“Oh, have ye na
heard of the fause Sakelde?
Oh, have ye na
heard of the keen Lord Scroope?
How they ha’e ta’en
bauld Kinmont Willie,
On Haribee to
hang him up?”
I well remember the dull April morning,
in the year 1596, when my father, William Armstrong
of Kinmont, “Kinmont Willie,” as he was
called by all the countryside, set out with me for
a ride into Cumberland.
As a rule, when he set his face that
way, he rode armed, and with all his men behind him,
for these were the old reiving days, when we folk
who dwelt on the Scottish side of the Border thought
we had a right to go and steal what we could, sheep,
or oxen, or even hay, from the English loons, who,
in their turn, would come slipping over from their
side to take like liberties with us, and mayhap burn
down a house or two in the by-going.
My father was aye in the thick and
throng of these raids, for he was such a big powerful
man that he was more than a match for three Englishmen,
did he chance to meet them. Men called him an
outlaw, but we thought little of that; most of the
brave men on our side had been outlawed at one time
or another, and it did them little ill: indeed,
it was aye thought to be rather a feather in their
cap.
Well, as I say, my father was not
riding on business, as it were, this morning, for
just then there was a truce for a day or two between
the countries, the two Wardens of the Marches, Sir
Walter Scott of Buccleuch, and My Lord Scroope, having
sent their deputies to meet and settle some affairs
at the Dayholme of Kershope, where a burn divides
England from Scotland. My father and I had attended
the Truce Muster, and were riding homeward with but
a handful of men, when I took a sudden notion into
my head, that I would like to cross the Border, and
ride a few miles on English ground.
My birthday had fallen the week before
(I was just eleven years old), and my father, aye
kind to his motherless bairns, had given me a new
pony, a little shaggy beast from Galloway, and, as
I was keen to see how it would run beside a big man’s
horse, I had pled hard for permission to accompany
him on it to the Muster.
As a rule I never rode with him.
“I was too young for the work,” he would
say; but that day he gave his consent, only making
the bargain that there should be no crying out or
grumbling if I were tired or hungry long ere we got
home again. I had laughed at the idea as I saddled
my shaggy little nag, and, to make matters sure, I
had gone to Janet, the kitchen wench, and begged her
for a satchel of oatcakes and cheese, which I fastened
to my saddle strap, little dreaming what need I would
have of them before the day was out.
The Truce Muster had broken up sooner
than he expected, so my father saw no reason why he
should not grant my request, and let me have a canter
on English soil, for on a day of truce we could cross
the Border if we chose without the risk of being taken
prisoners by Lord Scroope’s men, and marched
off to Carlisle Castle, while the English had a like
privilege, and could ride down Liddesdale in open daylight,
if they were so minded.
Scarce had we crossed the little burn,
however, which runs between low-growing hazel bushes,
and separates us from England, when two of the men
rode right into a bog, and when, after some half-hour’s
work, we got the horses out again, we found that both
of them wanted a shoe, and my father said at once
that we must go straight home, in case they went lame.
At this I drew a long face. I
had never been into England, and it was a sore disappointment
to be turned back just when we had reached it.
“Well, well,” said my
father, laughing, ever soft-hearted where I was concerned,
“I suppose I must e’en take thee a ride
into Bewcastle, lad, since we have got this length.
The men can go back with the horses; ’tis safe
enough to go alone to-day.”
So the men turned back, nothing loth,
for Bewcastle Waste was no unknown land to them, and
my father and I rode on for eight miles or so, over
that most desolate country. Its bareness and loneliness
disappointed me. Somehow I had expected that
England would be quite different from Scotland, even
although they were all one piece of land, with only
a burn running between.
“Hast had enough?” said
my father at last, noticing my downcast face, and
drawing rein. “Didst expect all the trees
to be made of silver, and all the houses to be built
of gold? Never mind, lad, every place looks much
the same in the month of April, I trow, especially
when it has been a backward season; but if summer
were once and here, I’ll let thee ride with
the troop, and mayhap thou wilt get a glimpse of ‘Merrie
Carlisle,’ as they call it. It lies over
there, twelve miles or more from where we stand.”
As he pointed out the direction with
his whip, we both became aware of a large body of
men, riding rapidly over the moor as if to meet us.
My father eyed them keenly, his face growing grave
as he did so.
“Who are they, father?”
I asked with a sinking heart. I had lived long
enough at Kinmont to know that men did not generally
ride together in such numbers unless they were bent
on mischief.
“It’s Sakelde, the English
Warden’s deputy, and no friend o’ mine,”
he answered with a frown, “and on any other
day I would not have met him alone like this for a
hundred merks; but the truce holds for three days
yet, so we are quite safe; all the same, lad, we had
better turn our horses round, and slip in behind that
little hill; they may not have noticed us, and in
that case ’tis no use rousing their curiosity.”
Alas! we had no sooner set our horses
to the trot, than it became apparent that not only
were we observed, but that for some reason or other
the leader of the band of horsemen was desirous of
barring our way.
He gave an order, we could
see him pointing with his hand, and at once
his men spurred on their horses and began to spread
out so as to surround us. Then my father swore
a big oath, and plunged his spurs into his horse’s
sides. “Come on, Jock,” he shouted,
“sit tight and be a man; if we can only get
over the hill edge at Kershope, they’ll pay for
this yet.”
I will remember that race to my dying
day. It appeared to last for hours, but it could
not have lasted many minutes, ten at the most, during
which time all the blood in my body seemed to be pounding
and surging in my head, and the green grass and the
sky to be flying past me, all mixed up together, and
behind, and on all sides, came the pit-pat of horses’
feet, and then someone seized my pony’s rein,
and brought him up with a jerk, and my father and
I were sitting in the midst of two hundred armed riders,
whose leader, a tall man, with a thin cunning face,
regarded us with a triumphant smile.
“Neatly caught, thou thieving
rogue,” he said; “by my troth, neatly
caught. Who would have thought that Kinmont Willie
would have been such a fool as to venture so far from
home without an escort? But I can supply the
want, and thou shalt ride to Carlisle right well attended,
and shall never now lack a guard till thou partest
with thy life at Haribee.”
As the last word fell on my ear, I
had much ado to keep my seat, for I turned sick and
faint, and all the crowd of men and horses seemed to
whirl round and round. Haribee! Right well
I knew that fateful name, for it was the place at
Carlisle where they hanged prisoners. They could
not hang my father they dare not for
although he had been declared an outlaw, and might
perhaps merit little love from the English, was not
this a day of truce, when all men could ride where
they would in safety?
“’Tis a day of truce,”
I gasped with dry lips; but the men around me only
laughed, and I could hear that my father’s fierce
remonstrance met with no better answer.
“Thou art well named, thou false
Sakelde,” I heard him say, and his voice shook
with fury, “for no man of honour would break
the King’s truce in this way.”
But Sakelde only gave orders to his
men to bind their prisoner, saying, as he did so,
“I warrant Lord Scroope will be too glad to see
thee to think much about the truce, and if thou art
so scrupulous, thou needest not be hanged for a couple
of days; the walls of Carlisle Castle are thick enough
to guard thee till then. Be quick, my lads,”
he went on, turning to his men; “we have a good
fourteen miles to ride yet, and I have no mind to
be benighted ere we reach firmer ground.”
So they tied my father’s feet
together under his horse, and his hands behind his
back, and fastened his bridle rein to that of a trooper,
and the word was given for the men to form up, and
they began to move forward as sharply as the boggy
nature of the ground would allow.
I followed in the rear with a heavy
heart. I could easily have escaped had I wanted
to do so, for no one paid any attention to me; but
I felt that, as long as I could, I must stay near
my father, whose massive head and proud set face I
could see towering above the surrounding soldiers,
for he was many inches taller than any of them.
The spring evening was fast drawing
to a close as we came to the banks of the Liddle,
and splashed down a stony track to a place where there
was a ford. As we paused for a moment or two to
give the horses a drink, my father’s voice rang
out above the careless jesting of the troopers.
“Let me say good-bye to my eldest
son, Sakelde, and send him home; or do the English
war with bairns?”
I saw the blood rise to the English
leader’s thin sallow face at the taunt, but
he answered quietly enough, “Let the boy speak
to him and then go back,” and a way was opened
up for me to where my father sat, a bound and helpless
prisoner, on his huge white horse.
One trooper, kinder than the rest,
took my pony’s rein as I slid off its back and
ran to him. Many a time when I was little, had
I had a ride on White Charlie, and I needed no help
to scramble up to my old place on the big horse’s
neck.
My father could not move, but he looked
down at me with all the anger and defiance gone out
of his face, and a look on it which I had only seen
there once before, and that was when he lifted me up
on his knee after my mother died and told me that
I must do my best to help him, and try to look after
the little ones.
That look upset me altogether, and,
forgetting the many eyes that watched us, and the
fact that I was eleven years old, and almost a man,
I threw my arms round his neck and kissed him again
and again, sobbing and greeting as any bairn might
have done, all the time.
“Ride home, laddie, and God
be with ye. Remember if I fall that thou art
the head of the house, and see that thou do honour
to the name,” he said aloud. Then he signed
to me to go, and, just as I was clambering down, resting
a toe in his stirrup, he made a tremendous effort and
bent down over me. “If thou could’st
but get word to the Lord of Buccleuch, laddie, ’tis
my only chance. They dare not touch me for two
days yet. Tell him I was ta’en by treachery
at the time o’ truce.”
The whisper was so low I could hardly
hear it, and yet in a moment I understood all it was
meant to convey, and my heart beat until I thought
that the whole of Sakelde’s troopers must read
my secret in my face as I passed through them to where
my pony stood.
With a word of thanks I took the rein
from the kindly man who had held it, and then stood
watching the body of riders as they splashed through
the ford, and disappeared in the twilight, leaving
me alone.
But I felt there was work for me to
do, and a ray of hope stole into my heart. True,
it was more than twenty miles, as the crow flies, to
Branksome Tower in Teviotdale, where my Lord of Buccleuch
lived, and I did not know the road, which lay over
some of the wildest hills of the Border country, but
I knew that he was a great man, holding King James’
commission as Warden of the Scottish Marches, and at
his bidding the whole countryside would rise to a
man. ’Twas well known that he bore no love
to the English, and when he knew that my father had
been taken in time of truce...! The fierce anger
rose in my heart at the thought, and, burying my face
in my pony’s rough coat, I vowed a vow, boy as
I was, to be at Branksome by the morning, or die in
the attempt. I knew that it was no use going
home to Kinmont for a man to ride with me, for it
was out of my way, and would only be a waste of time.
It was almost dark now, but I knew
that the moon would rise in three or four hours, and
then there would be light enough for me to try to thread
my way over the hills that lay between the valleys
of the Teviot and Liddle. In the meantime, there
was no special need to hurry, so I loosened my pony’s
rein, and let him nibble away at the short sweet grass
which was just beginning to spring, while I unbuckled
the bag of cakes which I had put up so gaily in the
morning, and, taking one out, along with a bit of
cheese, did my best to make a hearty meal. But
I was not very successful, for when the heart is heavy,
food goes down but slowly, and Janet’s oatcake
and the good ewe cheese, which at other times I found
so toothsome, seemed fairly to stick in my throat,
so at last I gave it up, and, taking the pony by the
head, I began to lead him up the valley.
Although I had been down the Liddle
as far as the ford once or twice before, it had always
been in daylight, and my father had been with me;
but I knew that as long as I kept close to the river
I was all right for the first few miles, until the
valley narrowed in, and then I must strike off among
the high hills on my left.
It was slow work, for it was too dark
to ride, and I dare not leave the water in case I
lost my way, and by the time we had gone mayhap four
or five miles, I had almost lost heart, for I was
both tired and cold, and it seemed to me that half
the night at least must be gone, and at this rate
we would never reach Branksome at all.
At last, just when the tears were
getting very near my eyes for I was but
a little chap to be set on such a desperate errand I
struck on a narrow road which led up a brae to my
left, and going along it for a hundred yards or so,
I saw a light which seemed to come from a cottage
window. I stopped and looked at it, wondering
if I dare go boldly up and knock.
In those lawless days one had to be
cautious about going up to strange houses, for one
never knew whether one would find a friend or an enemy
within, so I determined to tie my pony to a tree, and
steal noiselessly up to the building, and see what
sort of place it was.
I did so, and found that the light
came from a tiny thatched cottage standing by itself,
sheltered by some fir trees. There appeared to
be no dogs about, so I crept quite close to the little
window, and peered in through a hole in the shutter.
I could see the inside of the room quite plainly;
it was poorly furnished, but beautifully clean.
In a corner opposite the window stood a rough settle,
while on a three-legged stool by the peat fire sat
an old woman knitting busily, a collie dog at her
feet.
There could be nothing to fear from
her, so I knocked boldly at the door. The collie
flew to the back of it barking furiously, but I heard
the old woman calling him back, and presently she peeped
out, asking who was there.
“’Tis I, Jock Armstrong
of Kinmont,” I said, “and I fain would
be guided as to the quickest road to Branksome Tower.”
The old woman peered over my head
into the darkness, evidently expecting to see someone
standing behind me.
“I ken Willie o’ Kinmont;
but he’s a grown man,” she said suspiciously,
making as though she would shut the door.
“He’s my father,”
I cried, vainly endeavouring to keep my voice steady,
“and and I have a message
to carry from him to the Lord of Buccleuch at Branksome.”
I would fain have told the whole story, but I knew
it was better to be cautious. I was still no
distance from the English Border, and it would take
away the last chance of saving my father’s life,
were Sakelde to get to know that word of his doings
were like to reach the Scottish Warden’s ears.
“Loshsake, laddie!” exclaimed
the old dame in astonishment, setting the door wide
open so that the light might fall full on me, “’tis
full twenty miles tae Branksome, an’ it’s
a bad road ower the hills.”
“But I have a pony,” I
said. “’Tis tied up down the roadway there,
and the moon will rise.”
“That it will in an hour or
two, but all the same I misdoubt me that you’ll
lose your road. What’s the matter wi’
Kinmont Willie, that he has tae send a bairn like
you his messages? Ye needna’ be feared to
speak out,” she added as I hesitated; “Kinmont
Willie is a friend of mine at least, he
did my goodman and me a good turn once and
I would like to pay it back again if I could.”
I needed no second bidding; it was
such a relief to have someone to share the burden,
and I felt better as soon as I had told her, even
although the telling brought the tears to my eyes.
The old woman listened attentively,
and then shook her fist in the direction which the
English had taken.
“He’s a fause loon that
Sakelde,” she said, “and I’d walk
to Carlisle any day to see him hanged. ’Twas
he who stole our sheep, two years past at Martinmas,
and ’twas your father brought them back again.
But keep up your heart, my man; if you can get to
the Bold Buccleuch he’ll put things right, I’ll
warrant, and I’ll do all I can for you.
Go inbye, and sit down by the fire, and I’ll
go down the road and fetch the nag. You’ll
both be the better for a rest, and a bite o’
something to eat, and when the moon is risen I’ll
take you up the hill, and show you the track.
My goodman is away at Hawick market, or he would ha’e
ridden a bit of the road wi’ ye.”
When I was a little fellow, before
my mother died, she used to read me lessons out of
her great Bible with the silver clasps, and of all
the stories she read to me, I liked the lesson of
the Good Samaritan best, and, looking back, now that
I am a grown man, it seems to me that I met the Good
Samaritan that night, only he was a woman.
After Allison Elliot, for that was
her name, had brought my pony into her cow-house,
and seen that he was supplied with both hay and water,
she returned to the cottage, and with her own hands
took off my coarse woollen hose and heavy shoon, and
spread them on the hearth to dry, then she made me
lie down on the settle, and, covering me up with a
plaid, she bade me go to sleep, promising to wake
me the moment the moon rose.
It was nearly eleven o’clock
when she shook me gently, bidding me get up and put
on my shoon, as it was time to be going, and, sitting
up, I found a supper of wheaten bread and hot milk
on the table, which she told me to eat, while she
wrapped herself in a plaid and went out for the nag.
What with the sleep, and the dry clothes,
and the warm food, I promise you I felt twice the
man I had done a few hours earlier, and I chattered
quite gaily to her as she led my pony up a steep hillside
behind the cottage, for the moon was only beginning
to rise, and there was still but little light.
After we had gone some two miles, we struck a bridle
track, well trodden by horses’ hoofs, which wound
upwards between two high hills.
Here Allison paused and looked keenly at the ground.
“This is the path,” she
said; “you can hardly lose it, for there have
been riders over it yesterday or the day before.
Scott o’ Haining and his men, most likely, going
home from their meeting at the Kershope Burn.
This will lead you over by Priesthaugh Swire, and down
the Allan into Teviotdale. Beware of a bog which
you will pass some two miles on this side of Priesthaugh.
’Tis the mire Queen Mary stuck in when she rode
to visit her lover when he lay sick at Hermitage.
May the Lord be good to you, laddie, and grant you
a safe convoy, for ye carry a brave heart in that
little body o’ yours!”
I thanked her with all my might, promising
to go back and see her if my errand were successful;
then I turned my pony’s head to the hills, and
spurred him into a brisk canter. He was a willing
little beast, and mightily refreshed by Allison Elliot’s
hay, and, as the moon was now shining clearly, we
made steady progress; but it was a long lonely ride
for a boy of my age, and once or twice my courage nearly
failed me: once when my pony put his foot into
a sheep drain, and stumbled, throwing me clean over
his head, and again when I missed the track, and rode
straight into the bog Allison had warned me about,
and in which the little beast was near sticking altogether,
and I lost a good hour getting him to firm land and
finding the track again.
The bright morning sun was showing
above the Eastern horizon before I left the weary
hills behind me, but it was easy work to ride down
the sloping banks of the Allan, and soon I came to
the wooded valley of the Teviot.
Urging on my tired pony, I cantered
down the level haughs which lay by the river side,
and it was not long before Branksome came in sight,
a high square house, with many rows of windows, flanked
by a massive square tower at each corner.
I rode up to the great doorway through
an avenue of beeches and knocked timidly on the wrought-iron
knocker, for I had never been to such a big house
in my life before, and I felt that I made but a sorry
figure, splashed as I was with mud from head to foot.
The old seneschal who came to the
door seemed to think so too, for he looked me up and
down with a broad grin on his face before he asked
who I was, and on what business I had come.
“To see my Lord of Buccleuch,
and carry a message to him from William Armstrong
of Kinmont,” I replied, with as much dignity
as I could muster, for the fellow’s smile angered
me, and I feared that he might not think it worth
his while to tell the Warden of my arrival.
“Then thou shalt see Sir Walter
at once, young sir, if thou wilt walk this way,”
said the man, mimicking my voice good-naturedly, and,
hitching my pony’s bridle to an iron ring in
the door-post, he led me along a stone passage, straight
into a great vaulted hall, in the centre of which
stood a long wooden table, with a smaller one standing
crossways on a dais at its head.
A crowd of squires and men-at-arms
stood round the lower table, laughing and jesting
as they helped themselves with their hunting knives
to slices from the huge joints, or quaffed great tankards
of ale, while up at the top sat my Lord of Buccleuch
himself, surrounded by his knights, and waited on
by smart pages in livery, boys about my own age.
As the old seneschal appeared in the
doorway there was a sudden silence, while he announced
in a loud voice that a messenger had arrived from
William Armstrong of Kinmont; but when he stepped aside,
and everyone saw that the messenger was only a little
eleven-years-old lad, a loud laugh went round the
hall, and the smart pages whispered together and pointed
to my muddy clothes.
When the old seneschal saw this, he
gave me a kindly nudge.
“Yonder is my Lord of Buccleuch
at the top of the table,” he whispered; “go
right up to him, and speak out thy message boldly.”
I did as I was bid, though I felt
my cheeks burn as I walked up the great hall, among
staring men and whispering pages, and when I reached
the dais where the Warden sat, I knelt at his feet,
cap in hand, as my father had taught me to do before
my betters.
Sir Walter Scott, Lord of Buccleuch,
of whom I had heard so much, was a young, stern-looking
man, with curly brown hair and keen blue eyes.
His word was law on the Borders, and people said that
even the King, in far-off Edinburgh, stood in awe
of him; but he leant forward and spoke kindly enough
to me.
“So thou comest from Armstrong
of Kinmont, boy; and had Kinmont Willie no better
messenger at hand, that he had to fall back on a smatchet
like thee?”
“There were plenty of men at
Kinmont, an’ it please your lordship,”
I answered, “had I had time to seek them; but
a man called Sakelde hath ta’en my father prisoner,
and carried him to Carlisle, and I have ridden all
night to tell thee of it, for he is like to be hanged
the day after to-morrow, if thou canst not save him.”
Here my voice gave way, and I could
only cling to the great man’s knee, for my quivering
lips refused to say any more.
Buccleuch put his arm round me, and
spoke slowly, as one would speak to a bairn.
“And who is thy father, little man?”
“Kinmont Willie,” I gasped,
“and he was ta’en last night, in truce
time.”
I felt the arm that was round me stiffen,
and there was silence for a moment, then my lord swore
a great oath, and let his clenched fist fall so heavily
on the table, that the red French wine which stood
before him splashed right out of the beaker, a foot
or two in the air.
“My Lord of Scroope shall answer
for this,” he cried. “Hath he forgotten
that men name me the Bold Buccleuch, and that I am
Keeper o’ the Scottish Marches, to see that
justice is done to high and low, gentle and simple?”
Then he gave some quick, sharp orders,
and ten or twelve men left the room, and a minute
later I saw them, through a casement, throw themselves
astride their horses, and gallop out of the courtyard.
At the sight my heart lightened, for I knew that whatever
could be done for my father would be done, for these
men had gone to “warn the waters,” or,
in other words, to carry the tidings far and wide,
and bid all the men of the Western Border be ready
to meet their chief at some given trysting-place,
and ride with him to the rescue.
Meanwhile the Warden lifted me on
his knee, and began asking me questions, while the
pages gathered round, no longer jeering, but with
wide-open eyes.
“Thou art a brave lad,”
he said at last, after I had told him the whole story,
“and, with thy father’s permission, I would
fain have thee for one of my pages. We must tell
him how well thou hast carried the message, and ask
him if he can spare thee for a year or two.”
At any other time my heart would have
leapt at this unheard-of good fortune, for to be a
page in the Warden’s household was the ambition
of every well-born lad on the Border; but at that
moment I felt as if Buccleuch hardly realised my father’s
danger.
“But he is lodged in Carlisle
Castle, and men say the walls are thick,” I
said anxiously, “and it is garrisoned by my Lord
Scroope’s soldiers.”
The Warden laughed.
“We will teach my Lord Scroope
that there is no bird’s nest that the Bold Buccleuch
dare not harry,” he said, and, seeing the look
on his face, I was content.
Then, noticing how weary I was, he
called one of the older pages, and bade him see that
I had food and rest, and the boy, who had been one
of the first to laugh before, but who now treated
me with great respect, took me away to a little turret
room which he shared with some of his fellows, and
brought me a piece of venison pie, and then left me
to go to sleep on his low pallet, promising to wake
me when there were signs of the Warden and his men
setting out.
I must have slept the whole day, for
the little room was almost dark again, and the rain
was beating wildly on the casement, when the boy came
back. “My lord hath given orders for the
horses to be saddled,” he said, “and the
trysting-place is Woodhouselee. I heard one squire
tell another in the hall, for as a rule we pages know
nothing, and are only expected to do as we are bid.
I know not if my lord means thee to ride with him,
but I was sent up to fetch thee.”
It did not take me long to spring
up and fasten my doublet, and follow my guide down
to the great hall. Here all was bustle and confusion;
men were standing about ready armed, making a hasty
meal at the long table, which never seemed to be empty
of its load of food, while outside in the courtyard
some fifty or sixty horses were standing, ready saddled,
with bags of fodder thrown over their necks.
Every few minutes a handful of men
would ride up in the dusk, and, leaving their rough
mountain ponies outside, would stride into the hall,
and begin to eat as hard as they could, exchanging
greetings between the mouthfuls. These were men
from the neighbourhood, my friend informed me, mostly
kinsmen of Buccleuch, and lairds in their own
right, who had ridden to Branksome with their men
to start with their chief.
There was Scott of Harden, and Scott
of Goldilands, Scott of Commonside, and Scott of Allanhaugh,
and many more whom I do not now remember, and they
drank their ale, and laughed and joked, as if they
were riding to a wedding, instead of on an errand
which might cost them their lives.
Buccleuch himself was in the midst
of them, booted and spurred, and presently his eye
fell on me.
“Ha! my young cocksparrow,”
he cried. “Wilt ride with us to greet thy
father, or are thy bones too weary? Small shame
’twould be to thee if they were.”
“Oh, if it please thee, sire,
let me ride,” I said; “I am not too weary,
if my pony is not,” at which reply everyone laughed.
“I hear thy pony can scarce
hirple on three legs,” answered my lord, clapping
me on my shoulder, “but I like a lad of spirit,
and go thou shalt. Here, Red Rowan, take him
up in front of thee, and see that a horse be led for
Kinmont to ride home on.”
I was about to protest that I was
not a bairn to ride in front of any man, but Buccleuch
turned away as if the matter were settled, and the
big trooper who came up and took me in charge persuaded
me to do as I was bid. “’Tis a dark night,
laddie, and we ride fast,” he said, “and
my lord would be angered didst thou lose thy way,
or fall behind,” and although my pride was nettled
at first, I was soon fain to confess that he was right,
for the horses swung out into the wind and rain, and
took to the hills at a steady trot, keeping together
in the darkness in a way that astonished me.
Red Rowan had a plaid on his shoulders which he twisted
round me, and which sheltered me a little from the
driving rain, and I think I must have dozed at intervals,
for it seemed no time until we were over the hills,
and down at Woodhouselee in Canonbie, where a great
band of men were waiting for us, who had gathered from
Liddesdale and Hermitage Water.
With scarcely a word they joined our
ranks, and we rode silently and swiftly on, across
the Esk, and the Graeme’s country, until we reached
the banks of the Eden.
Here we came to a standstill, for
the river was so swollen with the recent rains that
it seemed madness for any man to venture into the
rushing torrent; but men who had ridden so far, and
on such an errand, were not to be easily daunted.
“This way, lads, and keep your
horses’ heads to the stream,” shouted a
voice, and with a scramble we were down the bank, and
the nags were swimming for dear life. I confess
now, that at that moment I thought my last hour had
come, for the swirling water was within an inch of
my toes, and I clung to Red Rowan’s coat with
all the strength I had, and shut my eyes, and tried
to think of my prayers. But it was soon over,
and on the other side we waited a minute to see if
any man were missing. Everyone was safe, however,
and on we went till we were close on Carlisle, and
could see the lights of the Castle rising up above
the city wall.
Then Buccleuch called a halt, and
everyone dismounted, and some forty men, throwing
their bridle reins to their comrades, stepped to the
front. Red Rowan was one of them, and I kept close
to his side.
Everything must have been arranged
beforehand, for not a word was spoken, but by the
light of a single torch the little band arranged themselves
in order, while I watched with wide-open eyes.
They were not all armed, but they all had their hands
full.
In the very front were ten men carrying
hunting-horns and bugles; then came ten carrying three
or four long ladders, which must have been brought
with us on ponies’ backs. Then came other
ten, armed with great iron bars and forehammers; and
only the last ten, among whom was the Warden himself
and Red Rowan, were prepared as if for fighting.
At the word of command they set out,
with long steady strides, and as no one noticed me,
I went too, running all the time in order to keep up
with them.
The Castle stood to the north side
of the little city, close to the city wall, and the
courtyard lay just below it. We stole up like
cats in the darkness, fearful lest someone might hear
us and give the alarm. Everyone seemed to be
asleep, however, or else the roaring of the wind deadened
the noise of our footsteps. In any case we reached
the wall in safety, and as we stood at the bottom
of it waiting till the men tied the ladders together,
we could hear the sentries in the courtyard challenge
as they went their rounds.
At last the ladders were ready, and
Buccleuch gave his whispered orders before they were
raised.
No man was to be killed, he said,
if it could possibly be helped, as the two countries
were at peace with each other, and he had no mind to
stir up strife. All he wanted was the rescue
of my father.
Then the ladders were raised, and
bitter was the disappointment when it was found that
they were too short. For a moment it seemed as
if we had come all the weary way for nothing.
“It matters not, lads,”
said the Warden cheerily; “there be more ways
of robbing a corbie’s nest than one. Bide
you here by the little postern, and Wat Scott and
Red Rowan and I will prowl round, and see what we can
see.”
Along with these two stalwart men
he vanished, while we crouched at the foot of the
wall and waited; nor had we long to wait.
In ten minutes we could hear the bolts
and bars being withdrawn, and the little door was
opened by Buccleuch himself, who wore a triumphant
smile. He had found a loophole at the back of
the Castle left entirely unguarded, and without much
difficulty he and his two companions had forced out
a stone or two, until the hole was large enough for
them to squeeze through, and had caught and bound
the unsuspecting sentries as they came round, stuffing
their mouths full of old clouts to hinder them from
crying out and giving the alarm.
Once we were inside the courtyard
he ordered the men with the iron bars and forehammers
to be ready to beat open the doors, and then he gave
the word to the men with the bugles and hunting horns.
Then began such a din as I had never
heard before, and have never heard since. The
bugles screeched, and the iron bars rang, and above
all sounded the wild Border slogan, “Wha dare
meddle wi’ me?” which the men shouted
with all their might. One would have thought that
the whole men in Scotland were about the walls, instead
of but forty.
And in good faith the people of the
Castle, cowards that they were, and even my Lord Scroope
himself, thought that they were beset by a whole army,
and after one or two frightened peeps from out of windows,
and behind doors, they shut themselves up as best
they might in their own quarters, and left us to work
our will, and beat down door after door until we came
to the very innermost prison itself, where my father
was chained hand and foot to the wall like any dog.
Just as the door was being burst open,
my lord caught sight of me as I squeezed along the
passage, anxious to see all that could be seen.
He laid his hand on the men’s shoulders and
held them back.
“Let the bairn go first,”
he said; “it is his right, for he has saved
him.”
Then I darted across the cell, and
stood at my father’s side. What he said
to me I never knew, only I saw that strange look once
more on his face, and his eyes were very bright.
Had he been a bairn or a woman I should have said
he was like to weep. It was past in a moment,
for there was little time to lose. At any instant
the garrison might find out how few in numbers we
were, and sally out to cut us off, so no time was
wasted in trying to strike his chains off him.
With an iron bar Red Rowan wrenched
the ring to which he was fastened, out of the wall,
and, raising him on his back, carried him bodily down
the narrow staircase, and out through the courtyard.
As we passed under my Lord Scroope’s
casement, my father, putting all his strength into
his voice, called out a lusty “good night”
to his lordship, which was echoed by the men with
peals of laughter.
Then we hurried on to where the main
body of troopers were waiting with the horses, and
I warrant the shout that they raised when they saw
us coming with my father in the midst of us, riding
on Red Rowan’s shoulder, might almost have been
heard at Branksome itself.
When it died away we heard another
sound which warned us that the laggards at the Castle
had gathered their feeble courage, and were calling
on the burghers of Carlisle to come to their aid, for
every bell in the city was ringing, and we could see
the flash of torches here and there.
Scarcely had the smiths struck the
last fetter from my father’s limbs than we heard
the thunder of horses’ hoofs behind us.
“To horse, lads,” cried
Buccleuch, and in another moment we were galloping
towards the Eden, I in front of Red Rowan as before,
and close to my father’s side.
The English knew the lie of the land
better than we did, for they were at the river before
us, well-nigh a thousand of them, with Lord Scroope
himself at their head. Apparently they never dreamed
that we would attempt to swim the torrent, and thought
we would have to show fight, for they were drawn up
as if for a battle; but we dashed past them with a
yell of defiance, and plunged into the flooded river,
and once more we came safe to the other side.
Once there we faced round, but the English made no
attempt to follow; they sat on their horses, glowering
at us in the dim light of the breaking day, but they
said never a word.
Then my Lord of Buccleuch raised himself
in his stirrups, and, plucking off his right glove,
he flung it with all his might across the river, and,
the wind catching it, it was blown right into their
leader’s face. “Take that, my Lord
of Scroope,” he cried; “mayhap ’twill
cure thee of thy treachery, for if Sakelde took him,
’twas thou who harboured him, and if thou likest
not my mode of visiting at thy Castle of Carlisle,
thou canst call and lodge thy complaint at Branksome
at thy leisure.”
Then, with a laugh, he turned his
horse’s head and led us homewards, as the sun
was rising and the world was waking up to another day.