“Where is the maid, mother?”
“Nay, I know not, my son. I thought she
was with thee.”
“I have not seen her anywhere. I have been
busy with the men.”
“Where are the other boys?”
“That I know not either.
I have seen none since I rose this morning. I
have been busy.”
“The maid had risen and dressed
herself, and had slipped out betimes,” said
the Lady of Dynevor, as she took her place at the board.
“Methought she would be with thee. She
is a veritable sprite for flitting hither and thither
after thee. Doubtless she is with some of the
others. Who knows where the boys have gone this
morning? They are not wont to be absent at the
breakfast hour.”
This last question was addressed to
the servants who were at the lower end of the board,
and one of them spoke up in reply. By what he
said it appeared that Griffeth had started off early
to fly a new falcon of his, and it seemed probable
that his brothers and little Lady Gertrude had accompanied
him; for whilst he had been discussing with the falconer
the best place for making the proposed trial, Llewelyn
had been to the stables and had saddled and led out
the palfrey upon which their little guest habitually
rode, and there seemed no reason to doubt that all
the party had gone somewhere up upon the highlands
to watch the maiden essay of the bird.
“She would be sure to long to
see the trial,” said Wendot, attacking the viands
before him with a hearty appetite. “She
always loves to go with us when there is anything
to see or hear. I marvel that she spoke not of
it to me, but perchance it slipped her memory.”
The early risers were late at the
meal, but no one was anxious about them. When
anything so engrossing as the flying of a young falcon
was in the wind, it was natural that so sublunary
a matter as breakfast should be forgotten. The
servants had finished their meal, and had left the
table before there was any sign of the return of the
wanderers, and then it was only Griffeth who came
bounding in, his face flushed and his eyes shining
as he caressed the hooded bird upon his wrist.
“He is a beauty, Wendot.
I would thou hadst been there to see. I took
him up to ”
“Ay, tell us all that when thou
hast had something to eat,” said Wendot.
“And where is Gertrude? she must be well-nigh
famished by this time.”
“Gertrude? Nay, I know
not. I have not seen her. I would not have
wearied her with such a tramp through the heavy dews.”
“But she had her palfrey; Llewelyn
led it away ere it was well light. Were you not
all together?”
“Nay, I was all alone.
Llewelyn and Howel were off and away before I was
ready; for when I sought them to ask if they would
come, they were nowhere to be found. As for the
maid, I never thought of her. Where can they
have taken her so early?”
A sudden look of anxiety crossed Wendot’s
face; but he repressed any exclamation of dismay,
and glanced at his mother to see if by any chance
she shared his feeling. But her face was calm
and placid, and she said composedly:
“If she is with Llewelyn and
Howel she will be safe. They have taken her on
some expedition in secret, but none will harm her with
two such stout protectors as they.”
And then the lady moved away to commence
her round of household duties, which in those days
was no sinecure; whilst Wendot stood in the midst of
the great hall with a strange shadow upon his face.
Griffeth, who was eagerly discussing his breakfast,
looked wonderingly at him.
“Brother, what ails thee?”
he said at length; “thou seemest ill at ease.”
“I am ill at ease,” answered
Wendot, and with a quick glance round him to assure
himself that there was no one by to hear, he approached
Griffeth with hasty steps and sat down beside him,
speaking in a low, rapid way and in English, “Griffeth,
tell me, didst thou hear aught last night ere thou
fell asleep?”
“Ay, I heard Wenwynwyn singing
to his harp in his own chamber, but nought beside.”
“I heard that too,” said
Wendot, “and for his singing I could not sleep;
so when it ceased not, I rose and stole to his room
to ask him to forbear, yet so wild and strange was
the song he sang that at the door I paused to listen;
and what thinkest thou was the burden that he sang?”
“Nay, I know not; tell me.”
“He sang a strange song that
I have never heard before, of how a dove was borne
from safe shelter a young dove in the
absence of the father bird; not the mother bird, but
the father and carried away to the eagle’s
nest by two fierce young eaglets untamed and untamable,
there to be left till the kites come down to carry
off the prize.
“Ha! thou startest and changest
colour! What is it thou fearest? Where are
Llewelyn and Howell and what have they done with the
maid? What kuowest thou, Griffeth?”
“I know nought,” answered
Griffeth, “save that Wenwynwyn has been up to
the commot of Llanymddyvri, and thou knowest what all
they of that place feel towards the English.
Then Llewelyn and Howel have been talking of late
of the eagle’s nest on the crag halfway thither,
and if they had named it to Gertrude she would have
been wild to go and see it. We know when Wenwynwyn
sings his songs how he ever calls Maelgon ap Caradoc
the kite, and the lords of Dynevor the eagles.
But, Wendot, it could not be a child
a maid and our father’s
guest. I cannot believe it of our own brothers.”
“I know not what to think, but
my heart misgives me. Thou knowest what Llewelyn
ever was, and Howel is but his shadow. I have
mistrusted this strange friendship before now, remembering
what chanced that first day, and that Llewelyn never
forgives or forgets; but I would not have dreamed
of such a thing as this. Yet, Griffeth, if the
thing is so, there is no time to lose. I am off
for the crag this very minute. Thou must quietly
collect and arm a few of our stanchest men, together
with the English servants left here with their young
mistress. Let all be done secretly and quietly,
and come after me with all speed. It may be that
we are on a fool’s errand, and that our fears
are groundless. But truly it may be that our
brothers are about to betray our guest into the hands
of one of England’s most bitter foes.
“Oh, methinks were her father
to return, and I had her not safe to deliver back
to him, I would not for very shame live to see the
day when I must avow to him what had befallen his
child at the hands of my brethren!”
Griffeth was fully alive to the possible
peril menacing the child, and eagerly took his orders
from his elder brother. It would not be difficult
to summon some dozen of the armed men on the place
to accompany him quietly and secretly. They would
follow upon Wendot’s fleet steps with as little
delay as might be, and would at least track the fugitive
and her guides, whether they succeeded in effecting
a rescue that day or not.
Wendot waited for nothing but to give
a few directions to his brother. Scarce ten minutes
had elapsed from the moment when the first illumination
of mind had come to him respecting some plot against
the life of an innocent child, before he had armed
himself, and unleashed two of the fleetest, strongest,
fiercest of the hounds, and was speeding up across
the moor and fell towards the lonely crag of the eagle’s
nest, which lay halfway between the castle of Dynevor
and the abode of Maelgon ap Caradoc.
There was one advantage Wendot possessed
over his brothers, and that was that he could take
the wild-deer tracks which led straight onward and
upward, whilst they with their charge would have to
keep to the winding mule track, which trebled the
distance. The maiden’s palfrey was none
too clever or surefooted upon these rough hillsides,
and their progress would be but slow.
Wendot moved as if he had wings to
his feet, and although the hot summer sun began to
beat down upon his head, and his breath came in deep,
laboured gasps, he felt neither heat nor fatigue, but
pressed as eagerly onwards and upwards as the strong,
fleet hounds at his side.
He knew he was on the right track;
for ever and anon his path would cross that which
had been trodden by the feet of the boys and the horse
earlier in the day, and his own quick eyes and the
deep baying of the hounds told him at once whenever
this was the case. Upwards and onwards, onwards
and upwards, sprang the brave lad with the untiring
energy of a strong and righteous purpose. He
might be going to danger, he might be going to his
death; for if he came into open collision with the
wild and savage retainers of Maelgon, intent upon
obtaining their prey, he knew that they would think
little of stabbing him to the heart rather than be
balked. There was no feud so far between Llanymddyvri
and Dynevor, but Wendot knew that his father was suspected
of leaning towards the English cause, and that it
would take little to provoke some hostile demonstration
on the part of his wild and reckless neighbour.
The whole country was torn and rent by internecine
strife, and there was a chronic state of semi-warfare
kept up between half the nobles of the country against
the other half.
But of personal danger Wendot thought
nothing. His own honour and that of his father
were at stake. If the little child left in their
care were treacherously given up to the foes of the
English, the boy felt that he should never lift up
his head again. He must save her
he would. Far rather would he die in her defence
than face her father with the story of the base treachery
of his brothers.
The path grew wilder and steeper;
the vegetation became more scant. The heat of
the sun was tempered by the cold of the upper air.
It was easier to climb, and the boy felt that his
muscles were made of steel.
Suddenly a new sound struck upon his
ear. It was like the whinny of a horse, only
that there was in it a note of distress. Glancing
sharply about him, Wendot saw Lady Gertrude’s
small white palfrey standing precariously on a ledge
of rock, and looking pitifully about him, unable to
move either up or down. The creature had plainly
been turned loose and abandoned, and in trying to
find his way home had stranded upon this ledge, and
was frightened to move a step. Wendot was fond
of all animals, and could not leave the pretty creature
in such a predicament.
“Besides, Gertrude may want
him again for the descent,” he said; and although
every moment was precious, he contrived to get the
horse up the steep bank and on to better ground, and
then tethered him on a small grassy plateau, where
he could feed and take his ease in safety for an hour
or two to come.
That matter accomplished, the lad
was up and off again. He had now to trust to
the hounds to direct him, for he did not know what
track his brothers would have taken, and the hard
rocks gave no indications which he could follow.
But the dogs were well used to their work, and with
their noses to the ground followed the trail unceasingly,
indicating from time to time by a deep bay that they
were absolutely certain of their direction.
High overhead loomed the apex of the
great crag. Wendot knew that he had not much
farther to go. He was able to distinguish the
cairn of stones which he and his brothers had once
erected on the top in honour of their having made
the ascent in a marvellously short space of time.
Wendot had beaten that record today, he knew; but
his eyes were full of anxiety instead of triumph.
He was scanning every track and every inch of distance
for traces of the foe he felt certain were somewhere
at hand. Had they been here already, and had
they carried off the prey? Or were they only
on their way, and had he come in time to thwart their
purpose yet?
Ha! what was that?
Wendot had reached the shoulder of
the mountain; he could see across the valley
could see the narrow winding track which led to the
stronghold of Maelgon. The Eagle’s Crag,
as it was called, fell away precipitously on the other
side. No one could scale it on that face.
The path from the upper valley wound round circuitously
towards it; and along this path, in the brilliant
sunshine, Wendot saw distinctly the approach of a small
band of armed men. Yes: they were approaching,
they were not retreating. Then they had not already
taken their prey; they were coming to claim it.
The boy could have shouted aloud in his triumph and
joy; but he held his peace, for who could tell what
peril might not lie in the way?
The next moment he had scaled the
steep, slippery rock which led to the precipitous
edge of the crag. Not a sign could he see of his
brothers or the child, but the hounds led right on
to the very verge of the precipice, and for a moment
the boy’s heart stood still. What if they
had grown afraid of the consequences of their own act,
and had resolved to get rid of the child in a sure
and safe fashion!
For a moment Wendot’s blood
ran cold. He recalled the traits of fierce cruelty
which had sometimes shown themselves in Llewelyn from
childhood, his well-known hatred of the English, his
outburst of passion with Gertrude, so quickly followed
by a strange appearance of friendship. Wendot
knew his countrymen and his nation’s characteristics,
and knew that fierce acts of treachery were often
truly charged upon them. What if
But the thought was too repellent to be seriously pursued,
and shaking it off by an effort, he raised his voice
and called his brothers by name.
And then, almost as it seemed from
beneath his very feet, there came an answering call;
but the voice was not that of his brothers, but the
cry of a terrified child.
“Oh, who are you? Do, please,
come to me. I am so frightened. I know I
shall fall. I know I shall be killed. Do
come to me quickly. I don’t know where
Llewelyn and Howel have gone.”
“I am coming I
am Wendot,” cried the boy, his heart giving a
sudden bound. “You are not hurt, you are
safe?”
“Yes; only so giddy and frightened,
and the sun is so hot and burning, and yet it is cold,
too. It is such a narrow place, and I cannot get
up or down. I can’t see the eagle’s
nest, and they have been such a long time going after
it. They said they would bring the nest and the
young eagles up to me, but they have never come back.
I’m afraid they are killed or hurt. Oh,
if you would only help me up, then we would go and
look for them together! Oh, I am so glad that
you have come!”
Wendot could not see the child, though
every word she spoke was distinctly audible.
He certainly could not reach her from the place where
he now stood; but the hounds had been following the
tracks of the quarry they had been scenting all this
way, and stood baying at a certain spot some fifty
yards away, and a little lower down than the apex
of the crag. It was long since Wendot had visited
this spot, his brothers knew it better than he; but
when he got to the place indicated by the dogs, he
saw that there was a little precipitous path along
the face of the cliff, which, although very narrow
and not a little dangerous, did give foothold to an
experienced mountaineer. How the child had ever
had the nerve to tread it he could not imagine, but
undoubtedly she was there, and he must get her back,
if possible, and down the mountainside, before those
armed men from the upper valley could reach them.
But could he do this? He cast
an apprehensive glance over his shoulder, and saw
to his dismay how quickly they were approaching.
From their quickened pace he fancied that his own
movements had been observed. Certainly there
was not a moment to lose, and leaving the dogs to keep
guard at the entrance, he set his foot upon the perilous
path and carefully pursued his way.
The face of the cliff jutted outwards
for some yards, and then made a sharp turn round an
angle. At the spot where this turn occurred, a
sort of natural arch had formed itself over the narrow
ledge which formed the path, and immediately behind
the arch there was a small plateau which gave space
to stand and move with some freedom, although a step
over the edge would plunge the unwary victim into
the deep gulf beneath. The cliff then fell away
once again, but the ledge wound round it still, until
it ended in a shallow alcove some eight feet deep,
which lay just beneath the highest part of the crag,
which overhung it by many yards.
And it was crouched up against the
cliff in this little alcove that Wendot found Gertrude;
cowering, white-faced, against the hard rock, faint
from want of food, terrified at the loneliness and
at her own fears for the safety of her companions,
and so overwrought by the tension of nerve she had
undergone, that when Wendot did stand beside her she
could only cling to him sobbing passionately, and it
was long before he could even induce her to let him
go, or to attempt to eat the contents of a small package
he had had the forethought to bring in his wallet.
He heard her tale as she sobbed in
his arms. They had come here after the eagle’s
nest. Llewelyn and Howel had been so kind!
They had not minded her being so slow, but had brought
her all the way; and when she wanted to follow them
along the ledge to get a better view of the nest,
they had blindfolded her that she might not get giddy,
and had put a rope round her and brought her safely
along the narrow ledge till she had got to this place.
But the nest could not be seen even from there, and
they had left her to see where it really was.
They said they would soon be back, but they had not
come, and she had got first anxious and then terrified
about them, and then fearful for her own safety.
At last when faintness and giddiness had come upon
her, and she could get no answer to her repeated shouts,
her spirit had altogether given way; and unless Wendot
had really come to her rescue, she was certain she
should have fallen down the precipice. She did
not know now how she should ever get back along the
narrow ridge, she was so frightened and giddy.
But if Llewelyn and Howel would come, perhaps she
might.
Did Wendot know where they were?
Would he take care of her now, and bring her safe
home?
“I will if I can,” answered
the boy, with a strange light in his blue eyes.
“Griffeth is on his way with plenty of help.
He will be here soon. Do you think you could
walk along the ridge now, if I were to hold you up
and help you? We should get home sooner if you
could.”
But the child shrank back and put
her hand before her eyes.
“Oh, let us wait till Griffeth
comes. I am so giddy still, and I am so afraid
I should fall. Hark! I’m sure I hear
voices. They are coming already. Oh, I am
so glad! I do want to get home. Wendot, why
do you look like that? Why do you get out that
thing? You are not going to fight?”
“Lady Gertrude,” said
Wendot, speaking in a grave, manly way that at once
riveted the child’s attention, “I am afraid
that those voices do not belong to our friends, but
to a band of men who are coming to try and take you
prisoner to a castle up the valley there. No:
do not be frightened; I will save you from them if
I can. There is help coming for us, and I think
I can hold this path against them for some time to
come. You must try and keep up heart and not
be frightened. You may see some hard blows struck,
but you can shut your eyes and not think about it.
If they do kill me and carry you off, do not give
up hope, for Griffeth and our own men will be after
you to rescue you. Now let me go, and try not
to be afraid. I think we can hold them at bay
till we are more equally matched.”
The child’s eyes dilated with
horror. She caught Wendot by the hand.
“Give me up,” she said
firmly. “I will not have you killed for
me. I would rather go with them. Give me
up, I say!”
“No, Gertrude; I will not give
you up,” answered Wendot very quietly, but with
an inflexibility of tone which made his voice seem
like that of another person. “Your father
placed you in my hands; to him I must answer for your
safety. What is life to a man without honour?
Would you have me stain my name for the sake of saving
my life? I think not that that is the English
code of honour.”
Child as she was, little Gertrude
understood well what was implied in those words, and
a new light flashed into her eyes. Something of
the soldier spirit awoke within her, and she snatched
at a small dagger Wendot carried in his belt, and
drawing her small figure to its full height, she said:
“We will both fight, Wendot;
we will both fight, and both die rather than let them
take us.”
He smiled, and just for a moment laid
his hand upon her head; then he drew on his mailed
gloves and looked well to the buckles of the stout
leathern jerkin, almost as impervious to the stabs
of his foes as a suit of mail itself. The temper
of his weapon he well knew; he had no fear that it
would play him false. He had not the headpiece
of mail; he had started in too great a hurry to arm
himself completely, and speed was too much an object
for him to willingly encumber himself needlessly.
But as he skirted the narrow ledge, and placed himself
beneath the protecting arch, he smiled grimly to himself,
and thought that the stone would be as good a guard,
and that here was a place where a man could sell his
life dear, and send many a foe to his account before
striking his own colours.
Scarcely had he well established himself
in the commanding position he had resolved upon, when
the sound of voices became more distinct. The
party had plainly arrived at the appointed place, and
Wendot could hear them discussing who was best fitted
for the task of traversing the dangerous ledge to
bring back the captive who was to be found there.
The wild Welsh was unintelligible to Gertrude, or
she would have known at once what dark treachery had
been planned and carried out by her trusted companions;
but Wendot’s cheek glowed with shame, and he
set his teeth hard, resolved to redeem the honour
of his father’s name to the last drop of his
blood if he should be called upon to shed it in the
cause.
He heard the slow and cautious steps
approaching along the path, and he gripped his weapon
more tightly in his hand. The red light of battle
was in his eyes, and the moment he caught sight of
the form of the stalwart soldier threading his perilous
way along the path he sprang upon him with a cry of
fury, and hurled him into the gulf beneath.
Down fell the man, utterly unprepared
for such an attack, and his sharp cry of terror was
echoed from above by a dozen loud voices.
Cries and shouts and questions assailed
Wendot, but he answered never a word. Those above
knew not if it had been an accident, or if an ambushed
foe had hurled their comrade to destruction. Again
came a long pause for consideration and
every moment wasted was all in favour of the pair
upon the ledge and then it became plain
that some course of action had been determined upon,
and Wendot heard the cautious approach of another
foe. This man crept on his way much more cautiously,
and the youth held himself ready for a yet more determined
spring. Luckily for him, he could remain hidden
until his opponent was close to him; and so soon as
he was certain from the sound that the man was reaching
the angle of the rock, he made another dash, and brought
down his sword with all the strength of his arm upon
the head of the assailant.
Once again into the heart of the abyss
crashed the body of the unfortunate soldier; but a
sharp thrill of pain ran through Wendot’s frame,
and a barbed arrow, well aimed at the joint of his
leather jerkin, plunged into his neck and stuck fast.
The first assailant whom he had disposed
of was but one of a close line, following each other
in rapid succession. As his face became visible
to the man now foremost a shout of surprise and anger
rose up.
“It is Res Wendot! It is
one of the sons of the house of Dynevor!
“Wendot, thou art mad!
We are the friends of thy house. We are here at
the instigation of thine own kindred. Give us
the maid, and thou shalt go free. We would not
harm thee.”
“Stir but one step nearer, and
I slay thee as I have slain thy two comrades,”
cried Wendot, in a voice which all might hear.
“I deal not in treachery towards those that
trust us. I will answer for the safety of the
maid with mine own life. Of my hand her father
will demand her when he comes again. Shall we
men of Wales give right cause to the English to call
us murderers, traitors, cowards? Take my life
if you will, take it a thousand times over if you
will, it is only over my dead body that you will reach
that child.”
“Down with him
traitor to the cause! He is sold to the English!
He is no countryman of ours! Spare him not!
He is worthy of death! Down with every Welshman
who bands not with those who would uphold his country’s
cause!”
Such were the shouts which rent the
air as the meaning of Wendot’s words made itself
understood. As for the brave lad himself, he had
plucked the arrow from his neck, and now stood boldly
on guard, resolved to husband his strength and keep
on the defensive only, hoping thus to gain time until
Griffeth and the armed men should arrive.
He had all the advantage of the position;
but his foes were strong men, and came on thick and
fast one after another, till it seemed as if the lad
might be forced backwards by sheer weight and pressure.
But Wendot was no novice at the use of arms:
as his third foe fell upon him with heavy blows of
his weighted axe, he stepped backwards a pace, and
let the blows descend harmlessly upon the solid rock
of the arch; until the man, disgusted at the non-success
of his endeavours to tempt his adversary out of his
defended position, threw away his blunted axe, and
was about to draw his sword for a thrust, when the
boy sprang like lightning upon him, and buried his
poniard in his heart.
Over went the man like a log, almost
dragging Wendot with him as he fell, and before the
youth had had time to recover himself, he had received
a deep gash in his sword arm from the foe who pressed
on next, and who made a quick dash to try to get possession
of the vantage ground of the arch.
But Wendot staggered back as if with
weakness, let his adversary dash through the arch
after him; and then, hurling himself upon him as he
passed through, pushed him sheer off the ledge on the
other side into the yawning gulf beneath.
The comrades of this last victim,
who had just sent up a shout of triumph, now changed
their note, and it became a yell of rage. Wendot
was back in his old vantage ground, wounded by several
arrows, spent by blows, and growing faint from loss
of blood, but dauntless and resolute as ever, determined
to sell his life dearly, and hold out as long as he
had breath left in him, sooner than let the helpless
child fall into the clutches of these fierce men,
goaded now to madness by the opposition they had met
with.
Hark! what was that? It was a
shout, a hail, and then the familiar call of the Dynevor
brothers rang through the still air.
“La-ha-boo!”
It was Griffeth’s voice.
He had come at last. It was plain that the foe
had heard, and had paused; for if they were menaced
from another quarter, it was time to think of their
own safety.
Summoning up all his strength, Wendot
sent back an answering hail, and the next moment there
was the sound of fierce voices and the clashing of
weapons overhead on the summit of the cliff; and in
quick, urgent accents Wendot’s foes were ordered
to retreat, as there was treachery somewhere, and
they had been betrayed.
Wendot saw his antagonists lower their
weapons, and return the way they had come, with fearful
backward glances, lest their boy foe should be following
them. But he had no wish to do that. He was
spent and exhausted and maimed. He turned backwards
towards the safer shelter of the little alcove, and
sank down beside the trembling child, panting, bleeding,
and almost unconscious.