A WEDDING
About noon of the day after that upon
which Sir John had come to his death, Cicely Foterell
sat at her meal in Shefton Hall. Not much of the
rough midwinter fare passed her lips, for she was ill
at ease. The man she loved had been dismissed
from her because his fortunes were on the wane, and
her father had gone upon a journey which she felt,
rather than knew, to be very dangerous. The great
old hall was lonesome, also, for a young girl who
had no comrades near. Sitting there in the big
room, she bethought her how different it had been
in her childhood, before some foul sickness, of which
she knew not the name or nature, had swept away her
mother, her two brothers, and her sister all in a single
week, leaving her untouched. Then there were
merry voices about the house where now was silence,
and she alone, with naught bout a spaniel dog for
company. Also most of the men were away with the
wains laden with the year’s clip of wool, which
her father had held until the price had heightened,
nor in this snow would they be back for another week,
or perhaps longer.
Oh! her heart was heavy as the winter
clouds without, and young and fair as she might be,
almost she wished that she had gone when her brothers
went, and found her peace.
To cheer her spirits she drank from
a cup of spiced ale, that the manservant had placed
beside her covered with a napkin, and was glad of
its warmth and comfort. Just then the door opened,
and her foster-mother, Mrs. Stower, entered.
She was still a handsome woman in her prime, for her
husband had been carried off by a fever when she was
but nineteen, and her baby with him, whereon she had
been brought to the Hall to nurse Cicely, whose mother
was very ill after her birth. Moreover, she was
tall and dark, with black and flashing eyes, for her
father had been a Spaniard of gentle birth, and, it
was said, gypsy blood ran in her mother’s veins.
There were but two people in the world
for whom Emlyn Stower cared Cicely, her
foster-child, and a certain playmate of hers, one
Thomas Bolle, now a lay-brother at the Abbey who had
charge of the cattle. The tale was that in their
early youth he had courted her, not against her will,
and that when, after her parents’ tragic deaths,
as a ward of the former Abbot of Blossholme, she was
married to her husband, not with her will, this Thomas
put on the robe of a monk of the lowest degree, being
but a yeoman of good stock though of little learning.
Something in the woman’s manner
attracted Cicely’s attention, and gave a hint
of tragedy. She paused at the door, fumbling with
its latch, which was not her way, then turned and
stood upright against it, like a picture in its frame.
“What is it, Nurse?” asked
Cicely in a shaken voice. “From your look
you bear tidings.”
Emlyn Stower walked forward, rested one hand upon the oak table and answered
“Aye, evil tidings if they be
true. Prepare your heart, my sweet.”
“Quick with them, Emlyn,”
gasped Cicely. “Who is dead? Christopher?”
She shook her head, and Cicely sighed in relief, adding
“Who, then? Oh! was that dream true?”
“Aye, dear; you are an orphan.”
The girls head fell forward. Then she lifted it, and asked
“Who told you? Give me all the truth or
I shall die.”
“A friend of mine who has to
do with the Abbey yonder; ask not his name.”
“I know it, Emlyn; Thomas Bolle,” she
whispered back.
“A friend of mine,” repeated
the tall, dark woman, “told me that Sir John
Foterell, your sire, was murdered last night in the
forest by a gang of armed men, of whom he slew two.”
“From the Abbey?” queried Cicely in the
same whisper.
“Who knows? I think it.
They say that the arrow in his throat was such as
they make there. Jeffrey Stokes was hunted, but
escaped on to some ship that had her anchor up.”
“I’ll have his life for it, the coward!”
exclaimed Cicely.
“Blame him not yet. He
met another friend of mine, and sent a message.
It was that he did but obey his master’s last
orders, and, as he had seen too much and to linger
here was certain death, if he lived, he would return
from over-seas with the papers when the times are safer.
He prayed that you would not doubt him.”
“The papers! What papers, Emlyn?”
She shrugged her broad shoulders.
“How should I know? Doubtless
some that your father was taking to London and did
not desire to lose. His iron chest stands open
in his chamber.”
Now poor Cicely remembered that her
father had spoken of certain “deeds” which
he must take with him, and began to sob.
“Weep not, darling,” said
her foster-mother, smoothing Cicely’s brown
hair with her strong hand. “These things
are decreed of God, and done with. Now you must
look to yourself. Your father is gone, but one
remains.”
Cicely lifted her tear-stained face.
“Yes, I have you,” she said.
“Me!” she answered, with
a quick smile. “Nay, of what use am I?
Your nursing days are over. What did you tell
me your father said to you before he rode about
Sir Christopher? Hush! there’s no time to
talk; you must away to Cranwell Towers.”
“Why?” asked Cicely.
“He cannot bring my father back to life, and
it would be thought strange indeed that at such a
time I should visit a man in his own house. Send
and tell him the tidings. I bide here to bury
my father, and,” she added proudly, “to
avenge him.”
“If so, sweet, you bide here
to be buried yourself in yonder Nunnery. Hark,
I have not told you all my news. The Abbot Maldon
claims the Blossholme lands under some trick of law.
It was as to them that your father quarrelled with
him the other night; and with the land goes your wardship,
as once mine went under this monk’s charter.
Before sunset the Abbot rides here with his men-at-arms
to take them, and to set you for safe-keeping in the
Nunnery, where you will find a husband called Holy
Church.”
“Name of God! is it so?”
said Cicely, springing up; “and the most of the
men are away! I cannot hold the Hall against that
foreign Abbot and his hirelings, and an orphaned heiress
is but a chattel to be sold. Oh! now I understand
what my father meant. Order horses. I’ll
off to Christopher. Yet, stay, Nurse. What
will he do with me? It may seem shameless, and
will vex him.”
“I think he will marry you.
I think to-night you will be a wife. If not,
I’ll know the reason why,” she added viciously.
“A wife! To-night!”
exclaimed the girl, turning crimson to her hair.
“And my father but just dead! How can it
be?”
“We’ll talk of that with
Harflete. Mayhap, like you, he’ll wish to
wait and ask the banns, or to lay the case before
a London lawyer. Meanwhile, I have ordered horses
and sent a message to the Abbot to say you come to
learn the meaning of these rumours, which will keep
him still till nightfall; and another to Cranwell
Towers, that we may find food and lodging there.
Quick, now, and get your cloak and hood. I have
the jewels in their case, for Maldon seeks them more
even than your lands, and with them all the money
I can find. Also I have bid the sewing-girl make
a pack of some garments. Come now, come, for that
Abbot is hungry and will be stirring. There is
no time for talk.”
Three hours later in the red glow
of the sunset Christopher Harflete, watching at his
door, saw two women riding towards him across the snow,
and knew them while they were yet far off.
“It is true, then,” he
said to Father Roger Necton, the old clergyman of
Cranwell, whom he had summoned from the vicarage.
“I thought that fool of a messenger must be
drunk. What can have chanced, Father?”
“Death, I think, my son, for
sure naught else would bring the Lady Cicely here
unaccompanied save by a waiting-woman. The question
is what will happen now?” and he
glanced sideways at him.
“I know well if I can get my
way,” answered Christopher, with a merry laugh.
“Say now, Father, if it should so be that this
lady were willing, could you marry us?”
“Without a doubt, my son, with
the consent of the parents;” and again he looked
at him.
“And if there were no parents?”
“Then with the consent of the guardian, the
bride being under age.”
“And if no guardian had been declared or admitted?”
Then such a marriage duly solemnized, being a sacrament of the Church, would
hold fast until the crack of doom unless the Pope annulled it, and, as you know,
the Pope is out of favour in this realm on this very matter of marriage.
Let me explain the law to you, ecclesiastic and civil
But Christopher was already running
towards the gate, so the old parson’s lecture
remained undelivered.
The two met in the snow, Emlyn Stower
riding on ahead and leaving them together.
“What is it, sweetest?” he asked.
“What is it?”
“Oh! Christopher,”
she answered, weeping, “my poor father is dead murdered,
or so says Emlyn.”
“Murdered! By whom?”
“By the Abbot of Blossholme’s
soldiers so says Emlyn, yonder in the forest
last eve. And the Abbot is coming to Shefton to
declare me his ward and thrust me into the Nunnery that
was Emlyn’s tale. And so, although it is
a strange thing to do, having none to protect me, I
have fled to you because Emlyn said I ought.”
“She is a wise woman, Emlyn,”
broke in Christopher; “I always thought well
of her judgment. But did you only come to me because
Emlyn told you?”
“Not altogether, Christopher.
I came because I am distraught, and you are a better
friend than none at all, and where else
should I go? Also my poor father with his last
words to me, although he was so angry with you, bade
me seek your help if there were need and oh!
Christopher, I came because you swore you loved me,
and, therefore, it seemed right. If I had gone
to the Nunnery, although the Prioress, Mother Matilda,
is good, and my friend, who knows, she might not have
let me out again, for the Abbot is her master, and
not my friend. It is our lands he loves,
and the famous jewels Emlyn has them with
her.”
By now they were across the moat and
at the steps of the house, so, without answering,
Christopher lifted her tenderly from the saddle, pressing
her to his breast as he did so, for that seemed his
best answer. A groom came to lead away the horses,
touching his bonnet, and staring at them curiously;
and, leaning on her lover’s shoulder, Cicely
passed through the arched doorway of Cranwell Towers
into the hall, where a great fire burned. Before
this fire, warming his thin hands, stood Father Necton,
engaged in eager conversation with Emlyn Stower.
As the pair advanced this talk ceased, evidently because
it was of them.
“Mistress Cicely,” said
the kindly-faced old man, speaking in a nervous fashion,
“I fear that you visit us in sad case,”
and he paused, not knowing what to add.
“Yes, indeed,” she answered,
“if all I hear is true. They say that my
father is killed by cruel men I know not
for certain why or by whom and that the
Abbot of Blossholme comes to claim me as his ward and
immure me in Blossholme Priory, whither I would not
go. I have fled here to escape him, having no
other refuge, though you may think ill of me for this
deed.”
“Not I, my child. I should
not speak against yonder Abbot, for he is my superior
in the Church, though, mind you, I owe him no allegiance,
since this benefice is not in his gift, nor am I a
Benedictine. Therefore I will tell you the truth.
I hold the man not honest. All is provender that
comes to his maw; moreover, he is no Englishman, but
a Spaniard, one sent here to work against the welfare
of this realm; to suck its wealth, stir up rebellion,
and make report of all that passes in it, for the
benefit of England’s enemies.”
“Yet he has friends at Court, or so said my
father.”
“Aye, aye, such folks have ever
friends their money buys them; though mayhap
an ill day is at hand for him and his likes. Well,
your poor father is gone, God knows how, though I
thought for long that would be his end, who ever spoke
his mind, or more; and you with your wealth are the
morsel that tempts Maldon’s appetite. And
now what is to be done? This is a hard case.
Would you refuge in some other Nunnery?”
“Nay,” answered Cicely, glancing sideways
at her lover.
“Then what’s to be done?”
“Oh! I know not,”
she said, bursting into a fit of weeping. “How
can I tell you, who am mazed with grief and doubt?
I had but a single friend my father, though
at times he was a rough one. Yet he loved me
in his way, and I have obeyed his last counsel;”
and, all her courage gone, she sank into a chair and
rocked herself to and fro, her head resting on her
hands.
“That is not true,” said
Emlyn in her bold voice. “Am I who suckled
you no friend, and is Father Necton here no friend,
and is Sir Christopher no friend? Well, if you
have lost your judgment, I have kept mine, and here
it is. Yonder, not two bowshots away, stands a
church, and before me I see a priest and a pair who
would serve for bride and bridegroom. Also we
can rake up witnesses and a cup of wine to drink your
health; and after that let the Abbot of Blossholme
do his worst. What say you, Sir Christopher?”
“You know my mind, Nurse Emlyn;
but what says Cicely? Oh! Cicely, what say
you?” and he bent over her.
She raised herself, still weeping,
and, throwing her arms about his neck, laid her head
upon his shoulder.
“I think it is the will of God,”
she whispered, “and why should I fight against
it, who am His servant? and yours, Chris.”
“And now, Father, what say you?”
asked Emlyn, pointing to the pair.
“I do not think there is much
to say,” answered the old clergyman, turning
his head aside, “save that if it should please
you to come to the church in ten minutes’ time
you will find a candle on the altar, and a priest
within the rails, and a clerk to hold the book.
More we cannot do at such short notice.”
Then he paused for a while, and, hearing
no dissent, walked down the hall and out of the door.
Emlyn took Cicely by the hand, led
her to a room that was shown to them, and there made
her ready for her bridal as best she might. She
had no fine dress in which to clothe her, nor, indeed,
would there have been time to don it. But she
combed out her beautiful brown hair, and, opening
that box of Eastern jewels which were the great pride
of the Foterells being the rarest and the
most ancient in all the countryside she
decked her with them. On her broad brow she set
a circlet from which hung sparkling diamonds that
had been brought, the story said, by her mother’s
ancestor, a Carfax, from the Holy Land, where once
they were the peculiar treasure of a paynim queen,
and upon her bosom a necklet of large pearls.
Brooches and rings also she found for her breast and
fingers, and for her waist a jewelled girdle with
a golden clasp, while to her ears she hung the finest
gems of all two great pearls pink like
the hawthorn-bloom when it begins to turn. Lastly
she flung over her head a veil of lace most curiously
wrought, and stood back with pride to look at her.
Now Cicely, who all this while had been silent and unresisting, spoke for the
first time, saying
“How came this here, Nurse?”
“Your mother wore it at her
bridal, and her mother too, so I have been told.
Also once before I wrapped it about you when
you were christened, sweet.”
“Mayhap; but how came it here?”
“In the bosom of my robe.
Not knowing when we should get home again, I brought
it, thinking that perhaps one day you might marry,
when it would be useful. And now, strangely enough,
the marriage has come.”
“Emlyn, Emlyn, I believe that
you planned all this business, whereof God alone knows
the end.”
“That is why He makes a beginning,
dear, that His end may be fulfilled in due season.”
“Aye, but what is that end?
Mayhap this is my shroud you wrap about me. In
truth, I feel as though death were near.”
“He is ever that,” replied
Emlyn unconcernedly. “But so long as he
doesn’t touch, what does it matter? Now
hark you, sweetest, I’ve Spanish and gypsy blood
in me with which go gifts, and so I’ll tell you
something for your comfort. However oft he snatches,
Death will not lay his bony hand on you for many a
long year not till you are well-nigh as
thin with age as he is. Oh! you’ll have
your troubles like all of us, worse than many, mayhap,
but you are Luck’s own child, who lived when
the rest were taken, and you’ll win through and
take others on your back, as a whale does barnacles.
So snap your fingers at death, as I do,” and
she suited the action to the word, “and be happy
while you may, and when you’re not happy, wait
till your turn comes round again. Now follow
me and, though your father is murdered, smile as you
should in such an hour, for what man wants a sad-faced
bride?”
They walked down the broad oaken stairs into the hall where Christopher stood
waiting for them. Glancing at him shyly, Cicely saw that he was clad in
mail beneath his cloak, and that his sword was girded at his side, also that
some men with him were armed. For a moment he stared at her glittering
beauty confused, then said
“Fear not this hint of war in
love’s own hour,” and he touched his shining
armour. “Cicely, these nuptials are strange
as they are happy, and some might try to break in
upon them. Come now, my sweet lady;” and
bowing before her he took her by the hand and led her
from the house, Emlyn walking behind them and the
men with torches going before and following after.
Outside it was freezing sharply, so
that the snow crunched beneath their feet. In
the west the last red glow of sunset still lingered
on the steely sky, and over against it the great moon
rose above the round edge of the world. In the
bushes of the garden, and the tall poplars that bordered
the moat, blackbirds and fieldfares chattered their
winter evening song, while about the grey tower of
the neighbouring church the daws still wheeled.
The picture of that scene whereof
at the time she seemed to take no note, always remained
fixed in the mind of Cicely: the cold expanse
of snow, the inky trees, the hard sky, the lambent
beams of the moon, the dull glow of the torches caught
and reflected by her jewels and her lover’s
mail, the midwinter sound of birds, the barking of
a distant hound, the black porch of the church that
drew nearer, the little oblong mounds which hid the
bones of hundreds who in their day had passed it as
infants, as bridegrooms and as brides, and at last
as cold, white things that had been men and women.
Now they were in the nave of the old
fane where the cold struck them like a sword.
The dim lights of the torches showed them that, short
as had been the time, the news of this marvellous marriage
had spread about, for at least a score of people were
standing here and there in knots, or a few of them
seated on the oak benches near the chancel. All
these turned to stare at them eagerly as they walked
towards the altar where stood the priest in his robes,
and since his sight was dim, behind him the old clerk
with a stable-lantern held on high to enable him to
read from his book.
They reached the carven rood-screen,
and at a sign kneeled down. In a clear voice
the clergyman began the service; presently, at another
sign, the pair rose, advanced to the altar-rails and
again knelt down. The moonlight, flowing through
the eastern window, fell full on both of them, turning
them to cold, white statues, such as those that knelt
in marble upon the tomb at their side.
All through the holy office Cicely
watched these statues with fascinated eyes, and it
seemed to her that they and the old crusaders, Harfletes
of a long-past day who lay near by, were watching her
with a wistful and kindly interest. She made
certain answers, a ring that was somewhat too small
was thrust upon her finger all the rest
of her life that ring hurt her at times, but she would
have never it moved, and then some one was kissing
her. At first she thought it must be her father,
and remembering, nearly wept till she heard Christopher’s
voice calling her wife, and knew that she was wed.
Father Roger, the old clerk still
holding the lantern behind him, writing something
in a little vellum book, asking her the date of her
birth and her full name, which, as he had been present
at her christening, she thought strange. Then
her husband signed the book, using the altar as a
table, not very easily for he was no great scholar,
and she signed also in her maiden name for the last
time, and the priest signed, and at his bidding Emlyn
Stower, who could write well, signed too. Next,
as though by an afterthought, Father Roger called several
of the congregation, who rather unwillingly made their
marks as witnesses. While they did so he explained
to them that, as the circumstances were uncommon,
it was well that there should be evidence, and that
he intended to send copies of this entry to sundry
dignities, not forgetting the holy Father at Rome.
On learning this they appeared to
be sorry that they had anything to do with the matter,
and one and all of them melted into the darkness of
the nave and out of Cicely’s mind.
So it was done at last.
Father Necton blew on his little book
till the ink was dry, then hid it away in his robe.
The old clerk, having pocketed a handsome fee from
Christopher, lit the pair down the nave to the porch,
where he locked the oaken door behind them, extinguished
his lantern and trudged off through the snow to the
ale-house, there to discuss these nuptials and hot
beer. Escorted by their torch-bearers Cicely and
Christopher walked silently arm-in-arm back to the
Towers, whither Emlyn, after embracing the bride,
had already gone on ahead. So having added one
more ceremony to its countless record, perhaps the
strangest of them all, the ancient church behind them
grew silent as the dead within its graves.
The Towers reached, the new-wed pair,
with Father Roger and Emlyn, sat down to the best
meal that could be prepared for them at such short
notice; a very curious wedding feast. Still, though
the company was so small it did not lack for heartiness,
since the old clergyman proposed their health in a
speech full of Latin words which they did not understand,
and every member of the household who had assembled
to hear him drank to it in cups of wine. This
done, the beautiful bride, now blushing and now pale,
was led away to the best chamber, which had been hastily
prepared for her. But Emlyn remained behind a
while, for she had words to speak.
“Sir Christopher,” she
said, “you are fast wed to the sweetest lady
that ever sun or moon shone on, and in that may hold
yourself a lucky man. Yet such deep joys seldom
come without their pain, and I think that this is
near at hand. There are those who will envy you
your fortune, Sir Christopher.”
“Yet they cannot change it,
Emlyn,” he answered anxiously. “The
knot that was tied to-night may not be unloosed.”
“Never,” broke in Father
Roger. “Though the suddenness and the circumstances
of it may be unusual, this marriage is a sacrament
celebrated in the face of the world with the full consent
of both parties and of the Holy Church. Moreover,
before the dawn I’ll send the record of it to
the bishop’s registry and elsewhere, that it
may not be questioned in days to come, giving copies
of the same to you and your lady’s foster-mother,
who is her nearest friend at hand.”
“It may not be loosed on earth
or in heaven,” replied Emlyn solemnly, “yet
perchance the sword can cut it. Sir Christopher,
I think that we should all do well to travel as soon
as may be.”
“Not to-night, surely, Nurse!” he exclaimed.
“No, not to-night,” she
answered, with a faint smile. “Your wife
has had a weary day, and could not. Moreover,
preparation must be made which is impossible at this
hour. But to-morrow, if the roads are open to
you, I think we should start for London, where she
may make complaint of her father’s slaying and
claim her heritage and the protection of the law.”
“That is good counsel,”
said the vicar, and Christopher, with whom words seemed
to be few, nodded his head.
“Meanwhile,” went on Emlyn,
“you have six men in this house and others round
it. Send out a messenger and summon them all here
at dawn, bidding them bring provision with them, and
what bows and arms they have. Set a watch also,
and after the Father and the messenger have gone, command
that the drawbridge be triced.”
“What do you fear?” he asked, waking from
his dream.
“I fear the Abbot of Blossholme
and his hired ruffians, who reck little of the laws,
as the soul of dead Sir John knows now, or can use
them as a cover to evil deeds. He’ll not
let such a prize slip between his fingers if he can
help it, and the times are turbulent.”
Alas! alas! it is true, said Father Roger, and that Abbot is a relentless
man who sticks at nothing, having much wealth and many friends both here and
beyond the seas. Yet surely he would never dare
“That we shall learn,”
interrupted Emlyn. “Meanwhile, Sir Christopher,
rouse yourself and give the orders.”
So Christopher summoned his men and
spoke words to them at which they looked very grave,
but being true-hearted fellows who loved him, said
they would do his bidding.
A while later, having written out
a copy of the marriage lines and witnessed it, Father
Roger departed with the messenger. The drawbridge
was hoisted above the moat, the doors were barred,
and a man set to watch in the gateway tower, while
Christopher, forgetful of all else, even of the danger
in which they were, sought the company of her who
waited for him.