“The
affair cries haste.
And
speed must answer it.” Othello.
At two o’clock that afternoon, it
was Tuesday, the third day of March, Master
Marryott and Capt. Christopher Bottle rode northward
from Smithfield bars, in somewhat different aspect
and mood from those in which they had gone through
their adventure in the same neighborhood the previous
night. They were well mounted; for Kit Bottle
was not the man to be gulled by the jinglers of the
Smithfield horse-market, and knew, too well for his
own good reputation, how to detect every trick by which
the jockeys palmed off their jades on buyers who judged
only by appearances.
They were fitly armed, too; for Hal,
before rejoining the captain, had procured pistols
as reinforcements to his rapier and dagger, and Kit
had so far exceeded instructions as to do likewise.
The captain as yet knew not what Hal’s mission
was, and he was too true a soldier to exhibit any
curiosity, if he felt any. But there was always
a possibility of use for weapons, in travelling in
those days; even on the much-frequented road from
London to St. Albans ("as common as the way between
St. Albans and London,” said Poins, of Doll
Tearsheet), in which thoroughfare, until he should
turn out beyond Barnet. Hal’s course lay.
It was a highway that, not far out of London, became
like all other roads of the time narrow and rutty,
often a mere ditch below the level of the fields,
woods, or commons, at either side; rarely flanked,
as in later times, by hedges, walls, or fences of
any kind; passing by fewer houses, and through smaller
villages, than it is now easy to imagine its doing.
On this, as on every English road,
most passenger travel was by horseback or afoot, although
the great, had their coaches, crude and slow-moving.
Most transportation of goods was by pack-horse, the
carriers going in numerous company for safety; though
huge, lumbering, covered stage-wagons had already
appeared on certain chief highways, with a record
of something like two miles an hour. The royal
post for the bearing of letters was in a primitive
and uncertain state. Travelling by post was unknown,
in the later sense of the term: such as it was,
it was a luxury of the great, who had obvious means
of arranging for relays of horses; and of state messengers,
who might press horses for the queen’s service.
When ordinary men were in haste, and needed fresh
horses, they might buy them, or trade for them, or
hire them from carriers, or from stable-keepers where
such existed. But the two animals obtained by
Bottle in Smithfield, though neither as shapely nor
as small as Spanish jennets, were quite sufficient
for the immediate purpose, the bearing
of their riders, without stop, to Welwyn.
Islington and Highgate were passed
without incident, and Hal, while soothed in his anxiety
to perform his mission without a hitch, began to think
again that the business was too easy to be interesting.
As a young gentleman of twenty-two who had read “The
Faerie Queen” for the romance and not for the
allegory, he would have liked some opportunity to play
the fighting knight in service of his queen. On
Finchley Common he looked well about, half in dread,
half in hope; whereupon Captain Bottle, as taking
up a subject apropos, began to discourse upon highway
robbers. From considering the possibilities of
a present encounter with them, he fell to discussing
their profession in a business light.
“An there must be vile laws
to ruin gentlemen withal, and hard peace to take the
bread out of true soldiers’ mouths, beshrew me
but bold robbing on the highway is choicer business
than a parson’s, or a lawyer’s, or a lackey’s
in some great house, or even coney-catching in the
taverns! When I was put to it to get my beef
and clary one way or another, I stayed in London,
thinking to keep up my purse by teaching fence; but
’tis an overcrowded vocation, and the rogues
that can chatter the most Italian take all the cream.
So old Kit must needs betake himself to a gentlemanly
kind of gull-catching, never using the false dice till
the true went against him, look you; nor bullying
a winner out of the stakes when they could be had
peaceably; and always working alone, disdaining to
fellow with rascally gangs. But often I have sighed
that I did not as Rumney did, he that was
mine ancient in the campaigns in Spain and Ireland.
When the nation waxed womanish, and would have no more
of war, Rumney, for love of the country, took to the
highways, and I have heard he hath thrived well about
Sherwood forest and toward Yorkshire. ’Twas
my choice of a town life hindered me being his captain
on the road as I had been in the wars. I hear
he calleth himself captain now! Though he puts
his head oftener into the noose than I, and runs more
risk of sword and pistol, his work is the worthier
of a soldier and gentleman for that. Yet I do
not call Rumney gentleman, neither! A marvellous
scurvy rogue! But no coward. Would that
thy business might take us so far as we should fall
in with the rascal! I should well like to drink
a gallon of sack with the rascally cur, in memory
of old times, or to stab him in the paunch for a trick
he did me about a woman in the Low Countries!”
Finchley Common was crossed without
threat of danger, the only rogues met being of the
swindling, begging, feigning, pilfering order, all
promptly recognized and classified by the experienced
captain. Nor did Whetston or Barnet or Hatfield,
or the intervening country, yield any event, save
that a clock struck six, and the day gray
enough at best was on the wane when they
passed through Hatfield. They had made but five
miles an hour, the road, though frozen, being uneven
and difficult, and Hal assuming that the pursuivant,
ignorant of a plan to forewarn Sir Valentine, would
not greatly hasten. He relied on the hour’s
start he had taken out of London, and he saved his
horses to meet any demand for speed that might suddenly
arise. At the worst, if the officer and his men
came up behind him, he could increase his pace and
outride them to Welwyn. And thus it was that he
let no northbound riders pass him, and that when such
riders, of whatever aspect, appeared in the distant
rear, he spurred forward sufficiently to leave them
out of sight.
On the hill, two or three miles beyond
Hatfield, he stopped and looked back over the lower
country, but could make out no group of horsemen in
the gathering darkness. His destination was now
near at hand, and he was still unsettled between opposite
feelings, satisfaction that his errand
seemed certain of accomplishment, regret that there
seemed no prospect of narrow work by which he might
a little distinguish himself in his own eyes.
The last few miles he rode in silence, Bottle having
ceased prattling and become meditative under the influence
of nightfall.
It was seven o’clock when they
rode across the brook into close view of Welwyn church
at the left of the road, and a few minutes later when
they drew up before the wall in front of Fleetwood
house, of which Hal knew the location,
through visits in former years, and began
to pound on the barred gate with their weapons, and
to call “Ho, within!”
The mansion beyond the wall was a
timbered one, its gables backed by trees. It
had no park, and its wall enclosed also a small orchard
at the rear, and a smaller courtyard at the front.
At one side of the gate was a porter’s lodge,
but this was at present vacant, or surely the knocking
on the wooden gate would have brought forth its occupant.
It seemed as if the house was deserted, and Hal had
a sudden inward sense of unexpected obstacle, perhaps
insuperable, in his way. His heart beat a little
more rapidly, until Kit, having ridden to where he
could see the side of the house, reported a light
in the side window of a rear chamber. Hal thereupon
increased his hallooing, with some thought of what
might occur if the pursuivants should come up ere he
got admission.
At length there appeared a moving
nebula of light amidst the darkness over the yard;
it approached the gate; steps were heard on the walk
within; finally a little wicket was opened in the gate,
and a long, bearded, sour face was visible in the
light of a lanthorn held up by its owner.
“Who is it disturbeth the night
in this manner?” asked a nasal voice, in a tone
of complaint and reproof.
“’Tis I, Master Underhill,”
spoke Hal, from his horse, “Master Harry Marryott,
Sir Valentine’s friend. I must see Sir Valentine
without a moment’s delay,” and he started
to dismount.
“I know not if thou canst see
Sir Valentine without delay, or at all whatsoever,”
replied the man of dismal countenance. His face
had the crow’s feet and the imprinted frown
of his fifty years, and there was some gray on his
bare head.
“Not see him!” blurted
out Hal. “What the devil open
me the gate this instant or I’ll teach thee
a lesson! Dost hear, Anthony?”
“Yield not to thy wrath nor
call upon the foul fiend, Master Marryott,”
said Anthony, severely. “I shall go decently
and in order, and learn if thou mayst be admitted.”
And he leisurely closed the wicket to return to the
house.
Hal could scarce contain himself for
anger. Being now afoot he called after the man,
and hammered on the gate, but with no effect of recalling
or hastening him.
“A snivelling Puritan, or I’m
a counterfeit soldier!” observed Kit Bottle,
in a tone of contempt and detestation.
“Ay,” said Hal, “and
all the worse whiner because, out of inherited ties,
he serveth a Catholic master. The old groaner, that
he should put me to this delay when Sir Valentine’s
life is at stake!”
This was Hal’s first intimation
to Kit of the real nature of his business. The
captain received it without comment, merely asking
if he should dismount.
“No,” said Hal, tying
his own horse to the gate; “but when I am admitted,
ride you back to the village, and listen for the sound
of hoofs from the direction of London; if you hear
such, come swiftly back, hallooing at the top of thy
voice, and get off thy horse, and hold him ready for
another to mount in thy stead. A hundred curses
on that Tony Underhill! He hath been Sir Valentine’s
steward so long, he dareth any impertinence.
And yet he never stayed me at the gate before!
And his grave look when he said he knew not if I might
see Sir Valentine! ’Twas a more solemn
face than even he is wont to wear. Holy Mary!
can it be that they are here already, that
they have come before me?”
“An it be men in quest of Sir
Valentine, you mean,” said Kit, who was of quick
divination, “where be their horses? They
would scarce stable them, and make a visit. Nor
would all be so quiet and dark.”
“And yet he looked as something
were amiss,” replied Hal, but partly reassured.
The faint mist of light appeared again,
the deliberate steps were heard, and this time the
gate was unbarred and slowly drawn a little space
open. In the lanthorn’s light was seen the
spare, tall figure that went with the long, gloomy
face.
“I will conduct thee to Sir
Valentine,” said Anthony. Hal stepped forward
with an exclamation of relief and pleasure, and Kit
Bottle instantly started his horse back toward the
village.
Hal followed the Puritan steward through
a porched doorway, across a hall, up a staircase that
ascended athwart the rear, and thence along a corridor,
to the last door on the side toward the back of the
house. Anthony softly opened this door.
Hal entered a chamber lighted by two
candles on a table, and containing in one corner a
large high-posted bed. On the table, among other
things, lay an ivory crucifix. A plainly dressed
gentleman sat on a chair between the table and the
bed. To this gentleman, without casting a look
at his face, Hal bowed respectfully, and began, “I
thank God, Sir Valentine ”
“Nay, sir,” answered the
gentleman, quietly, as if to prevent some mistake;
and Hal, looking up, perceived that this was not Sir
Valentine, but a pale, watchful-looking man, with
fiery eyes; while a voice, strangely weakened, came
from the bed:
“Thou’rt welcome, Harry.”
“What!” cried Hal, striding
to the bed. “Sir Valentine, goest thou to
bed so early?”
“Ay,” replied Sir Valentine,
motionless on his back, “and have been abed
these two days, with promise from my good physician
here of getting up some six days hence or so.”
“Thou’lt not move for
another week, at least, Sir Valentine,” said
the physician, the gentleman whom Hal first addressed.
“’Tis a sword wound got
in a quarrel, Harry,” explained Sir Valentine,
feebly, and paused, out of breath, looking for a reply.
But Hal stood startled and speechless.
Not move for a week, and the state officer likely
to arrive in an hour! “And in every possible
manner aid and hasten his departure from the country,”
her Majesty had said; and Hal had taken her money,
and by his promise, by her trust in him, by every
consideration that went to the making of a gentleman,
a man of honor, or an honest servant, stood bound
to carry out her wish.
The errand was not to be so simple, after all.