Gavan of the Greenwood Keep was a
prosperous man according to the standard of these
latter days, and his estate was reckoned to be the
largest and finest holding in all the western country-side.
A man might walk from break of day until darkness
and yet not complete the periphery of its boundary-lines,
but the palisaded portion included only the arable
land and home paddocks and was of comparatively
limited extent. Viewed from a bird’s-eye
elevation, this stockaded enclosure appeared to be
laid out in the shape of a pear, the house being situated
near the small end. The greatest length of the
area thus enclosed was a mile and a half, and it was
three-quarters of a mile wide at the big or southern
side, tapering down to a couple of hundred yards at
the northern entrance or barrier.
A quarter of a mile back from the
north gate stood the keep, not one distinct building,
but rather several, built in the form of a hollow
square and consolidated for mutual protection.
The principal entrance, the one at the northern end,
was called the water gate, for it should be explained
that the keep stood on the bank of the Ochre brook
and access was only possible by means of a drawbridge.
Some day Sir Gavan intended to turn the course of
the stream so as to carry it around the keep and thereby
secure the protection of a continuous moat. But
hitherto other duties had seemed more pressing, and
the plan was still in abeyance.
Entering through the covered way of
the water gate, with guard-room and bailiff’s
office to the right and left, one found himself in
the court-yard, some fifty yards in the square.
On the right were the cow-barns, horse-stalls, granaries,
tool-houses, and store-buildings, while the dwelling
proper, known as the Great House, occupied the entire
left of the square, the kitchens and other offices
adjoining the retainers’ quarters on the south.
An enormous hall, running clear to the roof, took
up the central portion of the house, staircases and
galleries affording access to the store and sleeping-rooms
on the second and attic stories. The roof proper
was surmounted by a para-petted and loop-holed structure
called the fighting platform, and it was thither that
Constans had repaired upon receiving the startling
intelligence of his sister’s disappearance.
Let us rejoin him there.
In the leisurely moving figure glimpsed
through the birches, Constans had instantly recognized
Issa. Plainly she had been out flower-hunting;
with the aid of his binoculars he could determine that
she carried a bunch of the delicate pink-and-white
blossoms that we call May-bloom. She was directing
her steps straight for the house, but either she was
unaccountably deaf to the continuous clanging of the
alarm-bell or, still more strangely, unaware of its
significance; she walked as though in a reverie, slowly
and with her head bent forward. Thunder of God!
it was a trap, and the foolish girl would not see.
Unquestionably, the Doomsmen had forced the stockade
at some distant point and were even now in ambush
about the keep. But Constans, for all his keenness
of vision and the assistance of his glass, could discover
nothing to indicate the presence of any considerable
body of men. There was no one in actual sight
save he who sat upon his blood-bay steed, girth deep
in the Ochre brook under shadow of the alders.
Only one, but that one!
Constans found himself in the court-yard;
how he scarcely knew. The water gate still stood
open with the drawbridge lowered, but both could be
easily secured within a few seconds should the enemy
venture upon any open demonstration. Sir Gavan
stood in the covered way talking anxiously with his
eldest son Tennant, who had just returned from an unsuccessful
search of the upper orchard.
Constans, in his confusion of mind,
did not notice his father and brother; he ran across
the court-yard to the horse-boxes. His black mare
Night whickered upon recognizing her master, and tried
to rub her muzzle against his cheek as he fumbled
with the throat-latch of the bridle. An instant
longer, to lead out the mare and vault upon her back,
and he was clattering through the court-yard and covered
way.
Upon reaching the open Constans saw
that the situation had developed into a crisis.
The cavalier of the ostrich-feather had forced his
horse up the steep bank of the Ochre brook and was
riding slowly towards the girl, who stood motionless,
realizing her perilous position, but unable for the
moment to cope with it. She half turned, as though
to seek again the shelter of the birchen copse; then,
clutching at her impeding skirts, she ran in the direction
of the keep. He of the ostrich-plume spurred
to the gallop; inevitably their paths must intersect
a few yards farther on.
From behind came the noise of men
shouting and the thud of quarrels impinging upon stout
oak; the Doomsmen, hitherto in hiding, were making
a diversion, in answer, doubtless, to a signal from
their leader. A hundred gray-garbed men showed
themselves in the open, coming from the shelter of
the fir plantation back of the rickyards; they ran
towards the open water gate, exposing themselves recklessly
in their eagerness to reach it.
But the defenders were not to be surprised
so easily, and Constans, glancing backward, saw that
the drawbridge was already in the air and the gate
closed. The outlaws, realizing that the surprise
was a failure, and unwilling to brave the arrows sent
whistling about their ears from the fighting platforms
of the keep, fell back in some disorder. At the
same moment a solitary figure appeared, emerging as
though by magic from the solid wall of the keep Sir
Gavan himself, a father forgetful of all else but
the peril of his children. He must have used the
“Rat’s-Hole” for egress; he hurried
down the green slope, calling his daughter by name.
All this Constans saw in that swift backward glance.
Well, there was but one thing that he could do.
And Night knew it, too; brave little
Night, how cleverly you forced yourself under the
towering bulk of that brute of a blood-bay! A
thunder of hoofs and they were in touch; Constans
felt himself hurled into space; the bridle-reins of
tough plaited leather were torn from his hands; Night
and he were down.
The dust cloud cleared and the boy
struggled up, although his head was still spinning
from the shock of the encounter. Ten yards away
lay the black mare with a broken foreleg. She
was trying to rise, her eyes glazed with pain and
her flanks heaving horribly.
The blood-bay had kept his feet and
his master his saddle a hardy pair, these
two. But the desperate expedient had proved successful
in that Issa was safe. Already Sir Gavan had
her in his arms, and before the horseman had fully
found himself the fugitives were under the shadow of
the keep’s walls.
The question of his own danger did
not immediately concern Constans; he had no eyes for
anything but Night lying there in her agony. His
father had given him the horse when she was a foal
of a week old, and Constans had broken and trained
her himself. Well, she had served him faithfully,
and in return he would show her the last mercy.
His knife-sheath hung from his girdle; he drew out
the blade and drove it home just behind the glossy
black shoulder. Night shuddered and lay still.
The knife had sunken deep, and Constans had to exert
all his strength to withdraw it. The bare point
of a rapier touched him meaningly on the arm; he stood
up and faced his enemy.
The man on horseback laughed softly.
“Oho, my young cockerel, it was but a touch
of the gaff, and now that you are ready is reason sufficient
why I should prefer to wait. But that neither
of us may forget ” He bent down and
caught Constans by the shoulders, turning him around
and forcing him backward until his head rested against
the blood-bay’s withers. Two slashes of
his hunting-knife and a tiny, triangular nick appeared
on the upper part of the lad’s right ear.
“That is my sign-manual of which
I spoke to you an hour or more ago. It is Quinton
Edge’s mark, as all men know, and it brands whatever
bears it as Quinton Edge’s property. Some
day I may deem it worth while to claim my own; until
then you can be my caretaker, my tenant. What!
no answer? And yet it is a generous offer, I
think, considering how sore my arm has grown and how
impertinently you behaved just now in interfering between
me and a lady. Light of God! but she is a bewitching
bundle of femineity. But twice, boy, have I seen
her; hardly a dozen words have passed ”
He stopped abruptly and gazed hard
at Constans. Then slowly:
“Your sister, I take it; there
is the same straight line of eyebrow. No answer
again? Well, we will pass it over for the nonce;
you have still many things to learn, and, chiefly,
to becomingly order body and soul in the presence
of your lord. After all, it pleases me better
to have the last word from the lady’s own lips;
she had been most discourteously treated, and I would
fain be shriven. Until we meet again, then.”
The cavalier put spur to the blood-bay’s
flank and rode straight for the Great House.
The boy stood staring after him; he did not notice
the trickle of blood from the cut in his ear; he was
not even conscious that he was still in life.
He remembered only the unforgivable affront which
this man had put upon him, the mark which was the infamous
badge of the bondman, the slave. Quinton Edge!
Ah, yes; he would remember that face and name.
The Doomsman had ridden in cool defiance
up to the very walls of the keep. It would have
been an easy matter for one of the garrison to have
bored his gay jacket through with a feathered shaft,
and for a moment Constans trembled, fearing lest some
overzealous partisan should thus rob him of his future
vengeance. But the very audacity of the man proved
the saving of his skin. They were brave men who
manned the fighting platforms of the Greenwood Keep,
and they could not bring themselves to set upon naked
courage.
Constans fancied that the man spoke
to some one who stood hidden in the deep embrasure
of a window, but it was too far to either see or hear.
Then it seemed that a small object fell lightly from
the window-sill. The Doomsman caught it dexterously
and fastened it on his breast. Another low bow
and, wheeling his horse, he dashed down the slope.
Constans ran blindly to meet him; why, he did not know.
He who named himself Quinton Edge swerved slightly
in his course so as to pass within arm’s-length,
calling out as he did so:
“Gage of battle and gage of
love; a fortunate day for me. Believe me that
at some future time I shall answer for them both.”
It was a sprig of the May-bloom that
the cavalier wore in his button-hole; Constans had
only time to recognize it when the blood-bay broke
into full gallop. The lad flung himself at full
length upon the turf, face downward, and lay there
motionless.