and his wasted limbs had gained their strength once more. With
despair he heard of the breaking of the truce, and of the fight at
Mauron in which Sir Robert Knolles and Sir Walter Bentley crushed the
rising power of Brittany—a fight in which many of the thirty champions
of Josselin met their end. Then, when with renewed strength and high
hopes in his heart he went forth to search for the famous Croquart who
proclaimed himself ever ready night or day to meet any man with any
weapon, it was only to find that in trying the paces of his new horse
the German had been cast into a ditch and had broken his neck. In the
same ditch perished Nigel’s last chance of soon accomplishing that deed
which should free him from his vow.

There was truce once more over all Christendom, and mankind was sated
with war, so that only in far-off Prussia, where the Teutonic knights
waged ceaseless battle with the Lithuanian heathen, could he hope to
find his heart’s desire. But money and high knightly fame were needed
ere a man could go upon the northern crusade, and ten years were yet to
pass ere Nigel should look from the battlements of Marienberg on the
waters of the Frische Haff, or should endure the torture of the hot
plate when bound to the Holy Woden stone of Memel. Meanwhile, he chafed
his burning soul out through the long seasons of garrison life in
Brittany, broken only by one visit to the château of the father of
Raoul, when he carried to the Lord of Grosbois the news of how his son
had fallen like a gallant gentleman under the gateway of La Brohinière.

And then, then at last, when all hope was well-nigh dead in his heart,
there came one glorious July morning which brought a horseman bearing a
letter to the Castle of Vannes, of which Nigel now was seneschal. It
contained but few words, short and clear as the call of a war-trumpet.
It was Chandos who wrote. He needed his Squire at his side, for his
pennon was in the breeze once more. He was at Bordeaux. The Prince was
starting at once for Bergerac, whence he would make a great raid into
France. It would not end without a battle. They had sent word of their
coming, and the good French King had promised to be at great pains to
receive them. Let Nigel hasten at once. If the army had left, then let
him follow after with all speed. Chandos had three other squires, but
would very gladly see his fourth once again, for he had heard much of
him since he parted, and nothing which he might not have expected to
hear of his father’s son. Such was the letter which made the summer sun
shine brighter and the blue sky seem of a still fairer blue upon that
happy morning in Vannes.

It is a weary way from Vannes to Bordeaux. Coastwise ships are hard to
find, and winds blow north when all brave hearts would fain be speeding
south. A full month has passed from the day when Nigel received his
letter before he stood upon the quay-side of the Garonne amid the
stacked barrels of Gascon wine and helped to lead Pommers down the
gang-planks. Not Aylward himself had a worse opinion of the sea than
the great yellow horse, and he whinnied with joy as he thrust his
muzzle into his master’s outstretched hand, and stamped his ringing
hoofs upon the good firm cobblestones. Beside him, slapping his tawny
shoulder in encouragement, was the lean spare form of Back Simon who
had remained ever under Nigel’s pennon.

But Aylward, where was he? Alas! two years before he and the whole of
Knolles’ company of archers had been drafted away on the King’s service
to Guienne, and since he could not write the Squire knew not whether he
was alive or dead. Simon, indeed, had thrice heard of him from
wandering archers, each time that he was alive and well and newly
married, but as the wife in one case was a fair maid, and in another a
dark, while in the third she was a French widow, it was hard to know
the truth.

Already the army had been gone a month, but news of it came daily to
the town, and such news as all men could read, for through the landward
gates there rolled one constant stream of wagons, pouring down the
Libourne Road, and bearing the booty of Southern France. The town was
full of foot-soldiers, for none but mounted men had been taken by the
Prince. With sad faces and longing eyes they watched the passing of the
train of plunder-laden carts, piled high with rich furniture, silks,
velvets, tapestries, carvings, and precious metals, which had been the
pride of many a lordly home in fair Auvergne or the wealthy
Bourbonnais.

Let no man think that in these wars England alone was face to face with
France alone. There is glory and to spare without trifling with the
truth. Two Provinces in France, both rich and warlike, had become
English through a royal marriage, and these, Guienne and Gascony,
furnished many of the most valiant soldiers under the island flag. So
poor a country as England could not afford to keep a great force
overseas, and so must needs have lost the war with France through want
of power to uphold the struggle. The feudal system enabled an army to
be drawn rapidly together with small expense, but at the end of a few
weeks it dispersed again as swiftly, and only by a well-filled
money-chest could it be held together. There was no such chest in
England, and the King was forever at his wits’ end how to keep his men
in the field.

But Guienne and Gascony were full of knights and squires who were
always ready to assemble from their isolated castles for a raid into
France, and these with the addition of those English cavaliers who
fought for honor, and a few thousand of the formidable archers, hired
for fourpence a day, made an army with which a short campaign could be
carried on. Such were the materials of the Prince’s force, some eight
thousand strong, who were now riding in a great circle through Southern
France, leaving a broad wale of blackened and ruined country behind
them.

But France, even with her southwestern corner in English hands, was
still a very warlike power, far richer and more populous than her
rival. Single Provinces were so great that they were stronger than many
a kingdom. Normandy in the north, Burgundy in the east, Brittany in the
west and Languedoc in the south were each capable of fitting out a
great army of their own. Therefore the brave and spirited John,
watching from Paris this insolent raid into his dominions, sent
messengers in hot haste to all these great feudatories as well as to
Lorraine, Picardy, Auvergne, Hainault, Vermandois, Champagne, and to
the German mercenaries over his eastern border, bidding all of them to
ride hard, with bloody spur, day and night, until they should gather to
a head at Chartres.

There a great army had assembled early in September, whilst the Prince,
all unconscious of its presence sacked towns and besieged castles from
Bourges to Issodun, passing Romorautin, and so onward to Vierzon and to
Tours. From week to week there were merry skirmishes at barriers, brisk
assaults of fortresses in which much honor was won, knightly meetings
with detached parties of Frenchmen and occasional spear-runnings where
noble champions deigned to venture their persons. Houses, too, were to
be plundered, while wine and women were in plenty. Never had either
knights or archers had so pleasant and profitable an excursion, so that
it was with high heart and much hope of pleasant days at Bordeaux with
their pockets full of money that the army turned south from the Loire
and began to retrace its steps to the seaboard city.

But now its pleasant and martial promenade changed suddenly to very
serious work of war. As the Prince moved south he found that all
supplies had been cleared away from in front of him and that there was
neither fodder for the horses nor food for the men. Two hundred wagons
laden with spoil rolled at the head of the army, but the starving
soldiers would soon have gladly changed it all for as many loads of
bread and of meat. The light troops of the French had preceded then and
burned or destroyed everything that could be of use. Now also for the
first time the Prince and his men became aware that a great army was
moving upon the eastern side of them, streaming southward in the hope
of cutting off their retreat to the sea. The sky glowed with their
fires at night, and the autumn sun twinkled and gleamed from one end of
the horizon to the other upon the steel caps and flashing weapons of a
mighty host.

Anxious to secure his plunder, and conscious that the levies of France
were far superior in number to his own force, the Prince redoubled his
attempts to escape; but his horses were exhausted and his starving men
were hardly to be kept in order. A few more days would unfit them for
battle. Therefore, when he found near the village of Maupertuis a
position in which a small force might have a chance to hold its own, he
gave up the attempt to outmarch his pursuers, and he turned at bay,
like a hunted boar, all tusks and eyes of flame.

Whilst these high events had been in progress, Nigel with Black Simon
and four other men-at-arms from Bordeaux, was hastening northward to
join the army. As far as Bergerac they were in a friendly land, but
thence onward they rode over a blackened landscape with many a roofless
house, its two bare gable-ends sticking upward—a “Knolles’ miter” as it
was afterward called when Sir Robert worked his stern will upon the
country. For three days they rode northward, seeing many small parties
of French in all directions, but too eager to reach the army to ease
their march in the search of adventures.

Then at last after passing Lusignan they began to come in touch with
English foragers, mounted bowmen for the most part, who were
endeavoring to collect supplies either for the army or for themselves.
From them Nigel learned that the Prince, with Chandos ever at his side,
was hastening south and might be met within a short day’s march. As he
still advanced these English stragglers became more and more numerous,
until at last he overtook a considerable column of archers moving in
the same direction as his own party. These were men whose horses had
failed them and who had therefore been left behind on the advance, but
were now hastening to be in time for the impending battle. A crowd of
peasant girls accompanied them upon their march, and a whole train of
laden mules were led beside them.

Nigel and his little troop of men-at-arms were riding past the archers
when Black Simon with a sudden exclamation touched his leader upon the
arm.

“See yonder, fair sir,” he cried, with gleaming eyes, “there where the
wastrel walks with the great fardel upon his back! Who is he who
marches behind him?”

Nigel looked, and was aware of a stunted peasant who bore upon his
rounded back an enormous bundle very much larger than himself. Behind
him walked a burly broad-shouldered archer, whose stained jerkin and
battered headpiece gave token of long and hard service. His bow was
slung over his shoulder, and his arms were round the waists of two
buxom Frenchwomen, who tripped along beside him with much laughter and
many saucy answers flung back over their shoulders to a score of
admirers behind them.

“Aylward!” cried Nigel, spurring forward.

The archer turned his bronzed face, stared for an instant with wild
eyes, and then, dropping his two ladies, who were instantly carried off
by his comrades, he rushed to seize the hand which his young master
held down to him. “Now, by my hilt, Squire Nigel, this is the fairest
sight of my lifetime!” he cried. “And you, old leather-face! Nay,
Simon, I would put my arms round your dried herring of a body, if I
could but reach you. Here is Pommers too, and I read in his eye that he
knows me well and is as ready to put his teeth into me as when he stood
in my father’s stall.”

It was like a whiff of the heather-perfumed breezes of Hankley to see
his homely face once more. Nigel laughed with sheer joy as he looked at
him.

“It was an ill day when the King’s service called you from my side,”
said he, “and by Saint Paul! I am right glad to set eyes upon you once
more! I see well that you are in no wise altered, but the same Aylward
that I have ever known. But who is this varlet with the great bundle
who waits upon your movements?”

“It is no less than a feather-bed, fair sir, which he bears upon his
back, for I would fain bring it to Tilford, and yet it is overlarge for
me when I take my place with my fellows in the ranks. But indeed this
war has been a most excellent one, and I have already sent half a
wagonload of my gear back to Bordeaux to await my homecoming. Yet I
have my fears when I think of all the rascal foot-archers who are
waiting there, for some folk have no grace or honesty in their souls,
and cannot keep their hands from that which belongs to another. But if
I may throw my leg over yonder spare horse I will come on with you,
fair sir, for indeed it would be joy to my heart to know that I was
riding under your banner once again.”

So Aylward, having given instructions to the bearer of his feather-bed,
rode away in spite of shrill protests from his French companions, who
speedily consoled themselves with those of his comrades who seemed to
have most to give. Nigel’s party was soon clear of the column of
archers and riding hard in the direction of the Prince’s army. They
passed by a narrow and winding track, through the great wood of
Nouaille, and found before them a marshy valley down which ran a
sluggish stream. Along its farther bank hundreds of horses were being
watered, and beyond was a dense block of wagons. Through these the
comrades passed, and then topped a small mound from which the whole
strange scene lay spread before them.

Down the valley the slow stream meandered with marshy meadows on either
side. A mile or two lower a huge drove of horses were to be seen
assembled upon the bank. They were the steeds of the French cavalry,
and the blue haze of a hundred fires showed where King John’s men were
camping. In front of the mound upon which they stood the English line
was drawn, but there were few fires, for indeed, save their horses,
there was little for them to cook. Their right rested upon the river,
and their array stretched across a mile of ground until the left was in
touch with a tangled forest which guarded it from flank attack. In
front was a long thick hedge and much broken ground, with a single
deeply rutted country road cutting through it in the middle. Under the
hedge and along the whole front of the position lay swarms of archers
upon the grass, the greater number slumbering peacefully with sprawling
limbs in the warm rays of the September sun. Behind were the quarters
of the various knights, and from end to end flew the banners and
pennons marked with the devices of the chivalry of England and Guienne.

With a glow in his heart Nigel saw those badges of famous captains and
leaders and knew that now at last he also might show his coat-armor in
such noble company. There was the flag of Jean Grailly, the Captal de
Buch, five silver shells on a black cross, which marked the presence of
the most famous soldier of Gascony, while beside it waved the red lion
of the noble Knight of Hainault, Sir Eustace d’Ambreticourt. These two
coats Nigel knew, as did every warrior in Europe, but a dense grove of
pennoned lances surrounded them, bearing charges which were strange to
him, from which he understood that these belonged to the Guienne
division of the army. Farther down the line the famous English ensigns
floated on the wind, the scarlet and gold of Warwick, the silver star
of Oxford, the golden cross of Suffolk, the blue and gold of
Willoughby, and the gold-fretted scarlet of Audley. In the very center
of them all was one which caused all others to pass from his mind, for
close to the royal banner of England, crossed with the label of the
Prince, there waved the war-worn flag with the red wedge upon the
golden field which marked the quarters of the noble Chandos.

At the sight Nigel set spurs to his horse, and a few minutes later had
reached the spot. Chandos, gaunt from hunger and want of sleep, but
with the old fire lurking in his eye, was standing by the Prince’s
tent, gazing down at what could be seen of the French array, and heavy
with thought. Nigel sprang from his horse and was within touch of his
master when the silken hanging of the royal tent was torn violently
aside and Edward rushed out.

He was without his armor and clad in a sober suit of black, but the
high dignity of his bearing and the imperious anger which flushed his
face proclaimed the leader and the Prince. At his heels was a little
white-haired ecclesiastic in a flowing gown of scarlet sendal,
expostulating and arguing in a torrent of words.

“Not another word, my Lord Cardinal,” cried the angry prince. “I have
listened to you overlong, and by God’s dignity! that which you say is
neither good nor fair in my ears. Hark you, John, I would have your
counsel. What think you is the message which my Lord Cardinal of
Perigord has carried from the King of France? He says that of his
clemency he will let my army pass back to Bordeaux if we will restore
to him all that we have taken, remit all ransoms, and surrender my own
person with that of a hundred nobles of England and Guienne to be held
as prisoners. What think you, John?”

Chandos smiled. “Things are not done in that fashion,” said he.

“But my Lord Chandos,” cried the Cardinal, “I have made it clear to the
Prince that indeed it is a scandal to all Christendom and a cause of
mocking to the heathen, that two great sons of the Church should turn
their swords thus upon each other.”

“Then bid the King of France keep clear of us,” said the Prince.

“Fair son, you are aware that you are in the heart of his country and
that it standeth not aright that he should suffer you to go forth as
you came. You have but a small army, three thousand bowmen and five
thousand men-at-arms at the most, who seem in evil case for want of
food and rest. The King has thirty thousand men at his back, of which
twenty thousand are expert men-at-arms. It is fitting therefore that
you make such terms as you may, lest worse befall.”

“Give my greetings to the King of France and tell him that England will
never pay ransom for me. But it seems to me, my Lord Cardinal, that you
have our numbers and condition very ready upon your tongue, and I would
fain know how the eye of a Churchman can read a line of battle so
easily. I have seen that these knights of your household have walked
freely to and fro within our camp, and I much fear that when I welcomed
you as envoys I have in truth given my protection to spies. How say
you, my Lord Cardinal?”

“Fair Prince, I know not how you can find it in your heart or
conscience to say such evil words.”

“There is this red-bearded nephew of thine, Robert de Duras. See where
he stands yonder, counting and prying. Hark hither, young sir! I have
been saying to your uncle the Cardinal that it is in my mind that you
and your comrades have carried news of our dispositions to the French
King. How say you?”

The knight turned pale and sank his eyes. “My lord,” he murmured, “it
may be that I have answered some questions.”

“And how will such answers accord with your honor, seeing that we have
trusted you since you came in the train of the Cardinal?”

“My lord, it is true that I am in the train of the Cardinal, and yet I
am liege man of King John and a knight of France, so I pray you to
assuage your wrath against me.”

The Prince ground his teeth and his piercing eyes blazed upon the
youth. “By my father’s soul! I can scarce forbear to strike you to the
earth! But this I promise you, that if you show that sign of the Red
Griffin in the field and if you be taken alive in to-morrow’s battle,
your head shall most assuredly be shorn from your shoulders.”

“Fair son, indeed you speak wildly,” cried the Cardinal. “I pledge you
my word that neither my nephew Robert nor any of my train will take
part in the battle. And now I leave you, sire, and may God assoil your
soul, for indeed in all this world no men stand in greater peril than
you and those who are around you, and I rede you that you spend the
night in such ghostly exercises as may best prepare you for that which
may befall.” So saying the Cardinal bowed, and with his household
walking behind him set off for the spot where they had left their’
horses, whence they rode to the neighboring Abbey.

The angry Prince turned upon his heel and entered his tent once more,
whilst Chandos, glancing round, held out a warm welcoming hand to
Nigel.

“I have heard much of your noble deeds,” said he. “Already your name
rises as a squire errant. I stood no higher, nor so high, at your age.”

Nigel flushed with pride and pleasure. “Indeed, my dear lord, it is
very little that I have done. But now that I am back at your side I
hope that in truth I shall learn to bear myself in worthy fashion, for
where else should I win honor if it be not under your banner.”

“Truly, Nigel, you have come at a very good time for advancement. I
cannot see how we can leave this spot without a great battle which will
live in men’s minds forever. In all our fights in France I cannot call
to mind any in which they have been so strong or we so weak as now, so
that there will be the more honor to be gained. I would that we had two
thousand more archers. But I doubt not that we shall give them much
trouble ere they drive us out from amidst these hedges. Have you seen
the French?”

“Nay, fair sir, I have but this moment arrived.”

“I was about to ride forth myself to coast their army and observe their
countenance, so come with me ere the night fall, and we shall see what
we can of their order and dispositions.”

There was a truce betwixt the two forces for the day, on account of the
ill-advised and useless interposition of the Cardinal of Perigord,
Hence when Chandos and Nigel had pushed their horses through the long
hedge which fronted the position they found that many small parties of
the knights of either army were riding up and down on the plain
outside. The greater number of these groups were French, since it was
very necessary for them to know as much as possible of the English
defenses; and many of their scouts had ridden up to within a hundred
yards of the hedge, where they were sternly ordered back by the pickets
of archers on guard.

Through these scattered knots of horsemen Chandos rode, and as many of
them were old antagonists it was “Ha, John!” on the one side, and “Ha,
Raoul!” “Ha, Nicholas!” “Ha, Guichard!” upon the other, as they brushed
past them. Only one cavalier greeted them amiss, a large, red-faced
man, the Lord Clermont, who by some strange chance bore upon his
surcoat a blue virgin standing amid golden sunbeams, which was the very
device which Chandos had donned for the day. The fiery Frenchman dashed
across their path and drew his steed back on to its haunches.

“How long is it, my Lord Chandos,” said he hotly, “since you have taken
it upon yourself to wear my arms?”

Chandos smiled. “It is surely you who have mine,” said he, “since this
surcoat was worked for thee by the good nuns of Windsor a long year
ago.”

“If it were not for the truce,” said Clermont, “I would soon show you
that you have no right to wear it.”

“Look for it then in the battle to-morrow, and I also will look for
yours,” Chandos answered. “There we can very honorably settle the
matter.”

But the Frenchman was choleric and hard to appease. “You English can
invent nothing,” said he, “and you take for your own whatever you see
handsome belonging to others.” So, grumbling and fuming, he rode upon
his way, while Chandos, laughing gayly, spurred onward across the
plain.

The immediate front of the English line was shrouded with scattered
trees and bushes which hid the enemy; but when they had cleared these a
fair view of the great French army lay before them. In the center of
the huge camp was a long and high pavilion of red silk, with the silver
lilies of the King at one end of it, and the golden oriflamme, the
battle-flag of old France, at the other. Like the reeds of a pool from
side to side of the broad array, and dwindling away as far as their
eyes could see, were the banners and pennons of high barons and famous
knights, but above them all flew the ducal standards which showed that
the feudal muster of all the warlike provinces of France was in the
field before them.

With a kindling eye Chandos looked across at the proud ensigns of
Normandy, or Burgundy, of Auvergne, of Champagne, of Vermandois, and of
Berry, flaunting and gleaming in the rays of the sinking sun. Riding
slowly down the line he marked with attentive gaze the camp of the
crossbowmen, the muster of the German mercenaries, the numbers of the
foot-soldiers, the arms of every proud vassal or vavasor which might
give some guide as to the power of each division. From wing to wing and
round the flanks he went, keeping ever within crossbow-shot of the
army, and then at last having noted all things in his mind he turned
his horse’s head and rode slowly back, heavy with thought, to the
English lines.




XXV.
HOW THE KING OF FRANCE HELD COUNSEL AT MAUPERTUIS


The morning of Sunday, the nineteenth of September, in the year of our
Lord 1356, was cold and fine. A haze which rose from the marshy valley
of Muisson covered both camps and set the starving Englishmen
shivering, but it cleared slowly away as the sun rose. In the red
silken pavilion of the French King—the same which had been viewed by
Nigel and Chandos the evening before—a solemn mass was held by the
Bishop of Chalons, who prayed for those who were about to die, with
little thought in his mind that his own last hour was so near at hand.
Then, when communion had been taken by the King and his four young sons
the altar was cleared away, and a great red-covered table placed
lengthwise down the tent, round which John might assemble his council
and determine how best he should proceed. With the silken roof, rich
tapestries of Arras round the walls and Eastern rugs beneath the feet,
his palace could furnish no fairer chamber.

King John, who sat upon the canopied dais at the upper end, was now in
the sixth year of his reign and the thirty-sixth of his life. He was a
short burly man, ruddy-faced and deep-chested, with dark kindly eyes
and a most noble bearing. It did not need the blue cloak sewed with
silver lilies to mark him as the King. Though his reign had been short,
his fame was already widespread over all Europe as a kindly gentleman
and a fearless soldier—a fit leader for a chivalrous nation. His elder
son, the Duke of Normandy, still hardly more than a boy, stood beside
him, his hand upon the King’s shoulder, and John half turned from time
to time to fondle him. On the right, at the same high dais, was the
King’s younger brother, the Duke of Orleans, a pale heavy-featured man,
with a languid manner and intolerant eyes. On the left was the Duke of
Bourbon, sad-faced and absorbed, with that gentle melancholy in his
eyes and bearing which comes often with the premonition of death. All
these were in their armor, save only for their helmets, which lay upon
the board before them.

Below, grouped around the long red table, was an assembly of the most
famous warriors in Europe. At the end nearest the King was the veteran
soldier the Duke of Athens, son of a banished father, and now High
Constable of France. On one side of him sat the red-faced and choleric
Lord Clermont, with the same blue Virgin in golden rays upon his
surcoat which had caused his quarrel with Chandos the night before. On
the other was a noble-featured grizzly-haired soldier, Arnold
d’Andreghen, who shared with Clermont the honor of being Marshal of
France. Next to them sat Lord James of Bourbon, a brave warrior who was
afterwards slain by the White Company at Brignais, and beside him a
little group of German noblemen, including the Earl of Salzburg and the
Earl of Nassau, who had ridden over the frontier with their formidable
mercenaries at the bidding of the French King. The ridged armor and the
hanging nasals of their bassinets were enough in themselves to tell
every soldier that they were from beyond the Rhine. At the other side
of the table were a line of proud and warlike Lords, Fiennes,
Chatillon, Nesle, de Landas, de Beaujeu, with the fierce knight errant
de Chargny, he who had planned the surprise of Calais, and Eustace de
Ribeaumont, who had upon the same occasion won the prize of valor from
the hands of Edward of England. Such were the chiefs to whom the King
now turned for assistance and advice.

“You have already heard, my friends,” said he, “that the Prince of
Wales has made no answer to the proposal which we sent by the Lord
Cardinal of Perigord. Certes this is as it should be, and though I have
obeyed the call of Holy Church I had no fears that so excellent a
Prince as Edward of England would refuse to meet us in battle. I am now
of opinion that we should fall upon them at once, lest perchance the
Cardinal’s cross should again come betwixt our swords and our enemies.”

A buzz of joyful assent arose from the meeting, and even from the
attendant men-at-arms who guarded the door. When it had died away the
Duke of Orleans rose in his place beside the King.

“Sire,” said he, “you speak as we would have you do, and I for one am
of opinion that the Cardinal of Perigord has been an ill friend of
France, for why should we bargain for a part when we have but to hold
out our hand in order to grasp the whole? What need is there for words?
Let us spring to horse forthwith and ride over this handful of
marauders who have dared to lay waste your fair dominions. If one of
them go hence save as our prisoner we are the more to blame.”

“By Saint Denis, brother!” said the King, smiling, “if words could slay
you would have had them all upon their backs ere ever we left Chartres.
You are new to war, but when you have had experience of a stricken
field or two you would know that things must be done with forethought
and in order or they may go awry. In our father’s time we sprang to
horse and spurred upon these English at Crécy and elsewhere as you
advise, but we had little profit from it, and now we are grown wiser.
How say you, Sieur de Ribeaumont? You have coasted their lines and
observed their countenance. Would you ride down upon them, as my
brother has advised, or how would you order the matter?”

De Ribeaumont, a tall dark-eyed handsome man, paused ere he answered.
“Sire,” he said at last, “I have indeed ridden along their front and
down their flanks, in company with Lord Landas and Lord de Beaujeu, who
are here at your council to witness to what I say. Indeed, sire, it is
in my mind that though the English are few in number yet they are in
such a position amongst these hedges and vines that you would be
well-advised if you were to leave them alone, for they have no food and
must retreat, so that you will be able to follow them and to fight them
to better advantage.”

A murmur of disapproval rose from the company, and the Lord Clermont,
Marshal of the army, sprang to his feet, his face red with anger.

“Eustace; Eustace,” said he, “I bear in mind the days when you were of
great heart and high enterprise, but since King Edward gave you yonder
chaplet of pearls you have ever been backward against the English!”

“My Lord Clermont,” said de Ribeaumont sternly, “it is not for me to
brawl at the King’s council and in the face of the enemy, but we will
go further into this matter at some other time. Meanwhile, the King has
asked me for my advice and I have given it as best I might.”

“It had been better for your honor, Sir Eustace, had you held your
peace,” said the Duke of Orleans. “Shall we let them slip from our
fingers when we have them here and are fourfold their number? I know
not where we should dwell afterwards, for I am very sure that we should
be ashamed to ride back to Paris, or to look our ladies in the eyes
again.”

“Indeed, Eustace, you have done well to say what is in your mind,” said
the King; “but I have already said that we shall join battle this
morning, so that there is no room here for further talk. But I would
fain have heard from you how it would be wisest and best that we attack
them?”

“I will advise you, sire, to the best of my power. Upon their right is
a river with marshes around it, and upon their left a great wood, so
that we can advance only upon the center. Along their front is a thick
hedge, and behind it I saw the green jerkins of their archers, as thick
as the sedges by the river. It is broken by one road where only four
horsemen could ride abreast, which leads through the position. It is
clear then that if we are to drive them back we must cross the great
hedge, and I am very sure that the horses will not face it with such a
storm of arrows beating from behind it. Therefore, it is my council
that we fight upon foot, as the English did at Crécy, for indeed we may
find that our horses will be more hindrance than help to us this day.”

“The same thought was in my own mind, sire,” said Arnold d’Andreghen
the veteran Marshal. “At Crécy the bravest had to turn their backs, for
what can a man do with a horse which is mad with pain and fear? If we
advance upon foot we are our own masters, and if we stop the shame is
ours.”

“The counsel is good,” said the Duke of Athens, turning his shrewd
wizened face to the King; “but one thing only I would add to it. The
strength of these people lies in their archers, and if we could throw
them into disorder, were it only for a short time, we should win the
hedge; else they will shoot so strongly that we must lose many men
before we reach it, for indeed we have learned that no armor will keep
out their shafts when they are close.”

“Your words, fair sir, are both good and wise,” said the King, “but I
pray you to tell us how you would throw these archers into disorder?”

“I would choose three hundred horsemen, sire, the best and most forward
in the army. With these I would ride up the narrow road, and so turn to
right and left, falling upon the archers behind the hedge. It may be
that the three hundred would suffer sorely, but what are they among so
great a host, if a road may be cleared for their companions?”

“I would say a word to that, sire,” cried the German Count of Nassau,
“I have come here with my comrades to venture our persons in your
quarrel; but we claim the right to fight in our own fashion, and we
would count it dishonor to dismount from our steeds out of fear of the
arrows of the English. Therefore, with your permission, we will ride to
the front, as the Duke of Athens has advised, and so clear a path for
the rest of you.”

“This may not be!” cried the Lord Clermont angrily. “It would be
strange indeed if Frenchmen could not be found to clear a path for the
army of the King of France. One would think to hear you talk, my Lord
Count, that your hardihood was greater than our own, but by our Lady of
Rocamadour you will learn before nightfall that it is not so. It is for
me, who am a Marshal of France; to lead these three hundred, since it
is an honorable venture.”

“And I claim the same right for the same reason,” said Arnold of
Andreghen.

The German Count struck the table with his mailed fist. “Do what you
like!” said he. “But this only I can promise you, that neither I nor
any of my German riders will descend from our horses so long as they
are able to carry us, for in our country it is only people of no
consequence who fight upon their feet.”

The Lord Clermont was leaning angrily forward with some hot reply when
King John intervened. “Enough, enough!” he said. “It is for you to give
your opinions, and for me to tell you what you will do. Lord Clermont,
and you, Arnold, you will choose three hundred of the bravest cavaliers
in the army and you will endeavor to break these archers. As to you and
your Germans, my Lord Nassau, you will remain upon horseback, since you
desire it, and you will follow the Marshals and support them as best
you may. The rest of the army will advance upon foot, in three other
divisions as arranged: yours, Charles,” and he patted his son, the Duke
of Normandy, affectionately upon the hand; “yours, Philip,” he glanced
at the Duke of Orleans; “and the main battle which is my own. To you,
Geoffrey de Chargny, I intrust the oriflamme this day. But who is this
knight and what does he desire?”

A young knight, ruddy-bearded and tall, a red griffin upon his surcoat,
had appeared in the opening of the tent. His flushed face and
disheveled dress showed that he had come in haste. “Sire,” said he, “I
am Robert de Duras, of the household of the Cardinal de Perigord. I
have told you yesterday all that I have learned of the English camp.
This morning I was again admitted to it, and I have seen their wagons
moving to the rear. Sire, they are in flight for Bordeaux.”

“’Fore God, I knew it!” cried the Duke of Orleans in a voice of fury.
“Whilst we have been talking they have slipped through our fingers. Did
I not warn you?”

“Be silent, Philip!” said the King angrily. “But you, sir, have you
seen this with your own eyes?”

“With my own eyes, sire, and I have ridden straight from their camp.”

King John looked at him with a stern gaze. “I know not how it accords
with your honor to carry such tidings in such a fashion,” said he; “but
we cannot choose but take advantage of it. Fear not, brother Philip, it
is in my mind that you will see all that you would wish of the
Englishmen before nightfall. Should we fall upon them whilst they cross
the ford it will be to our advantage. Now, fair sirs, I pray you to
hasten to your posts and to carry out all that we have agreed. Advance
the oriflamme, Geoffrey, and do you marshal the divisions, Arnold. So
may God and Saint Denis have us in their holy keeping this day!”

The Prince of Wales stood upon that little knoll where Nigel had halted
the day before. Beside him were Chandos, and a tall sun-burned warrior
of middle age, the Gascon Captal de Buch. The three men were all
attentively watching the distant French lines, while behind them a
column of wagons wound down to the ford of the Muisson.

Close in the rear four knights in full armor with open visors sat their
horses and conversed in undertones with each other. A glance at their
shields would have given their names to any soldier, for they were all
men of fame who had seen much warfare. At present they were awaiting
their orders, for each of them commanded the whole or part of a
division of the army. The youth upon the left, dark, slim and earnest,
was William Montacute, Earl of Salisbury, only twenty-eight years of
age and yet a veteran of Crécy. How high he stood in reputation is
shown by the fact that the command of the rear, the post of honor in a
retreating army, had been given to him by the Prince. He was talking to
a grizzled harsh-faced man, somewhat over middle age, with lion
features and fierce light-blue eyes which gleamed as they watched the
distant enemy. It was the famous Robert de Ufford, Earl of Suffolk, who
had fought without a break from Cadsand onward through the whole
Continental War. The other tall silent soldier, with the silver star
gleaming upon his surcoat, was John de Vere, Earl of Oxford, and he
listened to the talk of Thomas Beauchamp, a burly, jovial, ruddy
nobleman and a tried soldier, who leaned forward and tapped his mailed
hand upon the other’s steel-clad thigh. They were old
battle-companions, of the same age and in the very prime of life, with
equal fame and equal experience of the wars. Such was the group of
famous English soldiers who sat their horses behind the Prince and
waited for their orders.

“I would that you had laid hands upon him,” said the Prince angrily,
continuing his conversation with Chandos, “and yet, perchance, it was
wiser to play this trick and make them think that we were retreating.”

“He has certainly carried the tidings,” said Chandos, with a smile. “No
sooner had the wagons started than I saw him gallop down the edge of
the wood.”

“It was well thought of, John,” the Prince remarked, “for it would
indeed be great comfort if we could turn their own spy against them.
Unless they advance upon us, I know not how we can hold out another
day, for there is not a loaf left in the army; and yet if we leave this
position where shall we hope to find such another?”

“They will stoop, fair sir, they will stoop to our lure. Even now
Robert de Duras will be telling them that the wagons are on the move,
and they will hasten to overtake us lest we pass the ford. But who is
this, who rides so fast? Here perchance may be tidings.”

A horseman had spurred up to the knoll. He sprang from the saddle, and
sank on one knee before the Prince.

“How now, my Lord Audley,” said Edward. “What would you have?”

“Sir,” said the knight, still kneeling with bowed head before his
leader, “I have a boon to ask of you.”

“Nay, James, rise! Let me hear what I can do.”

The famous knight errant, pattern of chivalry for all time; rose and
turned his swarthy face and dark earnest eyes upon his master. “Sir,”
said he, “I have ever served most loyally my lord your father and
yourself, and shall continue so to do so long as I have life. Dear sir,
I must now acquaint you that formerly I made a vow if ever I should be
in any battle under your command that I would be foremost or die in the
attempt. I beg therefore that you will graciously permit me to
honorably quit my place among the others, that I may post myself in
such wise as to accomplish my vow.”

The Prince smiled, for it was very sure that vow or no vow, permission
or no permission, Lord James Audley would still be in the van. “Go,
James,” said he, shaking his hand, “and God grant that this day you may
shine in valor above all knights. But hark, John, what is that?”

Chandos cast up his fierce nose like the eagle which smells slaughter
afar. “Surely, sir, all is forming even as we had planned it.”

From far away there came a thunderous shout. Then another and yet
another.

“See, they are moving!” cried the Captal de Buch.

All morning they had watched the gleam of the armed squadrons who were
drawn up in front of the French camp. Now whilst a great blare of
trumpets was borne to their ears, the distant masses flickered and
twinkled in the sunlight.

“Yes, yes, they are moving!” cried the Prince.

“They are moving! They are moving!” Down the line the murmur ran. And
then with a sudden impulse the archers at the hedge sprang to their
feet and the knights behind them waved their weapons in the air, while
one tremendous shout of warlike joy carried their defiance to the
approaching enemy. Then there fell such a silence that the pawing of
the horses or the jingle of their harness struck loud upon the ear,
until amid the hush there rose a low deep roar like the sound of the
tide upon the beach, ever growing and deepening as the host of France
drew near.




XXVI.
HOW NIGEL FOUND HIS THIRD DEED


Four archers lay behind a clump of bushes ten yards in front of the
thick hedge which shielded their companions. Amid the long line of
bowmen those behind them were their own company, and in the main the
same who were with Knolles in Brittany. The four in front were their
leaders: old Wat of Carlisle, Ned Widdington the red-headed Dalesman,
the bald bowyer Bartholomew, and Samkin Alyward, newly rejoined after a
week’s absence. All four were munching bread and apples, for Aylward
had brought in a full haversack and divided them freely amongst his
starving comrades. The old Borderer and the Yorkshireman were gaunt and
hollow-eyed with privation, while the bowyer’s round face had fallen in
so that the skin hung in loose pouches under his eyes and beneath his
jaws.

Behind them lines of haggard, wolfish men glared through the underwood,
silent and watchful save that they burst into a fierce yelp of welcome
when Chandos and Nigel galloped up, sprang from their horses and took
their station beneath them. All along the green fringe of bowmen might
be seen the steel-clad figures of knights and squires who had pushed
their way into the front line to share the fortune of the archers.

“I call to mind that I once shot six ends with a Kentish woldsman at
Ashford—” began the Bowyer.

“Nay, nay, we have heard that story!” said old Wat impatiently. “Shut
thy clap, Bartholomew, for it is no time for redeless gossip! Walk down
the line, I pray you, and see if there be no frayed string, nor broken
nock nor loosened whipping to be mended.”

The stout bowyer passed down the fringe of bowmen, amidst a running
fire of rough wit. Here and there a bow was thrust out at him through
the hedge for his professional advice.

“Wax your heads!” he kept crying. “Pass down the wax-pot and wax your
heads. A waxed arrow will pass where a dry will be held. Tom Beverley,
you jack-fool! where is your bracer-guard? Your string will flay your
arm ere you reach your up-shot this day. And you, Watkin, draw not to
your mouth, as is your wont, but to your shoulder. You are so used to
the wine-pot that the string must needs follow it. Nay, stand loose,
and give space for your drawing arms, for they will be on us anon.”

He ran back and joined his comrades in the front, who had now risen to
their feet. Behind them a half-mile of archers stood behind the hedge,
each with his great warbow strung, half a dozen shafts loose behind
him, and eighteen more in the quiver slung across his front. With arrow
on string, their feet firm-planted, their fierce eager faces peering
through the branches, they awaited the coming storm.

The broad flood of steel, after oozing slowly forward, had stopped
about a mile from the English front. The greater part of the army had
then descended from their horses, while a crowd of varlets and hostlers
led them to the rear. The French formed themselves now into three great
divisions, which shimmered in the sun like silvery pools, reed-capped
with many a thousand of banners and pennons. A space of several hundred
yards divided each. At the same time two bodies of horsemen formed
themselves in front. The first consisted of three hundred men in one
thick column, the second of a thousand, riding in a more extended line.

The Prince had ridden up to the line of archers. He was in dark armor,
his visor open, and his handsome aquiline face all glowing with spirit
and martial fire. The bowmen yelled at him, and he waved his hands to
them as a huntsman cheers his hounds.

“Well, John, what think you now?” he asked. “What would my noble father
not give to be by our side this day? Have you seen that they have left
their horses?”

“Yes, my fair lord, they have learned their lesson,” said Chandos.
“Because we have had good fortune upon our feet at Crécy and elsewhere
they think that they have found the trick of it. But it is in my mind
that it is very different to stand when you are assailed, as we have
done, and to assail others when you must drag your harness for a mile
and come weary to the fray.”

“You speak wisely, John. But these horsemen who form in front and ride
slowly towards us, what make you of them?”

“Doubtless they hope to cut the strings of our bowmen and so clear a
way for the others. But they are indeed a chosen band, for mark you,
fair sir, are not those the colors of Clermont upon the left, and of
d’Andreghen upon the right, so that both marshals ride with the
vanguard?”

“By God’s soul, John!” cried the Prince, “it is very sure that you can
see more with one eye than any man in this army with two. But it is
even as you say. And this larger band behind?”

“They should be Germans, fair sir, by the fashion of their harness.”

The two bodies of horsemen had moved slowly over the plain, with a
space of nearly a quarter of a mile between them. Now, having come two
bowshots from the hostile line, they halted. All that they could see of
the English was the long hedge, with an occasional twinkle of steel
through its leafy branches, and behind that the spear-heads of the
men-at-arms rising from amidst the brushwood and the vines. A lovely
autumn countryside with changing many-tinted foliage lay stretched
before them, all bathed in peaceful sunshine, and nothing save those
flickering fitful gleams to tell of the silent and lurking enemy who
barred their way. But the bold spirit of the French cavaliers rose the
higher to the danger. The clamor of their war-cries filled the air, and
they tossed their pennoned spears over their heads in menace and
defiance. From the English line it was a noble sight, the gallant,
pawing, curveting horses, the many-colored twinkling riders, the swoop
and wave and toss of plume and banner.

Then a bugle rang forth. With a sudden yell every spur struck deep,
every lance was laid in rest, and the whole gallant squadron flew like
a glittering thunderbolt for the center of the English line.

A hundred yards they had crossed, and yet another hundred, but there
was no movement in front of them, and no sound save their own hoarse
battle-cries and the thunder of their horses. Ever swifter and swifter
they flew. From behind the hedge it was a vision of horses, white, bay
and black, their necks stretched, their nostrils distended, their
bellies to the ground, whilst of the rider one could but see a shield
with a plume-tufted visor above it, and a spear-head twinkling in
front.

Then of a sudden the Prince raised his hand and gave a cry. Chandos
echoed it, it swelled down the line, and with one mighty chorus of
twanging strings and hissing shafts the long-pent storm broke at last.

Alas for the noble steeds! Alas for the gallant men. When the lust of
battle is over who would not grieve to see that noble squadron break
into red ruin before the rain of arrows beating upon the faces and
breasts of the horses? The front rank crashed down, and the others
piled themselves upon the top of them, unable to check their speed, or
to swerve aside from the terrible wall of their shattered comrades
which had so suddenly sprung up before them. Fifteen feet high was that
blood-spurting mound of screaming, kicking horses and writhing,
struggling men. Here and there on the flanks a horseman cleared himself
and dashed for the hedge, only to have his steed slain under him and to
be hurled from his saddle. Of all the three hundred gallant riders, not
one ever reached that fatal hedge.

But now in a long rolling wave of steel the German battalion roared
swiftly onward. They opened in the center to pass that terrible mound
of death, and then spurred swiftly in upon the archers. They were brave
men, well led, and in their open lines they could avoid the clubbing
together which had been the ruin of the vanguard; yet they perished
singly even as the others had perished together. A few were slain by
the arrows. The greater number had their horses killed under them, and
were so shaken and shattered by the fall that they could not raise
their limbs, over-weighted with iron, from the spot where they lay.

Three men riding together broke through the bushes which sheltered the
leaders of the archers, cut down Widdington the Dalesman, spurred
onward through the hedge, dashed over the bowmen behind it, and made
for the Prince. One fell with an arrow through his head, a second was
beaten from his saddle by Chandos, and the third was slain by the
Prince’s own hand. A second band broke through near the river, but were
cut off by Lord Audley and his squires, so that all were slain. A
single horseman whose steed was mad with pain, an arrow in its eye and
a second in its nostril, sprang over the hedge and clattered through
the whole army, disappearing amid whoops and laughter into the woods
behind. But none others won as far as the hedge. The whole front of the
position was fringed with a litter of German wounded or dead, while one
great heap in the center marked the downfall of the gallant French
three hundred.

Whilst these two waves of the attack had broken in front of the English
position, leaving this blood-stained wreckage behind them, the main
divisions had halted and made their last preparations for their own
assault. They had not yet begun their advance, and the nearest was
still half a mile distant, when the few survivors from the forlorn
hope, their maddened horses bristling with arrows, flew past them on
either flank.

At the same moment the English archers and men-at-arms dashed through
the hedge, and dragged all who were living out of that tangled heap of
shattered horses and men. It was a mad wild rush, for in a few minutes
the fight must be renewed, and yet there was a rich harvest of wealth
for the lucky man who could pick a wealthy prisoner from amid the
crowd. The nobler spirits disdained to think of ransoms whilst the
fight was still unsettled; but a swarm of needy soldiers, Gascons and
English, dragged the wounded out by the leg or the arm, and with
daggers at their throats demanded their names, title and means. He who
had made a good prize hurried him to the rear where his own servants
could guard him, while he who was disappointed too often drove the
dagger home and then rushed once more into the tangle in the hope of
better luck. Clermont, with an arrow through the sky-blue Virgin on his
surcoat, lay dead within ten paces of the hedge; d’Andreghen was
dragged by a penniless squire from under a horse and became his
prisoner. The Earl of Salzburg and of Nassau were both found helpless
on the ground and taken to the rear. Aylward cast his thick arms round
Count Otto von Langenbeck, and laid him, helpless from a broken leg,
behind his bush. Black Simon had made prize of Bernard, Count of
Ventadour, and hurried him through the hedge. Everywhere there was
rushing and shouting, brawling and buffeting, while amidst it all a
swarm of archers were seeking their shafts, plucking them from the
dead, and sometimes even from the wounded. Then there was a sudden cry
of warning. In a moment every man was back in his place once more, and
the line of the hedge was clear.

It was high time; for already the first division of the French was
close upon them. If the charge of the horsemen had been terrible from
its rush and its fire, this steady advance of a huge phalanx of armored
footmen was even more fearsome to the spectator. They moved very
slowly, on account of the weight of their armor, but their progress was
the more regular and inexorable. With elbows touching—their shields
slung in front, their short five-foot spears carried in their right
hands, and their maces or swords ready at their belts, the deep column
of men-at-arms moved onward. Again the storm of arrows beat upon them
clinking and thudding on the armor. They crouched double behind their
shields as they met it. Many fell, but still the slow tide lapped
onward. Yelling, they surged up to the hedge, and lined it for half a
mile, struggling hard to pierce it.

For five minutes the long straining ranks faced each other with fierce
stab of spear on one side and heavy beat of ax or mace upon the other.
In many parts the hedge was pierced or leveled to the ground, and the
French men-at-arms were raging amongst the archers, hacking and hewing
among the lightly armed men. For a moment it seemed as if the battle
was on the turn.

But John de Vere, Earl of Oxford, cool, wise and crafty in war, saw and
seized his chance. On the right flank a marshy meadow skirted the
river. So soft was it that a heavily-armed man would sink to his knees.
At his order a spray of light bowmen was thrown out from the battle
line and forming upon the flank of the French poured their arrows into
them. At the same moment Chandos, with Audley, Nigel, Bartholomew
Burghersh, the Captal de Buch, and a score of other knights sprang upon
their horses, and charging down the narrow lane rode over the French
line in front of them. Once through it they spurred to left and right,
trampling down the dismounted men-at-arms.

A fearsome sight was Pommers that day, his red eyes rolling, his
nostrils gaping, his tawny mane tossing, and his savage teeth gnashing
in fury, as he tore and smashed and ground beneath his ramping hoofs
all that came before him. Fearsome too was the rider, ice-cool; alert,
concentrated of purpose, with, heart of fire and muscles of steel. A
very angel of battle he seemed as he drove his maddened horse through
the thickest of the press, but strive as he would: the tall figure of
his master upon his coal-black steed was ever half a length before him.

Already the moment of danger was passed. The French line had given
back. Those who had pierced the hedge had fallen like brave men amid
the ranks of their foemen. The division of Warwick had hurried up from
the vineyards to fill the gaps of Salisbury’s battle-line. Back rolled
the shining tide, slowly at first, even as it had advanced, but quicker
now as the bolder fell and the weaker shredded out and shuffled with
ungainly speed for a place of safety. Again there was a rush from
behind the hedge. Again there was a reaping of that strange crop of
bearded arrows which grew so thick upon the ground, and again the
wounded prisoners were seized and dragged in brutal haste to the rear.
Then the line was restored, and the English, weary, panting and shaken,
awaited the next attack.

But a great good fortune had come to them—so great that as they looked
down the valley they could scarce credit their own senses. Behind the
division of the Dauphin, which had pressed them so hard, stood a second
division hardly less numerous, led by the Duke of Orleans. The
fugitives from in front, blood-smeared and bedraggled, blinded with
sweat and with fear, rushed amidst its ranks in their flight, and in a
moment, without a blow being struck, had carried them off in their wild
rout. This vast array, so solid and so martial, thawed suddenly away
like a snow-wreath in the sun. It was gone, and in its place thousands
of shining dots scattered over the whole plain as each man made his own
way to the spot where he could find his horse and bear himself from the
field. For a moment it seemed that the battle was won, and a
thundershout of joy pealed up from the English line.

But as the curtain of the Duke’s division was drawn away it was only to
disclose stretching far behind it, and spanning the valley from side to
side, the magnificent array of the French King, solid, unshaken, and
preparing its ranks for the attack. Its numbers were as great as those
of the English army; it was unscathed by all that was past, and it had
a valiant monarch to lead it to the charge. With the slow deliberation
of the man who means to do or to die, its leader marshaled its ranks
for the supreme effort of the day.

Meanwhile during that brief moment of exultation when the battle
appeared to be won, a crowd of hot-headed young knights and squires
swarmed and clamored round the Prince, beseeching that he would allow
them to ride forth.

“See this insolent fellow who bears three martlets upon a field gales!”
cried Sir Maurice Berkeley. “He stands betwixt the two armies as though
he had no dread of us.”

“I pray you, sir, that I may ride out to him, since he seems ready to
attempt some small deed,” pleaded Nigel.

“Nay, fair sirs, it is an evil thing that we should break our line,
seeing that we still have much to do,” said the Prince. “See! he rides
away, and so the matter is settled.”

“Nay, fair prince,” said the young knight who had spoken first. “My
gray horse, Lebryte, could run him down ere he could reach shelter.
Never since I left Severn side have I seen steed so fleet as mine.
Shall I not show you?” In an instant he had spurred the charger and was
speeding across the plain.

The Frenchman, John de Helennes, a squire of Picardy, had waited with a
burning heart, his soul sick at the flight of the division in which he
had ridden. In the hope of doing some redeeming exploit, or of meeting
his own death, he had loitered betwixt the armies, but no movement had
come from the English lines. Now he had turned his horse’s head to join
the King’s array, when the low drumming of hoofs sounded behind him,
and he turned to find a horseman hard upon his heels. Each had drawn
his sword, and the two armies paused to view the fight. In the first
bout Sir Maurice Berkeley’s lance was struck from his hand, and as he
sprang down to recover it the Frenchman ran him through the thigh,
dismounted from his horse, and received his surrender. As the
unfortunate Englishman hobbled away at the side of his captor a roar of
laughter burst from both armies at the spectacle.

“By my ten finger-bones!” cried Aylward, chuckling behind the remains
of his bush, “he found more on his distaff that time than he knew how
to spin. Who was the knight?”

“By his arms,” said old Wat, “he should either be a Berkeley of the
West or a Popham of Kent.”

“I call to mind that I shot a match of six ends once with a Kentish
woldsman—” began the fat Bowyer.

“Nay, nay, stint thy talk, Bartholomew!” cried old Wat. “Here is poor
Ned with his head cloven, and it would be more fitting if you were
saying aves for his soul, instead of all this bobance and boasting.
Now, now, Tom of Beverley?”

“We have suffered sorely in this last bout, Wat. There are forty of our
men upon their backs, and the Dean Foresters on the right are in worse
case still.”

“Talking will not mend it, Tom, and if all but one were on their backs
he must still hold his ground.”

Whilst the archers were chatting, the leaders of the army were in
solemn conclave just behind them. Two divisions of the French had been
repulsed, and yet there was many an anxious face as the older knights
looked across the plain at the unbroken array of the French King moving
slowly toward them. The line of the archers was much thinned and
shredded. Many knights and squires had been disabled in the long and
fierce combat at the hedge. Others, exhausted by want of food, had no
strength left and were stretched panting upon the ground. Some were
engaged in carrying the wounded to the rear and laying them under the
shelter of the trees, whilst others were replacing their broken swords
or lances from the weapons of the slain. The Captal de Buch, brave and
experienced as he was, frowned darkly and whispered his misgivings to
Chandos.

But the Prince’s courage flamed the higher as the shadow fell, while
his dark eyes gleamed with a soldier’s pride as he glanced round him at
his weary comrades, and then at the dense masses of the King’s battle
which now, with a hundred trumpets blaring and a thousand pennons
waving, rolled slowly over the plain. “Come what may, John, this has
been a most noble meeting,” said he. “They will not be ashamed of us in
England. Take heart, my friends, for if we conquer we shall carry the
glory ever with us; but if we be slain then we die most worshipfully
and in high honor, as we have ever prayed that we might die, and we
leave behind us our brothers and kinsmen who will assuredly avenge us.
It is but one more effort, and all will be well. Warwick, Oxford,
Salisbury, Suffolk, every man to the front! My banner to the front
also! Your horses, fair sirs! The archers are spent, and our own good
lances must win the field this day. Advance, Walter, and may God and
Saint George be with England!”

Sir Walter Woodland, riding a high black horse, took station by the
Prince, with the royal banner resting in a socket by his saddle. From
all sides the knights and squires crowded in upon it, until they formed
a great squadron containing the survivors of the battalions of Warwick
and Salisbury as well as those of the Prince. Four hundred men-at-arms
who had been held in reserve were brought up and thickened the array,
but even so Chandos’ face was grave as he scanned it and then turned
his eyes upon the masses of the Frenchmen.

“I like it not, fair sir. The weight is overgreat,” he whispered to the
Prince.

“How would you order it, John? Speak what is in your mind.”

“We should attempt something upon their flank whilst we hold them in
front. How say you, Jean?” He turned to the Captal de Buch, whose dark,
resolute face reflected the same misgivings.

“Indeed, John, I think as you do,” said he. “The French King is a very
valiant man, and so are those who are about him, and I know not how we
may drive them back unless we can do as you advise. If you will give me
only a hundred men I will attempt it.”

“Surely the task is mine, fair sir, since the thought has come from
me,” said Chandos.

“Nay, John, I would keep you at my side. But you speak well, Jean, and
you shall do even as you have said. Go ask the Earl of Oxford for a
hundred men-at-arms and as many hobblers, that you may ride round the
mound yonder, and so fall upon them unseen. Let all that are left of
the archers gather on each side, shoot away their arrows, and then
fight as best they may. Wait till they are past yonder thorn-bush and
then, Walter, bear my banner straight against that of the King of
France. Fair sirs, may God and the thought of your ladies hold high
your hearts!”

The French monarch, seeing that his footmen had made no impression upon
the English, and also that the hedge had been well-nigh leveled to the
ground in the course of the combat, so that it no longer presented an
obstacle, had ordered his followers to remount their horses, and it was
as a solid mass of cavalry that the chivalry of France advanced to
their last supreme effort. The King was in the center of the front
line, Geoffrey de Chargny with the golden oriflamme upon his right, and
Eustace de Ribeaumont with the royal lilies upon the left. At his elbow
was the Duke of Athens, High Constable of France, and round him were
the nobles of the court, fiery and furious, yelling their warcries as
they waved their weapons over their heads. Six thousand gallant men of
the bravest race in Europe, men whose very names are like blasts of a
battle-trumpet—Beaujeus and Chatillons, Tancarvilles and
Ventadours—pressed hard behind the silver lilies.

Slowly they moved at first, walking their horses that they might be the
fresher for the shock. Then they broke into a trot which was quickening
into a gallop when the remains of the hedge in front of them was beaten
in an instant to the ground and the broad line of the steel-clad
chivalry of England swept grandly forth to the final shock. With loose
rein and busy spur the two lines of horsemen galloped at the top of
their speed straight and hard for each other. An instant later they met
with a thunder-crash which was heard by the burghers on the wall of
Poitiers, seven good miles away.

Under that frightful impact horses fell dead with broken necks, and
many a rider, held in his saddle by the high pommel, fractured his
thighs with the shock. Here and there a pair met breast to breast, the
horses rearing straight upward and falling back upon their masters. But
for the most part the line had opened in the gallop, and the cavaliers,
flying through the gaps, buried themselves in the enemy’s ranks. Then
the flanks shredded out, and the thick press in the center loosened
until there was space to swing a sword and to guide a steed. For ten
acres there was one wild tumultuous swirl of tossing heads, of gleaming
weapons which rose and fell, of upthrown hands, of tossing plumes and
of lifted shields, whilst the din of a thousand war-cries and the
clash-clash of metal upon metal rose and swelled like the roar and beat
of an ocean surge upon a rock-bound coast. Backward and forward swayed
the mighty throng, now down the valley and now up, as each side in turn
put forth its strength for a fresh rally. Locked in one long deadly
grapple, great England and gallant France with iron hearts and souls of
fire strove and strove for mastery.

Sir Walter Woodland, riding hard upon his high black horse, had plunged
into the swelter and headed for the blue and silver banner of King
John. Close at his heels in a solid wedge rode the Prince, Chandos,
Nigel, Lord Reginald Cobham, Audley with his four famous squires, and a
score of the flower of the English and Gascon knighthood. Holding
together and bearing down opposition by a shower of blows and by the
weight of their powerful horses, their progress was still very slow,
for ever fresh waves of French cavaliers surged up against them and
broke in front only to close in again upon their rear. Sometimes they
were swept backward by the rush, sometimes they gained a few paces,
sometimes they could but keep their foothold, and yet from minute to
minute that blue and silver flag which waved above the press grew ever
a little closer. A dozen furious hard-breathing French knights had
broken into their ranks, and clutched at Sir Walter Woodland’s banner,
but Chandos and Nigel guarded it on one side, Audley with his squires
on the other, so that no man laid his hand upon it and lived.

But now there was a distant crash and a roar of “Saint George for
Guienne!” from behind. The Captal de Buch had charged home. “Saint
George for England!” yelled the main attack, and ever the counter-cry
came back to them from afar. The ranks opened in front of them. The
French were giving way. A small knight with golden scroll-work upon his
armor threw himself upon the Prince and was struck dead by his mace. It
was the Duke of Athens, Constable of France, but none had time to note
it, and the fight rolled on over his body. Looser still were the French
ranks. Many were turning their horses, for that ominous roar from the
rear had shaken their resolution. The little English wedge poured
onward, the Prince, Chandos, Audley and Nigel ever in the van.

A huge warrior in black, bearing a golden banner, appeared suddenly in
a gap of the shredding ranks. He tossed his precious burden to a
squire, who bore it away. Like a pack of hounds on the very haunch of a
deer the English rushed yelling for the oriflamme. But the black
warrior flung himself across their path. “Chargny! Chargny _à la
recousse!_” he roared with a voice of thunder. Sir Reginald Cobham
dropped before his battle-ax, so did the Gascon de Clisson. Nigel was
beaten down on to the crupper of his horse by a sweeping blow; but at
the same instant Chandos’ quick blade passed through the Frenchman’s
camail and pierced his throat. So died Geoffrey de Chargny; but the
oriflamme was saved.

Dazed with the shock, Nigel still kept his saddle, and Pommers, his
yellow hide mottled with blood, bore him onward with the others. The
French horsemen were now in full flight; but one stern group of knights
stood firm, like a rock in a rushing torrent, beating off all, whether
friend or foe, who tried to break their ranks. The oriflamme had gone,
and so had the blue and silver banner, but here were desperate men
ready to fight to the death. In their ranks honor was to be reaped. The
Prince and his following hurled themselves upon them, while the rest of
the English horsemen swept onward to secure the fugitives and to win
their ransoms. But the nobler spirits—Audley, Chandos and the
others—would have thought it shame to gain money whilst there was work
to be done or honor to be won. Furious was the wild attack, desperate
the prolonged defense. Men fell from their saddles for very exhaustion.

Nigel, still at his place near Chandos’ elbow, was hotly attacked by a
short broad-shouldered warrior upon a stout white cob, but Pommers
reared with pawing fore feet and dashed the smaller horse to the
ground. The falling rider clutched Nigel’s arm and tore him from the
saddle, so that the two rolled upon the grass under the stamping hoofs,
the English squire on the top, and his shortened sword glimmered before
the visor of the gasping, breathless Frenchman.

“_Je me rends! je me rends!_” he panted.

For a moment a vision of rich ransoms passed through Nigel’s brain.
That noble palfrey, that gold-flecked armor, meant fortune to the
captor. Let others have it! There was work still to be done. How could
he desert the Prince and his noble master for the sake of a private
gain? Could he lead a prisoner to the rear when honor beckoned him to
the van? He staggered to his feet, seized Pommers by the mane, and
swung himself into the saddle.

An instant later he was by Chandos’ side once more and they were
bursting together through the last ranks of the gallant group who had
fought so bravely to the end. Behind them was one long swath of the
dead and the wounded. In front the whole wide plain was covered with
the flying French and their pursuers.

The Prince reined up his steed and opened his visor, whilst his
followers crowded round him with waving weapons and frenzied shouts of
victory. “What now, John!” cried the smiling Prince, wiping his
streaming face with his ungauntleted hand. “How fares it then?”

“I am little hurt, fair lord, save for a crushed hand and a spear-prick
in the shoulder. But you, sir? I trust you have no scathe?”

“In truth, John, with you at one elbow and Lord Audley at the other, I
know not how I could come to harm. But alas! I fear that Sir James is
sorely stricken.”

The gallant Lord Audley had dropped upon the ground and the blood oozed
from every crevice of his battered armor. His four brave Squires—Dutton
of Dutton, Delves of Doddington, Fowlhurst of Crewe and Hawkstone of
Wainhill—wounded and weary themselves, but with no thought save for
their master, unlaced his helmet and bathed his pallid blood-stained
face.

He looked up at the Prince with burning eyes. “I thank you, sir, for
deigning to consider so poor a knight as myself,” said he in a feeble
voice.

The Prince dismounted and bent over him. “I am bound to honor you very
much, James,” said he, “for by your valor this day you have won glory
and renown above us all, and your prowess has proved you to be the
bravest knight.”

“My Lord,” murmured the wounded man, “you have a right to say what you
please; but I wish it were as you say.”

“James,” said the Prince, “from this time onward I make you a knight of
my own household, and I settle upon you five hundred marks of yearly
income from my own estates in England.”

“Sir,” the knight answered, “God make me worthy of the good fortune you
bestow upon me. Your knight I will ever be, and the money I will divide
with your leave amongst these four squires who have brought me whatever
glory I have won this day.” So saying his head fell back, and he lay
white and silent upon the grass.

“Bring water!” said the Prince. “Let the royal leech see to him; for I
had rather lose many men than the good Sir James. Ha, Chandos, what
have we here?”

A knight lay across the path with his helmet beaten down upon his
shoulders. On his surcoat and shield were the arms of a red griffin.

“It is Robert de Duras the spy,” said Chandos.

“Well for him that he has met his end,” said the angry Prince. “Put him
on his shield, Hubert, and let four archers bear him to the monastery.
Lay him at the feet of the Cardinal and say that by this sign I greet
him. Place my flag on yonder high bush, Walter, and let my tent be
raised there, that my friends may know where to seek me.”

The flight and pursuit had thundered far away, and the field was
deserted save for the numerous groups of weary horsemen who were making
their way back, driving their prisoners before them. The archers were
scattered over the whole plain, rifling the saddle-bags and gathering
the armor of those who had fallen, or searching for their own scattered
arrows.

Suddenly, however, as the Prince was turning toward the bush which he
had chosen for his headquarters, there broke out from behind him an
extraordinary uproar and a group of knights and squires came pouring
toward him, all arguing, swearing and abusing each other in French and
English at the tops of their voices. In the midst of them limped a
stout little man in gold-spangled armor, who appeared to be the object
of the contention, for one would drag him one way and one another, as
though they would pull him limb from limb. “Nay, fair sirs, gently,
gently, I pray you!” he pleaded. “There is enough for all, and no need
to treat me so rudely.” But ever the hubbub broke out again, and swords
gleamed as the angry disputants glared furiously at each other. The
Prince’s eyes fell upon the small prisoner, and he staggered back with
a gasp of astonishment.

“King John!” he cried.

A shout of joy rose from the warriors around him. “The King of France!
The King of France a prisoner!” they cried in an ecstasy.

“Nay, nay, fair sirs, let him not hear that we rejoice! Let no word
bring pain to his soul!” Running forward the Prince clasped the French
King by the two hands.

“Most welcome, sire!” he cried. “Indeed it is good for us that so
gallant a knight should stay with us for some short time, since the
chance of war has so ordered it. Wine there! Bring wine for the King!”

But John was flushed and angry. His helmet had been roughly torn off,
and blood was smeared upon his cheek. His noisy captors stood around
him in a circle, eying him hungrily like dogs who have been beaten from
their quarry. There were Gascons and English, knights, squires and
archers, all pushing and straining.

“I pray you, fair Prince, to get rid of these rude fellows,” said King
John, “for indeed they have plagued me sorely. By Saint Denis! my arm
has been well-nigh pulled from its socket.”

“What wish you then?” asked the Prince, turning angrily upon the noisy
swarm of his followers.

“We took him, fair lord. He is ours!” cried a score of voices. They
closed in, all yelping together like a pack of wolves. “It was I, fair
lord!”—“Nay, it was I!”—“You lie, you rascal, it was I!” Again their
fierce eyes glared and their blood-stained hands sought the hilts of
their weapons.

“Nay, this must be settled here and now!” said the Prince. “I crave
your patience, fair and honored sir, for a few brief minutes, since
indeed much ill-will may spring from this if it be not set at rest. Who
is this tall knight who can scarce keep his hands from the King’s
shoulder?”

“It is Denis de Morbecque, my lord, a knight of St. Omer, who is in our
service, being an outlaw from France.”

“I call him to mind. How then, Sir Denis? What say you in this matter?”

“He gave himself to me, fair lord. He had fallen in the press, and I
came upon him and seized him. I told him that I was a knight from
Artois, and he gave me his glove. See here, I bear it in my hand.”

“It is true, fair lord! It is true!” cried a dozen French voices.

“Nay, sir, judge not too soon!” shouted an English squire, pushing his
way to the front. “It was I who had him at my mercy, and he is my
prisoner, for he spoke to this man only because he could tell by his
tongue that he was his own countryman. I took him, and here are a score
to prove it.”

“It is true, fair lord. We saw it and it was even so,” cried a chorus
of Englishmen.

At all times there was growling and snapping betwixt the English and
their allies of France. The Prince saw how easily this might set a
light to such a flame as could not readily be quenched. It must be
stamped out now ere it had time to mount.

“Fair and honored lord,” he said to the King, “again I pray you for a
moment of patience. It is your word and only yours which can tell us
what is just and right. To whom were you graciously pleased to commit
your royal person?”

King John looked up from the flagon which had been brought to him and
wiped his lips with the dawnings of a smile upon his ruddy face.

“It was not this Englishman,” he said, and a cheer burst from the
Gascons, “nor was it this bastard Frenchman,” he added. “To neither of
them did I surrender.”

There was a hush of surprise.

“To whom then, sir?” asked the Prince.

The King looked slowly round. “There was a devil of a yellow horse,”
said he. “My poor palfrey went over like a skittle-pin before a ball.
Of the rider I know nothing save that he bore red roses on a silver
shield. Ah! by Saint Denis, there is the man himself, and there his
thrice-accursed horse!”

His head swimming, and moving as if in a dream, Nigel found himself the
center of the circle of armed and angry men.

The Prince laid his hand upon his shoulder. “It is the little cock of
Tilford Bridge,” said he. “On my father’s soul, I have ever said that
you would win your way. Did you receive the King’s surrender?”

“Nay, fair lord, I did not receive it.”

“Did you hear him give it?”

“I heard, sir, but I did not know that it was the King. My master Lord
Chandos had gone on, and I followed after.”

“And left him lying. Then the surrender was not complete, and by the
laws of war the ransom goes to Denis de Morbecque, if his story be
true.”

“It is true,” said the King. “He was the second.”

“Then the ransom is yours, Denis. But for my part I swear by my
father’s soul that I had rather have the honor this Squire has gathered
than all the richest ransoms of France.”

At these words spoken before that circle of noble warriors Nigel’s
heart gave one great throb, and he dropped upon his knee before the
Prince. “Fair lord, how can I thank you?” he murmured. “These words at
least are more than any ransom.”

“Rise up!” said the smiling Prince, and he smote with his sword upon
his shoulder. “England has lost a brave Squire, and has gained a
gallant knight. Nay, linger not, I pray! Rise up, Sir Nigel!”




XXVII.
HOW THE THIRD MESSENGER CAME TO COSFORD


Two months have passed, and the long slopes of Hindhead are russet with
the faded ferns—the fuzzy brown pelt which wraps the chilling earth.
With whoop and scream the wild November wind sweeps over the great
rolling downs, tossing the branches of the Cosford beeches, and
rattling at the rude latticed windows. The stout old knight of Duplin,
grown even a little stouter, with whiter beard to fringe an ever redder
face, sits as of yore at the head of his own board. A well-heaped
platter flanked by a foaming tankard stands before him. At his right
sits the Lady Mary, her dark, plain, queenly face marked deep with
those years of weary waiting, but bearing the gentle grace and dignity
which only sorrow and restraint can give. On his left is Matthew, the
old priest. Long ago the golden-haired beauty had passed from Cosford
to Fernhurst, where the young and beautiful Lady Edith Brocas is the
belle of all Sussex, a sunbeam of smiles and merriment, save perhaps
when her thoughts for an instant fly back to that dread night when she
was plucked from under the very talons of the foul hawk of Shalford.

The old knight looked up as a fresh gust of wind with a dash of rain
beat against the window behind him. “By Saint Hubert, it is a wild
night!” said he. “I had hoped to-morrow to have a flight at a heron of
the pool or a mallard in the brook. How fares it with little Katherine
the peregrine, Mary?”

“I have joined the wing, father, and I have imped the feathers; but I
fear it will be Christmas ere she can fly again.”

“This is a hard saying,” said Sir John; “for indeed I have seen no
bolder better bird. Her wing was broken by a heron’s beak last Sabbath
sennight, holy father, and Mary has the mending of it.”

“I trust, my son, that you had heard mass ere you turned to worldly
pleasure upon God’s holy day,” Father Matthew answered.

“Tut, tut!” said the old knight, laughing. “Shall I make confession at
the head of my own table? I can worship the good God amongst his own
works, the woods and the fields, better than in yon pile of stone and
wood. But I call to mind a charm for a wounded hawk which was taught me
by the fowler of Gaston de Foix. How did it run? ‘The lion of the Tribe
of Judah, the root of David, has conquered.’ Yes, those were the words
to be said three times as you walk round the perch where the bird is
mewed.”

The old priest shook his head. “Nay, these charms are tricks of the
Devil,” said he. “Holy Church lends them no countenance, for they are
neither good nor fair. But how is it now with your tapestry, Lady Mary?
When last I was beneath this roof you had half done in five fair colors
the story of Theseus and Ariadne.”

“It is half done still, holy father.”

“How is this, my daughter? Have you then so many calls?”

“Nay, holy father, her thoughts are otherwhere,” Sir John answered.
“She will sit an hour at a time, the needle in her hand and her soul a
hundred leagues from Cosford House. Ever since the Prince’s battle—”

“Good father, I beg you—”

“Nay, Mary, none can hear me, save your own confessor, Father Matthew.
Ever since the Prince’s battle, I say, when we heard that young Nigel
had won such honor she is brain-wode, and sits ever—well, even as you
see her now.”

An intent look had come into Mary’s eyes; her gaze was fixed upon the
dark rain-splashed window. It was a face carved from ivory,
white-lipped and rigid, on which the old priest looked.

“What is it, my daughter? What do you see?”

“I see nothing, father.”

“What is it then that disturbs you?”

“I hear, father.”

“What do you hear?”

“There are horsemen on the road.”

The old knight laughed. “So it goes on, father. What day is there that
a hundred horsemen do not pass our gate, and yet every clink of hoofs
sets her poor heart a-trembling. So strong and steadfast she has ever
been, my Mary, and now no sound too slight to shake her to the soul!
Nay, daughter, nay, I pray you!”

She had half-risen from her chair, her hands clenched and her dark,
startled eyes still fixed upon the window. “I hear them, father! I hear
them amid the wind and the rain! Yes, yes, they are turning—they have
turned! My God, they are at our very door!”

“By Saint Hubert, the girl is right!” cried old Sir John, beating his
fist upon the board. “Ho, varlets, out with you to the yard! Set the
mulled wine on the blaze once more! There are travelers at the gate,
and it is no night to keep a dog waiting at our door. Hurry, Hannekin!
Hurry, I say, or I will haste you with my cudgel!”

Plainly to the ears of all men could be heard the stamping of the
horses. Mary had stood up, quivering in every limb. An eager step at
the threshold, the door was flung wide, and there in the opening stood
Nigel, the rain gleaming upon his smiling face, his cheeks flushed with
the beating of the wind, his blue eyes shining with tenderness and
love. Something held her by the throat, the light of the torches danced
up and down; but her strong spirit rose at the thought that others
should see that inner holy of holies of her soul. There is a heroism of
women to which no valor of man can attain. Her eyes only carried him
her message as she held out her hand.

“Welcome, Nigel!” said she.

He stooped and kissed it.

“Saint Catharine has brought me home,” said he.

A merry supper it was at Cosford Manor that night, with Nigel at the
head betwixt the jovial old knight and the Lady Mary, whilst at the
farther end Samkin Aylward, wedged between two servant maids, kept his
neighbors in alternate laughter and terror as he told his tales of the
French Wars. Nigel had to turn his doeskin heels and show his little
golden spurs. As he spoke of what was passed Sir John clapped him on
the shoulder, while Mary took his strong right hand in hers, and the
good old priest smiling blessed them both. Nigel had drawn a little
golden ring from his pocket, and it twinkled in the torchlight.

“Did you say that you must go on your way to-morrow, father?” he asked
the priest.

“Indeed, fair son, the matter presses.”

“But you may bide the morning?”

“It will suffice if I start at noon.”

“Much may be done in a morning.” He looked at Mary, who blushed and
smiled. “By Saint Paul! I have waited long enough.”

“Good, good!” chuckled the old knight, with wheezy laughter. “Even so I
wooed your mother, Mary. Wooers were brisk in the olden time. To-morrow
is Tuesday, and Tuesday is ever a lucky day. Alas! that the good Dame
Ermyntrude is no longer with us to see it done! The old hound must run
us down, Nigel, and I hear its bay upon my own heels; but my heart will
rejoice that before the end I may call you son. Give me your hand,
Mary, and yours, Nigel. Now, take an old man’s blessing, and may God
keep and guard you both, and give you your desert, for I believe on my
soul that in all this broad land there dwells no nobler man nor any
woman more fitted to be his mate!”

There let us leave them, their hearts full of gentle joy, the golden
future of hope and promise stretching out before their youthful eyes.
Alas for those green spring dreaming! How often do they fade and wither
until they fall and rot, a dreary sight, by the wayside of life! But
here, by God’s blessing, it was not so, for they burgeoned and they
grew, ever fairer and more noble, until the whole wide world might
marvel at the beauty of it.

It has been told elsewhere how as the years passed Nigel’s name rose
higher in honor; but still Mary’s would keep pace with it, each helping
and sustaining the other upon an ever higher path. In many lands did
Nigel carve his fame, and ever as he returned spent and weary from his
work he drank fresh strength and fire and craving for honor from her
who glorified his home. At Twynham Castle they dwelled for many years,
beloved and honored by all. Then in the fullness of time they came back
to the Tilford Manor-house and spent their happy, healthy age amid
those heather downs where Nigel had passed his first lusty youth, ere
ever he turned his face to the wars. Thither also came Aylward when he
had left the “Pied Merlin” where for many a year he sold ale to the men
of the forest.

But the years pass; the old wheel turns and ever the thread runs out.
The wise and the good, the noble and the brave, they come from the
darkness, and into the darkness they go, whence, whither and why, who
may say? Here is the slope of Hindhead. The fern still glows russet in
November, the heather still burns red in July; but where now is the
Manor of Cosford? Where is the old house of Tilford? Where, but for a
few scattered gray stones, is the mighty pile of Waverley? And yet even
gnawing Time has not eaten all things away. Walk with me toward
Guildford, reader, upon the busy highway. Here, where the high green
mound rises before us, mark yonder roofless shrine which still stands
foursquare to the winds. It is St. Catharine’s, where Nigel and Mary
plighted their faith. Below lies the winding river, and over yonder you
still see the dark Chantry woods which mount up to the bare summit, on
which, roofed and whole, stands that Chapel of the Martyr where the
comrades beat off the archers of the crooked Lord of Shalford. Down
yonder on the flanks of the long chalk hills one traces the road by
which they made their journey to the wars. And now turn hither to the
north, down this sunken winding path! It is all unchanged since Nigel’s
day. Here is the Church of Compton. Pass under the aged and crumbling
arch. Before the steps of that ancient altar, unrecorded and unbrassed,
lies the dust of Nigel and of Mary. Near them is that of Maude their
daughter, and of Alleyne Edricson, whose spouse she was; their children
and children’s children are lying by their side. Here too, near the old
yew in the churchyard, is the little mound which marks where Samkin
Aylward went back to that good soil from which he sprang.

So lie the dead leaves; but they and such as they nourish forever that
great old trunk of England, which still sheds forth another crop and
another, each as strong and as fair as the last. The body may lie in
moldering chancel, or in crumbling vault, but the rumor of noble lives,
the record of valor and truth, can never die, but lives on in the soul
of the people. Our own work lies ready to our hands; and yet our
strength may be the greater and our faith the firmer if we spare an
hour from present toils to look back upon the women who were gentle and
strong, or the men who loved honor more than life, on this green stage
of England where for a few short years we play our little part.

THE END




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