He that sows in craft does reap in jealousy.
Middleton.
Vengeance is in my heart, death in my
hand;
Blood and revenge are hammering in my
head.
Shakespeare.
The scene of the pastime had been
reached, and the preparations for the hawking had
already begun. The falconers brought up their
birds, the pages gave up their masters’ jumping
poles, and the dogs were sniffing the air, eager for
the chase to commence.
At last the jerkins were taken off,
and the straps which had held the hawks were unloosed;
the dogs were sent to the front, and the real work
of the day began.
Sir George was in capital humour,
and closely followed by Sir Benedict a Woode and the
others, he led off at a rare pace, with the ladies
following upon their steeds a little distance in the
rear, and, behind all, a number of admiring rustics,
eager to see a little of the sport in which it was
not their lot to participate.
Sparrows were plentiful, but no other
kind of bird was to be seen, and Sir Benedict was
just thinking that Sir George would have to humble
himself, when the dogs began to bark.
“Quails, as I’m alive!
See!” shouted the baron, in high delight.
“And a whole bevy of them, too,”
added De la Zouch, turning round to the ladies.
The excitement, which had simmered
before, now suddenly became intense, and away went
lord and lady, knight and esquire, over wall and ditch,
in their eagerness to keep up with the hunt.
Dorothy had not flown her bird, for
she had noticed that Master Manners was without a
hawk, and now she sent it forward to him by her page,
and waited with a beating heart to learn whether her
offer had been accepted.
Manners himself came back and thanked her.
“But marry, fair Mistress Vernon,”
said he, “I could no more rob you of your bird
than I could steal away your beauty or take possession
of your heart.”
“Nay, now,” replied Dorothy,
not paying the proper amount of regard to the truth,
“I am already for-wearied of the hawking; and
it were more to my taste to follow on in a more leisurely
fashion,” she added, seeing that he was about
to refuse. “St. George is a good bird, and
is anxious to try a flight; and thou art a stranger,
too; thou must take it,” and she placed the
merlin on his wrist.
Manners had never felt more embarrassed
in the course of his life, and, ready-witted though
he was, he found himself at a loss how to reply.
Before he had collected his scattered senses, Dorothy
had gone, and he, left alone, was a long way in the
rear. The horns of the hunters, which were continually
sounding, proved a sufficient guide, and being nimble
of foot, he started off in great haste to rejoin the
party, which was now well out of sight.
All this had not escaped the jealous
eyes of De la Zouch, for, securely hidden within the
friendly foliage of a patch of brushwood, he had seen
and heard all, and, with perceptions sharpened by the
jealous spirit which raged within his breast, he had
at once divined the secret which neither of the two,
as yet, understood.
As Manners departed, he emerged from
his hiding-place, gnashing his teeth with rage.
His anger was terrible to behold.
“So, so!” he exclaimed,
as he watched the retreating figure, “it has
come to this, then, that I am to yield my share of
the riches of Haddon to this usurping churl.
But no; it shall never, never be! John Manners
shall lie in six feet of solid earth ere I forego the
prize!”
Had he been more careful, Sir Henry
would have discovered that he was not alone.
Had he been less rash, whatever he might have thought,
he would have kept his opinions to himself; for hardly
had he spoken, when a rough voice at his elbow awakened
him from the reverie into which he had fallen.
“Such words, noble sir, are
costly, and I ween thou hadst rather not have them
repeated to the King of the Peak.”
De la Zouch turned sharply round and
fiercely confronted the well-known figure of the Derby
packman.
“Thou art over bold for a knave,”
he exclaimed; “get thee gone.”
“Not till I am the richer, or
I will hie me to Sir George, and tell my tale to him,”
was the cool reply.
“Villain!” hissed Sir
Henry, “begone!” and obeying the impulse
of the moment, he dealt the pedlar a blow which felled
him to the ground.
“There will be a few more nobles
for that,” groaned the man as he slowly regained
his feet.
De la Zouch glanced contemptuously
at him and turned to depart, but he was not to go
so easily.
“Nay, forsooth,” cried
the pedlar, clapping his hands upon the shoulders
of the nobleman. “And thou wilt forget thy
debts it behoves me to insist.”
With a curse the latter turned round
again, but seeing the determined aspect of the man,
he pulled out three golden nobles and offered them
to him.
The packman laughed.
“What!” he exclaimed.
“I must have more than that for my bruises alone.”
“Thou art insolent; that is
all I shall give thee; take it or leave it and get
thee gone. Thy word would never weigh against
mine.”
“Well, master,” returned
the other, “it is a case of life or death, and
you value your life at three sorry nobles? I would
take that rather than the money, for Manners is a
friend to the poor,” and grasping his thick
stick with both his hands he struck at De la Zouch
with all his might.
The blow was parried by Sir Henry,
who received it upon his jumping pole, and with blood
now thoroughly aroused and life on either side to
fight for, the conflict was furiously sustained.
The packman’s attack was at
no time equal to the defence of his adversary, and
as he rained down blow after blow they were coolly
caught upon the pole, which, used in skilful hands
in much the same fashion as the quarter-staff, made
quite an admirable weapon both for attack and defence.
Such an unequal contest could not
long continue. Science must ever triumph over
mere brute force, and this occasion proved to be no
exception to the rule, and as the man tired, his blows
perceptibly weakened. Had Sir Henry by any piece
of misfortune failed to protect himself, the end might
have been different. His skill, however, saved
him in the end, and as the fury of his opponent abated
the knight became more vigorous in his attack.
The end soon came, for, raising his
stout ash pole high up in the air, De la Zouch brought
it down with, tremendous force, and easily breaking
through the pedlar’s guard, it alighted heavily
upon his head. With a groan the unlucky man staggered
back and fell upon the turf. The blow had struck
home, and the Derby packman was no more.
Whilst this scene was being enacted,
Sir Henry’s page, missing his master from amongst
the hawking party, had turned back in great trepidation
to seek him. Guided by the sound of the blows,
the youth had experienced little difficulty in attaining
the object of his search, and, standing at a respectable
distance, he had been a silent witness of the tragic
conclusion of the encounter. Seeing that all was
over, he slowly advanced, in a very uncertain state
of mind as to the character of his reception.
De la Zouch was too busily engaged
in a scrutiny of his late opponent to notice the arrival
of his page, and upon the latter devolved the unpleasant
duty of announcing himself.
“That was a featly stroke, my lord,” he
began.
Sir Henry turned round, and a sigh
of relief escaped him as he found it was not a fresh
combatant with whom he would have to contend.
“Ha, Eustace,” he said,
“There are many who would like to learn the
trick of it; ’tis known to few besides myself,
but I will teach it thee some future time.”
Eustace, too, gave a sigh of relief.
His master was unusually gracious.
When Sir Henry spoke again, his voice was changed.
“Hast thou seen all?” he asked.
“I saw the end of it.”
“But the commencement?”
“No! I was ”
“Ah, well,” interrupted
the knight, “’twas not my fault; I would
fain have had thee witness its commencement, for,
by my troth, the knave brought his fate upon himself.”
He rolled the corpse over and they
turned to go, but ere they had proceeded many yards
they came to a halt. De la Zouch had an idea,
and they wheeled about and returned to the body once
more.
“Empty the jerkin,” said Sir Henry, as
he pointed to the man’s jacket.
Eustace shuddered, but the command
was given in so peremptory a tone that there was no
option but to comply. He stooped down and emptied
the capacious pockets of the dead man’s jerkin,
wondering the while-time whether or no his master
had suddenly turned robber.
“There is little enough to take,” said
he.
“Tut, I want none of it,”
replied the knight, and picking up the assortment,
which consisted of a huge jack-knife, a pair of spectacles
with monstrously wide rims, some bootlaces, a broken
comb, and a few coins, he carefully scattered them
about the scene where the struggle had taken place.
He was not yet satisfied, though, for espying the
hollow trunk of an old tree close by, he made the unwilling
page help him to deposit the body there.
Eustace wonderingly helped him.
He would much preferred to have left it alone, but
he dared offer no resistance. He could only hope
that if the matter were heard of again, he might not
be implicated in the plot.
De la Zouch critically surveyed the
scene, and after lightly covering the body over with
grass and twigs, he turned to depart.
They walked on in silence for some
distance before either of them spoke: the knight
deeply wrapped in thought; the page eager and yet
fearful to learn the particulars, yet not daring to
question his master.
At last Sir Henry spoke.
“Mind you, Eustace,” said
he, “say naught of this affair. I would
not have my name mixed up with it, and if they ask
thee, say thou knowest naught.”
Eustace felt mightily relieved, and
readily gave the required promise. He was used
to these little deceptions which his master was wont
to use on pressing occasions.
“And see,” continued the
knight, after a pause, “I am hurt, for although
I have come off victor without a scratch, I have not
come out of the tussle without a bruise or two.
I shall tell them I have had a fall. You understand!”
The page acquiesced, the conversation
ceased, and the two walked on in silence to rejoin
their companions.