As had been arranged when Lempriere
challenged Leicester, they met soon after dawn among
the trees beside the Thames. A gentleman of the
court, to whom the Duke’s Daughter had previously
presented Lempriere, gaily agreed to act as second,
and gallantly attended the lord of Rozel in his adventurous
enterprise. There were few at Court who had not
some grudge against Leicester, few who would not willingly
have done duty at such a time; for Leicester’s
friends were of fair-weather sort, ready to defend
him, to support him, not for friendship but for the
crumbs that dropped from the table of his power.
The favourite himself was attended by the Earl of
Ealing, a youngster who had his spurs to win, who thought
it policy to serve the great time-server. Two
others also came.
It was a morning little made for deeds
of rancour or of blood. As they passed, the early
morning mists above the green fields of Kent and Essex
were being melted by the summer sun. The smell
of ripening fruit came on them with pungent sweetness,
their feet crashed odorously through clumps of tiger-lilies,
and the dew on the ribbon-grass shook glistening drops
upon their velvets. Overhead the carolling of
the thrush came swimming recklessly through the trees,
and far over in the fields the ploughmen started upon
the heavy courses of their labour; while here and there
poachers with bows and arrows slid through the green
undergrowth, like spies hovering on an army’s
flank.
To Lempriere the morning carried no
impression save that life was well worth living.
No agitation passed across his nerves, no apprehension
reached his mind. He had no imagination; he loved
the things that his eyes saw because they filled him
with enjoyment; but why they were, or whence they
came, or what they meant or boded, never gave him
meditation. A vast epicurean, a consummate egotist,
ripe with feeling and rich with energy, he could not
believe that when he spoke the heavens would not fall.
The stinging sweetness of the morning was a tonic
to all his energies, an elation to his mind; he swaggered
through the lush grasses and boskage as though marching
to a marriage.
Leicester, on his part, no more caught
at the meaning of the morning, at the long whisper
of enlivened nature, than did his foe. The day
gave to him no more than was his right. If the
day was not fine, then Leicester was injured; but
if the day was fine, then Leicester had his due.
Moral blindness made him blind for the million deep
teachings trembling round him. He felt only the
garish and the splendid. So it was that at Kenilworth,
where his Queen had visited him, the fêtes that he
had held would far outshine the fête which would take
place in Greenwich Park on this May Day. The
fête of this May Day would take place, but would he
see it? The thought flashed through his mind that
he might not; but he trod it under foot; not through
an inborn, primitive egotism like that of Lempriere,
but through an innate arrogance, an unalterable belief
that Fate was ever on his side. He had played
so many tricks with Fate, had mocked while taking
its gifts so often, that, like the son who has flouted
his indulgent father through innumerable times, he
conceived that he should never be disinherited.
It irked him that he should be fighting with a farmer,
as he termed the Seigneur of the Jersey Isle; but
there was in the event, too, a sense of relief, for
he had a will for murder. Yesterday’s events
were still fresh in his mind; and he had a feeling
that the letting of Lempriere’s blood would cool
his own and be some cure for the choler which the
presence of these strangers at the Court had wrought
in him.
There were better swordsmen in England
than he, but his skill was various, and he knew tricks
of the trade which this primitive Norman could never
have learnt. He had some touch of wit, some biting
observation, and, as he neared the place of the encounter,
he played upon the coming event with a mordant frivolity.
Not by nature a brave man, he was so much a fatalist,
such a worshipper of his star, that he had acquired
an artificial courage which had served him well.
The unschooled gentlemen with him roared with laughter
at his sallies, and they came to the place of meeting
as though to a summer feast.
“Good-morrow, nobility,”
said Leicester with courtesy overdone, and bowing
much too low. “Good-morrow, valentine,”
answered Lempriere, flushing slightly at the disguised
insult, and rising to the moment.
“I hear the crop of fools is
short this year in Jersey, and through no fault of
yours you’ve done your best most loyally,”
jeered Leicester, as he doffed his doublet, his gentlemen
laughing in derision.
“’Tis true enough, my
lord, and I have come to find new seed in England,
where are fools to spare; as I trust in Heaven one
shall be spared on this very day for planting yonder.”
He was eaten with rage, but he was cool and steady.
He was now in his linen and small
clothes and looked like some untrained Hercules.
“Well said, nobility,”
laughed Leicester with an ugly look. “’Tis
seed time let us measure out the seed.
On guard!”
Never were two men such opposites,
never two so seemingly ill-matched. Leicester’s
dark face and its sardonic look, his lithe figure,
the nervous strength of his bearing, were in strong
contrast to the bulking breadth, the perspiring robustness
of Lempriere of Rozel. It was not easy of belief
that Lempriere should be set to fight this toreador
of a fighting Court. But there they stood, Lempriere’s
face with a great-eyed gravity looming above his rotund
figure like a moon above a purple cloud. But
huge and loose though the Seigneur’s motions
seemed, he was as intent as though there were but
two beings in the universe, Leicester and himself.
A strange alertness seemed to be upon him, and, as
Leicester found when the swords crossed, he was quicker
than his bulk gave warrant. His perfect health
made his vision sure; and, though not a fine swordsman,
he had done much fighting in his time, had been ever
ready for the touch of steel; and had served some warlike
days in fighting France, where fate had well befriended
him. That which Leicester meant should be by-play
of a moment became a full half-hour’s desperate
game. Leicester found that the thrust the
fatal thrust learned from an Italian master he
meant to give, was met by a swift precision, responding
to quick vision. Again and again he would have
brought the end, but Lempriere heavily foiled him.
The wound which the Seigneur got at last, meant to
be mortal, was saved from that by the facility of
a quick apprehension. Indeed, for a time the issue
had seemed doubtful, for the endurance and persistence
of the Seigneur made for exasperation and recklessness
in his antagonist, and once blood was drawn from the
wrist of the great man; but at length Lempriere went
upon the aggressive. Here he erred, for Leicester
found the chance for which he had manoeuvred to
use the feint and thrust got out of Italy. He
brought his enemy low, but only after a duel the like
of which had never been seen at the Court of England.
The toreador had slain his bull at last, but had done
no justice to his reputation. Never did man more
gallantly sustain his honour with heaviest odds against
him than did the Seigneur of Rozel that day.
As he was carried away by the merry
gentlemen of the Court, he called back to the favourite:
“Leicester is not so great a
swordsman after all. Hang fast to your honours
by the skin of your teeth, my lord.”