When those of the royalists who had
not deserted the King and fled precipitately toward
the coast had regained the castle and the Priory,
the city was turned over to looting and rapine.
In this, Norman of Torn and his men did not participate,
but camped a little apart from the town until daybreak
the following morning, when they started east, toward
Dover.
They marched until late the following
evening, passing some twenty miles out of their way
to visit a certain royalist stronghold. The troops
stationed there had fled, having been appraised some
few hours earlier, by fugitives, of the defeat of
Henry’s army at Lewes.
Norman of Torn searched the castle
for the one he sought, but, finding it entirely deserted,
continued his eastward march. Some few miles
farther on, he overtook a party of deserting royalist
soldiery, and from them he easily, by dint of threats,
elicited the information he desired: the direction
taken by the refugees from the deserted castle, their
number, and as close a description of the party as
the soldiers could give.
Again he was forced to change the
direction of his march, this time heading northward
into Kent. It was dark before he reached his
destination, and saw before him the familiar outlines
of the castle of Roger de Leybourn. This time,
the outlaw threw his fierce horde completely around
the embattled pile before he advanced with a score
of sturdy ruffians to reconnoiter.
Making sure that the drawbridge was
raised, and that he could not hope for stealthy entrance
there, he crept silently to the rear of the great
building and there, among the bushes, his men searched
for the ladder that Norman of Torn had seen the knavish
servant of My Lady Claudia unearth, that the outlaw
might visit the Earl of Buckingham, unannounced.
Presently they found it, and it was
the work of but a moment to raise it to the sill of
the low window, so that soon the twenty stood beside
their chief within the walls of Leybourn.
Noiselessly, they moved through the
halls and corridors of the castle until a maid, bearing
a great pasty from the kitchen, turned a sudden corner
and bumped full into the Outlaw of Torn. With
a shriek that might have been heard at Lewes, she
dropped the dish upon the stone floor and, turning,
ran, still shrieking at the top of her lungs, straight
for the great dining hall.
So close behind her came the little
band of outlaws that scarce had the guests arisen
in consternation from the table at the shrill cries
of the girl than Norman of Torn burst through the
great door with twenty drawn swords at his back.
The hall was filled with knights and
gentlewomen and house servants and men-at-arms.
Fifty swords flashed from fifty scabbards as the men
of the party saw the hostile appearance of their visitors,
but before a blow could be struck, Norman of Torn,
grasping his sword in his right hand, raised his left
aloft in a gesture for silence.
“Hold!” he cried, and,
turning directly to Roger de Leybourn, “I have
no quarrel with thee, My Lord, but again I come for
a guest within thy halls. Methinks thou hast
as bad taste in whom thou entertains as didst thy
fair lady.”
“Who be ye, that thus rudely
breaks in upon the peace of my castle, and makes bold
to insult my guests?” demanded Roger de Leybourn.
“Who be I! If you wait,
you shall see my mark upon the forehead of yon grinning
baboon,” replied the outlaw, pointing a mailed
finger at one who had been seated close to De Leybourn.
All eyes turned in the direction that
the rigid finger of the outlaw indicated, and there
indeed was a fearful apparition of a man. With
livid face he stood, leaning for support against the
table; his craven knees wabbling beneath his fat carcass;
while his lips were drawn apart against his yellow
teeth in a horrid grimace of awful fear.
“If you recognize me not, Sir
Roger,” said Norman of Torn, drily, “it
is evident that your honored guest hath a better memory.”
At last the fear-struck man found
his tongue, and, though his eyes never left the menacing
figure of the grim, iron-clad outlaw, he addressed
the master of Leybourn; shrieking in a high, awe-emasculated
falsetto:
“Seize him! Kill him!
Set your men upon him! Do you wish to live another
moment, draw and defend yourselves for he be the Devil
of Torn, and there be a great price upon his head.
“Oh, save me, save me! for he
has come to kill me,” he ended in a pitiful
wail.
The Devil of Torn! How that name
froze the hearts of the assembled guests.
The Devil of Torn! Slowly the
men standing there at the board of Sir Roger de Leybourn
grasped the full purport of that awful name.
Tense silence for a moment held the
room in the stillness of a sepulchre, and then a woman
shrieked, and fell prone across the table. She
had seen the mark of the Devil of Torn upon the dead
brow of her mate.
And then Roger de Leybourn spoke:
“Norman of Torn, but once before
have you entered within the walls of Leybourn, and
then you did, in the service of another, a great service
for the house of Leybourn; and you stayed the night,
an honored guest. But a moment since, you said
that you had no quarrel with me. Then why be
you here? Speak! Shall it be as a friend
or an enemy that the master of Leybourn greets Norman
of Torn; shall it be with outstretched hand or naked
sword?”
“I come for this man, whom you
may all see has good reason to fear me. And when
I go, I take part of him with me. I be in a great
hurry, so I would prefer to take my great and good
friend, Peter of Colfax, without interference; but,
if you wish it otherwise; we be a score strong within
your walls, and nigh a thousand lie without. What
say you, My Lord?”
“Your grievance against Peter
of Colfax must be a mighty one, that you search him
out thus within a day’s ride from the army of
the King who has placed a price upon your head, and
from another army of men who be equally your enemies.”
“I would gladly go to hell after
Peter of Colfax,” replied the outlaw. “What
my grievance be matters not. Norman of Torn acts
first and explains afterward, if he cares to explain
at all. Come forth, Peter of Colfax, and for
once in your life, fight like a man, that you may save
your friends here from the fate that has found you
at last after two years of patient waiting.”
Slowly, the palsied limbs of the great
coward bore him tottering to the center of the room,
where gradually a little clear space had been made;
the men of the party forming a circle, in the center
of which stood Peter of Colfax and Norman of Torn.
“Give him a great draught of
brandy,” said the outlaw, “or he will sink
down and choke in the froth of his own terror.”
When they had forced a goblet of the
fiery liquid upon him, Peter of Colfax regained his
lost nerve enough so that he could raise his sword
arm and defend himself and, as the fumes circulated
through him, and the primal instinct of self-preservation
asserted itself, he put up a more and more creditable
fight, until those who watched thought that he might
indeed have a chance to vanquish the Outlaw of Torn.
But they did not know that Norman of Torn was but
playing with his victim, that he might make the torture
long, drawn out, and wreak as terrible a punishment
upon Peter of Colfax, before he killed him, as the
Baron had visited upon Bertrade de Montfort because
she would not yield to his base desires.
The guests were craning their necks
to follow every detail of the fascinating drama that
was being enacted before them.
“God, what a swordsman!” muttered one.
“Never was such swordplay seen
since the day the first sword was drawn from the first
scabbard!” replied Roger de Leybourn. “Is
it not marvellous!”
Slowly but surely was Norman of Torn
cutting Peter of Colfax to pieces; little by little,
and with such fiendish care that, except for loss
of blood, the man was in no way crippled; nor did the
outlaw touch his victim’s face with his gleaming
sword. That he was saving for the fulfillment
of his design.
And Peter of Colfax, cornered and
fighting for his life, was no marrowless antagonist,
even against the Devil of Torn. Furiously he
fought; in the extremity of his fear, rushing upon
his executioner with frenzied agony. Great beads
of cold sweat stood upon his livid brow.
And then the gleaming point of Norman
of Torn flashed, lightning-like, in his victim’s
face, and above the right eye of Peter of Colfax was
a thin vertical cut from which the red blood had barely
started to ooze ere another swift move of that master
sword hand placed a fellow to parallel the first.
Five times did the razor point touch
the forehead of Peter of Colfax, until the watchers
saw there, upon the brow of the doomed man, the seal
of death, in letters of blood NT.
It was the end. Peter of Colfax,
cut to ribbons yet fighting like the maniac he had
become, was as good as dead, for the mark of the Outlaw
of Torn was upon his brow. Now, shrieking and
gibbering through his frothy lips, his yellow fangs
bared in a mad and horrid grin, he rushed full upon
Norman of Torn. There was a flash of the great
sword as the outlaw swung it to the full of his mighty
strength through an arc that passed above the shoulders
of Peter of Colfax, and the grinning head rolled upon
the floor, while the loathsome carcass, that had been
a baron of England, sunk in a disheveled heap among
the rushes of the great hall of the castle of Leybourn.
A little shudder passed through the
wide-eyed guests. Some one broke into hysterical
laughter, a woman sobbed, and then Norman of Torn,
wiping his blade upon the rushes of the floor as he
had done upon another occasion in that same hall,
spoke quietly to the master of Leybourn.
“I would borrow yon golden platter,
My Lord. It shall be returned, or a mightier
one in its stead.”
Leybourn nodded his assent, and Norman
of Torn turned, with a few words of instructions,
to one of his men.
The fellow gathered up the head of
Peter of Colfax, and placed it upon the golden platter.
“I thank you, Sir Roger, for
your hospitality,” said Norman of Torn, with
a low bow which included the spellbound guests.
“Adieu.” Thus followed by his men,
one bearing the head of Peter of Colfax upon the platter
of gold, Norman of Torn passed quietly from the hall
and from the castle.