Sir Hugh was weary, for he had ridden
far and fast that day, and ridden warily too, by bypaths
and green forest roads, for the country was much harried
by robbers at that time, under the grim chief that
went by the name of the Red Hound: he was an outlaw
that had been a knight; but for his cruelty and his
blackness of heart and his pitiless wickedness he
had been driven from his stronghold into the forest,
where he lived a hunted life, rending hitherto all
that were sent against him, a terror in the land;
writing his anger upon broken churches and charred
farmsteads. Sparing none but the children whom
he took to serve him, and maidens to please himself
and his men.
But Sir Hugh had been safe enough;
for the Red Hound was out northwards; and Sir Hugh
was gallantly attended by a troop of jingling horse,
that went swiftly before and behind him, while he rode
in the midst, silent as was his wont, his eyes dwelling
wistfully upon the green and lonely places of the
forest, the bright faces of the flowers, and the woodland
things that slipped away into the brake. For
all his deeds of might and Hugh though young
in years was old in valour he had a deep
desire for peace and the fair and beautiful arts of
life. He could sing tuneably to the lute; and
he loved the delicate things of earth with a love
of which he spoke to none.
At last they struck out of the forest
into a firmer road; and here was a wall by the wayside
and a towered gate; but the wood climbed steeply within.
At the gate they halted, and presently Sir Hugh was
admitted. The road within was paved with stone,
and led to the left; and here Sir Hugh dismounted,
and saying that he would stretch his limbs, left his
horse to be led by the page that rode beside him, giving
him a smiling glance, which had made the boy a willing
and loving servant. The troop rode off among
the copses; and Sir Hugh, taught by the porter, took
a grassy path that led steeply through the wood to
the right, the porter telling him that he would be
the first at the castle gate; for the path was steep
and direct, while the road wound at an easier slope,
to the top of the hill where the Castle stood.
Sir Hugh unlaced his helmet, for the
day had been still and hot. He was a very gracious
youth to behold. His face was beardless and clean-cut.
His skin was as the skin of a child, for he had lived
a pure life, eating and drinking sparingly. Another
might have been mocked for this; but Sir Hugh was
so gallant a fighter, so courteous, so loving, that
he was let to please himself. His eyes were large
and quiet; his hair rippled into short brown curls.
He had no signs of travel, save a little dust upon
his brow; and this he washed off at a rill that fell
clear through the wood, dripping from the rocks.
And so he went up easily, and glancing about him.
The oak-copse interlaced its boughs above his head;
the sun had lately set, and there was a soft twilight
in the forest. In the pale sky floated a few dark
clouds, with rims of fire caught from the sinking sun;
sometimes the wood was all about him, with close undergrowth
and grassy paths. Sometimes he saw a pile of
rocks, all overgrown with moss, indistinct in the
gloom. Sometimes he saw a dell where a stream
went murmuring down, hidden in climbing plants; sometimes
a little lawn would open in the heart of the chase,
where a deer stood to graze, leaping lightly into
the brake at the sight of him.
He came very suddenly to the end of
the path. Through the interlaced leaves of the
copse a great bulk loomed up, that seemed strangely
high and dark; the wood ended, and he saw the Castle
before him, with its turrets and battlements showing
black against the green sky; a light or two burnt
with a fiery redness in some of the high windows.
He stepped out on to the wide platform
of the Castle, and saw before him the wooded ridges
of the lower hills, with light veils of mist lying
among them, that had a golden hue from the setting
sun; beyond, rose the shadowy shapes of mountains,
that seemed to guard a sweet and solemn secret of
peace in their midst. As he looked round, his
troop rode briskly out of the wood, with a sudden
clatter, and a sharp ringing of weapons, as they came
out upon the paved space; and presently a warder looked
out, and the great doors of the Castle were opened
to them.
Sir Hugh bore with him a letter of
great import. The Lord whom he served, the Earl
Fitz-Simon, was a man of haughty strength and great
pride. His Countess was lately dead, and he had
no son to bear his name. He was old and grizzled
and brought a terror about with him. He was as
powerful indeed as the King himself, of whom the Earl
spoke scornfully, without concealment, doing him a
scanty homage when they met. Sir Hugh was of
distant kin to him, and had been brought up in his
Castle; and the Earl went as near loving him as he
had ever gone, wishing that he had him as his son,
and indeed desiring that he should have the Earldom
after him if he had no heir of his own, and marry his
only daughter, a grim maiden. And Hugh loved the
Earl very faithfully, giving him the worship of a
son.
On the day before the Earl had sent
for him; and Hugh had stood beside him as he sate
and wrote in silence, watching his great bony hand
and his knotted brow, bristled with stiff hair.
Presently the Earl had thrown down his pen, and exclaiming
that he was but an ill clerk, had smiled pleasantly
upon Hugh, telling him in a few sour words that he
meant to take another wife, and that his choice had
fallen upon the Lady Mary, the daughter of the Lord
Bigod (whose Castle it was that Sir Hugh now approached).
“A goodly maiden, apt to bear strong children
to my body.” And as he said this he made
a pause, and watched Hugh narrowly to see how he took
the news, and whether he had hoped for the Earldom
after him. But Hugh had given him an open smile
in return, and said that he wished him much happiness,
and heirs to rule after him. And the Earl had
nodded well-pleased, knowing that Hugh had spoken
what was in his heart, and that no other man that he
knew would have so wished in Hugh’s place; and
then the Earl had sworn a coarse oath or two, saying
that he was old and spent, and if he did not beget
an heir, Hugh should come after him; but that if he
did beget a man-child, then that Hugh should have
the guarding of him after he himself was gone.
And then he did up his letter roughly, splashed wax
upon it, and pricked it with a signet; and bade Hugh
ride in haste with a score of troopers, saying, “And
I trust you with this because you do not turn your
eyes aside to vanity, as the priests say, and care
nothing for the looks of maidens; therefore you will
be a safe messenger; and you will put my ring (he
gave it him) upon the Lady Mary’s finger before
the priest, and kiss her on the lips if you have a
mind; and bid her ride within the week to the wedding;
and stay not for the Lord Bigod, for he is more maid
than man, and will not willingly let his daughter
go; but will fear to keep her from my behest.”
And then he beat his hand on Hugh’s
shoulder, as his manner was when he was pleased; and
then to Hugh’s surprise bent and kissed his cheek,
as a man might kiss his son, and then, as if ashamed,
frowned upon him, and said “with haste!” and
in an hour Hugh was gone.
Now when they entered the Castle,
which had a great court within, full of galleries,
there was a great stir of people to see them; the
horses were led away to the stables; the troopers passed
into the guard room; and an old seneschal with a white
staff asked Hugh courteously of his business, and
then led him up a flight of steps, and into a long
dark room, hung with a faded green arras.
Here sate a pale thin man at a table,
looking upon a book, in a velvet gown; the seneschal
cried out Hugh’s name, who made an obeisance,
and then advancing, put the letter in the hands of
the Lord Bigod, saying, “From the Earl Fitz-Simon;
these.” Then the Lord Bigod rent the paper,
looking curiously upon it; and read therein. Hugh
observed him closely; he looked more like a priest
than a knight, but there was something very sweet
and noble about his air, and he looked as a man might
look who had known both sorrow and thought, and wished
well to all the world. The Lord Bigod read the
letter, and then grew somewhat pale; then he read
it again, and walked to the window, turning it in
his hands. He stood so long, holding the letter
behind him, and looking out, that Hugh saw that he
was wrestling in mind and ill-at-ease. Then he
turned, and said very courteously to Hugh, though
his voice trembled somewhat, “Know you what is
within this letter?” And Hugh said, “Yea,
sir.” And the Lord Bigod said, “It
is a great matter.” And then, after another
long silence, the Lord Bigod turned to the seneschal
who waited at the door, and said, “See that Sir
Hugh be well bestowed:” and then with an
inclination of the head to Sir Hugh he added, “I
will think hereon, and you shall hear my words to-morrow.”
Hugh turned and followed the seneschal out; and he
felt a great pity for the kind Lord whom he had left,
for he saw that he was in great sadness of mind and
perplexity. The seneschal asked Hugh if he would
join the knights, but Hugh said he was weary and would
rest. So the seneschal led him to a spacious
chamber, from which Hugh could see the tree-tops of
the forest, and the mountains very black, with a great
orange glow of sunset behind; food was served him,
and his page came to him, to do off his armour.
And presently, seeing that the page was very weary,
he bade him lie down to sleep; so the page lay down
upon a little bed that was in a turret opening on the
room; and soon after Sir Hugh himself lay down upon
a great pillared bed, made of oak, and hung with tapestries.
But he could not sleep, but lay wearily gazing at
the glimmering window and hearing the breathing of
the boy in the turret hard by, till at last he too
fell asleep.
The morning came with a great brightness
and freshness, with the hoarse cries of the jackdaws
that lived in the ledges of the tower; Sir Hugh dressed
himself carefully and noiselessly, not to wake the
page, who still slept deeply; then he stood beside
the boy’s bed; the boy stretched out his arms
in slumber and then awoke, ashamed to be later than
his master, and to find him apparelled.
Presently the seneschal came, and
led Hugh to the Hall, where were the two sons of the
Lord Bigod, with a large company of knights, that
stood up at his appearing, and did him great honour;
and then came a message for him to go to the Lord
Bigod. Hugh saw at once that he was very weary
and had not slept; the letter lay on the table beside
him; and he said to Hugh that he had given the letter
great thought, and that it was a very honourable behest:
“And herewith I accept it for the Lady Mary,”
he said stammeringly, “who will do as my daughter
and as the chosen of the honourable Earl should do.”
Then he was silent for a space, presently adding,
“I have not told my daughter the tidings yet;
I will tell her; and then you shall have speech with
her; but I would,” he added, “that there
was not such haste in the matter; for a maiden is
a tender thing and merits tender usage; do you think,
sir” and here he looked anxiously
upon Hugh “do you think that the
Earl will consent to a longer delay, that the maiden
may grow accustomed to the thought? She has as
yet spoken to no man but myself and her brothers,
and though she is fearless and of a high spirit” he
broke off suddenly, and then with a wistful glance
at Sir Hugh, added, “Will the Earl delay awhile?”
Sir Hugh felt a great pity for the man who stood so
anxiously before him, but he hardened his heart and
said, “I think that the Earl will not delay
his purpose: he is swift to do his will.”
A great cloud of sadness came down on the Lord Bigod’s
face, and he said very low, “That is a good way,
the way of a great warrior so be it then,
sir,” and he softly withdrew, asking Hugh to
wait for him.
Then fell a long silence; and Hugh,
looking upon the folded letter on the table, felt
it to be a cruel thing; but he never wavered in loyalty
to the Earl, and thought to himself that the longer
the maiden waited the more would she perchance be
terrified; that great men must wed as they would and
other things with which he sought to excuse what seemed
a harsh deed.
Suddenly he heard a footstep; a door
opened; and the Lord Bigod appeared, leading a maiden
into the room, who encircled his arm with her hands.
She was tall and slender, apparelled all in white,
with a girdle of gold. She was very pale, but
bore herself with a gentle and simple grace; and there
fell upon Hugh a thought that he cast from him as
it were with both his hands. He had never known
love, and his heart was as pure as snow; the maidens
that he had seen had appeared to him but as distant
visions of tenderness and grace, stirring in his heart
nothing but a sort of brotherly compassion for things
so delicate and frail, and unfit for the hard world
in which men must live. But at the sight of the
Lady Mary, her great eyes, in which there seemed a
trace of swimming tears, he felt suddenly a deep passionate
hunger of the heart, as though a sweet and deep mystery,
lying far-off, had been brought suddenly near to him.
Was this love, that great power of which the poets
sung; the power which had lost kingdoms and wrought
the destruction of men? He feared it was so indeed.
He felt as a poor man might, who had lived in pinching
want, and had suddenly found a great treasure of gold,
at the stroke of a mattock in his field. One glance
passed between them; and it seemed as though some other
thing had passed; as though their souls had leapt
together. Then he dropped his eyes and stood
waiting, while a faint fragrance seemed to pass upon
the air. Then the Lord Bigod said very gravely,
“Sir Hugh, I have told the Lady Mary of your
errand; and she will do the bidding of the Earl in
every point. To-day we will make preparation;
to-morrow shall the betrothal be; and on the third
day the Lady Mary shall ride with you; and now I will
leave you together for awhile; for the Lady Mary would
ask you many things, and you will be courteous and
tell her all.” Then he kissed his daughter,
and led her to a chair before the table, and motioned
to Sir Hugh to be seated at the table-side; and then
he went out of the room in haste.
Then the Lady Mary began to speak
in a low clear voice that had no trembling in it;
but her hands that were clasped together on the table
trembled; and Hugh took courage, and told her of the
greatness of the Earl and his high courage, praising
him generously and nobly; he spoke of the Earl’s
daughter, and of the kinsfolk that abode there; and
of the priest of the Castle, and of the knights; and
of the Castle itself, and its great woodland chase;
and the Lady Mary heard him attentively, her eyes
fixed upon his face, and her lips parted. And
then she asked him one or two questions, but broke
off, and said, “Sir Hugh, you will know that
all this is very new and strange to me; but it is
not the newness and strangeness that is most in my
heart; but it is the thought of what I leave behind,
this house and my kin; and my father who is above
all things dear to me for I know no other
place but this, and no other faces have I seen.”
Then Sir Hugh felt his whole heart melted within him
at the sight both of her grief and of her high courage.
And the thought that she should thus pass in all her
stainless grace to the harsh embrace of the old and
grim Earl, came like a horror into his heart; but
he only said, “Lady, I have dwelt all my life
with the Earl and he has ever used me gently and graciously,
and he is as a father to me; I know that men fear him;
yet I can but say that he has a true heart full of
wisdom and might.” And the Lady Mary smiled
faintly, and said, “I will be sure it is so
indeed.” And so she rose, and presently
withdrew.
The day passed like a swift dream
for Sir Hugh. He could think of nothing but the
Lady Mary, with a strange leaping of the heart; that
she was in the Castle above him, hidden somewhere like
a flower in the dark walls; that he would stand before
her to plight his Lord’s troth; that he would
ride with her through the forest; and that he would
have her near him through the months, when she was
wedded to the Earl all this was a secret
and urgent joy to him; not that he thought ever to
win her love such a traitorous imagining
never even crossed his mind but he thought
that she would be as a sweet sister to him, whom he
would guard as he could from every shadow of care;
the thought of her sadness, and of her fear of the
Earl worked strongly in his heart; but he saw no way
out of that; and indeed believed, or tried to believe
in his heart, that she would love the Earl for his
might, and that he would love her for her grace, and
that so all would be well.
The next day he rose very early, and
was soon summoned to the chapel. There were few
present; there seemed indeed, from soft movements and
whisperings, to be ladies in a gallery beside the altar,
but they were hidden in a lattice. The sons of
the Lord Bigod were there, looking full of joyful
excitement; other lords and knights sate within the
chapel, and an old priest, in stiff vestments, with
a worn and patient face, knelt by the altar, his lips
moving as in prayer. Presently the Lord Bigod
came in, as pale as death and sore troubled, and with
him walked the Lady Mary, who seemed to bring the
very peace of God with her. She was pale, but
clear of complexion, and with a great brightness in
her eyes, as of one whose will was strong. Then
Hugh drew near to the altar, and plighted the Earl’s
troth to her, putting the great ring, with its ruby
as red as blood, upon her finger. He noticed,
as he waited to put the ring upon her hand, that a
ray of light from the window darted through the signet,
and cast a light, like a drop of blood, upon the maiden’s
white palm; and then the voice of the priest, raised
softly in blessing, fell upon his ear with a tender
hope; and at the end he knelt down very gently, and
kissed the Lady Mary’s hand in token of fealty;
and the thought of the Earl’s jest about bidding
him to kiss her on the lips came like a shameful thought
into his mind.
Then the day passed slowly and sadly;
but he saw not the Lady Mary save once, when, as he
walked in the wood, trying to cool his hot brain with
the quiet, he saw her stand on a balcony looking out
over the forest with an infinite and patient sadness
of air, as of one that bade farewell.
And again the sun went down, and the
night passed; and at daybreak he heard the clatter
of horsehoofs in the court, the jingling of the stirrups,
and the voices of his troop, who made merry adieux
to their new comrades.
Then he came down himself; and saw
beside his horse a smaller horse richly caparisoned;
then in a moment, very swiftly, came the Lady Mary
down the stairs, with the Lord Bigod and her brothers;
she kissed her brothers, who looked smilingly at her;
and then her father, hanging for a moment on his neck,
and whispering a word into his ear; and Hugh could
see the Lord Bigod’s face working, as he restrained
his tears, in anguish of heart. Then she smiled
palely upon Hugh; her father lifted her to her horse;
and they rode out with a great waving of handkerchiefs
and crying of farewells, the bell of the Castle ringing
as sweet as honey in the tower.
They rode all day in the green forest,
with a troop in front and a troop behind. The
air was cool and fresh, and the sun lay sweetly upon
the glades and woodpaths. All things seemed to
rejoice together; the birds sang out of their simple
joy, and the doves cooed, hidden in the heart of great
green trees; and the joy of being with the maiden
outweighed all other thoughts in the mind of Sir Hugh.
Sometimes they were silent, and sometimes they talked
softly together like brother and sister. What
pleased him best was that she seemed to have put all
care and anxiety away from her mind; once or twice,
after a silence, he saw a tear glisten on her cheek;
but she spoke, with no show of courage, but as though
she had formed a purpose, and would take whatever
befel her with a gentle tranquillity. The little
services that he was enabled to do her seemed to him
like a treasure that he laid up for the days to come;
and the love which he felt in his heart had no shadow
in it; it was simply as the worship of a pure spirit
for the most delicate and beautiful thing that the
world could hold.
At last the sun set when they were
yet some miles from the Earl’s Castle; and while
Hugh was still counting up the minutes that remained
to him, he saw the troop in front come to a halt; and
presently one of them rode back, and told him with
an uneasy air that there was a great smoke in the
wood to the left; and that they thought they were not
far from the haunts of the Red Hound. But Hugh
said lightly, not to terrify the maiden, that the
Red Hound was far to the north; to which the trooper
replied with a downcast look, “It was so said,
sir.” “Ride on then warily!”
said Hugh and he bade the troop behind come
up nearer. The Lady Mary presently asked him
what the matter was; and though by this time a dreadful
anxiety had sprung into Hugh’s mind, he told
her who the Red Hound was, and she replied that she
had heard of him; but seeing that he was somewhat
troubled she forbore to speak more of that, but pointed
out to him a little tuft of red flowers that grew
daintily in the crevice of a rock beside the path.
He turned to look at it; and suddenly became aware
that something, he could not clearly say what, had
slipped away at that moment from the bushes beside
the road; the thought came into his mind that this
was a spy set to watch them; and so he bade the men
draw their swords, and close about them in a ring.
They were now in the thickest of the
wood. The green road in which they were riding
dipped down to a low marshy place, where a stream
soaked through the path. The rock, which seemed
like a little pinnacle, rose sharply on their left
clear of the bushes: all else was forest, except
that a little path or clearing led up to the left,
among the trees. There was an utter stillness
in the air, which was all full of a golden light.
The swords came merrily out of the scabbards with
a sudden clang. The troopers closed in about them;
but then, with a sudden dark rush out of the wood,
there swept down the clearing a number of horsemen,
roughly clad with leather cuirasses and gaiters, all
armed with long pointed spears. It seemed as though
they must have been ambushed there against them, they
came on with such suddenness.
In a moment there was a scene of fierce
confusion; swords flashed high; there were groans
and shouts; a trooper, pierced by a lance, fell writhing
at their feet; one of the enemy, cut down by a sword
blow, fell to the earth and crouched there, blood dripping
from his head and shoulder; but the armoured troopers,
well drilled and trained, would have prevailed, had
not a flight of arrows sung with a sharp rattle out
of the thicket, and four of the men behind him fell,
two of them instantly slain, and two grievously wounded.
The riderless horses, wounded too, rushed snorting
down the road, and another troop of men on foot poured
out of the forest behind them.
In the middle of the enemies’
lancers rode a tall man, red-haired and scowling,
with yet something of a knightly air. Hugh recognised
him at once as none other than the Red Hound himself,
whom he had seen long ago before the days of his outlawry.
He did not join in the fight, but sate on his horse
a little apart, shouting a command from moment to
moment.
Hugh cast a swift glance round; the
men on foot were yet some little way off, running
down the road; the troopers in front had pushed the
lancemen a little way up the clearing; and Hugh determined
to attempt a desperate rush with the Lady Mary up
the road: desperate indeed it was, but he saw
that if he could but get clear of the fight, there
were none that could follow, except perhaps the chief
himself; Hugh leant across his horse’s neck;
the Lady Mary sate still and silent, like the daughter
of a line of knights, looking at the combat with a
steady and unblenching look. He laid his hand
on her bridle rein, and she turned and looked in his
eyes; and he saw that therein which made him glad
in the midst of the dangers though he was
too much accustomed to battle to have fear for himself it
was as a man, that had been long voyaging, might see,
in a clear dawn, the cliffs of his home across the
leaping seas.
He pointed, and said a word in her
ear; she glanced at him, nodded, and drew up her rein;
but at that moment his horse gave a short upward jerk,
and then fell grovelling on his knees, an arrow sticking
in his side, close to Sir Hugh’s knee.
He flung his foot clear, and leapt to the Lady’s
side; and then in a moment he saw that the battle was
gone against him past mending. Another flight
of arrows sang from the thicket, and four of the troopers
in the glade fell from their horses, and the lancers,
who were drawing back, pressed down upon them.
Then Sir Hugh signed swiftly to the Lady that she
should ride clear; but in that moment the Lady’s
horse fell too. Sir Hugh caught her in his arms,
and dragged her free of the horse, tearing her gown
by the knee, for the arrow that had slain the horse
had pierced through the Lady’s garment, though
without wounding her. Then he saw that they were
very hard beset, and that there was no way out; so
he hastened to the rock, laid his hands upon a little
ledge about as high as his head; leapt up, set his
sword beside him, and then, stooping down, drew the
Lady up beside him. Then he shouted to his men
to come back to the rock; there were but a handful
left; but they drew back slowly, and made a little
ring about the base of the rock, while the others drew
slowly in around them, but halted at a little distance,
fearing the flashing swords.
The Red Hound himself stood near at
hand; Hugh heard him shout his commands aloud, and
heard him say that they should save the girl alive,
and take the Knight captive if they could and
the Lady Mary heard it too, for she turned to Sir
Hugh, and with a sudden look of entreaty, said, “Hugh,
I must not fall into his hands.” He looked
at her smiling, and said, “Nay, dear, you shall
not.”
And then Hugh saw that it was indeed
the end, and that his death was at hand; he had seen
men in abundance die, and had often wondered how it
was that death should come to him at the last.
But now, instead of fear, there came to him a sort
of fierce joy that he should die with her whom he
was now not ashamed to love; and in the midst of the
shouting and the tumult, he had a sudden vision of
himself and her wandering away, two happy spirits,
hand in hand, from the place of their passion.
And now the last of his troopers had
fallen. Then the Lady Mary drew close to him,
and said, “Is it time?” And he said, “Yes,
dear, it is the time; fear nought you will
feel nothing and you will wait for me,
for I shall follow you close. And now, dear one,
turn your face from me lest it unman me there
is nought to fear.” So she smiled again,
and he kissed her on the lips, and she turned from
him; and he struck one stroke with his sword; she
quivered once, and sinking down moved no more.
Then Sir Hugh prayed a prayer; and
looking upon his sword, off which the blood now dripped,
he poised it in his hand like a lance. The spearmen
had closed in to the rock. But Hugh hurled his
sword point foremost at the Red Hound, and saw it
sink through his skull, till the hilt clattered on
his brow; and then he cast one look upon the Lady;
and, as a man might enter the gates of his home, he
leapt very joyfully down among the spears.