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 Molène 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 Molène 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.
“A moi, Anglais, a 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 chateau 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 Brohiniere?”
“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.