HOW SIR RICHARD OF THE LEA REPAID HIS DEBT
The proud Sheriff loud
’gan cry
And said, “Thou
traitor knight,
Thou keepest here the
king’s enemy
Against the laws and
right.”
“Open the gate!” shouted
the Sheriff hoarsely, to the sentinel upon the walls.
“Open, I say, in the king’s name!”
“Why who are you to come thus
brawling upon my premises?” asked a haughty
voice; and Sir Richard himself stepped forth upon the
turret.
“You know me well, traitor knight!”
said the Sheriff, “now give up into my hands
the enemy of the King whom you have sheltered against
the laws and right.”
“Fair and softly, sir,”
quoth the knight smoothly. “I well avow
that I have done certain deeds this day. But
I have done them upon mine own land, which you now
trespass upon; and I shall answer only to the King whom
God preserve! for my actions.”
“Thou soft-spoken villain!”
said the Sheriff, still in a towering passion.
“I, also, serve the King; and if these outlaws
are not given up to me at once, I shall lay siege
to the castle and burn it with fire.”
“First show me your warrants,” said Sir
Richard curtly.
“My word is enough! Am I not Sheriff of
Nottingham?”
“If you are, in sooth,”
retorted the knight, “you should know that you
have no authority within my lands unless you bear the
King’s order. In the meantime, go mend
your manners, lording.”
And Sir Richard snapped his fingers
and disappeared from the walls. The Sheriff,
after lingering a few moments longer in hope of further
parley, was forced to withdraw, swearing fiercely.
“The King’s order!”
muttered he. “That shall I have without
delay, as well as this upstart knight’s estates;
for King Richard is lately returned, I hear, from
the Holy Land.”
Meanwhile the knight had gone back
to Robin Hood, and the two men greeted each other
right gladly. “Well met, bold Robin!”
cried he, taking him in his arms. “Well
met, indeed! The Lord has lately prospered me,
and I was minded this day to ride forth and repay my
debt to you.”
“And so you have,” answered Robin gaily.
“Nay, ’twas nothing this
small service!” said the knight. “I
meant the moneys coming to you.”
“They have all been repaid,”
said Robin; “my lord of Hereford himself gave
them to me.”
“The exact sum?” asked the knight.
“The exact sum,” answered Robin, winking
solemnly.
Sir Richard smiled, but said no more
at the time. Robin was made to rest until dinner
should be served. Meanwhile a leech bound up his
hand with ointment, promising him that he should soon
have its use again. Some halfscore others of
the yeomen had been hurt in the fight, but luckily
none of grave moment. They were all bandaged and
made happy by bumpers of ale.
At dinner Sir Richard presented Robin
to his wife and son. The lady was stately and
gracious, and made much of Marian, whom she had known
as a little girl and who was now clothed more seemly
for a dinner than in monkish garments. The young
esquire was a goodly youth and bade fair to make as
stout a knight as his father.
The feast was a joyous event.
There were two long tables, and two hundred men sat
down at them, and ate and drank and afterward sang
songs. An hundred and forty of these men wore
Lincoln green and called Robin Hood their chief.
Never, I ween, had there been a more gallant company
at table in Lea Castle!
That night the foresters tarried within
the friendly walls, and the next day took leave; though
Sir Richard protested that they should have made a
longer stay. And he took Robin aside to his strong
room and pressed him again to take the four hundred
golden pounds. But his guest was firm.
“Keep the money, for it is your
own,” said Robin; “I have but made the
Bishop return that which he extorted unjustly.”
Sir Richard thanked him in a few earnest
words, and asked him and all his men to visit the
armory, before they departed. And therein they
saw, placed apart, an hundred and forty stout yew
bows of cunning make, with fine waxen silk strings;
and an hundred and forty sheaves of arrows. Every
shaft was a just ell long, set with peacock’s
feathers, and notched with silver. And Sir Richard’s
fair lady came forward and with her own hands gave
each yeoman a bow and a sheaf.
“In sooth, these are poor presents
we have made you, good Robin Hood,” said Sir
Richard; “but they carry with them a thousand
times their weight in gratitude.”
The Sheriff made good his threat to
inform the King. Forth rode he to London town
upon the week following, his scalp wound having healed
sufficiently to permit him to travel. This time
he did not seek out Prince John, but asked audience
with King Richard of the Lion Heart himself.
His Majesty had but lately returned from the crusades,
and was just then looking into the state of his kingdom.
So the Sheriff found ready audience.
Then to him the Sheriff spoke at length
concerning Robin Hood; how that for many months the
outlaws had defied the King, and slain the King’s
deer; how Robin had gathered about him the best archers
in all the countryside; and, finally, how the traitorous
knight Sir Richard of the Lea had rescued the band
when capture seemed certain, and refused to deliver
them up to justice.
The King heard him through with attention and quoth
he:
“Meseems I have heard of this
same Robin Hood, and his men, and also seen somewhat
of their prowess. Did not these same outlaws shoot
in a royal Tourney at Finsbury field?”
“They did, Your Majesty, under a royal amnesty.”
In this speech the Sheriff erred, for the King asked
quickly,
“How came they last to the Fair at Nottingham by
stealth?”
“Yes, Your Majesty.”
“Did you forbid them to come?”
“No, Your Majesty. That is ”
“Speak out!”
“For the good of the shire,”
began the Sheriff again, falteringly, “we did
proclaim an amnesty; but ’twas because these
men had proved a menace ”
“Now by my halidom!” quoth
the King, while his brow grew black. “Such
treachery would be unknown in the camp of the Saracen;
and yet we call ourselves a Christian people!”
The Sheriff kept silence through very
fear and shame; then the King began speech again:
“Nathless, my lord Sheriff,
we promise to look into this matter. Those outlaws
must be taught that there is but one King in England,
and that he stands for the law.”
So the Sheriff was dismissed, with
very mixed feelings, and went his way home to Nottingham
town. A fortnight later the King began to make
good his word, by riding with a small party of knights
to Lea Castle. Sir Richard was advised of the
cavalcade’s approach, and quickly recognized
his royal master in the tall knight who rode in advance.
Hasting to open wide his castle gates he went forth
to meet the King and fell on one knee and kissed his
stirrup. For Sir Richard, also, had been with
the King to the Holy Land, and they had gone on many
adventurous quests together.
The King bade him rise, and dismounted
from his own horse to greet him as a brother in arms;
and arm-in-arm they went into the castle, while bugles
and trumpets sounded forth joyous welcome in honor
of the great occasion.
After the King had rested and supped,
he turned upon the knight and with grave face inquired:
“What is this I hear about your
castle’s becoming a nest and harbor for outlaws?”
The Sir Richard of the Lea, divining
that the Sheriff had been at the King’s ear
with his story, made a clean breast of all he knew;
how that the outlaws had befriended him in sore need as
they had befriended others and how that
he had given them only knightly protection in return.
The King liked the story well, for
his own soul was one of chivalry. And he asked
other questions about Robin Hood, and heard of the
ancient wrong done his father before him, and of Robin’s
own enemies, and of his manner of living.
“In sooth,” cried King
Richard, springing up, “I must see this bold
fellow for myself! An you will entertain my little
company, and be ready to sally forth, upon the second
day, in quest of me if need were, I shall e’en
fare alone into the greenwood to seek an adventure
with him.”
But of this adventure you shall be
told in the next tale; for I have already shown you
how Sir Richard of the Lea repaid his debt, with interest.