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<h1>THE BLACK ARROW—A TALE OF THE TWO ROSES</h1>
<h2>Critic on the Hearth:</h2>
<p>No one but myself knows what I have suffered, nor what my
books have gained, by your unsleeping watchfulness and admirable
pertinacity. And now here is a volume that goes into the
world and lacks your <i>imprimatur</i>: a strange thing in our
joint lives; and the reason of it stranger still! I have watched
with interest, with pain, and at length with amusement, your
unavailing attempts to peruse <i>The Black Arrow</i>; and I think
I should lack humour indeed, if I let the occasion slip and did
not place your name in the fly-leaf of the only book of mine that
you have never read—and never will read.</p>
<p>That others may display more constancy is still my hope.
The tale was written years ago for a particular audience and (I
may say) in rivalry with a particular author; I think I should do
well to name him, Mr. Alfred R. Phillips. It was not
without its reward at the time. I could not, indeed,
displace Mr. Phillips from his well-won priority; but in the eyes
of readers who thought less than nothing of <i>Treasure
Island</i>, <i>The Black Arrow</i> was supposed to mark a clear
advance. Those who read volumes and those who read story
papers belong to different worlds. The verdict on
<i>Treasure Island</i> was reversed in the other court; I wonder,
will it be the same with its successor?</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><i>R. L. S.</i></p>
<p><span class="smcap">Saranac Lake</span>, April 8, 1888.</p>
<h2>PROLOGUE—JOHN AMEND-ALL</h2>
<p>On a certain afternoon, in the late springtime, the bell upon
Tunstall Moat House was heard ringing at an unaccustomed
hour. Far and near, in the forest and in the fields along
the river, people began to desert their labours and hurry towards
the sound; and in Tunstall hamlet a group of poor country-folk
stood wondering at the summons.</p>
<p>Tunstall hamlet at that period, in the reign of old King Henry
VI., wore much the same appearance as it wears to-day. A
score or so of houses, heavily framed with oak, stood scattered
in a long green valley ascending from the river. At the
foot, the road crossed a bridge, and mounting on the other side,
disappeared into the fringes of the forest on its way to the Moat
House, and further forth to Holywood Abbey. Half-way up the
village, the church stood among yews. On every side the
slopes were crowned and the view bounded by the green elms and
greening oak-trees of the forest.</p>
<p>Hard by the bridge, there was a stone cross upon a knoll, and
here the group had collected—half a dozen women and one
tall fellow in a russet smock—discussing what the bell
betided. An express had gone through the hamlet half an
hour before, and drunk a pot of ale in the saddle, not daring to
dismount for the hurry of his errand; but he had been ignorant
himself of what was forward, and only bore sealed letters from
Sir Daniel Brackley to Sir Oliver Oates, the parson, who kept the
Moat House in the master’s absence.</p>
<p>But now there was the noise of a horse; and soon, out of the
edge of the wood and over the echoing bridge, there rode up young
Master Richard Shelton, Sir Daniel’s ward. He, at the
least, would know, and they hailed him and begged him to
explain. He drew bridle willingly enough—a young
fellow not yet eighteen, sun-browned and grey-eyed, in a jacket
of deer’s leather, with a black velvet collar, a green hood
upon his head, and a steel cross-bow at his back. The
express, it appeared, had brought great news. A battle was
impending. Sir Daniel had sent for every man that could
draw a bow or carry a bill to go post-haste to Kettley, under
pain of his severe displeasure; but for whom they were to fight,
or of where the battle was expected, Dick knew nothing. Sir
Oliver would come shortly himself, and Bennet Hatch was arming at
that moment, for he it was who should lead the party.</p>
<p>“It is the ruin of this kind land,” a woman
said. “If the barons live at war, ploughfolk must eat
roots.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Dick, “every man that follows
shall have sixpence a day, and archers twelve.”</p>
<p>“If they live,” returned the woman, “that
may very well be; but how if they die, my master?”</p>
<p>“They cannot better die than for their natural
lord,” said Dick.</p>
<p>“No natural lord of mine,” said the man in the
smock. “I followed the Walsinghams; so we all did
down Brierly way, till two years ago, come Candlemas. And
now I must side with Brackley! It was the law that did it;
call ye that natural? But now, what with Sir Daniel and
what with Sir Oliver—that knows more of law than
honesty—I have no natural lord but poor King Harry the
Sixt, God bless him!—the poor innocent that cannot tell his
right hand from his left.”</p>
<p>“Ye speak with an ill tongue, friend,” answered
Dick, “to miscall your good master and my lord the king in
the same libel. But King Harry—praised be the
saints!—has come again into his right mind, and will have
all things peaceably ordained. And as for Sir Daniel,
y’ are very brave behind his back. But I will be no
tale-bearer; and let that suffice.”</p>
<p>“I say no harm of you, Master Richard,” returned
the peasant. “Y’ are a lad; but when ye come to
a man’s inches, ye will find ye have an empty pocket.
I say no more: the saints help Sir Daniel’s neighbours, and
the Blessed Maid protect his wards!”</p>
<p>“Clipsby,” said Richard, “you speak what I
cannot hear with honour. Sir Daniel is my good master, and
my guardian.”</p>
<p>“Come, now, will ye read me a riddle?” returned
Clipsby. “On whose side is Sir Daniel?”</p>
<p>“I know not,” said Dick, colouring a little; for
his guardian had changed sides continually in the troubles of
that period, and every change had brought him some increase of
fortune.</p>
<p>“Ay,” returned Clipsby, “you, nor no
man. For, indeed, he is one that goes to bed Lancaster and
gets up York.”</p>
<p>Just then the bridge rang under horse-shoe iron, and the party
turned and saw Bennet Hatch come galloping—a brown-faced,
grizzled fellow, heavy of hand and grim of mien, armed with sword
and spear, a steel salet on his head, a leather jack upon his
body. He was a great man in these parts; Sir Daniel’s
right hand in peace and war, and at that time, by his
master’s interest, bailiff of the hundred.</p>
<p>“Clipsby,” he shouted, “off to the Moat
House, and send all other laggards the same gate. Bowyer
will give you jack and salet. We must ride before
curfew. Look to it: he that is last at the lych-gate Sir
Daniel shall reward. Look to it right well! I know
you for a man of naught. Nance,” he added, to one of
the women, “is old Appleyard up town?”</p>
<p>“I’ll warrant you,” replied the woman.
“In his field, for sure.”</p>
<p>So the group dispersed, and while Clipsby walked leisurely
over the bridge, Bennet and young Shelton rode up the road
together, through the village and past the church.</p>
<p>“Ye will see the old shrew,” said Bennet.
“He will waste more time grumbling and prating of Harry the
Fift than would serve a man to shoe a horse. And all
because he has been to the French wars!”</p>
<p>The house to which they were bound was the last in the
village, standing alone among lilacs; and beyond it, on three
sides, there was open meadow rising towards the borders of the
wood.</p>
<p>Hatch dismounted, threw his rein over the fence, and walked
down the field, Dick keeping close at his elbow, to where the old
soldier was digging, knee-deep in his cabbages, and now and
again, in a cracked voice, singing a snatch of song. He was
all dressed in leather, only his hood and tippet were of black
frieze, and tied with scarlet; his face was like a walnut-shell,
both for colour and wrinkles; but his old grey eye was still
clear enough, and his sight unabated. Perhaps he was deaf;
perhaps he thought it unworthy of an old archer of Agincourt to
pay any heed to such disturbances; but neither the surly notes of
the alarm bell, nor the near approach of Bennet and the lad,
appeared at all to move him; and he continued obstinately
digging, and piped up, very thin and shaky:</p>
<blockquote><p>“Now, dear lady, if thy will be,<br/>
I pray you that you will rue on me.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“Nick Appleyard,” said Hatch, “Sir Oliver
commends him to you, and bids that ye shall come within this hour
to the Moat House, there to take command.”</p>
<p>The old fellow looked up.</p>
<p>“Save you, my masters!” he said, grinning.
“And where goeth Master Hatch?”</p>
<p>“Master Hatch is off to Kettley, with every man that we
can horse,” returned Bennet. “There is a fight
toward, it seems, and my lord stays a reinforcement.”</p>
<p>“Ay, verily,” returned Appleyard. “And
what will ye leave me to garrison withal?”</p>
<p>“I leave you six good men, and Sir Oliver to
boot,” answered Hatch.</p>
<p>“It’ll not hold the place,” said Appleyard;
“the number sufficeth not. It would take two score to
make it good.”</p>
<p>“Why, it’s for that we came to you, old
shrew!” replied the other. “Who else is there
but you that could do aught in such a house with such a
garrison?”</p>
<p>“Ay! when the pinch comes, ye remember the old
shoe,” returned Nick. “There is not a man of
you can back a horse or hold a bill; and as for archery—St.
Michael! if old Harry the Fift were back again, he would stand
and let ye shoot at him for a farthen a shoot!”</p>
<p>“Nay, Nick, there’s some can draw a good bow
yet,” said Bennet.</p>
<p>“Draw a good bow!” cried Appleyard.
“Yes! But who’ll shoot me a good shoot?
It’s there the eye comes in, and the head between your
shoulders. Now, what might you call a long shoot, Bennet
Hatch?”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Bennet, looking about him, “it
would be a long shoot from here into the forest.”</p>
<p>“Ay, it would be a longish shoot,” said the old
fellow, turning to look over his shoulder; and then he put up his
hand over his eyes, and stood staring.</p>
<p>“Why, what are you looking at?” asked Bennet, with
a chuckle. “Do, you see Harry the Fift?”</p>
<p>The veteran continued looking up the hill in silence.
The sun shone broadly over the shelving meadows; a few white
sheep wandered browsing; all was still but the distant jangle of
the bell.</p>
<p>“What is it, Appleyard?” asked Dick.</p>
<p>“Why, the birds,” said Appleyard.</p>
<p>And, sure enough, over the top of the forest, where it ran
down in a tongue among the meadows, and ended in a pair of goodly
green elms, about a bowshot from the field where they were
standing, a flight of birds was skimming to and fro, in evident
disorder.</p>
<p>“What of the birds?” said Bennet.</p>
<p>“Ay!” returned Appleyard, “y’ are a
wise man to go to war, Master Bennet. Birds are a good
sentry; in forest places they be the first line of battle.
Look you, now, if we lay here in camp, there might be archers
skulking down to get the wind of us; and here would you be, none
the wiser!”</p>
<p>“Why, old shrew,” said Hatch, “there be no
men nearer us than Sir Daniel’s, at Kettley; y’ are
as safe as in London Tower; and ye raise scares upon a man for a
few chaffinches and sparrows!”</p>
<p>“Hear him!” grinned Appleyard. “How
many a rogue would give his two crop ears to have a shoot at
either of us? Saint Michael, man! they hate us like two
polecats!”</p>
<p>“Well, sooth it is, they hate Sir Daniel,”
answered Hatch, a little sobered.</p>
<p>“Ay, they hate Sir Daniel, and they hate every man that
serves with him,” said Appleyard; “and in the first
order of hating, they hate Bennet Hatch and old Nicholas the
bowman. See ye here: if there was a stout fellow yonder in
the wood-edge, and you and I stood fair for him—as, by
Saint George, we stand!—which, think ye, would he
choose?”</p>
<p>“You, for a good wager,” answered Hatch.</p>
<p>“My surcoat to a leather belt, it would be you!”
cried the old archer. “Ye burned Grimstone,
Bennet—they’ll ne’er forgive you that, my
master. And as for me, I’ll soon be in a good place,
God grant, and out of bow-shoot—ay, and
cannon-shoot—of all their malices. I am an old man,
and draw fast to homeward, where the bed is ready. But for
you, Bennet, y’ are to remain behind here at your own
peril, and if ye come to my years unhanged, the old true-blue
English spirit will be dead.”</p>
<p>“Y’ are the shrewishest old dolt in Tunstall
Forest,” returned Hatch, visibly ruffled by these
threats. “Get ye to your arms before Sir Oliver come,
and leave prating for one good while. An ye had talked so
much with Harry the Fift, his ears would ha’ been richer
than his pocket.”</p>
<p>An arrow sang in the air, like a huge hornet; it struck old
Appleyard between the shoulder-blades, and pierced him clean
through, and he fell forward on his face among the
cabbages. Hatch, with a broken cry, leapt into the air;
then, stooping double, he ran for the cover of the house.
And in the meanwhile Dick Shelton had dropped behind a lilac, and
had his crossbow bent and shouldered, covering the point of the
forest.</p>
<p>Not a leaf stirred. The sheep were patiently browsing;
the birds had settled. But there lay the old man, with a
cloth-yard arrow standing in his back; and there were Hatch
holding to the gable, and Dick crouching and ready behind the
lilac bush.</p>
<p>“D’ye see aught?” cried Hatch.</p>
<p>“Not a twig stirs,” said Dick.</p>
<p>“I think shame to leave him lying,” said Bennet,
coming forward once more with hesitating steps and a very pale
countenance. “Keep a good eye on the wood, Master
Shelton—keep a clear eye on the wood. The saints
assoil us! here was a good shoot!”</p>
<p>Bennet raised the old archer on his knee. He was not yet
dead; his face worked, and his eyes shut and opened like
machinery, and he had a most horrible, ugly look of one in
pain.</p>
<p>“Can ye hear, old Nick?” asked Hatch.
“Have ye a last wish before ye wend, old
brother?”</p>
<p>“Pluck out the shaft, and let me pass, a’
Mary’s name!” gasped Appleyard. “I be
done with Old England. Pluck it out!”</p>
<p>“Master Dick,” said Bennet, “come hither,
and pull me a good pull upon the arrow. He would fain pass,
the poor sinner.”</p>
<p>Dick laid down his cross-bow, and pulling hard upon the arrow,
drew it forth. A gush of blood followed; the old archer
scrambled half upon his feet, called once upon the name of God,
and then fell dead. Hatch, upon his knees among the
cabbages, prayed fervently for the welfare of the passing
spirit. But even as he prayed, it was plain that his mind
was still divided, and he kept ever an eye upon the corner of the
wood from which the shot had come. When he had done, he got
to his feet again, drew off one of his mailed gauntlets, and
wiped his pale face, which was all wet with terror.</p>
<p>“Ay,” he said, “it’ll be my turn
next.”</p>
<p>“Who hath done this, Bennet?” Richard asked, still
holding the arrow in his hand.</p>
<p>“Nay, the saints know,” said Hatch.
“Here are a good two score Christian souls that we have
hunted out of house and holding, he and I. He has paid his
shot, poor shrew, nor will it be long, mayhap, ere I pay
mine. Sir Daniel driveth over-hard.”</p>
<p>“This is a strange shaft,” said the lad, looking
at the arrow in his hand.</p>
<p>“Ay, by my faith!” cried Bennet.
“Black, and black-feathered. Here is an ill-favoured
shaft, by my sooth! for black, they say, bodes burial. And
here be words written. Wipe the blood away. What read
ye?”</p>
<p>“‘<i>Appulyaird fro Jon
Amend-All</i>,’” read Shelton. “What
should this betoken?”</p>
<p>“Nay, I like it not,” returned the retainer,
shaking his head. “John Amend-All! Here is a
rogue’s name for those that be up in the world! But
why stand we here to make a mark? Take him by the knees,
good Master Shelton, while I lift him by the shoulders, and let
us lay him in his house. This will be a rare shog to poor
Sir Oliver; he will turn paper colour; he will pray like a
windmill.”</p>
<p>They took up the old archer, and carried him between them into
his house, where he had dwelt alone. And there they laid
him on the floor, out of regard for the mattress, and sought, as
best they might, to straighten and compose his limbs.</p>
<p>Appleyard’s house was clean and bare. There was a
bed, with a blue cover, a cupboard, a great chest, a pair of
joint-stools, a hinged table in the chimney corner, and hung upon
the wall the old soldier’s armoury of bows and defensive
armour. Hatch began to look about him curiously.</p>
<p>“Nick had money,” he said. “He may
have had three score pounds put by. I would I could light
upon’t! When ye lose an old friend, Master Richard,
the best consolation is to heir him. See, now, this
chest. I would go a mighty wager there is a bushel of gold
therein. He had a strong hand to get, and a hard hand to
keep withal, had Appleyard the archer. Now may God rest his
spirit! Near eighty year he was afoot and about, and ever
getting; but now he’s on the broad of his back, poor shrew,
and no more lacketh; and if his chattels came to a good friend,
he would be merrier, methinks, in heaven.”</p>
<p>“Come, Hatch,” said Dick, “respect his
stone-blind eyes. Would ye rob the man before his
body? Nay, he would walk!”</p>
<p>Hatch made several signs of the cross; but by this time his
natural complexion had returned, and he was not easily to be
dashed from any purpose. It would have gone hard with the
chest had not the gate sounded, and presently after the door of
the house opened and admitted a tall, portly, ruddy, black-eyed
man of near fifty, in a surplice and black robe.</p>
<p>“Appleyard”—the newcomer was saying, as he
entered; but he stopped dead. “Ave Maria!” he
cried. “Saints be our shield! What cheer is
this?”</p>
<p>“Cold cheer with Appleyard, sir parson,” answered
Hatch, with perfect cheerfulness. “Shot at his own
door, and alighteth even now at purgatory gates. Ay! there,
if tales be true, he shall lack neither coal nor
candle.”</p>
<p>Sir Oliver groped his way to a joint-stool, and sat down upon
it, sick and white.</p>
<p>“This is a judgment! O, a great stroke!” he
sobbed, and rattled off a leash of prayers.</p>
<p>Hatch meanwhile reverently doffed his salet and knelt
down.</p>
<p>“Ay, Bennet,” said the priest, somewhat
recovering, “and what may this be? What enemy hath
done this?”</p>
<p>“Here, Sir Oliver, is the arrow. See, it is
written upon with words,” said Dick.</p>
<p>“Nay,” cried the priest, “this is a foul
hearing! John Amend-All! A right Lollardy word.
And black of hue, as for an omen! Sirs, this knave arrow
likes me not. But it importeth rather to take
counsel. Who should this be? Bethink you,
Bennet. Of so many black ill-willers, which should he be
that doth so hardily outface us? Simnel? I do much
question it. The Walsinghams? Nay, they are not yet
so broken; they still think to have the law over us, when times
change. There was Simon Malmesbury, too. How think
ye, Bennet?”</p>
<p>“What think ye, sir,” returned Hatch, “of
Ellis Duckworth?”</p>
<p>“Nay, Bennet, never. Nay, not he,” said the
priest. “There cometh never any rising, Bennet, from
below—so all judicious chroniclers concord in their
opinion; but rebellion travelleth ever downward from above; and
when Dick, Tom, and Harry take them to their bills, look ever
narrowly to see what lord is profited thereby. Now, Sir
Daniel, having once more joined him to the Queen’s party,
is in ill odour with the Yorkist lords. Thence, Bennet,
comes the blow—by what procuring, I yet seek; but therein
lies the nerve of this discomfiture.”</p>
<p>“An’t please you, Sir Oliver,” said Bennet,
“the axles are so hot in this country that I have long been
smelling fire. So did this poor sinner, Appleyard.
And, by your leave, men’s spirits are so foully inclined to
all of us, that it needs neither York nor Lancaster to spur them
on. Hear my plain thoughts: You, that are a clerk, and Sir
Daniel, that sails on any wind, ye have taken many men’s
goods, and beaten and hanged not a few. Y’ are called
to count for this; in the end, I wot not how, ye have ever the
uppermost at law, and ye think all patched. But give me
leave, Sir Oliver: the man that ye have dispossessed and beaten
is but the angrier, and some day, when the black devil is by, he
will up with his bow and clout me a yard of arrow through your
inwards.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Bennet, y’ are in the wrong. Bennet,
ye should be glad to be corrected,” said Sir Oliver.
“Y’ are a prater, Bennet, a talker, a babbler; your
mouth is wider than your two ears. Mend it, Bennet, mend
it.”</p>
<p>“Nay, I say no more. Have it as ye list,”
said the retainer.</p>
<p>The priest now rose from the stool, and from the writing-case
that hung about his neck took forth wax and a taper, and a flint
and steel. With these he sealed up the chest and the
cupboard with Sir Daniel’s arms, Hatch looking on
disconsolate; and then the whole party proceeded, somewhat
timorously, to sally from the house and get to horse.</p>
<p>“’Tis time we were on the road, Sir Oliver,”
said Hatch, as he held the priest’s stirrup while he
mounted.</p>
<p>“Ay; but, Bennet, things are changed,” returned
the parson. “There is now no Appleyard—rest his
soul!—to keep the garrison. I shall keep you,
Bennet. I must have a good man to rest me on in this day of
black arrows. ‘The arrow that flieth by day,’
saith the evangel; I have no mind of the context; nay, I am a
sluggard priest, I am too deep in men’s affairs.
Well, let us ride forth, Master Hatch. The jackmen should
be at the church by now.”</p>
<p>So they rode forward down the road, with the wind after them,
blowing the tails of the parson’s cloak; and behind them,
as they went, clouds began to arise and blot out the sinking
sun. They had passed three of the scattered houses that
make up Tunstall hamlet, when, coming to a turn, they saw the
church before them. Ten or a dozen houses clustered
immediately round it; but to the back the churchyard was next the
meadows. At the lych-gate, near a score of men were
gathered, some in the saddle, some standing by their
horses’ heads. They were variously armed and mounted;
some with spears, some with bills, some with bows, and some
bestriding plough-horses, still splashed with the mire of the
furrow; for these were the very dregs of the country, and all the
better men and the fair equipments were already with Sir Daniel
in the field.</p>
<p>“We have not done amiss, praised be the cross of
Holywood! Sir Daniel will be right well content,”
observed the priest, inwardly numbering the troop.</p>
<p>“Who goes? Stand! if ye be true!” shouted
Bennet. A man was seen slipping through the churchyard
among the yews; and at the sound of this summons he discarded all
concealment, and fairly took to his heels for the forest.
The men at the gate, who had been hitherto unaware of the
stranger’s presence, woke and scattered. Those who
had dismounted began scrambling into the saddle; the rest rode in
pursuit; but they had to make the circuit of the consecrated
ground, and it was plain their quarry would escape them.
Hatch, roaring an oath, put his horse at the hedge, to head him
off; but the beast refused, and sent his rider sprawling in the
dust. And though he was up again in a moment, and had
caught the bridle, the time had gone by, and the fugitive had
gained too great a lead for any hope of capture.</p>
<p>The wisest of all had been Dick Shelton. Instead of
starting in a vain pursuit, he had whipped his crossbow from his
back, bent it, and set a quarrel to the string; and now, when the
others had desisted, he turned to Bennet and asked if he should
shoot.</p>
<p>“Shoot! shoot!” cried the priest, with sanguinary
violence.</p>
<p>“Cover him, Master Dick,” said Bennet.
“Bring me him down like a ripe apple.”</p>
<p>The fugitive was now within but a few leaps of safety; but
this last part of the meadow ran very steeply uphill; and the man
ran slower in proportion. What with the greyness of the
falling night, and the uneven movements of the runner, it was no
easy aim; and as Dick levelled his bow, he felt a kind of pity,
and a half desire that he might miss. The quarrel sped.</p>
<p>The man stumbled and fell, and a great cheer arose from Hatch
and the pursuers. But they were counting their corn before
the harvest. The man fell lightly; he was lightly afoot
again, turned and waved his cap in a bravado, and was out of
sight next moment in the margin of the wood.</p>
<p>“And the plague go with him!” cried Bennet.
“He has thieves’ heels; he can run, by St
Banbury! But you touched him, Master Shelton; he has stolen
your quarrel, may he never have good I grudge him
less!”</p>
<p>“Nay, but what made he by the church?” asked Sir
Oliver. “I am shrewdly afeared there has been
mischief here. Clipsby, good fellow, get ye down from your
horse, and search thoroughly among the yews.”</p>
<p>Clipsby was gone but a little while ere he returned carrying a
paper.</p>
<p>“This writing was pinned to the church door,” he
said, handing it to the parson. “I found naught else,
sir parson.”</p>
<p>“Now, by the power of Mother Church,” cried Sir
Oliver, “but this runs hard on sacrilege! For the
king’s good pleasure, or the lord of the
manor—well! But that every run-the-hedge in a green
jerkin should fasten papers to the chancel door—nay, it
runs hard on sacrilege, hard; and men have burned for matters of
less weight. But what have we here? The light falls
apace. Good Master Richard, y’ have young eyes.
Read me, I pray, this libel.”</p>
<p>Dick Shelton took the paper in his hand and read it
aloud. It contained some lines of very rugged doggerel,
hardly even rhyming, written in a gross character, and most
uncouthly spelt. With the spelling somewhat bettered, this
is how they ran:</p>
<blockquote><p>“I had four blak arrows under my belt,<br/>
Four for the greefs that I have felt,<br/>
Four for the nomber of ill menne<br/>
That have opressid me now and then.</p>
<p>One is gone; one is wele sped;<br/>
Old Apulyaird is ded.</p>
<p>One is for Maister Bennet Hatch,<br/>
That burned Grimstone, walls and thatch.</p>
<p>One for Sir Oliver Oates,<br/>
That cut Sir Harry Shelton’s throat.</p>
<p>Sir Daniel, ye shull have the fourt;<br/>
We shall think it fair sport.</p>
<p>Ye shull each have your own part,<br/>
A blak arrow in each blak heart.<br/>
Get ye to your knees for to pray:<br/>
Ye are ded theeves, by yea and nay!</p>
<p style="text-align: right">“<span class="smcap">Jon
Amend-All</span><br/>
of the Green Wood,<br/>
And his jolly fellaweship.</p>
<p>“Item, we have mo arrowes and goode hempen cord for
otheres of your following.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“Now, well-a-day for charity and the Christian
graces!” cried Sir Oliver, lamentably. “Sirs,
this is an ill world, and groweth daily worse. I will swear
upon the cross of Holywood I am as innocent of that good
knight’s hurt, whether in act or purpose, as the babe
unchristened. Neither was his throat cut; for therein they
are again in error, as there still live credible witnesses to
show.”</p>
<p>“It boots not, sir parson,” said Bennet.
“Here is unseasonable talk.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Master Bennet, not so. Keep ye in your due
place, good Bennet,” answered the priest. “I
shall make mine innocence appear. I will, upon no
consideration, lose my poor life in error. I take all men
to witness that I am clear of this matter. I was not even
in the Moat House. I was sent of an errand before nine upon
the clock”—</p>
<p>“Sir Oliver,” said Hatch, interrupting,
“since it please you not to stop this sermon, I will take
other means. Goffe, sound to horse.”</p>
<p>And while the tucket was sounding, Bennet moved close to the
bewildered parson, and whispered violently in his ear.</p>
<p>Dick Shelton saw the priest’s eye turned upon him for an
instant in a startled glance. He had some cause for
thought; for this Sir Harry Shelton was his own natural
father. But he said never a word, and kept his countenance
unmoved.</p>
<p>Hatch and Sir Oliver discussed together for a while their
altered situation; ten men, it was decided between them, should
be reserved, not only to garrison the Moat House, but to escort
the priest across the wood. In the meantime, as Bennet was
to remain behind, the command of the reinforcement was given to
Master Shelton. Indeed, there was no choice; the men were
loutish fellows, dull and unskilled in war, while Dick was not
only popular, but resolute and grave beyond his age.
Although his youth had been spent in these rough, country places,
the lad had been well taught in letters by Sir Oliver, and Hatch
himself had shown him the management of arms and the first
principles of command. Bennet had always been kind and
helpful; he was one of those who are cruel as the grave to those
they call their enemies, but ruggedly faithful and well willing
to their friends; and now, while Sir Oliver entered the next
house to write, in his swift, exquisite penmanship, a memorandum
of the last occurrences to his master, Sir Daniel Brackley,
Bennet came up to his pupil to wish him God-speed upon his
enterprise.</p>
<p>“Ye must go the long way about, Master Shelton,”
he said; “round by the bridge, for your life! Keep a
sure man fifty paces afore you, to draw shots; and go softly till
y’ are past the wood. If the rogues fall upon you,
ride for ’t; ye will do naught by standing. And keep
ever forward, Master Shelton; turn me not back again, an ye love
your life; there is no help in Tunstall, mind ye that. And
now, since ye go to the great wars about the king, and I continue
to dwell here in extreme jeopardy of my life, and the saints
alone can certify if we shall meet again below, I give you my
last counsels now at your riding. Keep an eye on Sir
Daniel; he is unsure. Put not your trust in the
jack-priest; he intendeth not amiss, but doth the will of others;
it is a hand-gun for Sir Daniel! Get your good lordship
where ye go; make you strong friends; look to it. And think
ever a pater-noster-while on Bennet Hatch. There are worse
rogues afoot than Bennet. So, God-speed!”</p>
<p>“And Heaven be with you, Bennet!” returned
Dick. “Ye were a good friend to me-ward, and so I
shall say ever.”</p>
<p>“And, look ye, master,” added Hatch, with a
certain embarrassment, “if this Amend-All should get a
shaft into me, ye might, mayhap, lay out a gold mark or mayhap a
pound for my poor soul; for it is like to go stiff with me in
purgatory.”</p>
<p>“Ye shall have your will of it, Bennet,” answered
Dick. “But, what cheer, man! we shall meet again,
where ye shall have more need of ale than masses.”</p>
<p>“The saints so grant it, Master Dick!” returned
the other. “But here comes Sir Oliver. An he
were as quick with the long-bow as with the pen, he would be a
brave man-at-arms.”</p>
<p>Sir Oliver gave Dick a sealed packet, with this
superscription: “To my ryght worchypful master, Sir Daniel
Brackley, knyght, be thys delyvered in haste.”</p>
<p>And Dick, putting it in the bosom of his jacket, gave the word
and set forth westward up the village.</p>
<h2>BOOK I—THE TWO LADS</h2>
<h3>CHAPTER I—AT THE SIGN OF THE SUN IN KETTLEY</h3>
<p>Sir Daniel and his men lay in and about Kettley that night,
warmly quartered and well patrolled. But the Knight of
Tunstall was one who never rested from money-getting; and even
now, when he was on the brink of an adventure which should make
or mar him, he was up an hour after midnight to squeeze poor
neighbours. He was one who trafficked greatly in disputed
inheritances; it was his way to buy out the most unlikely
claimant, and then, by the favour he curried with great lords
about the king, procure unjust decisions in his favour; or, if
that was too roundabout, to seize the disputed manor by force of
arms, and rely on his influence and Sir Oliver’s cunning in
the law to hold what he had snatched. Kettley was one such
place; it had come very lately into his clutches; he still met
with opposition from the tenants; and it was to overawe
discontent that he had led his troops that way.</p>
<p>By two in the morning, Sir Daniel sat in the inn room, close
by the fireside, for it was cold at that hour among the fens of
Kettley. By his elbow stood a pottle of spiced ale.
He had taken off his visored headpiece, and sat with his bald
head and thin, dark visage resting on one hand, wrapped warmly in
a sanguine-coloured cloak. At the lower end of the room
about a dozen of his men stood sentry over the door or lay asleep
on benches; and somewhat nearer hand, a young lad, apparently of
twelve or thirteen, was stretched in a mantle on the floor.
The host of the Sun stood before the great man.</p>
<p>“Now, mark me, mine host,” Sir Daniel said,
“follow but mine orders, and I shall be your good lord
ever. I must have good men for head boroughs, and I will
have Adam-a-More high constable; see to it narrowly. If
other men be chosen, it shall avail you nothing; rather it shall
be found to your sore cost. For those that have paid rent
to Walsingham I shall take good measure—you among the rest,
mine host.”</p>
<p>“Good knight,” said the host, “I will swear
upon the cross of Holywood I did but pay to Walsingham upon
compulsion. Nay, bully knight, I love not the rogue
Walsinghams; they were as poor as thieves, bully knight.
Give me a great lord like you. Nay; ask me among the
neighbours, I am stout for Brackley.”</p>
<p>“It may be,” said Sir Daniel, dryly.
“Ye shall then pay twice.”</p>
<p>The innkeeper made a horrid grimace; but this was a piece of
bad luck that might readily befall a tenant in these unruly
times, and he was perhaps glad to make his peace so easily.</p>
<p>“Bring up yon fellow, Selden!” cried the
knight.</p>
<p>And one of his retainers led up a poor, cringing old man, as
pale as a candle, and all shaking with the fen fever.</p>
<p>“Sirrah,” said Sir Daniel, “your
name?”</p>
<p>“An’t please your worship,” replied the man,
“my name is Condall—Condall of Shoreby, at your good
worship’s pleasure.”</p>
<p>“I have heard you ill reported on,” returned the
knight. “Ye deal in treason, rogue; ye trudge the
country leasing; y’ are heavily suspicioned of the death of
severals. How, fellow, are ye so bold? But I will
bring you down.”</p>
<p>“Right honourable and my reverend lord,” the man
cried, “here is some hodge-podge, saving your good
presence. I am but a poor private man, and have hurt
none.”</p>
<p>“The under-sheriff did report of you most vilely,”
said the knight. “‘Seize me,’ saith he,
‘that Tyndal of Shoreby.’”</p>
<p>“Condall, my good lord; Condall is my poor name,”
said the unfortunate.</p>
<p>“Condall or Tyndal, it is all one,” replied Sir
Daniel, coolly. “For, by my sooth, y’ are here
and I do mightily suspect your honesty. If ye would save
your neck, write me swiftly an obligation for twenty
pound.”</p>
<p>“For twenty pound, my good lord!” cried
Condall. “Here is midsummer madness! My whole
estate amounteth not to seventy shillings.”</p>
<p>“Condall or Tyndal,” returned Sir Daniel,
grinning, “I will run my peril of that loss. Write me
down twenty, and when I have recovered all I may, I will be good
lord to you, and pardon you the rest.”</p>
<p>“Alas! my good lord, it may not be; I have no skill to
write,” said Condall.</p>
<p>“Well-a-day!” returned the knight.
“Here, then, is no remedy. Yet I would fain have
spared you, Tyndal, had my conscience suffered. Selden,
take me this old shrew softly to the nearest elm, and hang me him
tenderly by the neck, where I may see him at my riding.
Fare ye well, good Master Condall, dear Master Tyndal; y’
are post-haste for Paradise; fare ye then well!”</p>
<p>“Nay, my right pleasant lord,” replied Condall,
forcing an obsequious smile, “an ye be so masterful, as
doth right well become you, I will even, with all my poor skill,
do your good bidding.”</p>
<p>“Friend,” quoth Sir Daniel, “ye will now
write two score. Go to! y’ are too cunning for a
livelihood of seventy shillings. Selden, see him write me
this in good form, and have it duly witnessed.”</p>
<p>And Sir Daniel, who was a very merry knight, none merrier in
England, took a drink of his mulled ale, and lay back,
smiling.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the boy upon the floor began to stir, and presently
sat up and looked about him with a scare.</p>
<p>“Hither,” said Sir Daniel; and as the other rose
at his command and came slowly towards him, he leaned back and
laughed outright. “By the rood!” he cried,
“a sturdy boy!”</p>
<p>The lad flushed crimson with anger, and darted a look of hate
out of his dark eyes. Now that he was on his legs, it was
more difficult to make certain of his age. His face looked
somewhat older in expression, but it was as smooth as a young
child’s; and in bone and body he was unusually slender, and
somewhat awkward of gait.</p>
<p>“Ye have called me, Sir Daniel,” he said.
“Was it to laugh at my poor plight?”</p>
<p>“Nay, now, let laugh,” said the knight.
“Good shrew, let laugh, I pray you. An ye could see
yourself, I warrant ye would laugh the first.”</p>
<p>“Well,” cried the lad, flushing, “ye shall
answer this when ye answer for the other. Laugh while yet
ye may!”</p>
<p>“Nay, now, good cousin,” replied Sir Daniel, with
some earnestness, “think not that I mock at you, except in
mirth, as between kinsfolk and singular friends. I will
make you a marriage of a thousand pounds, go to! and cherish you
exceedingly. I took you, indeed, roughly, as the time
demanded; but from henceforth I shall ungrudgingly maintain and
cheerfully serve you. Ye shall be Mrs. Shelton—Lady
Shelton, by my troth! for the lad promiseth bravely. Tut!
ye will not shy for honest laughter; it purgeth melancholy.
They are no rogues who laugh, good cousin. Good mine host,
lay me a meal now for my cousin, Master John. Sit ye down,
sweetheart, and eat.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Master John, “I will break no
bread. Since ye force me to this sin, I will fast for my
soul’s interest. But, good mine host, I pray you of
courtesy give me a cup of fair water; I shall be much beholden to
your courtesy indeed.”</p>
<p>“Ye shall have a dispensation, go to!” cried the
knight. “Shalt be well shriven, by my faith!
Content you, then, and eat.”</p>
<p>But the lad was obstinate, drank a cup of water, and, once
more wrapping himself closely in his mantle, sat in a far corner,
brooding.</p>
<p>In an hour or two, there rose a stir in the village of
sentries challenging and the clatter of arms and horses; and then
a troop drew up by the inn door, and Richard Shelton, splashed
with mud, presented himself upon the threshold.</p>
<p>“Save you, Sir Daniel,” he said.</p>
<p>“How! Dickie Shelton!” cried the knight; and
at the mention of Dick’s name the other lad looked
curiously across. “What maketh Bennet
Hatch?”</p>
<p>“Please you, sir knight, to take cognisance of this
packet from Sir Oliver, wherein are all things fully
stated,” answered Richard, presenting the priest’s
letter. “And please you farther, ye were best make
all speed to Risingham; for on the way hither we encountered one
riding furiously with letters, and by his report, my Lord of
Risingham was sore bested, and lacked exceedingly your
presence.”</p>
<p>“How say you? Sore bested?” returned the
knight. “Nay, then, we will make speed sitting down,
good Richard. As the world goes in this poor realm of
England, he that rides softliest rides surest. Delay, they
say, begetteth peril; but it is rather this itch of doing that
undoes men; mark it, Dick. But let me see, first, what
cattle ye have brought. Selden, a link here at the
door!”</p>
<p>And Sir Daniel strode forth into the village street, and, by
the red glow of a torch, inspected his new troops. He was
an unpopular neighbour and an unpopular master; but as a leader
in war he was well-beloved by those who rode behind his
pennant. His dash, his proved courage, his forethought for
the soldiers’ comfort, even his rough gibes, were all to
the taste of the bold blades in jack and salet.</p>
<p>“Nay, by the rood!” he cried, “what poor
dogs are these? Here be some as crooked as a bow, and some
as lean as a spear. Friends, ye shall ride in the front of
the battle; I can spare you, friends. Mark me this old
villain on the piebald! A two-year mutton riding on a hog
would look more soldierly! Ha! Clipsby, are ye there,
old rat? Y’ are a man I could lose with a good heart;
ye shall go in front of all, with a bull’s eye painted on
your jack, to be the better butt for archery; sirrah, ye shall
show me the way.”</p>
<p>“I will show you any way, Sir Daniel, but the way to
change sides,” returned Clipsby, sturdily.</p>
<p>Sir Daniel laughed a guffaw.</p>
<p>“Why, well said!” he cried. “Hast a
shrewd tongue in thy mouth, go to! I will forgive you for
that merry word. Selden, see them fed, both man and
brute.”</p>
<p>The knight re-entered the inn.</p>
<p>“Now, friend Dick,” he said, “fall to.
Here is good ale and bacon. Eat, while that I
read.”</p>
<p>Sir Daniel opened the packet, and as he read his brow
darkened. When he had done he sat a little, musing.
Then he looked sharply at his ward.</p>
<p>“Dick,” said he, “Y’ have seen this
penny rhyme?”</p>
<p>The lad replied in the affirmative.</p>
<p>“It bears your father’s name,” continued the
knight; “and our poor shrew of a parson is, by some mad
soul, accused of slaying him.”</p>
<p>“He did most eagerly deny it,” answered Dick.</p>
<p>“He did?” cried the knight, very sharply.
“Heed him not. He has a loose tongue; he babbles like
a jack-sparrow. Some day, when I may find the leisure,
Dick, I will myself more fully inform you of these matters.
There was one Duckworth shrewdly blamed for it; but the times
were troubled, and there was no justice to be got.”</p>
<p>“It befell at the Moat House?” Dick ventured, with
a beating at his heart.</p>
<p>“It befell between the Moat House and Holywood,”
replied Sir Daniel, calmly; but he shot a covert glance, black
with suspicion, at Dick’s face. “And
now,” added the knight, “speed you with your meal; ye
shall return to Tunstall with a line from me.”</p>
<p>Dick’s face fell sorely.</p>
<p>“Prithee, Sir Daniel,” he cried, “send one
of the villains! I beseech you let me to the battle.
I can strike a stroke, I promise you.”</p>
<p>“I misdoubt it not,” replied Sir Daniel, sitting
down to write. “But here, Dick, is no honour to be
won. I lie in Kettley till I have sure tidings of the war,
and then ride to join me with the conqueror. Cry not on
cowardice; it is but wisdom, Dick; for this poor realm so tosseth
with rebellion, and the king’s name and custody so changeth
hands, that no man may be certain of the morrow. Toss-pot
and Shuttle-wit run in, but my Lord Good-Counsel sits o’
one side, waiting.”</p>
<p>With that, Sir Daniel, turning his back to Dick, and quite at
the farther end of the long table, began to write his letter,
with his mouth on one side, for this business of the Black Arrow
stuck sorely in his throat.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, young Shelton was going on heartily enough with his
breakfast, when he felt a touch upon his arm, and a very soft
voice whispering in his ear.</p>
<p>“Make not a sign, I do beseech you,” said the
voice, “but of your charity tell me the straight way to
Holywood. Beseech you, now, good boy, comfort a poor soul
in peril and extreme distress, and set me so far forth upon the
way to my repose.”</p>
<p>“Take the path by the windmill,” answered Dick, in
the same tone; “it will bring you to Till Ferry; there
inquire again.”</p>
<p>And without turning his head, he fell again to eating.
But with the tail of his eye he caught a glimpse of the young lad
called Master John stealthily creeping from the room.</p>
<p>“Why,” thought Dick, “he is a young as
I. ‘Good boy’ doth he call me? An I had
known, I should have seen the varlet hanged ere I had told
him. Well, if he goes through the fen, I may come up with
him and pull his ears.”</p>
<p>Half an hour later, Sir Daniel gave Dick the letter, and bade
him speed to the Moat House. And, again, some half an hour
after Dick’s departure, a messenger came, in hot haste,
from my Lord of Risingham.</p>
<p>“Sir Daniel,” the messenger said, “ye lose
great honour, by my sooth! The fight began again this
morning ere the dawn, and we have beaten their van and scattered
their right wing. Only the main battle standeth fast.
An we had your fresh men, we should tilt you them all into the
river. What, sir knight! Will ye be the last?
It stands not with your good credit.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” cried the knight, “I was but now upon
the march. Selden, sound me the tucket. Sir, I am
with you on the instant. It is not two hours since the more
part of my command came in, sir messenger. What would ye
have? Spurring is good meat, but yet it killed the
charger. Bustle, boys!”</p>
<p>By this time the tucket was sounding cheerily in the morning,
and from all sides Sir Daniel’s men poured into the main
street and formed before the inn. They had slept upon their
arms, with chargers saddled, and in ten minutes five-score
men-at-arms and archers, cleanly equipped and briskly
disciplined, stood ranked and ready. The chief part were in
Sir Daniel’s livery, murrey and blue, which gave the
greater show to their array. The best armed rode first; and
away out of sight, at the tail of the column, came the sorry
reinforcement of the night before. Sir Daniel looked with
pride along the line.</p>
<p>“Here be the lads to serve you in a pinch,” he
said.</p>
<p>“They are pretty men, indeed,” replied the
messenger. “It but augments my sorrow that ye had not
marched the earlier.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said the knight, “what would
ye? The beginning of a feast and the end of a fray, sir
messenger;” and he mounted into his saddle.
“Why! how now!” he cried. “John!
Joanna! Nay, by the sacred rood! where is she? Host,
where is that girl?”</p>
<p>“Girl, Sir Daniel?” cried the landlord.
“Nay, sir, I saw no girl.”</p>
<p>“Boy, then, dotard!” cried the knight.
“Could ye not see it was a wench? She in the
murrey-coloured mantle—she that broke her fast with water,
rogue—where is she?”</p>
<p>“Nay, the saints bless us! Master John, ye called
him,” said the host. “Well, I thought none
evil. He is gone. I saw him—her—I saw her
in the stable a good hour agone; ’a was saddling a grey
horse.”</p>
<p>“Now, by the rood!” cried Sir Daniel, “the
wench was worth five hundred pound to me and more.”</p>
<p>“Sir knight,” observed the messenger, with
bitterness, “while that ye are here, roaring for five
hundred pounds, the realm of England is elsewhere being lost and
won.”</p>
<p>“It is well said,” replied Sir Daniel.
“Selden, fall me out with six cross-bowmen; hunt me her
down. I care not what it cost; but, at my returning, let me
find her at the Moat House. Be it upon your head. And
now, sir messenger, we march.”</p>
<p>And the troop broke into a good trot, and Selden and his six
men were left behind upon the street of Kettley, with the staring
villagers.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER II—IN THE FEN</h3>
<p>It was near six in the May morning when Dick began to ride
down into the fen upon his homeward way. The sky was all
blue; the jolly wind blew loud and steady; the windmill-sails
were spinning; and the willows over all the fen rippling and
whitening like a field of corn. He had been all night in
the saddle, but his heart was good and his body sound, and he
rode right merrily.</p>
<p>The path went down and down into the marsh, till he lost sight
of all the neighbouring landmarks but Kettley windmill on the
knoll behind him, and the extreme top of Tunstall Forest far
before. On either hand there were great fields of blowing
reeds and willows, pools of water shaking in the wind, and
treacherous bogs, as green as emerald, to tempt and to betray the
traveller. The path lay almost straight through the
morass. It was already very ancient; its foundation had
been laid by Roman soldiery; in the lapse of ages much of it had
sunk, and every here and there, for a few hundred yards, it lay
submerged below the stagnant waters of the fen.</p>
<p>About a mile from Kettley, Dick came to one such break in the
plain line of causeway, where the reeds and willows grew
dispersedly like little islands and confused the eye. The
gap, besides, was more than usually long; it was a place where
any stranger might come readily to mischief; and Dick bethought
him, with something like a pang, of the lad whom he had so
imperfectly directed. As for himself, one look backward to
where the windmill sails were turning black against the blue of
heaven—one look forward to the high ground of Tunstall
Forest, and he was sufficiently directed and held straight on,
the water washing to his horse’s knees, as safe as on a
highway.</p>
<p>Half-way across, and when he had already sighted the path
rising high and dry upon the farther side, he was aware of a
great splashing on his right, and saw a grey horse, sunk to its
belly in the mud, and still spasmodically struggling.
Instantly, as though it had divined the neighbourhood of help,
the poor beast began to neigh most piercingly. It rolled,
meanwhile, a blood-shot eye, insane with terror; and as it
sprawled wallowing in the quag, clouds of stinging insects rose
and buzzed about it in the air.</p>
<p>“Alack!” thought Dick, “can the poor lad
have perished? There is his horse, for certain—a
brave grey! Nay, comrade, if thou criest to me so
piteously, I will do all man can to help thee. Shalt not
lie there to drown by inches!”</p>
<p>And he made ready his crossbow, and put a quarrel through the
creature’s head.</p>
<p>Dick rode on after this act of rugged mercy, somewhat sobered
in spirit, and looking closely about him for any sign of his less
happy predecessor in the way. “I would I had dared to
tell him further,” he thought; “for I fear he has
miscarried in the slough.”</p>
<p>And just as he was so thinking, a voice cried upon his name
from the causeway side, and, looking over his shoulder, he saw
the lad’s face peering from a clump of reeds.</p>
<p>“Are ye there?” he said, reining in.
“Ye lay so close among the reeds that I had passed you
by. I saw your horse bemired, and put him from his agony;
which, by my sooth! an ye had been a more merciful rider, ye had
done yourself. But come forth out of your hiding.
Here be none to trouble you.”</p>
<p>“Nay, good boy, I have no arms, nor skill to use them if
I had,” replied the other, stepping forth upon the
pathway.</p>
<p>“Why call me ‘boy’?” cried Dick.
“Y’ are not, I trow, the elder of us
twain.”</p>
<p>“Good Master Shelton,” said the other,
“prithee forgive me. I have none the least intention
to offend. Rather I would in every way beseech your
gentleness and favour, for I am now worse bested than ever,
having lost my way, my cloak, and my poor horse. To have a
riding-rod and spurs, and never a horse to sit upon! And
before all,” he added, looking ruefully upon his
clothes—“before all, to be so sorrily
besmirched!”</p>
<p>“Tut!” cried Dick. “Would ye mind a
ducking? Blood of wound or dust of
travel—that’s a man’s adornment.”</p>
<p>“Nay, then, I like him better plain,” observed the
lad. “But, prithee, how shall I do? Prithee,
good Master Richard, help me with your good counsel. If I
come not safe to Holywood, I am undone.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Dick, dismounting, “I will give
more than counsel. Take my horse, and I will run awhile,
and when I am weary we shall change again, that so, riding and
running, both may go the speedier.”</p>
<p>So the change was made, and they went forward as briskly as
they durst on the uneven causeway, Dick with his hand upon the
other’s knee.</p>
<p>“How call ye your name?” asked Dick.</p>
<p>“Call me John Matcham,” replied the lad.</p>
<p>“And what make ye to Holywood?” Dick
continued.</p>
<p>“I seek sanctuary from a man that would oppress
me,” was the answer. “The good Abbot of
Holywood is a strong pillar to the weak.”</p>
<p>“And how came ye with Sir Daniel, Master Matcham?”
pursued Dick.</p>
<p>“Nay,” cried the other, “by the abuse of
force! He hath taken me by violence from my own place;
dressed me in these weeds; ridden with me till my heart was sick;
gibed me till I could ’a’ wept; and when certain of
my friends pursued, thinking to have me back, claps me in the
rear to stand their shot! I was even grazed in the right
foot, and walk but lamely. Nay, there shall come a day
between us; he shall smart for all!”</p>
<p>“Would ye shoot at the moon with a hand-gun?” said
Dick. “’Tis a valiant knight, and hath a hand
of iron. An he guessed I had made or meddled with your
flight, it would go sore with me.”</p>
<p>“Ay, poor boy,” returned the other,
“y’ are his ward, I know it. By the same token,
so am I, or so he saith; or else he hath bought my
marriage—I wot not rightly which; but it is some handle to
oppress me by.”</p>
<p>“Boy again!” said Dick.</p>
<p>“Nay, then, shall I call you girl, good Richard?”
asked Matcham.</p>
<p>“Never a girl for me,” returned Dick.
“I do abjure the crew of them!”</p>
<p>“Ye speak boyishly,” said the other.
“Ye think more of them than ye pretend.”</p>
<p>“Not I,” said Dick, stoutly. “They
come not in my mind. A plague of them, say I! Give me
to hunt and to fight and to feast, and to live with jolly
foresters. I never heard of a maid yet that was for any
service, save one only; and she, poor shrew, was burned for a
witch and the wearing of men’s clothes in spite of
nature.”</p>
<p>Master Matcham crossed himself with fervour, and appeared to
pray.</p>
<p>“What make ye?” Dick inquired.</p>
<p>“I pray for her spirit,” answered the other, with
a somewhat troubled voice.</p>
<p>“For a witch’s spirit?” Dick cried.
“But pray for her, an ye list; she was the best wench in
Europe, was this Joan of Arc. Old Appleyard the archer ran
from her, he said, as if she had been Mahoun. Nay, she was
a brave wench.”</p>
<p>“Well, but, good Master Richard,” resumed Matcham,
“an ye like maids so little, y’ are no true natural
man; for God made them twain by intention, and brought true love
into the world, to be man’s hope and woman’s
comfort.”</p>
<p>“Faugh!” said Dick. “Y’ are a
milk-sopping baby, so to harp on women. An ye think I be no
true man, get down upon the path, and whether at fists,
back-sword, or bow and arrow, I will prove my manhood on your
body.”</p>
<p>“Nay, I am no fighter,” said Matcham,
eagerly. “I mean no tittle of offence. I meant
but pleasantry. And if I talk of women, it is because I
heard ye were to marry.”</p>
<p>“I to marry!” Dick exclaimed. “Well,
it is the first I hear of it. And with whom was I to
marry?”</p>
<p>“One Joan Sedley,” replied Matcham,
colouring. “It was Sir Daniel’s doing; he hath
money to gain upon both sides; and, indeed, I have heard the poor
wench bemoaning herself pitifully of the match. It seems
she is of your mind, or else distasted to the
bridegroom.”</p>
<p>“Well! marriage is like death, it comes to all,”
said Dick, with resignation. “And she bemoaned
herself? I pray ye now, see there how shuttle-witted are
these girls: to bemoan herself before that she had seen me!
Do I bemoan myself? Not I. An I be to marry, I will
marry dry-eyed! But if ye know her, prithee, of what favour
is she? fair or foul? And is she shrewish or
pleasant?”</p>
<p>“Nay, what matters it?” said Matcham.
“An y’ are to marry, ye can but marry. What
matters foul or fair? These be but toys. Y’ are
no milksop, Master Richard; ye will wed with dry eyes,
anyhow.”</p>
<p>“It is well said,” replied Shelton.
“Little I reck.”</p>
<p>“Your lady wife is like to have a pleasant lord,”
said Matcham.</p>
<p>“She shall have the lord Heaven made her for,”
returned Dick. “It trow there be worse as well as
better.”</p>
<p>“Ah, the poor wench!” cried the other.</p>
<p>“And why so poor?” asked Dick.</p>
<p>“To wed a man of wood,” replied his
companion. “O me, for a wooden husband!”</p>
<p>“I think I be a man of wood, indeed,” said Dick,
“to trudge afoot the while you ride my horse; but it is
good wood, I trow.”</p>
<p>“Good Dick, forgive me,” cried the other.
“Nay, y’ are the best heart in England; I but
laughed. Forgive me now, sweet Dick.”</p>
<p>“Nay, no fool words,” returned Dick, a little
embarrassed by his companion’s warmth. “No harm
is done. I am not touchy, praise the saints.”</p>
<p>And at that moment the wind, which was blowing straight behind
them as they went, brought them the rough flourish of Sir
Daniel’s trumpeter.</p>
<p>“Hark!” said Dick, “the tucket
soundeth.”</p>
<p>“Ay,” said Matcham, “they have found my
flight, and now I am unhorsed!” and he became pale as
death.</p>
<p>“Nay, what cheer!” returned Dick.
“Y’ have a long start, and we are near the
ferry. And it is I, methinks, that am unhorsed.”</p>
<p>“Alack, I shall be taken!” cried the
fugitive. “Dick, kind Dick, beseech ye help me but a
little!”</p>
<p>“Why, now, what aileth thee?” said Dick.
“Methinks I help you very patently. But my heart is
sorry for so spiritless a fellow! And see ye here, John
Matcham—sith John Matcham is your name—I, Richard
Shelton, tide what betideth, come what may, will see you safe in
Holywood. The saints so do to me again if I default
you. Come, pick me up a good heart, Sir White-face.
The way betters here; spur me the horse. Go faster!
faster! Nay, mind not for me; I can run like a
deer.”</p>
<p>So, with the horse trotting hard, and Dick running easily
alongside, they crossed the remainder of the fen, and came out
upon the banks of the river by the ferryman’s hut.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER III—THE FEN FERRY</h3>
<p>The river Till was a wide, sluggish, clayey water, oozing out
of fens, and in this part of its course it strained among some
score of willow-covered, marshy islets.</p>
<p>It was a dingy stream; but upon this bright, spirited morning
everything was become beautiful. The wind and the martens
broke it up into innumerable dimples; and the reflection of the
sky was scattered over all the surface in crumbs of smiling
blue.</p>
<p>A creek ran up to meet the path, and close under the bank the
ferryman’s hut lay snugly. It was of wattle and clay,
and the grass grew green upon the roof.</p>
<p>Dick went to the door and opened it. Within, upon a foul
old russet cloak, the ferryman lay stretched and shivering; a
great hulk of a man, but lean and shaken by the country
fever.</p>
<p>“Hey, Master Shelton,” he said, “be ye for
the ferry? Ill times, ill times! Look to
yourself. There is a fellowship abroad. Ye were
better turn round on your two heels and try the
bridge.”</p>
<p>“Nay; time’s in the saddle,” answered
Dick. “Time will ride, Hugh Ferryman. I am hot
in haste.”</p>
<p>“A wilful man!” returned the ferryman,
rising. “An ye win safe to the Moat House, y’
have done lucky; but I say no more.” And then
catching sight of Matcham, “Who be this?” he asked,
as he paused, blinking, on the threshold of his cabin.</p>
<p>“It is my kinsman, Master Matcham,” answered
Dick.</p>
<p>“Give ye good day, good ferryman,” said Matcham,
who had dismounted, and now came forward, leading the
horse. “Launch me your boat, I prithee; we are sore
in haste.”</p>
<p>The gaunt ferryman continued staring.</p>
<p>“By the mass!” he cried at length, and laughed
with open throat.</p>
<p>Matcham coloured to his neck and winced; and Dick, with an
angry countenance, put his hand on the lout’s shoulder.</p>
<p>“How now, churl!” he cried. “Fall to
thy business, and leave mocking thy betters.”</p>
<p>Hugh Ferryman grumblingly undid his boat, and shoved it a
little forth into the deep water. Then Dick led in the
horse, and Matcham followed.</p>
<p>“Ye be mortal small made, master,” said Hugh, with
a wide grin; “something o’ the wrong model,
belike. Nay, Master Shelton, I am for you,” he added,
getting to his oars. “A cat may look at a king.
I did but take a shot of the eye at Master Matcham.”</p>
<p>“Sirrah, no more words,” said Dick.
“Bend me your back.”</p>
<p>They were by that time at the mouth of the creek, and the view
opened up and down the river. Everywhere it was enclosed
with islands. Clay banks were falling in, willows nodding,
reeds waving, martens dipping and piping. There was no sign
of man in the labyrinth of waters.</p>
<p>“My master,” said the ferryman, keeping the boat
steady with one oar, “I have a shrew guess that
John-a-Fenne is on the island. He bears me a black grudge
to all Sir Daniel’s. How if I turned me up stream and
landed you an arrow-flight above the path? Ye were best not
meddle with John Fenne.”</p>
<p>“How, then? is he of this company?” asked
Dick.</p>
<p>“Nay, mum is the word,” said Hugh.
“But I would go up water, Dick. How if Master Matcham
came by an arrow?” and he laughed again.</p>
<p>“Be it so, Hugh,” answered Dick.</p>
<p>“Look ye, then,” pursued Hugh. “Sith
it shall so be, unsling me your cross-bow—so: now make it
ready—good; place me a quarrel. Ay, keep it so, and
look upon me grimly.”</p>
<p>“What meaneth this?” asked Dick.</p>
<p>“Why, my master, if I steal you across, it must be under
force or fear,” replied the ferryman; “for else, if
John Fenne got wind of it, he were like to prove my most
distressful neighbour.”</p>
<p>“Do these churls ride so roughly?” Dick
inquired. “Do they command Sir Daniel’s own
ferry?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” whispered the ferryman, winking.
“Mark me! Sir Daniel shall down. His time is
out. He shall down. Mum!” And he bent
over his oars.</p>
<p>They pulled a long way up the river, turned the tail of an
island, and came softly down a narrow channel next the opposite
bank. Then Hugh held water in midstream.</p>
<p>“I must land you here among the willows,” he
said.</p>
<p>“Here is no path but willow swamps and quagmires,”
answered Dick.</p>
<p>“Master Shelton,” replied Hugh, “I dare not
take ye nearer down, for your own sake now. He watcheth me
the ferry, lying on his bow. All that go by and owe Sir
Daniel goodwill, he shooteth down like rabbits. I heard him
swear it by the rood. An I had not known you of old
days—ay, and from so high upward—I would
’a’ let you go on; but for old days’
remembrance, and because ye had this toy with you that’s
not fit for wounds or warfare, I did risk my two poor ears to
have you over whole. Content you; I can no more, on my
salvation!”</p>
<p>Hugh was still speaking, lying on his oars, when there came a
great shout from among the willows on the island, and sounds
followed as of a strong man breasting roughly through the
wood.</p>
<p>“A murrain!” cried Hugh. “He was on
the upper island all the while!” He pulled straight
for shore. “Threat me with your bow, good Dick;
threat me with it plain,” he added. “I have
tried to save your skins, save you mine!”</p>
<p>The boat ran into a tough thicket of willows with a
crash. Matcham, pale, but steady and alert, at a sign from
Dick, ran along the thwarts and leaped ashore; Dick, taking the
horse by the bridle, sought to follow, but what with the
animal’s bulk, and what with the closeness of the thicket,
both stuck fast. The horse neighed and trampled; and the
boat, which was swinging in an eddy, came on and off and pitched
with violence.</p>
<p>“It may not be, Hugh; here is no landing,” cried
Dick; but he still struggled valiantly with the obstinate thicket
and the startled animal.</p>
<p>A tall man appeared upon the shore of the island, a long-bow
in his hand. Dick saw him for an instant, with the corner
of his eye, bending the bow with a great effort, his face crimson
with hurry.</p>
<p>“Who goes?” he shouted. “Hugh, who
goes?”</p>
<p>“’Tis Master Shelton, John,” replied the
ferryman.</p>
<p>“Stand, Dick Shelton!” bawled the man upon the
island. “Ye shall have no hurt, upon the rood!
Stand! Back out, Hugh Ferryman.”</p>
<p>Dick cried a taunting answer.</p>
<p>“Nay, then, ye shall go afoot,” returned the man;
and he let drive an arrow.</p>
<p>The horse, struck by the shaft, lashed out in agony and
terror; the boat capsized, and the next moment all were
struggling in the eddies of the river.</p>
<p>When Dick came up, he was within a yard of the bank; and
before his eyes were clear, his hand had closed on something firm
and strong that instantly began to drag him forward. It was
the riding-rod, that Matcham, crawling forth upon an overhanging
willow, had opportunely thrust into his grasp.</p>
<p>“By the mass!” cried Dick, as he was helped
ashore, “that makes a life I owe you. I swim like a
cannon-ball.” And he turned instantly towards the
island.</p>
<p>Midway over, Hugh Ferryman was swimming with his upturned
boat, while John-a-Fenne, furious at the ill-fortune of his shot,
bawled to him to hurry.</p>
<p>“Come, Jack,” said Shelton, “run for
it! Ere Hugh can hale his barge across, or the pair of
’em can get it righted, we may be out of cry.”</p>
<p>And adding example to his words, he began to run, dodging
among the willows, and in marshy places leaping from tussock to
tussock. He had no time to look for his direction; all he
could do was to turn his back upon the river, and put all his
heart to running.</p>
<p>Presently, however, the ground began to rise, which showed him
he was still in the right way, and soon after they came forth
upon a slope of solid turf, where elms began to mingle with the
willows.</p>
<p>But here Matcham, who had been dragging far into the rear,
threw himself fairly down.</p>
<p>“Leave me, Dick!” he cried, pantingly; “I
can no more.”</p>
<p>Dick turned, and came back to where his companion lay.</p>
<p>“Nay, Jack, leave thee!” he cried.
“That were a knave’s trick, to be sure, when ye
risked a shot and a ducking, ay, and a drowning too, to save my
life. Drowning, in sooth; for why I did not pull you in
along with me, the saints alone can tell!”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Matcham, “I would
’a’ saved us both, good Dick, for I can
swim.”</p>
<p>“Can ye so?” cried Dick, with open eyes. It
was the one manly accomplishment of which he was himself
incapable. In the order of the things that he admired, next
to having killed a man in single fight came swimming.
“Well,” he said, “here is a lesson to despise
no man. I promised to care for you as far as Holywood, and,
by the rood, Jack, y’ are more capable to care for
me.”</p>
<p>“Well, Dick, we’re friends now,” said
Matcham.</p>
<p>“Nay, I never was unfriends,” answered Dick.
“Y’ are a brave lad in your way, albeit something of
a milksop, too. I never met your like before this
day. But, prithee, fetch back your breath, and let us
on. Here is no place for chatter.”</p>
<p>“My foot hurts shrewdly,” said Matcham.</p>
<p>“Nay, I had forgot your foot,” returned
Dick. “Well, we must go the gentlier. I would I
knew rightly where we were. I have clean lost the path; yet
that may be for the better, too. An they watch the ferry,
they watch the path, belike, as well. I would Sir Daniel
were back with two score men; he would sweep me these rascals as
the wind sweeps leaves. Come, Jack, lean ye on my shoulder,
ye poor shrew. Nay, y’ are not tall enough.
What age are ye, for a wager?—twelve?”</p>
<p>“Nay, I am sixteen,” said Matcham.</p>
<p>“Y’ are poorly grown to height, then,”
answered Dick. “But take my hand. We shall go
softly, never fear. I owe you a life; I am a good repayer,
Jack, of good or evil.”</p>
<p>They began to go forward up the slope.</p>
<p>“We must hit the road, early or late,” continued
Dick; “and then for a fresh start. By the mass! but
y’ ’ave a rickety hand, Jack. If I had a hand
like that, I would think shame. I tell you,” he went
on, with a sudden chuckle, “I swear by the mass I believe
Hugh Ferryman took you for a maid.”</p>
<p>“Nay, never!” cried the other, colouring high.</p>
<p>“A’ did, though, for a wager!” Dick
exclaimed. “Small blame to him. Ye look liker
maid than man; and I tell you more—y’ are a
strange-looking rogue for a boy; but for a hussy, Jack, ye would
be right fair—ye would. Ye would be well favoured for
a wench.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Matcham, “ye know right well
that I am none.”</p>
<p>“Nay, I know that; I do but jest,” said
Dick. “Ye’ll be a man before your mother,
Jack. What cheer, my bully! Ye shall strike shrewd
strokes. Now, which, I marvel, of you or me, shall be first
knighted, Jack? for knighted I shall be, or die for
’t. ‘Sir Richard Shelton, Knight’: it
soundeth bravely. But ‘Sir John Matcham’
soundeth not amiss.”</p>
<p>“Prithee, Dick, stop till I drink,” said the
other, pausing where a little clear spring welled out of the
slope into a gravelled basin no bigger than a pocket.
“And O, Dick, if I might come by anything to eat!—my
very heart aches with hunger.”</p>
<p>“Why, fool, did ye not eat at Kettley?” asked
Dick.</p>
<p>“I had made a vow—it was a sin I had been led
into,” stammered Matcham; “but now, if it were but
dry bread, I would eat it greedily.”</p>
<p>“Sit ye, then, and eat,” said Dick, “while
that I scout a little forward for the road.” And he
took a wallet from his girdle, wherein were bread and pieces of
dry bacon, and, while Matcham fell heartily to, struck farther
forth among the trees.</p>
<p>A little beyond there was a dip in the ground, where a
streamlet soaked among dead leaves; and beyond that, again, the
trees were better grown and stood wider, and oak and beech began
to take the place of willow and elm. The continued tossing
and pouring of the wind among the leaves sufficiently concealed
the sounds of his footsteps on the mast; it was for the ear what
a moonless night is to the eye; but for all that Dick went
cautiously, slipping from one big trunk to another, and looking
sharply about him as he went. Suddenly a doe passed like a
shadow through the underwood in front of him, and he paused,
disgusted at the chance. This part of the wood had been
certainly deserted, but now that the poor deer had run, she was
like a messenger he should have sent before him to announce his
coming; and instead of pushing farther, he turned him to the
nearest well-grown tree, and rapidly began to climb.</p>
<p>Luck had served him well. The oak on which he had
mounted was one of the tallest in that quarter of the wood, and
easily out-topped its neighbours by a fathom and a half; and when
Dick had clambered into the topmost fork and clung there,
swinging dizzily in the great wind, he saw behind him the whole
fenny plain as far as Kettley, and the Till wandering among woody
islets, and in front of him, the white line of high-road winding
through the forest. The boat had been righted—it was
even now midway on the ferry. Beyond that there was no sign
of man, nor aught moving but the wind. He was about to
descend, when, taking a last view, his eye lit upon a string of
moving points about the middle of the fen. Plainly a small
troop was threading the causeway, and that at a good pace; and
this gave him some concern as he shinned vigorously down the
trunk and returned across the wood for his companion.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER IV—A GREENWOOD COMPANY</h3>
<p>Matcham was well rested and revived; and the two lads, winged
by what Dick had seen, hurried through the remainder of the
outwood, crossed the road in safety, and began to mount into the
high ground of Tunstall Forest. The trees grew more and
more in groves, with heathy places in between, sandy, gorsy, and
dotted with old yews. The ground became more and more
uneven, full of pits and hillocks. And with every step of
the ascent the wind still blew the shriller, and the trees bent
before the gusts like fishing-rods.</p>
<p>They had just entered one of the clearings, when Dick suddenly
clapped down upon his face among the brambles, and began to crawl
slowly backward towards the shelter of the grove. Matcham,
in great bewilderment, for he could see no reason for this
flight, still imitated his companion’s course; and it was
not until they had gained the harbour of a thicket that he turned
and begged him to explain.</p>
<p>For all reply, Dick pointed with his finger.</p>
<p>At the far end of the clearing, a fir grew high above the
neighbouring wood, and planted its black shock of foliage clear
against the sky. For about fifty feet above the ground the
trunk grew straight and solid like a column. At that level,
it split into two massive boughs; and in the fork, like a
mast-headed seaman, there stood a man in a green tabard, spying
far and wide. The sun glistened upon his hair; with one
hand he shaded his eyes to look abroad, and he kept slowly
rolling his head from side to side, with the regularity of a
machine.</p>
<p>The lads exchanged glances.</p>
<p>“Let us try to the left,” said Dick.
“We had near fallen foully, Jack.”</p>
<p>Ten minutes afterwards they struck into a beaten path.</p>
<p>“Here is a piece of forest that I know not,” Dick
remarked. “Where goeth me this track?”</p>
<p>“Let us even try,” said Matcham.</p>
<p>A few yards further, the path came to the top of a ridge and
began to go down abruptly into a cup-shaped hollow. At the
foot, out of a thick wood of flowering hawthorn, two or three
roofless gables, blackened as if by fire, and a single tall
chimney marked the ruins of a house.</p>
<p>“What may this be?” whispered Matcham.</p>
<p>“Nay, by the mass, I know not,” answered
Dick. “I am all at sea. Let us go
warily.”</p>
<p>With beating hearts, they descended through the
hawthorns. Here and there, they passed signs of recent
cultivation; fruit trees and pot herbs ran wild among the
thicket; a sun-dial had fallen in the grass; it seemed they were
treading what once had been a garden. Yet a little farther
and they came forth before the ruins of the house.</p>
<p>It had been a pleasant mansion and a strong. A dry ditch
was dug deep about it; but it was now choked with masonry, and
bridged by a fallen rafter. The two farther walls still
stood, the sun shining through their empty windows; but the
remainder of the building had collapsed, and now lay in a great
cairn of ruin, grimed with fire. Already in the interior a
few plants were springing green among the chinks.</p>
<p>“Now I bethink me,” whispered Dick, “this
must be Grimstone. It was a hold of one Simon Malmesbury;
Sir Daniel was his bane! ’Twas Bennet Hatch that
burned it, now five years agone. In sooth, ’twas
pity, for it was a fair house.”</p>
<p>Down in the hollow, where no wind blew, it was both warm and
still; and Matcham, laying one hand upon Dick’s arm, held
up a warning finger.</p>
<p>“Hist!” he said.</p>
<p>Then came a strange sound, breaking on the quiet. It was
twice repeated ere they recognised its nature. It was the
sound of a big man clearing his throat; and just then a hoarse,
untuneful voice broke into singing.</p>
<blockquote><p>“Then up and spake the master, the king of
the outlaws:<br/>
‘What make ye here, my merry men, among the greenwood
shaws?’<br/>
And Gamelyn made answer—he looked never adown:<br/>
‘O, they must need to walk in wood that may not walk in
town!’”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The singer paused, a faint clink of iron followed, and then
silence.</p>
<p>The two lads stood looking at each other. Whoever he
might be, their invisible neighbour was just beyond the
ruin. And suddenly the colour came into Matcham’s
face, and next moment he had crossed the fallen rafter, and was
climbing cautiously on the huge pile of lumber that filled the
interior of the roofless house. Dick would have withheld
him, had he been in time; as it was, he was fain to follow.</p>
<p>Right in the corner of the ruin, two rafters had fallen
crosswise, and protected a clear space no larger than a pew in
church. Into this the lads silently lowered
themselves. There they were perfectly concealed, and
through an arrow-loophole commanded a view upon the farther
side.</p>
<p>Peering through this, they were struck stiff with terror at
their predicament. To retreat was impossible; they scarce
dared to breathe. Upon the very margin of the ditch, not
thirty feet from where they crouched, an iron caldron bubbled and
steamed above a glowing fire; and close by, in an attitude of
listening, as though he had caught some sound of their clambering
among the ruins, a tall, red-faced, battered-looking man stood
poised, an iron spoon in his right hand, a horn and a formidable
dagger at his belt. Plainly this was the singer; plainly he
had been stirring the caldron, when some incautious step among
the lumber had fallen upon his ear. A little further off,
another man lay slumbering, rolled in a brown cloak, with a
butterfly hovering above his face. All this was in a
clearing white with daisies; and at the extreme verge, a bow, a
sheaf of arrows, and part of a deer’s carcase, hung upon a
flowering hawthorn.</p>
<p>Presently the fellow relaxed from his attitude of attention,
raised the spoon to his mouth, tasted its contents, nodded, and
then fell again to stirring and singing.</p>
<p>“‘O, they must need to walk in wood that may not
walk in town,’” he croaked, taking up his song where
he had left it.</p>
<blockquote><p>“O, sir, we walk not here at all an evil
thing to do.<br/>
But if we meet with the good king’s deer to shoot a shaft
into.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Still as he sang, he took from time to time, another spoonful
of the broth, blew upon it, and tasted it, with all the airs of
an experienced cook. At length, apparently, he judged the
mess was ready; for taking the horn from his girdle, he blew
three modulated calls.</p>
<p>The other fellow awoke, rolled over, brushed away the
butterfly, and looked about him.</p>
<p>“How now, brother?” he said.
“Dinner?”</p>
<p>“Ay, sot,” replied the cook, “dinner it is,
and a dry dinner, too, with neither ale nor bread. But
there is little pleasure in the greenwood now; time was when a
good fellow could live here like a mitred abbot, set aside the
rain and the white frosts; he had his heart’s desire both
of ale and wine. But now are men’s spirits dead; and
this John Amend-All, save us and guard us! but a stuffed booby to
scare crows withal.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” returned the other, “y’ are too
set on meat and drinking, Lawless. Bide ye a bit; the good
time cometh.”</p>
<p>“Look ye,” returned the cook, “I have even
waited for this good time sith that I was so high. I have
been a grey friar; I have been a king’s archer; I have been
a shipman, and sailed the salt seas; and I have been in greenwood
before this, forsooth! and shot the king’s deer. What
cometh of it? Naught! I were better to have bided in
the cloister. John Abbot availeth more than John
Amend-All. By ’r Lady! here they come.”</p>
<p>One after another, tall, likely fellows began to stroll into
the lawn. Each as he came produced a knife and a horn cup,
helped himself from the caldron, and sat down upon the grass to
eat. They were very variously equipped and armed; some in
rusty smocks, and with nothing but a knife and an old bow; others
in the height of forest gallantry, all in Lincoln green, both
hood and jerkin, with dainty peacock arrows in their belts, a
horn upon a baldrick, and a sword and dagger at their
sides. They came in the silence of hunger, and scarce
growled a salutation, but fell instantly to meat.</p>
<p>There were, perhaps, a score of them already gathered, when a
sound of suppressed cheering arose close by among the hawthorns,
and immediately after five or six woodmen carrying a stretcher
debauched upon the lawn. A tall, lusty fellow, somewhat
grizzled, and as brown as a smoked ham, walked before them with
an air of some authority, his bow at his back, a bright
boar-spear in his hand.</p>
<p>“Lads!” he cried, “good fellows all, and my
right merry friends, y’ have sung this while on a dry
whistle and lived at little ease. But what said I
ever? Abide Fortune constantly; she turneth, turneth
swift. And lo! here is her little firstling—even that
good creature, ale!”</p>
<p>There was a murmur of applause as the bearers set down the
stretcher and displayed a goodly cask.</p>
<p>“And now haste ye, boys,” the man continued.
“There is work toward. A handful of archers are but
now come to the ferry; murrey and blue is their wear; they are
our butts—they shall all taste arrows—no man of them
shall struggle through this wood. For, lads, we are here
some fifty strong, each man of us most foully wronged; for some
they have lost lands, and some friends; and some they have been
outlawed—all oppressed! Who, then, hath done this
evil? Sir Daniel, by the rood! Shall he then profit?
shall he sit snug in our houses? shall he till our fields? shall
he suck the bone he robbed us of? I trow not. He
getteth him strength at law; he gaineth cases; nay, there is one
case he shall not gain—I have a writ here at my belt that,
please the saints, shall conquer him.”</p>
<p>Lawless the cook was by this time already at his second horn
of ale. He raised it, as if to pledge the speaker.</p>
<p>“Master Ellis,” he said, “y’ are for
vengeance—well it becometh you!—but your poor brother
o’ the greenwood, that had never lands to lose nor friends
to think upon, looketh rather, for his poor part, to the profit
of the thing. He had liever a gold noble and a pottle of
canary wine than all the vengeances in purgatory.”</p>
<p>“Lawless,” replied the other, “to reach the
Moat House, Sir Daniel must pass the forest. We shall make
that passage dearer, pardy, than any battle. Then, when he
hath got to earth with such ragged handful as escapeth
us—all his great friends fallen and fled away, and none to
give him aid—we shall beleaguer that old fox about, and
great shall be the fall of him. ’Tis a fat buck; he
will make a dinner for us all.”</p>
<p>“Ay,” returned Lawless, “I have eaten many
of these dinners beforehand; but the cooking of them is hot work,
good Master Ellis. And meanwhile what do we? We make
black arrows, we write rhymes, and we drink fair cold water, that
discomfortable drink.”</p>
<p>“Y’ are untrue, Will Lawless. Ye still smell
of the Grey Friars’ buttery; greed is your undoing,”
answered Ellis. “We took twenty pounds from
Appleyard. We took seven marks from the messenger last
night. A day ago we had fifty from the merchant.”</p>
<p>“And to-day,” said one of the men, “I
stopped a fat pardoner riding apace for Holywood. Here is
his purse.”</p>
<p>Ellis counted the contents.</p>
<p>“Five score shillings!” he grumbled.
“Fool, he had more in his sandal, or stitched into his
tippet. Y’ are but a child, Tom Cuckow; ye have lost
the fish.”</p>
<p>But, for all that, Ellis pocketed the purse with
nonchalance. He stood leaning on his boar-spear, and looked
round upon the rest. They, in various attitudes, took
greedily of the venison pottage, and liberally washed it down
with ale. This was a good day; they were in luck; but
business pressed, and they were speedy in their eating. The
first-comers had by this time even despatched their dinner.
Some lay down upon the grass and fell instantly asleep, like
boa-constrictors; others talked together, or overhauled their
weapons: and one, whose humour was particularly gay, holding
forth an ale-horn, began to sing:</p>
<blockquote><p>“Here is no law in good green shaw,<br/>
Here is no lack of meat;<br/>
’Tis merry and quiet, with deer for our diet,<br/>
In summer, when all is sweet.</p>
<p>Come winter again, with wind and rain—<br/>
Come winter, with snow and sleet,<br/>
Get home to your places, with hoods on your faces,<br/>
And sit by the fire and eat.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>All this while the two lads had listened and lain close; only
Richard had unslung his cross-bow, and held ready in one hand the
windac, or grappling-iron that he used to bend it.
Otherwise they had not dared to stir; and this scene of forest
life had gone on before their eyes like a scene upon a
theatre. But now there came a strange interruption.
The tall chimney which over-topped the remainder of the ruins
rose right above their hiding-place. There came a whistle
in the air, and then a sounding smack, and the fragments of a
broken arrow fell about their ears. Some one from the upper
quarters of the wood, perhaps the very sentinel they saw posted
in the fir, had shot an arrow at the chimney-top.</p>
<p>Matcham could not restrain a little cry, which he instantly
stifled, and even Dick started with surprise, and dropped the
windac from his fingers. But to the fellows on the lawn,
this shaft was an expected signal. They were all afoot
together, tightening their belts, testing their bow-strings,
loosening sword and dagger in the sheath. Ellis held up his
hand; his face had suddenly assumed a look of savage energy; the
white of his eyes shone in his sun-brown face.</p>
<p>“Lads,” he said, “ye know your places.
Let not one man’s soul escape you. Appleyard was a
whet before a meal; but now we go to table. I have three
men whom I will bitterly avenge—Harry Shelton, Simon
Malmesbury, and”—striking his broad
bosom—“and Ellis Duckworth, by the mass!”</p>
<p>Another man came, red with hurry, through the thorns.</p>
<p>“’Tis not Sir Daniel!” he panted.
“They are but seven. Is the arrow gone?”</p>
<p>“It struck but now,” replied Ellis.</p>
<p>“A murrain!” cried the messenger.
“Methought I heard it whistle. And I go
dinnerless!”</p>
<p>In the space of a minute, some running, some walking sharply,
according as their stations were nearer or farther away, the men
of the Black Arrow had all disappeared from the neighbourhood of
the ruined house; and the caldron, and the fire, which was now
burning low, and the dead deer’s carcase on the hawthorn,
remained alone to testify they had been there.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER V—“BLOODY AS THE HUNTER”</h3>
<p>The lads lay quiet till the last footstep had melted on the
wind. Then they arose, and with many an ache, for they were
weary with constraint, clambered through the ruins, and recrossed
the ditch upon the rafter. Matcham had picked up the windac
and went first, Dick following stiffly, with his cross-bow on his
arm.</p>
<p>“And now,” said Matcham, “forth to
Holywood.”</p>
<p>“To Holywood!” cried Dick, “when good
fellows stand shot? Not I! I would see you hanged
first, Jack!”</p>
<p>“Ye would leave me, would ye?” Matcham asked.</p>
<p>“Ay, by my sooth!” returned Dick. “An
I be not in time to warn these lads, I will go die with
them. What! would ye have me leave my own men that I have
lived among. I trow not! Give me my
windac.”</p>
<p>But there was nothing further from Matcham’s mind.</p>
<p>“Dick,” he said, “ye sware before the saints
that ye would see me safe to Holywood. Would ye be
forsworn? Would you desert me—a perjurer?”</p>
<p>“Nay, I sware for the best,” returned Dick.
“I meant it too; but now! But look ye, Jack, turn
again with me. Let me but warn these men, and, if needs
must, stand shot with them; then shall all be clear, and I will
on again to Holywood and purge mine oath.”</p>
<p>“Ye but deride me,” answered Matcham.
“These men ye go to succour are the I same that hunt me to
my ruin.”</p>
<p>Dick scratched his head.</p>
<p>“I cannot help it, Jack,” he said.
“Here is no remedy. What would ye? Ye run no
great peril, man; and these are in the way of death.
Death!” he added. “Think of it! What a
murrain do ye keep me here for? Give me the windac.
Saint George! shall they all die?”</p>
<p>“Richard Shelton,” said Matcham, looking him
squarely in the face, “would ye, then, join party with Sir
Daniel? Have ye not ears? Heard ye not this Ellis,
what he said? or have ye no heart for your own kindly blood and
the father that men slew? ‘Harry Shelton,’ he
said; and Sir Harry Shelton was your father, as the sun shines in
heaven.”</p>
<p>“What would ye?” Dick cried again.
“Would ye have me credit thieves?”</p>
<p>“Nay, I have heard it before now,” returned
Matcham. “The fame goeth currently, it was Sir Daniel
slew him. He slew him under oath; in his own house he shed
the innocent blood. Heaven wearies for the avenging
on’t; and you—the man’s son—ye go about
to comfort and defend the murderer!”</p>
<p>“Jack,” cried the lad “I know not. It
may be; what know I? But, see here: This man hath bred me
up and fostered me, and his men I have hunted with and played
among; and to leave them in the hour of peril—O, man, if I
did that, I were stark dead to honour! Nay, Jack, ye would
not ask it; ye would not wish me to be base.”</p>
<p>“But your father, Dick?” said Matcham, somewhat
wavering. “Your father? and your oath to me? Ye
took the saints to witness.”</p>
<p>“My father?” cried Shelton. “Nay, he
would have me go! If Sir Daniel slew him, when the hour
comes this hand shall slay Sir Daniel; but neither him nor his
will I desert in peril. And for mine oath, good Jack, ye
shall absolve me of it here. For the lives’ sake of
many men that hurt you not, and for mine honour, ye shall set me
free.”</p>
<p>“I, Dick? Never!” returned Matcham.
“An ye leave me, y’ are forsworn, and so I shall
declare it.”</p>
<p>“My blood heats,” said Dick. “Give me
the windac! Give it me!”</p>
<p>“I’ll not,” said Matcham.
“I’ll save you in your teeth.”</p>
<p>“Not?” cried Dick. “I’ll make
you!”</p>
<p>“Try it,” said the other.</p>
<p>They stood, looking in each other’s eyes, each ready for
a spring. Then Dick leaped; and though Matcham turned
instantly and fled, in two bounds he was over-taken, the windac
was twisted from his grasp, he was thrown roughly to the ground,
and Dick stood across him, flushed and menacing, with doubled
fist. Matcham lay where he had fallen, with his face in the
grass, not thinking of resistance.</p>
<p>Dick bent his bow.</p>
<p>“I’ll teach you!” he cried, fiercely.
“Oath or no oath, ye may go hang for me!”</p>
<p>And he turned and began to run. Matcham was on his feet
at once, and began running after him.</p>
<p>“What d’ye want?” cried Dick,
stopping. “What make ye after me? Stand
off!”</p>
<p>“Will follow an I please,” said Matcham.
“This wood is free to me.”</p>
<p>“Stand back, by ’r Lady!” returned Dick,
raising his bow.</p>
<p>“Ah, y’ are a brave boy!” retorted
Matcham. “Shoot!”</p>
<p>Dick lowered his weapon in some confusion.</p>
<p>“See here,” he said. “Y’ have
done me ill enough. Go, then. Go your way in fair
wise; or, whether I will or not, I must even drive you to
it.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Matcham, doggedly, “y’
are the stronger. Do your worst. I shall not leave to
follow thee, Dick, unless thou makest me,” he added.</p>
<p>Dick was almost beside himself. It went against his
heart to beat a creature so defenceless; and, for the life of
him, he knew no other way to rid himself of this unwelcome and,
as he began to think, perhaps untrue companion.</p>
<p>“Y’ are mad, I think,” he cried.
“Fool-fellow, I am hasting to your foes; as fast as foot
can carry me, go I thither.”</p>
<p>“I care not, Dick,” replied the lad.
“If y’ are bound to die, Dick, I’ll die
too. I would liever go with you to prison than to go free
without you.”</p>
<p>“Well,” returned the other, “I may stand no
longer prating. Follow me, if ye must; but if ye play me
false, it shall but little advance you, mark ye that. Shalt
have a quarrel in thine inwards, boy.”</p>
<p>So saying, Dick took once more to his heels, keeping in the
margin of the thicket and looking briskly about him as he
went. At a good pace he rattled out of the dell, and came
again into the more open quarters of the wood. To the left
a little eminence appeared, spotted with golden gorse, and
crowned with a black tuft of firs.</p>
<p>“I shall see from there,” he thought, and struck
for it across a heathy clearing.</p>
<p>He had gone but a few yards, when Matcham touched him on the
arm, and pointed. To the eastward of the summit there was a
dip, and, as it were, a valley passing to the other side; the
heath was not yet out; all the ground was rusty, like an
unscoured buckler, and dotted sparingly with yews; and there, one
following another, Dick saw half a score green jerkins mounting
the ascent, and marching at their head, conspicuous by his
boar-spear, Ellis Duckworth in person. One after another
gained the top, showed for a moment against the sky, and then
dipped upon the further side, until the last was gone.</p>
<p>Dick looked at Matcham with a kindlier eye.</p>
<p>“So y’ are to be true to me, Jack?” he
asked. “I thought ye were of the other
party.”</p>
<p>Matcham began to sob.</p>
<p>“What cheer!” cried Dick. “Now the
saints behold us! would ye snivel for a word?”</p>
<p>“Ye hurt me,” sobbed Matcham. “Ye hurt
me when ye threw me down. Y’ are a coward to abuse
your strength.”</p>
<p>“Nay, that is fool’s talk,” said Dick,
roughly. “Y’ had no title to my windac, Master
John. I would ’a’ done right to have well
basted you. If ye go with me, ye must obey me; and so,
come.”</p>
<p>Matcham had half a thought to stay behind; but, seeing that
Dick continued to scour full-tilt towards the eminence and not so
much as looked across his shoulder, he soon thought better of
that, and began to run in turn. But the ground was very
difficult and steep; Dick had already a long start, and had, at
any rate, the lighter heels, and he had long since come to the
summit, crawled forward through the firs, and ensconced himself
in a thick tuft of gorse, before Matcham, panting like a deer,
rejoined him, and lay down in silence by his side.</p>
<p>Below, in the bottom of a considerable valley, the short cut
from Tunstall hamlet wound downwards to the ferry. It was
well beaten, and the eye followed it easily from point to
point. Here it was bordered by open glades; there the
forest closed upon it; every hundred yards it ran beside an
ambush. Far down the path, the sun shone on seven steel
salets, and from time to time, as the trees opened, Selden and
his men could be seen riding briskly, still bent upon Sir
Daniel’s mission. The wind had somewhat fallen, but
still tussled merrily with the trees, and, perhaps, had Appleyard
been there, he would have drawn a warning from the troubled
conduct of the birds.</p>
<p>“Now, mark,” Dick whispered. “They be
already well advanced into the wood; their safety lieth rather in
continuing forward. But see ye where this wide glade
runneth down before us, and in the midst of it, these two score
trees make like an island? There were their safety.
An they but come sound as far as that, I will make shift to warn
them. But my heart misgiveth me; they are but seven against
so many, and they but carry cross-bows. The long-bow, Jack,
will have the uppermost ever.”</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Selden and his men still wound up the path,
ignorant of their danger, and momently drew nearer hand.
Once, indeed, they paused, drew into a group, and seemed to point
and listen. But it was something from far away across the
plain that had arrested their attention—a hollow growl of
cannon that came, from time to time, upon the wind, and told of
the great battle. It was worth a thought, to be sure; for
if the voice of the big guns were thus become audible in Tunstall
Forest, the fight must have rolled ever eastward, and the day, by
consequence, gone sore against Sir Daniel and the lords of the
dark rose.</p>
<p>But presently the little troop began again to move forward,
and came next to a very open, heathy portion of the way, where
but a single tongue of forest ran down to join the road.
They were but just abreast of this, when an arrow shone
flying. One of the men threw up his arms, his horse reared,
and both fell and struggled together in a mass. Even from
where the boys lay they could hear the rumour of the men’s
voices crying out; they could see the startled horses prancing,
and, presently, as the troop began to recover from their first
surprise, one fellow beginning to dismount. A second arrow
from somewhat farther off glanced in a wide arch; a second rider
bit the dust. The man who was dismounting lost hold upon
the rein, and his horse fled galloping, and dragged him by the
foot along the road, bumping from stone to stone, and battered by
the fleeing hoofs. The four who still kept the saddle
instantly broke and scattered; one wheeled and rode, shrieking,
towards the ferry; the other three, with loose rein and flying
raiment, came galloping up the road from Tunstall. From
every clump they passed an arrow sped. Soon a horse fell,
but the rider found his feet and continued to pursue his comrades
till a second shot despatched him. Another man fell; then
another horse; out of the whole troop there was but one fellow
left, and he on foot; only, in different directions, the noise of
the galloping of three riderless horses was dying fast into the
distance.</p>
<p>All this time not one of the assailants had for a moment shown
himself. Here and there along the path, horse or man
rolled, undespatched, in his agony; but no merciful enemy broke
cover to put them from their pain.</p>
<p>The solitary survivor stood bewildered in the road beside his
fallen charger. He had come the length of that broad glade,
with the island of timber, pointed out by Dick. He was not,
perhaps, five hundred yards from where the boys lay hidden; and
they could see him plainly, looking to and fro in deadly
expectation. But nothing came; and the man began to pluck
up his courage, and suddenly unslung and bent his bow. At
the same time, by something in his action, Dick recognised
Selden.</p>
<p>At this offer of resistance, from all about him in the covert
of the woods there went up the sound of laughter. A score
of men, at least, for this was the very thickest of the ambush,
joined in this cruel and untimely mirth. Then an arrow
glanced over Selden’s shoulder; and he leaped and ran a
little back. Another dart struck quivering at his
heel. He made for the cover. A third shaft leaped out
right in his face, and fell short in front of him. And then
the laughter was repeated loudly, rising and reechoing from
different thickets.</p>
<p>It was plain that his assailants were but baiting him, as men,
in those days, baited the poor bull, or as the cat still trifles
with the mouse. The skirmish was well over; farther down
the road, a fellow in green was already calmly gathering the
arrows; and now, in the evil pleasure of their hearts, they gave
themselves the spectacle of their poor fellow-sinner in his
torture.</p>
<p>Selden began to understand; he uttered a roar of anger,
shouldered his cross-bow, and sent a quarrel at a venture into
the wood. Chance favoured him, for a slight cry
responded. Then, throwing down his weapon, Selden began to
run before him up the glade, and almost in a straight line for
Dick and Matcham.</p>
<p>The companions of the Black Arrow now began to shoot in
earnest. But they were properly served; their chance had
past; most of them had now to shoot against the sun; and Selden,
as he ran, bounded from side to side to baffle and deceive their
aim. Best of all, by turning up the glade he had defeated
their preparations; there were no marksmen posted higher up than
the one whom he had just killed or wounded; and the confusion of
the foresters’ counsels soon became apparent. A
whistle sounded thrice, and then again twice. It was
repeated from another quarter. The woods on either side
became full of the sound of people bursting through the
underwood; and a bewildered deer ran out into the open, stood for
a second on three feet, with nose in air, and then plunged again
into the thicket.</p>
<p>Selden still ran, bounding; ever and again an arrow followed
him, but still would miss. It began to appear as if he
might escape. Dick had his bow armed, ready to support him;
even Matcham, forgetful of his interest, took sides at heart for
the poor fugitive; and both lads glowed and trembled in the
ardour of their hearts.</p>
<p>He was within fifty yards of them, when an arrow struck him
and he fell. He was up again, indeed, upon the instant; but
now he ran staggering, and, like a blind man, turned aside from
his direction.</p>
<p>Dick leaped to his feet and waved to him.</p>
<p>“Here!” he cried. “This way! here is
help! Nay, run, fellow—run!”</p>
<p>But just then a second arrow struck Selden in the shoulder,
between the plates of his brigandine, and, piercing through his
jack, brought him, like a stone, to earth.</p>
<p>“O, the poor heart!” cried Matcham, with clasped
hands.</p>
<p>And Dick stood petrified upon the hill, a mark for
archery.</p>
<p>Ten to one he had speedily been shot—for the foresters
were furious with themselves, and taken unawares by Dick’s
appearance in the rear of their position—but instantly, out
of a quarter of the wood surprisingly near to the two lads, a
stentorian voice arose, the voice of Ellis Duckworth.</p>
<p>“Hold!” it roared. “Shoot not!
Take him alive! It is young Shelton—Harry’s
son.”</p>
<p>And immediately after a shrill whistle sounded several times,
and was again taken up and repeated farther off. The
whistle, it appeared, was John Amend-All’s battle trumpet,
by which he published his directions.</p>
<p>“Ah, foul fortune!” cried Dick. “We
are undone. Swiftly, Jack, come swiftly!”</p>
<p>And the pair turned and ran back through the open pine clump
that covered the summit of the hill.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER VI—TO THE DAY’S END</h3>
<p>It was, indeed, high time for them to run. On every side
the company of the Black Arrow was making for the hill.
Some, being better runners, or having open ground to run upon,
had far outstripped the others, and were already close upon the
goal; some, following valleys, had spread out to right and left,
and outflanked the lads on either side.</p>
<p>Dick plunged into the nearest cover. It was a tall grove
of oaks, firm under foot and clear of underbrush, and as it lay
down hill, they made good speed. There followed next a
piece of open, which Dick avoided, holding to his left. Two
minutes after, and the same obstacle arising, the lads followed
the same course. Thus it followed that, while the lads,
bending continually to the left, drew nearer and nearer to the
high road and the river which they had crossed an hour or two
before, the great bulk of their pursuers were leaning to the
other hand, and running towards Tunstall.</p>
<p>The lads paused to breathe. There was no sound of
pursuit. Dick put his ear to the ground, and still there
was nothing; but the wind, to be sure, still made a turmoil in
the trees, and it was hard to make certain.</p>
<p>“On again,” said Dick; and, tired as they were,
and Matcham limping with his injured foot, they pulled themselves
together, and once more pelted down the hill.</p>
<p>Three minutes later, they were breasting through a low thicket
of evergreen. High overhead, the tall trees made a
continuous roof of foliage. It was a pillared grove, as
high as a cathedral, and except for the hollies among which the
lads were struggling, open and smoothly swarded.</p>
<p>On the other side, pushing through the last fringe of
evergreen, they blundered forth again into the open twilight of
the grove.</p>
<p>“Stand!” cried a voice.</p>
<p>And there, between the huge stems, not fifty feet before them,
they beheld a stout fellow in green, sore blown with running, who
instantly drew an arrow to the head and covered them.
Matcham stopped with a cry; but Dick, without a pause, ran
straight upon the forester, drawing his dagger as he went.
The other, whether he was startled by the daring of the
onslaught, or whether he was hampered by his orders, did not
shoot; he stood wavering; and before he had time to come to
himself, Dick bounded at his throat, and sent him sprawling
backward on the turf. The arrow went one way and the bow
another with a sounding twang. The disarmed forester
grappled his assailant; but the dagger shone and descended
twice. Then came a couple of groans, and then Dick rose to
his feet again, and the man lay motionless, stabbed to the
heart.</p>
<p>“On!” said Dick; and he once more pelted forward,
Matcham trailing in the rear. To say truth, they made but
poor speed of it by now, labouring dismally as they ran, and
catching for their breath like fish. Matcham had a cruel
stitch, and his head swam; and as for Dick, his knees were like
lead. But they kept up the form of running with
undiminished courage.</p>
<p>Presently they came to the end of the grove. It stopped
abruptly; and there, a few yards before them, was the high road
from Risingham to Shoreby, lying, at this point, between two even
walls of forest.</p>
<p>At the sight Dick paused; and as soon as he stopped running,
he became aware of a confused noise, which rapidly grew
louder. It was at first like the rush of a very high gust
of wind, but soon it became more definite, and resolved itself
into the galloping of horses; and then, in a flash, a whole
company of men-at-arms came driving round the corner, swept
before the lads, and were gone again upon the instant. They
rode as for their lives, in complete disorder; some of them were
wounded; riderless horses galloped at their side with bloody
saddles. They were plainly fugitives from the great
battle.</p>
<p>The noise of their passage had scarce begun to die away
towards Shoreby, before fresh hoofs came echoing in their wake,
and another deserter clattered down the road; this time a single
rider and, by his splendid armour, a man of high degree.
Close after him there followed several baggage-waggons, fleeing
at an ungainly canter, the drivers flailing at the horses as if
for life. These must have run early in the day; but their
cowardice was not to save them. For just before they came
abreast of where the lads stood wondering, a man in hacked
armour, and seemingly beside himself with fury, overtook the
waggons, and with the truncheon of a sword, began to cut the
drivers down. Some leaped from their places and plunged
into the wood; the others he sabred as they sat, cursing them the
while for cowards in a voice that was scarce human.</p>
<p>All this time the noise in the distance had continued to
increase; the rumble of carts, the clatter of horses, the cries
of men, a great, confused rumour, came swelling on the wind; and
it was plain that the rout of a whole army was pouring, like an
inundation, down the road.</p>
<p>Dick stood sombre. He had meant to follow the highway
till the turn for Holywood, and now he had to change his
plan. But above all, he had recognised the colours of Earl
Risingham, and he knew that the battle had gone finally against
the rose of Lancaster. Had Sir Daniel joined, and was he
now a fugitive and ruined? or had he deserted to the side of
York, and was he forfeit to honour? It was an ugly
choice.</p>
<p>“Come,” he said, sternly; and, turning on his
heel, he began to walk forward through the grove, with Matcham
limping in his rear.</p>
<p>For some time they continued to thread the forest in
silence. It was now growing late; the sun was setting in
the plain beyond Kettley; the tree-tops overhead glowed golden;
but the shadows had begun to grow darker and the chill of the
night to fall.</p>
<p>“If there were anything to eat!” cried Dick,
suddenly, pausing as he spoke.</p>
<p>Matcham sat down and began to weep.</p>
<p>“Ye can weep for your own supper, but when it was to
save men’s lives, your heart was hard enough,” said
Dick, contemptuously. “Y’ ’ave seven
deaths upon your conscience, Master John; I’ll ne’er
forgive you that.”</p>
<p>“Conscience!” cried Matcham, looking fiercely
up. “Mine! And ye have the man’s red
blood upon your dagger! And wherefore did ye slay him, the
poor soul? He drew his arrow, but he let not fly; he held
you in his hand, and spared you! ’Tis as brave to
kill a kitten, as a man that not defends himself.”</p>
<p>Dick was struck dumb.</p>
<p>“I slew him fair. I ran me in upon his bow,”
he cried.</p>
<p>“It was a coward blow,” returned Matcham.
“Y’ are but a lout and bully, Master Dick; ye but
abuse advantages; let there come a stronger, we will see you
truckle at his boot! Ye care not for vengeance,
neither—for your father’s death that goes unpaid, and
his poor ghost that clamoureth for justice. But if there
come but a poor creature in your hands that lacketh skill and
strength, and would befriend you, down she shall go!”</p>
<p>Dick was too furious to observe that “she.”</p>
<p>“Marry!” he cried, “and here is news!
Of any two the one will still be stronger. The better man
throweth the worse, and the worse is well served. Ye
deserve a belting, Master Matcham, for your ill-guidance and
unthankfulness to meward; and what ye deserve ye shall
have.”</p>
<p>And Dick, who, even in his angriest temper, still preserved
the appearance of composure, began to unbuckle his belt.</p>
<p>“Here shall be your supper,” he said,
grimly. Matcham had stopped his tears; he was as white as a
sheet, but he looked Dick steadily in the face, and never
moved. Dick took a step, swinging the belt. Then he
paused, embarrassed by the large eyes and the thin, weary face of
his companion. His courage began to subside.</p>
<p>“Say ye were in the wrong, then,” he said,
lamely.</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Matcham, “I was in the
right. Come, cruel! I be lame; I be weary; I resist
not; I ne’er did thee hurt; come, beat
me—coward!”</p>
<p>Dick raised the belt at this last provocation, but Matcham
winced and drew himself together with so cruel an apprehension,
that his heart failed him yet again. The strap fell by his
side, and he stood irresolute, feeling like a fool.</p>
<p>“A plague upon thee, shrew!” he said.
“An ye be so feeble of hand, ye should keep the closer
guard upon your tongue. But I’ll be hanged before I
beat you!” and he put on his belt again. “Beat
you I will not,” he continued; “but forgive
you?—never. I knew ye not; ye were my master’s
enemy; I lent you my horse; my dinner ye have eaten; y’
’ave called me a man o’ wood, a coward, and a
bully. Nay, by the mass! the measure is filled, and runneth
over. ’Tis a great thing to be weak, I trow: ye can
do your worst, yet shall none punish you; ye may steal a
man’s weapons in the hour of need, yet may the man not take
his own again;—y’ are weak, forsooth! Nay,
then, if one cometh charging at you with a lance, and crieth he
is weak, ye must let him pierce your body through! Tut!
fool words!”</p>
<p>“And yet ye beat me not,” returned Matcham.</p>
<p>“Let be,” said Dick—“let be. I
will instruct you. Y’ ’ave been ill-nurtured,
methinks, and yet ye have the makings of some good, and, beyond
all question, saved me from the river. Nay, I had forgotten
it; I am as thankless as thyself. But, come, let us
on. An we be for Holywood this night, ay, or to-morrow
early, we had best set forward speedily.”</p>
<p>But though Dick had talked himself back into his usual
good-humour, Matcham had forgiven him nothing. His
violence, the recollection of the forester whom he had
slain—above all, the vision of the upraised belt, were
things not easily to be forgotten.</p>
<p>“I will thank you, for the form’s sake,”
said Matcham. “But, in sooth, good Master Shelton, I
had liever find my way alone. Here is a wide wood; prithee,
let each choose his path; I owe you a dinner and a lesson.
Fare ye well!”</p>
<p>“Nay,” cried Dick, “if that be your tune, so
be it, and a plague be with you!”</p>
<p>Each turned aside, and they began walking off severally, with
no thought of the direction, intent solely on their
quarrel. But Dick had not gone ten paces ere his name was
called, and Matcham came running after.</p>
<p>“Dick,” he said, “it were unmannerly to part
so coldly. Here is my hand, and my heart with it. For
all that wherein you have so excellently served and helped
me—not for the form, but from the heart, I thank you.
Fare ye right well.”</p>
<p>“Well, lad,” returned Dick, taking the hand which
was offered him, “good speed to you, if speed you
may. But I misdoubt it shrewdly. Y’ are too
disputatious.” So then they separated for the second
time; and presently it was Dick who was running after
Matcham.</p>
<p>“Here,” he said, “take my cross-bow; shalt
not go unarmed.”</p>
<p>“A cross-bow!” said Matcham. “Nay,
boy, I have neither the strength to bend nor yet the skill to aim
with it. It were no help to me, good boy. But yet I
thank you.”</p>
<p>The night had now fallen, and under the trees they could no
longer read each other’s face.</p>
<p>“I will go some little way with you,” said
Dick. “The night is dark. I would fain leave
you on a path, at least. My mind misgiveth me, y’ are
likely to be lost.”</p>
<p>Without any more words, he began to walk forward, and the
other once more followed him. The blackness grew thicker
and thicker. Only here and there, in open places, they saw
the sky, dotted with small stars. In the distance, the
noise of the rout of the Lancastrian army still continued to be
faintly audible; but with every step they left it farther in the
rear.</p>
<p>At the end of half an hour of silent progress they came forth
upon a broad patch of heathy open. It glimmered in the
light of the stars, shaggy with fern and islanded with clumps of
yew. And here they paused and looked upon each other.</p>
<p>“Y’ are weary?” Dick said.</p>
<p>“Nay, I am so weary,” answered Matcham,
“that methinks I could lie down and die.”</p>
<p>“I hear the chiding of a river,” returned
Dick. “Let us go so far forth, for I am sore
athirst.”</p>
<p>The ground sloped down gently; and, sure enough, in the
bottom, they found a little murmuring river, running among
willows. Here they threw themselves down together by the
brink; and putting their mouths to the level of a starry pool,
they drank their fill.</p>
<p>“Dick,” said Matcham, “it may not be.
I can no more.”</p>
<p>“I saw a pit as we came down,” said Dick.
“Let us lie down therein and sleep.”</p>
<p>“Nay, but with all my heart!” cried Matcham.</p>
<p>The pit was sandy and dry; a shock of brambles hung upon one
hedge, and made a partial shelter; and there the two lads lay
down, keeping close together for the sake of warmth, their
quarrel all forgotten. And soon sleep fell upon them like a
cloud, and under the dew and stars they rested peacefully.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER VII—THE HOODED FACE</h3>
<p>They awoke in the grey of the morning; the birds were not yet
in full song, but twittered here and there among the woods; the
sun was not yet up, but the eastern sky was barred with solemn
colours. Half starved and over-weary as they were, they lay
without moving, sunk in a delightful lassitude. And as they
thus lay, the clang of a bell fell suddenly upon their ears.</p>
<p>“A bell!” said Dick, sitting up. “Can
we be, then, so near to Holywood?”</p>
<p>A little after, the bell clanged again, but this time somewhat
nearer hand; and from that time forth, and still drawing nearer
and nearer, it continued to sound brokenly abroad in the silence
of the morning.</p>
<p>“Nay, what should this betoken?” said Dick, who
was now broad awake.</p>
<p>“It is some one walking,” returned Matcham, and
“the bell tolleth ever as he moves.”</p>
<p>“I see that well,” said Dick. “But
wherefore? What maketh he in Tunstall Woods?
Jack,” he added, “laugh at me an ye will, but I like
not the hollow sound of it.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Matcham, with a shiver, “it hath
a doleful note. An the day were not come”—</p>
<p>But just then the bell, quickening its pace, began to ring
thick and hurried, and then it gave a single hammering jangle,
and was silent for a space.</p>
<p>“It is as though the bearer had run for a pater-noster
while, and then leaped the river,” Dick observed.</p>
<p>“And now beginneth he again to pace soberly
forward,” added Matcham.</p>
<p>“Nay,” returned Dick—“nay, not so
soberly, Jack. ’Tis a man that walketh you right
speedily. ’Tis a man in some fear of his life, or
about some hurried business. See ye not how swift the
beating draweth near?”</p>
<p>“It is now close by,” said Matcham.</p>
<p>They were now on the edge of the pit; and as the pit itself
was on a certain eminence, they commanded a view over the greater
proportion of the clearing, up to the thick woods that closed it
in.</p>
<p>The daylight, which was very clear and grey, showed them a
riband of white footpath wandering among the gorse. It
passed some hundred yards from the pit, and ran the whole length
of the clearing, east and west. By the line of its course,
Dick judged it should lead more or less directly to the Moat
House.</p>
<p>Upon this path, stepping forth from the margin of the wood, a
white figure now appeared. It paused a little, and seemed
to look about; and then, at a slow pace, and bent almost double,
it began to draw near across the heath. At every step the
bell clanked. Face, it had none; a white hood, not even
pierced with eye-holes, veiled the head; and as the creature
moved, it seemed to feel its way with the tapping of a
stick. Fear fell upon the lads, as cold as death.</p>
<p>“A leper!” said Dick, hoarsely.</p>
<p>“His touch is death,” said Matcham.
“Let us run.”</p>
<p>“Not so,” returned Dick. “See ye
not?—he is stone blind. He guideth him with a
staff. Let us lie still; the wind bloweth towards the path,
and he will go by and hurt us not. Alas, poor soul, and we
should rather pity him!”</p>
<p>“I will pity him when he is by,” replied
Matcham.</p>
<p>The blind leper was now about halfway towards them, and just
then the sun rose and shone full on his veiled face. He had
been a tall man before he was bowed by his disgusting sickness,
and even now he walked with a vigorous step. The dismal
beating of his bell, the pattering of the stick, the eyeless
screen before his countenance, and the knowledge that he was not
only doomed to death and suffering, but shut out for ever from
the touch of his fellow-men, filled the lads’ bosoms with
dismay; and at every step that brought him nearer, their courage
and strength seemed to desert them.</p>
<p>As he came about level with the pit, he paused, and turned his
face full upon the lads.</p>
<p>“Mary be my shield! He sees us!” said
Matcham, faintly.</p>
<p>“Hush!” whispered Dick. “He doth but
hearken. He is blind, fool!”</p>
<p>The leper looked or listened, whichever he was really doing,
for some seconds. Then he began to move on again, but
presently paused once more, and again turned and seemed to gaze
upon the lads. Even Dick became dead-white and closed his
eyes, as if by the mere sight he might become infected. But
soon the bell sounded, and this time, without any farther
hesitation, the leper crossed the remainder of the little heath
and disappeared into the covert of the woods.</p>
<p>“He saw us,” said Matcham. “I could
swear it!”</p>
<p>“Tut!” returned Dick, recovering some sparks of
courage. “He but heard us. He was in fear, poor
soul! An ye were blind, and walked in a perpetual night, ye
would start yourself, if ever a twig rustled or a bird cried
‘Peep.’”</p>
<p>“Dick, good Dick, he saw us,” repeated
Matcham. “When a man hearkeneth, he doth not as this
man; he doth otherwise, Dick. This was seeing; it was not
hearing. He means foully. Hark, else, if his bell be
not stopped!”</p>
<p>Such was the case. The bell rang no longer.</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Dick, “I like not that.
Nay,” he cried again, “I like that little. What
may this betoken? Let us go, by the mass!”</p>
<p>“He hath gone east,” added Matcham.
“Good Dick, let us go westward straight; I shall not
breathe till I have my back turned upon that leper.”</p>
<p>“Jack, y’ are too cowardly,” replied
Dick. “We shall go fair for Holywood, or as fair, at
least, as I can guide you, and that will be due north.”</p>
<p>They were afoot at once, passed the stream upon some
stepping-stones, and began to mount on the other side, which was
steeper, towards the margin of the wood. The ground became
very uneven, full of knolls and hollows; trees grew scattered or
in clumps; it became difficult to choose a path, and the lads
somewhat wandered. They were weary, besides, with
yesterday’s exertions and the lack of food, and they moved
but heavily and dragged their feet among the sand.</p>
<p>Presently, coming to the top of a knoll, they were aware of
the leper, some hundred feet in front of them, crossing the line
of their march by a hollow. His bell was silent, his staff
no longer tapped the ground, and he went before him with the
swift and assured footsteps of a man who sees. Next moment
he had disappeared into a little thicket.</p>
<p>The lads, at the first glimpse, had crouched behind a tuft of
gorse; there they lay, horror-struck.</p>
<p>“Certain, he pursueth us,” said
Dick—“certain! He held the clapper of his bell
in one hand, saw ye? that it should not sound. Now may the
saints aid and guide us, for I have no strength to combat
pestilence!”</p>
<p>“What maketh he?” cried Matcham. “What
doth he want? Who ever heard the like, that a leper, out of
mere malice, should pursue unfortunates? Hath he not his
bell to that very end, that people may avoid him? Dick,
there is below this something deeper.”</p>
<p>“Nay, I care not,” moaned Dick; “the
strength is gone out of me; my legs are like water. The
saints be mine assistance!”</p>
<p>“Would ye lie there idle?” cried Matcham.
“Let us back into the open. We have the better
chance; he cannot steal upon us unawares.”</p>
<p>“Not I,” said Dick. “My time is come,
and peradventure he may pass us by.”</p>
<p>“Bend me, then, your bow!” cried the other.
“What! will ye be a man?”</p>
<p>Dick crossed himself. “Would ye have me shoot upon
a leper?” he cried. “The hand would fail
me. Nay, now,” he added—“nay, now, let
be! With sound men I will fight, but not with ghosts and
lepers. Which this is, I wot not. One or other,
Heaven be our protection!”</p>
<p>“Now,” said Matcham, “if this be man’s
courage, what a poor thing is man! But sith ye will do
naught, let us lie close.”</p>
<p>Then came a single, broken jangle on the bell.</p>
<p>“He hath missed his hold upon the clapper,”
whispered Matcham. “Saints! how near he
is!”</p>
<p>But Dick answered never a word; his teeth were near
chattering.</p>
<p>Soon they saw a piece of the white robe between some bushes;
then the leper’s head was thrust forth from behind a trunk,
and he seemed narrowly to scan the neighbourhood before he once
again withdrew. To their stretched senses, the whole bush
appeared alive with rustlings and the creak of twigs; and they
heard the beating of each other’s heart.</p>
<p>Suddenly, with a cry, the leper sprang into the open close by,
and ran straight upon the lads. They, shrieking aloud,
separated and began to run different ways. But their
horrible enemy fastened upon Matcham, ran him swiftly down, and
had him almost instantly a prisoner. The lad gave one
scream that echoed high and far over the forest, he had one spasm
of struggling, and then all his limbs relaxed, and he fell limp
into his captor’s arms.</p>
<p>Dick heard the cry and turned. He saw Matcham fall; and
on the instant his spirit and his strength revived; With a cry of
pity and anger, he unslung and bent his arblast. But ere he
had time to shoot, the leper held up his hand.</p>
<p>“Hold your shot, Dickon!” cried a familiar
voice. “Hold your shot, mad wag! Know ye not a
friend?”</p>
<p>And then laying down Matcham on the turf, he undid the hood
from off his face, and disclosed the features of Sir Daniel
Brackley.</p>
<p>“Sir Daniel!” cried Dick.</p>
<p>“Ay, by the mass, Sir Daniel!” returned the
knight. “Would ye shoot upon your guardian,
rogue? But here is this”—And there he broke
off, and pointing to Matcham, asked: “How call ye him,
Dick?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Dick, “I call him Master
Matcham. Know ye him not? He said ye knew
him!”</p>
<p>“Ay,” replied Sir Daniel, “I know the
lad;” and he chuckled. “But he has fainted;
and, by my sooth, he might have had less to faint for! Hey,
Dick? Did I put the fear of death upon you?”</p>
<p>“Indeed, Sir Daniel, ye did that,” said Dick, and
sighed again at the mere recollection. “Nay, sir,
saving your respect, I had as lief ’a’ met the devil
in person; and to speak truth, I am yet all a-quake. But
what made ye, sir, in such a guise?”</p>
<p>Sir Daniel’s brow grew suddenly black with anger.</p>
<p>“What made I?” he said. “Ye do well to
mind me of it! What? I skulked for my poor life in my
own wood of Tunstall, Dick. We were ill sped at the battle;
we but got there to be swept among the rout. Where be all
my good men-at-arms? Dick, by the mass, I know not!
We were swept down; the shot fell thick among us; I have not seen
one man in my own colours since I saw three fall. For
myself, I came sound to Shoreby, and being mindful of the Black
Arrow, got me this gown and bell, and came softly by the path for
the Moat House. There is no disguise to be compared with
it; the jingle of this bell would scare me the stoutest outlaw in
the forest; they would all turn pale to hear it. At length
I came by you and Matcham. I could see but evilly through
this same hood, and was not sure of you, being chiefly, and for
many a good cause, astonished at the finding you together.
Moreover, in the open, where I had to go slowly and tap with my
staff, I feared to disclose myself. But see,” he
added, “this poor shrew begins a little to revive. A
little good canary will comfort me the heart of it.”</p>
<p>The knight, from under his long dress, produced a stout
bottle, and began to rub the temples and wet the lips of the
patient, who returned gradually to consciousness, and began to
roll dim eyes from one to another.</p>
<p>“What cheer, Jack!” said Dick. “It was
no leper, after all; it was Sir Daniel! See!”</p>
<p>“Swallow me a good draught of this,” said the
knight. “This will give you manhood.
Thereafter, I will give you both a meal, and we shall all three
on to Tunstall. For, Dick,” he continued, laying
forth bread and meat upon the grass, “I will avow to you,
in all good conscience, it irks me sorely to be safe between four
walls. Not since I backed a horse have I been pressed so
hard; peril of life, jeopardy of land and livelihood, and to sum
up, all these losels in the wood to hunt me down. But I be
not yet shent. Some of my lads will pick me their way
home. Hatch hath ten fellows; Selden, he had six.
Nay, we shall soon be strong again; and if I can but buy my peace
with my right fortunate and undeserving Lord of York, why, Dick,
we’ll be a man again and go a-horseback!”</p>
<p>And so saying, the knight filled himself a horn of canary, and
pledged his ward in dumb show.</p>
<p>“Selden,” Dick
faltered—“Selden”—And he paused
again.</p>
<p>Sir Daniel put down the wine untasted.</p>
<p>“How!” he cried, in a changed voice.
“Selden? Speak! What of Selden?”</p>
<p>Dick stammered forth the tale of the ambush and the
massacre.</p>
<p>The knight heard in silence; but as he listened, his
countenance became convulsed with rage and grief.</p>
<p>“Now here,” he cried, “on my right hand, I
swear to avenge it! If that I fail, if that I spill not ten
men’s souls for each, may this hand wither from my
body! I broke this Duckworth like a rush; I beggared him to
his door; I burned the thatch above his head; I drove him from
this country; and now, cometh he back to beard me? Nay,
but, Duckworth, this time it shall go bitter hard!”</p>
<p>He was silent for some time, his face working.</p>
<p>“Eat!” he cried, suddenly. “And you
here,” he added to Matcham, “swear me an oath to
follow straight to the Moat House.”</p>
<p>“I will pledge mine honour,” replied Matcham.</p>
<p>“What make I with your honour?” cried the
knight. “Swear me upon your mother’s
welfare!”</p>
<p>Matcham gave the required oath; and Sir Daniel re-adjusted the
hood over his face, and prepared his bell and staff. To see
him once more in that appalling travesty somewhat revived the
horror of his two companions. But the knight was soon upon
his feet.</p>
<p>“Eat with despatch,” he said, “and follow me
yarely to mine house.”</p>
<p>And with that he set forth again into the woods; and presently
after the bell began to sound, numbering his steps, and the two
lads sat by their untasted meal, and heard it die slowly away up
hill into the distance.</p>
<p>“And so ye go to Tunstall?” Dick inquired.</p>
<p>“Yea, verily,” said Matcham, “when needs
must! I am braver behind Sir Daniel’s back than to
his face.”</p>
<p>They ate hastily, and set forth along the path through the
airy upper levels of the forest, where great beeches stood apart
among green lawns, and the birds and squirrels made merry on the
boughs. Two hours later, they began to descend upon the
other side, and already, among the tree-tops, saw before them the
red walls and roofs of Tunstall House.</p>
<p>“Here,” said Matcham, pausing, “ye shall
take your leave of your friend Jack, whom y’ are to see no
more. Come, Dick, forgive him what he did amiss, as he, for
his part, cheerfully and lovingly forgiveth you.”</p>
<p>“And wherefore so?” asked Dick. “An we
both go to Tunstall, I shall see you yet again, I trow, and that
right often.”</p>
<p>“Ye’ll never again see poor Jack Matcham,”
replied the other, “that was so fearful and burthensome,
and yet plucked you from the river; ye’ll not see him more,
Dick, by mine honour!” He held his arms open, and the
lads embraced and kissed. “And, Dick,”
continued Matcham, “my spirit bodeth ill. Y’
are now to see a new Sir Daniel; for heretofore hath all
prospered in his hands exceedingly, and fortune followed him; but
now, methinks, when his fate hath come upon him, and he runs the
adventure of his life, he will prove but a foul lord to both of
us. He may be brave in battle, but he hath the liar’s
eye; there is fear in his eye, Dick, and fear is as cruel as the
wolf! We go down into that house, Saint Mary guide us forth
again!”</p>
<p>And so they continued their descent in silence, and came out
at last before Sir Daniel’s forest stronghold, where it
stood, low and shady, flanked with round towers and stained with
moss and lichen, in the lilied waters of the moat. Even as
they appeared, the doors were opened, the bridge lowered, and Sir
Daniel himself, with Hatch and the parson at his side, stood
ready to receive them.</p>
<h2>BOOK II—THE MOAT HOUSE</h2>
<h3>CHAPTER I—DICK ASKS QUESTIONS</h3>
<p>The Moat House stood not far from the rough forest road.
Externally, it was a compact rectangle of red stone, flanked at
each corner by a round tower, pierced for archery and
battlemented at the top. Within, it enclosed a narrow
court. The moat was perhaps twelve feet wide, crossed by a
single drawbridge. It was supplied with water by a trench,
leading to a forest pool and commanded, through its whole length,
from the battlements of the two southern towers. Except
that one or two tall and thick trees had been suffered to remain
within half a bowshot of the walls, the house was in a good
posture for defence.</p>
<p>In the court, Dick found a part of the garrison, busy with
preparations for defence, and gloomily discussing the chances of
a siege. Some were making arrows, some sharpening swords
that had long been disused; but even as they worked, they shook
their heads.</p>
<p>Twelve of Sir Daniel’s party had escaped the battle, run
the gauntlet through the wood, and come alive to the Moat
House. But out of this dozen, three had been gravely
wounded: two at Risingham in the disorder of the rout, one by
John Amend-All’s marksmen as he crossed the forest.
This raised the force of the garrison, counting Hatch, Sir
Daniel, and young Shelton, to twenty-two effective men. And
more might be continually expected to arrive. The danger
lay not therefore in the lack of men.</p>
<p>It was the terror of the Black Arrow that oppressed the
spirits of the garrison. For their open foes of the party
of York, in these most changing times, they felt but a far-away
concern. “The world,” as people said in those
days, “might change again” before harm came.
But for their neighbours in the wood, they trembled. It was
not Sir Daniel alone who was a mark for hatred. His men,
conscious of impunity, had carried themselves cruelly through all
the country. Harsh commands had been harshly executed; and
of the little band that now sat talking in the court, there was
not one but had been guilty of some act of oppression or
barbarity. And now, by the fortune of war, Sir Daniel had
become powerless to protect his instruments; now, by the issue of
some hours of battle, at which many of them had not been present,
they had all become punishable traitors to the State, outside the
buckler of the law, a shrunken company in a poor fortress that
was hardly tenable, and exposed upon all sides to the just
resentment of their victims. Nor had there been lacking
grisly advertisements of what they might expect.</p>
<p>At different periods of the evening and the night, no fewer
than seven riderless horses had come neighing in terror to the
gate. Two were from Selden’s troop; five belonged to
men who had ridden with Sir Daniel to the field. Lastly, a
little before dawn, a spearman had come staggering to the moat
side, pierced by three arrows; even as they carried him in, his
spirit had departed; but by the words that he uttered in his
agony, he must have been the last survivor of a considerable
company of men.</p>
<p>Hatch himself showed, under his sun-brown, the pallour of
anxiety; and when he had taken Dick aside and learned the fate of
Selden, he fell on a stone bench and fairly wept. The
others, from where they sat on stools or doorsteps in the sunny
angle of the court, looked at him with wonder and alarm, but none
ventured to inquire the cause of his emotion.</p>
<p>“Nay, Master Shelton,” said Hatch, at
last—“nay, but what said I? We shall all
go. Selden was a man of his hands; he was like a brother to
me. Well, he has gone second; well, we shall all
follow! For what said their knave rhyme?—‘A
black arrow in each black heart.’ Was it not so it
went? Appleyard, Selden, Smith, old Humphrey gone; and
there lieth poor John Carter, crying, poor sinner, for the
priest.”</p>
<p>Dick gave ear. Out of a low window, hard by where they
were talking, groans and murmurs came to his ear.</p>
<p>“Lieth he there?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Ay, in the second porter’s chamber,”
answered Hatch. “We could not bear him further, soul
and body were so bitterly at odds. At every step we lifted
him, he thought to wend. But now, methinks, it is the soul
that suffereth. Ever for the priest he crieth, and Sir
Oliver, I wot not why, still cometh not. ’Twill be a
long shrift; but poor Appleyard and poor Selden, they had
none.”</p>
<p>Dick stooped to the window and looked in. The little
cell was low and dark, but he could make out the wounded soldier
lying moaning on his pallet.</p>
<p>“Carter, poor friend, how goeth it?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Master Shelton,” returned the man, in an excited
whisper, “for the dear light of heaven, bring the
priest. Alack, I am sped; I am brought very low down; my
hurt is to the death. Ye may do me no more service; this
shall be the last. Now, for my poor soul’s interest,
and as a loyal gentleman, bestir you; for I have that matter on
my conscience that shall drag me deep.”</p>
<p>He groaned, and Dick heard the grating of his teeth, whether
in pain or terror.</p>
<p>Just then Sir Daniel appeared upon the threshold of the
hall. He had a letter in one hand.</p>
<p>“Lads,” he said, “we have had a shog, we
have had a tumble; wherefore, then, deny it? Rather it
imputeth to get speedily again to saddle. This old Harry
the Sixt has had the undermost. Wash we, then, our hands of
him. I have a good friend that rideth next the duke, the
Lord of Wensleydale. Well, I have writ a letter to my
friend, praying his good lordship, and offering large
satisfaction for the past and reasonable surety for the
future. Doubt not but he will lend a favourable ear.
A prayer without gifts is like a song without music: I surfeit
him with promises, boys—I spare not to promise. What,
then, is lacking? Nay, a great thing—wherefore should
I deceive you?—a great thing and a difficult: a messenger
to bear it. The woods—y’ are not ignorant of
that—lie thick with our ill-willers. Haste is most
needful; but without sleight and caution all is naught.
Which, then, of this company will take me this letter, bear me it
to my Lord of Wensleydale, and bring me the answer
back?”</p>
<p>One man instantly arose.</p>
<p>“I will, an’t like you,” said he.
“I will even risk my carcase.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Dicky Bowyer, not so,” returned the
knight. “It likes me not. Y’ are sly
indeed, but not speedy. Ye were a laggard ever.”</p>
<p>“An’t be so, Sir Daniel, here am I,” cried
another.</p>
<p>“The saints forfend!” said the knight.
“Y’ are speedy, but not sly. Ye would blunder
me headforemost into John Amend-All’s camp. I thank
you both for your good courage; but, in sooth, it may not
be.”</p>
<p>Then Hatch offered himself, and he also was refused.</p>
<p>“I want you here, good Bennet; y’ are my right
hand, indeed,” returned the knight; and then several coming
forward in a group, Sir Daniel at length selected one and gave
him the letter.</p>
<p>“Now,” he said, “upon your good speed and
better discretion we do all depend. Bring me a good answer
back, and before three weeks, I will have purged my forest of
these vagabonds that brave us to our faces. But mark it
well, Throgmorton: the matter is not easy. Ye must steal
forth under night, and go like a fox; and how ye are to cross
Till I know not, neither by the bridge nor ferry.”</p>
<p>“I can swim,” returned Throgmorton. “I
will come soundly, fear not.”</p>
<p>“Well, friend, get ye to the buttery,” replied Sir
Daniel. “Ye shall swim first of all in nut-brown
ale.” And with that he turned back into the hall.</p>
<p>“Sir Daniel hath a wise tongue,” said Hatch,
aside, to Dick. “See, now, where many a lesser man
had glossed the matter over, he speaketh it out plainly to his
company. Here is a danger, ’a saith, and here
difficulty; and jesteth in the very saying. Nay, by Saint
Barbary, he is a born captain! Not a man but he is some
deal heartened up! See how they fall again to
work.”</p>
<p>This praise of Sir Daniel put a thought in the lad’s
head.</p>
<p>“Bennet,” he said, “how came my father by
his end?”</p>
<p>“Ask me not that,” replied Hatch. “I
had no hand nor knowledge in it; furthermore, I will even be
silent, Master Dick. For look you, in a man’s own
business there he may speak; but of hearsay matters and of common
talk, not so. Ask me Sir Oliver—ay, or Carter, if ye
will; not me.”</p>
<p>And Hatch set off to make the rounds, leaving Dick in a
muse.</p>
<p>“Wherefore would he not tell me?” thought the
lad. “And wherefore named he Carter?
Carter—nay, then Carter had a hand in it,
perchance.”</p>
<p>He entered the house, and passing some little way along a
flagged and vaulted passage, came to the door of the cell where
the hurt man lay groaning. At his entrance Carter started
eagerly.</p>
<p>“Have ye brought the priest?” he cried.</p>
<p>“Not yet awhile,” returned Dick.
“Y’ ’ave a word to tell me first. How
came my father, Harry Shelton, by his death?”</p>
<p>The man’s face altered instantly.</p>
<p>“I know not,” he replied, doggedly.</p>
<p>“Nay, ye know well,” returned Dick.
“Seek not to put me by.”</p>
<p>“I tell you I know not,” repeated Carter.</p>
<p>“Then,” said Dick, “ye shall die
unshriven. Here am I, and here shall stay. There
shall no priest come near you, rest assured. For of what
avail is penitence, an ye have no mind to right those wrongs ye
had a hand in? and without penitence, confession is but
mockery.”</p>
<p>“Ye say what ye mean not, Master Dick,” said
Carter, composedly. “It is ill threatening the dying,
and becometh you (to speak truth) little. And for as little
as it commends you, it shall serve you less. Stay, an ye
please. Ye will condemn my soul—ye shall learn
nothing! There is my last word to you.” And the
wounded man turned upon the other side.</p>
<p>Now, Dick, to say truth, had spoken hastily, and was ashamed
of his threat. But he made one more effort.</p>
<p>“Carter,” he said, “mistake me not. I
know ye were but an instrument in the hands of others; a churl
must obey his lord; I would not bear heavily on such an
one. But I begin to learn upon many sides that this great
duty lieth on my youth and ignorance, to avenge my father.
Prithee, then, good Carter, set aside the memory of my
threatenings, and in pure goodwill and honest penitence give me a
word of help.”</p>
<p>The wounded man lay silent; nor, say what Dick pleased, could
he extract another word from him.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Dick, “I will go call the
priest to you as ye desired; for howsoever ye be in fault to me
or mine, I would not be willingly in fault to any, least of all
to one upon the last change.”</p>
<p>Again the old soldier heard him without speech or motion; even
his groans he had suppressed; and as Dick turned and left the
room, he was filled with admiration for that rugged
fortitude.</p>
<p>“And yet,” he thought, “of what use is
courage without wit? Had his hands been clean, he would
have spoken; his silence did confess the secret louder than
words. Nay, upon all sides, proof floweth on me. Sir
Daniel, he or his men, hath done this thing.”</p>
<p>Dick paused in the stone passage with a heavy heart. At
that hour, in the ebb of Sir Daniel’s fortune, when he was
beleaguered by the archers of the Black Arrow and proscribed by
the victorious Yorkists, was Dick, also, to turn upon the man who
had nourished and taught him, who had severely punished, indeed,
but yet unwearyingly protected his youth? The necessity, if
it should prove to be one, was cruel.</p>
<p>“Pray Heaven he be innocent!” he said.</p>
<p>And then steps sounded on the flagging, and Sir Oliver came
gravely towards the lad.</p>
<p>“One seeketh you earnestly,” said Dick.</p>
<p>“I am upon the way, good Richard,” said the
priest. “It is this poor Carter. Alack, he is
beyond cure.”</p>
<p>“And yet his soul is sicker than his body,”
answered Dick.</p>
<p>“Have ye seen him?” asked Sir Oliver, with a
manifest start.</p>
<p>“I do but come from him,” replied Dick.</p>
<p>“What said he? what said he?” snapped the priest,
with extraordinary eagerness.</p>
<p>“He but cried for you the more piteously, Sir
Oliver. It were well done to go the faster, for his hurt is
grievous,” returned the lad.</p>
<p>“I am straight for him,” was the reply.
“Well, we have all our sins. We must all come to our
latter day, good Richard.”</p>
<p>“Ay, sir; and it were well if we all came fairly,”
answered Dick.</p>
<p>The priest dropped his eyes, and with an inaudible benediction
hurried on.</p>
<p>“He, too!” thought Dick—“he, that
taught me in piety! Nay, then, what a world is this, if all
that care for me be blood-guilty of my father’s
death? Vengeance! Alas! what a sore fate is mine, if
I must be avenged upon my friends!”</p>
<p>The thought put Matcham in his head. He smiled at the
remembrance of his strange companion, and then wondered where he
was. Ever since they had come together to the doors of the
Moat House the younger lad had disappeared, and Dick began to
weary for a word with him.</p>
<p>About an hour after, mass being somewhat hastily run through
by Sir Oliver, the company gathered in the hall for dinner.
It was a long, low apartment, strewn with green rushes, and the
walls hung with arras in a design of savage men and questing
bloodhounds; here and there hung spears and bows and bucklers; a
fire blazed in the big chimney; there were arras-covered benches
round the wall, and in the midst the table, fairly spread,
awaited the arrival of the diners. Neither Sir Daniel nor
his lady made their appearance. Sir Oliver himself was
absent, and here again there was no word of Matcham. Dick
began to grow alarmed, to recall his companion’s melancholy
forebodings, and to wonder to himself if any foul play had
befallen him in that house.</p>
<p>After dinner he found Goody Hatch, who was hurrying to my Lady
Brackley.</p>
<p>“Goody,” he said, “where is Master Matcham,
I prithee? I saw ye go in with him when we
arrived.”</p>
<p>The old woman laughed aloud.</p>
<p>“Ah, Master Dick,” she said, “y’ have
a famous bright eye in your head, to be sure!” and laughed
again.</p>
<p>“Nay, but where is he, indeed?” persisted
Dick.</p>
<p>“Ye will never see him more,” she
returned—“never. It is sure.”</p>
<p>“An I do not,” returned the lad, “I will
know the reason why. He came not hither of his full free
will; such as I am, I am his best protector, and I will see him
justly used. There be too many mysteries; I do begin to
weary of the game!”</p>
<p>But as Dick was speaking, a heavy hand fell on his
shoulder. It was Bennet Hatch that had come unperceived
behind him. With a jerk of his thumb, the retainer
dismissed his wife.</p>
<p>“Friend Dick,” he said, as soon as they were
alone, “are ye a moon-struck natural? An ye leave not
certain things in peace, ye were better in the salt sea than here
in Tunstall Moat House. Y’ have questioned me;
y’ have baited Carter; y’ have frighted the
Jack-priest with hints. Bear ye more wisely, fool; and even
now, when Sir Daniel calleth you, show me a smooth face for the
love of wisdom. Y’ are to be sharply
questioned. Look to your answers.”</p>
<p>“Hatch,” returned Dick, “in all this I smell
a guilty conscience.”</p>
<p>“An ye go not the wiser, ye will soon smell
blood,” replied Bennet. “I do but warn
you. And here cometh one to call you.”</p>
<p>And indeed, at that very moment, a messenger came across the
court to summon Dick into the presence of Sir Daniel.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER II—THE TWO OATHS</h3>
<p>Sir Daniel was in the hall; there he paced angrily before the
fire, awaiting Dick’s arrival. None was by except Sir
Oliver, and he sat discreetly backward, thumbing and muttering
over his breviary.</p>
<p>“Y’ have sent for me, Sir Daniel?” said
young Shelton.</p>
<p>“I have sent for you, indeed,” replied the
knight. “For what cometh to mine ears? Have I
been to you so heavy a guardian that ye make haste to credit ill
of me? Or sith that ye see me, for the nonce, some worsted,
do ye think to quit my party? By the mass, your father was
not so! Those he was near, those he stood by, come wind or
weather. But you, Dick, y’ are a fair-day friend, it
seemeth, and now seek to clear yourself of your
allegiance.”</p>
<p>“An’t please you, Sir Daniel, not so,”
returned Dick, firmly. “I am grateful and faithful,
where gratitude and faith are due. And before more is said,
I thank you, and I thank Sir Oliver; y’ have great claims
upon me both—none can have more; I were a hound if I forgot
them.”</p>
<p>“It is well,” said Sir Daniel; and then, rising
into anger: “Gratitude and faith are words, Dick
Shelton,” he continued; “but I look to deeds.
In this hour of my peril, when my name is attainted, when my
lands are forfeit, when this wood is full of men that hunger and
thirst for my destruction, what doth gratitude? what doth
faith? I have but a little company remaining; is it
grateful or faithful to poison me their hearts with your
insidious whisperings? Save me from such gratitude!
But, come, now, what is it ye wish? Speak; we are here to
answer. If ye have aught against me, stand forth and say
it.”</p>
<p>“Sir,” replied Dick, “my father fell when I
was yet a child. It hath come to mine ears that he was
foully done by. It hath come to mine ears—for I will
not dissemble—that ye had a hand in his undoing. And
in all verity, I shall not be at peace in mine own mind, nor very
clear to help you, till I have certain resolution of these
doubts.”</p>
<p>Sir Daniel sat down in a deep settle. He took his chin
in his hand and looked at Dick fixedly.</p>
<p>“And ye think I would be guardian to the man’s son
that I had murdered?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Dick, “pardon me if I answer
churlishly; but indeed ye know right well a wardship is most
profitable. All these years have ye not enjoyed my
revenues, and led my men? Have ye not still my marriage? I
wot not what it may be worth—it is worth something.
Pardon me again; but if ye were base enough to slay a man under
trust, here were, perhaps, reasons enough to move you to the
lesser baseness.”</p>
<p>“When I was lad of your years,” returned Sir
Daniel, sternly, “my mind had not so turned upon
suspicions. And Sir Oliver here,” he added,
“why should he, a priest, be guilty of this act?”</p>
<p>“Nay, Sir Daniel,” said Dick, “but where the
master biddeth there will the dog go. It is well known this
priest is but your instrument. I speak very freely; the
time is not for courtesies. Even as I speak, so would I be
answered. And answer get I none! Ye but put more
questions. I rede ye be ware, Sir Daniel; for in this way
ye will but nourish and not satisfy my doubts.”</p>
<p>“I will answer you fairly, Master Richard,” said
the knight. “Were I to pretend ye have not stirred my
wrath, I were no honest man. But I will be just even in
anger. Come to me with these words when y’ are grown
and come to man’s estate, and I am no longer your guardian,
and so helpless to resent them. Come to me then, and I will
answer you as ye merit, with a buffet in the mouth. Till
then ye have two courses: either swallow me down these insults,
keep a silent tongue, and fight in the meanwhile for the man that
fed and fought for your infancy; or else—the door standeth
open, the woods are full of mine enemies—go.”</p>
<p>The spirit with which these words were uttered, the looks with
which they were accompanied, staggered Dick; and yet he could not
but observe that he had got no answer.</p>
<p>“I desire nothing more earnestly, Sir Daniel, than to
believe you,” he replied. “Assure me ye are
free from this.”</p>
<p>“Will ye take my word of honour, Dick?” inquired
the knight.</p>
<p>“That would I,” answered the lad.</p>
<p>“I give it you,” returned Sir Daniel.
“Upon my word of honour, upon the eternal welfare of my
spirit, and as I shall answer for my deeds hereafter, I had no
hand nor portion in your father’s death.”</p>
<p>He extended his hand, and Dick took it eagerly. Neither
of them observed the priest, who, at the pronunciation of that
solemn and false oath, had half arisen from his seat in an agony
of horror and remorse.</p>
<p>“Ah,” cried Dick, “ye must find it in your
great-heartedness to pardon me! I was a churl, indeed, to
doubt of you. But ye have my hand upon it; I will doubt no
more.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Dick,” replied Sir Daniel, “y’
are forgiven. Ye know not the world and its calumnious
nature.”</p>
<p>“I was the more to blame,” added Dick, “in
that the rogues pointed, not directly at yourself, but at Sir
Oliver.”</p>
<p>As he spoke, he turned towards the priest, and paused in the
middle of the last word. This tall, ruddy, corpulent,
high-stepping man had fallen, you might say, to pieces; his
colour was gone, his limbs were relaxed, his lips stammered
prayers; and now, when Dick’s eyes were fixed upon him
suddenly, he cried out aloud, like some wild animal, and buried
his face in his hands.</p>
<p>Sir Daniel was by him in two strides, and shook him fiercely
by the shoulder. At the same moment Dick’s suspicions
reawakened.</p>
<p>“Nay,” he said, “Sir Oliver may swear
also. ’Twas him they accused.”</p>
<p>“He shall swear,” said the knight.</p>
<p>Sir Oliver speechlessly waved his arms.</p>
<p>“Ay, by the mass! but ye shall swear,” cried Sir
Daniel, beside himself with fury. “Here, upon this
book, ye shall swear,” he continued, picking up the
breviary, which had fallen to the ground.
“What! Ye make me doubt you! Swear, I say;
swear!”</p>
<p>But the priest was still incapable of speech. His terror
of Sir Daniel, his terror of perjury, risen to about an equal
height, strangled him.</p>
<p>And just then, through the high, stained-glass window of the
hall, a black arrow crashed, and struck, and stuck quivering, in
the midst of the long table.</p>
<p>Sir Oliver, with a loud scream, fell fainting on the rushes;
while the knight, followed by Dick, dashed into the court and up
the nearest corkscrew stair to the battlements. The
sentries were all on the alert. The sun shone quietly on
green lawns dotted with trees, and on the wooded hills of the
forest which enclosed the view. There was no sign of a
besieger.</p>
<p>“Whence came that shot?” asked the knight.</p>
<p>“From yonder clump, Sir Daniel,” returned a
sentinel.</p>
<p>The knight stood a little, musing. Then he turned to
Dick. “Dick,” he said, “keep me an eye
upon these men; I leave you in charge here. As for the
priest, he shall clear himself, or I will know the reason
why. I do almost begin to share in your suspicions.
He shall swear, trust me, or we shall prove him
guilty.”</p>
<p>Dick answered somewhat coldly, and the knight, giving him a
piercing glance, hurriedly returned to the hall. His first
glance was for the arrow. It was the first of these
missiles he had seen, and as he turned it to and fro, the dark
hue of it touched him with some fear. Again there was some
writing: one word—“Earthed.”</p>
<p>“Ay,” he broke out, “they know I am home,
then. Earthed! Ay, but there is not a dog among them
fit to dig me out.”</p>
<p>Sir Oliver had come to himself, and now scrambled to his
feet.</p>
<p>“Alack, Sir Daniel!” he moaned, “y’
’ave sworn a dread oath; y’ are doomed to the end of
time.”</p>
<p>“Ay,” returned the knight, “I have sworn an
oath, indeed, thou chucklehead; but thyself shalt swear a
greater. It shall be on the blessed cross of
Holywood. Look to it; get the words ready. It shall
be sworn to-night.”</p>
<p>“Now, may Heaven lighten you!” replied the priest;
“may Heaven incline your heart from this
iniquity!”</p>
<p>“Look you, my good father,” said Sir Daniel,
“if y’ are for piety, I say no more; ye begin late,
that is all. But if y’ are in any sense bent upon
wisdom, hear me. This lad beginneth to irk me like a
wasp. I have a need for him, for I would sell his
marriage. But I tell you, in all plainness, if that he
continue to weary me, he shall go join his father. I give
orders now to change him to the chamber above the chapel.
If that ye can swear your innocency with a good, solid oath and
an assured countenance, it is well; the lad will be at peace a
little, and I will spare him. If that ye stammer or blench,
or anyways boggle at the swearing, he will not believe you; and
by the mass, he shall die. There is for your thinking
on.”</p>
<p>“The chamber above the chapel!” gasped the
priest.</p>
<p>“That same,” replied the knight. “So
if ye desire to save him, save him; and if ye desire not,
prithee, go to, and let me be at peace! For an I had been a
hasty man, I would already have put my sword through you, for
your intolerable cowardice and folly. Have ye chosen?
Say!”</p>
<p>“I have chosen,” said the priest.
“Heaven pardon me, I will do evil for good. I will
swear for the lad’s sake.”</p>
<p>“So is it best!” said Sir Daniel.
“Send for him, then, speedily. Ye shall see him
alone. Yet I shall have an eye on you. I shall be
here in the panel room.”</p>
<p>The knight raised the arras and let it fall again behind
him. There was the sound of a spring opening; then followed
the creaking of trod stairs.</p>
<p>Sir Oliver, left alone, cast a timorous glance upward at the
arras-covered wall, and crossed himself with every appearance of
terror and contrition.</p>
<p>“Nay, if he is in the chapel room,” the priest
murmured, “were it at my soul’s cost, I must save
him.”</p>
<p>Three minutes later, Dick, who had been summoned by another
messenger, found Sir Oliver standing by the hall table, resolute
and pale.</p>
<p>“Richard Shelton,” he said, “ye have
required an oath from me. I might complain, I might deny
you; but my heart is moved toward you for the past, and I will
even content you as ye choose. By the true cross of
Holywood, I did not slay your father.”</p>
<p>“Sir Oliver,” returned Dick, “when first we
read John Amend-All’s paper, I was convinced of so
much. But suffer me to put two questions. Ye did not
slay him; granted. But had ye no hand in it?”</p>
<p>“None,” said Sir Oliver. And at the same
time he began to contort his face, and signal with his mouth and
eyebrows, like one who desired to convey a warning, yet dared not
utter a sound.</p>
<p>Dick regarded him in wonder; then he turned and looked all
about him at the empty hall.</p>
<p>“What make ye?” he inquired.</p>
<p>“Why, naught,” returned the priest, hastily
smoothing his countenance. “I make naught; I do but
suffer; I am sick. I—I—prithee, Dick, I must
begone. On the true cross of Holywood, I am clean innocent
alike of violence or treachery. Content ye, good lad.
Farewell!”</p>
<p>And he made his escape from the apartment with unusual
alacrity.</p>
<p>Dick remained rooted to the spot, his eyes wandering about the
room, his face a changing picture of various emotions, wonder,
doubt, suspicion, and amusement. Gradually, as his mind
grew clearer, suspicion took the upper hand, and was succeeded by
certainty of the worst. He raised his head, and, as he did
so, violently started. High upon the wall there was the
figure of a savage hunter woven in the tapestry. With one
hand he held a horn to his mouth; in the other he brandished a
stout spear. His face was dark, for he was meant to
represent an African.</p>
<p>Now, here was what had startled Richard Shelton. The sun
had moved away from the hall windows, and at the same time the
fire had blazed up high on the wide hearth, and shed a changeful
glow upon the roof and hangings. In this light the figure
of the black hunter had winked at him with a white eyelid.</p>
<p>He continued staring at the eye. The light shone upon it
like a gem; it was liquid, it was alive. Again the white
eyelid closed upon it for a fraction of a second, and the next
moment it was gone.</p>
<p>There could be no mistake. The live eye that had been
watching him through a hole in the tapestry was gone. The
firelight no longer shone on a reflecting surface.</p>
<p>And instantly Dick awoke to the terrors of his position.
Hatch’s warning, the mute signals of the priest, this eye
that had observed him from the wall, ran together in his
mind. He saw he had been put upon his trial, that he had
once more betrayed his suspicions, and that, short of some
miracle, he was lost.</p>
<p>“If I cannot get me forth out of this house,” he
thought, “I am a dead man! And this poor Matcham,
too—to what a cockatrice’s nest have I not led
him!”</p>
<p>He was still so thinking, when there came one in haste, to bid
him help in changing his arms, his clothing, and his two or three
books, to a new chamber.</p>
<p>“A new chamber?” he repeated.
“Wherefore so? What chamber?”</p>
<p>“’Tis one above the chapel,” answered the
messenger.</p>
<p>“It hath stood long empty,” said Dick,
musing. “What manner of room is it?”</p>
<p>“Nay, a brave room,” returned the man.
“But yet”—lowering his voice—“they
call it haunted.”</p>
<p>“Haunted?” repeated Dick, with a chill.
“I have not heard of it. Nay, then, and by
whom?”</p>
<p>The messenger looked about him; and then, in a low whisper,
“By the sacrist of St. John’s,” he said.
“They had him there to sleep one night, and in the
morning—whew!—he was gone. The devil had taken
him, they said; the more betoken, he had drunk late the night
before.”</p>
<p>Dick followed the man with black forebodings.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER III—THE ROOM OVER THE CHAPEL</h3>
<p>From the battlements nothing further was observed. The
sun journeyed westward, and at last went down; but, to the eyes
of all these eager sentinels, no living thing appeared in the
neighbourhood of Tunstall House.</p>
<p>When the night was at length fairly come, Throgmorton was led
to a room overlooking an angle of the moat. Thence he was
lowered with every precaution; the ripple of his swimming was
audible for a brief period; then a black figure was observed to
land by the branches of a willow and crawl away among the
grass. For some half hour Sir Daniel and Hatch stood
eagerly giving ear; but all remained quiet. The messenger
had got away in safety.</p>
<p>Sir Daniel’s brow grew clearer. He turned to
Hatch.</p>
<p>“Bennet,” he said, “this John Amend-All is
no more than a man, ye see. He sleepeth. We will make
a good end of him, go to!”</p>
<p>All the afternoon and evening, Dick had been ordered hither
and thither, one command following another, till he was
bewildered with the number and the hurry of commissions.
All that time he had seen no more of Sir Oliver, and nothing of
Matcham; and yet both the priest and the young lad ran
continually in his mind. It was now his chief purpose to
escape from Tunstall Moat House as speedily as might be; and yet,
before he went, he desired a word with both of these.</p>
<p>At length, with a lamp in one hand, he mounted to his new
apartment. It was large, low, and somewhat dark. The
window looked upon the moat, and although it was so high up, it
was heavily barred. The bed was luxurious, with one pillow
of down and one of lavender, and a red coverlet worked in a
pattern of roses. All about the walls were cupboards,
locked and padlocked, and concealed from view by hangings of
dark-coloured arras. Dick made the round, lifting the
arras, sounding the panels, seeking vainly to open the
cupboards. He assured himself that the door was strong and
the bolt solid; then he set down his lamp upon a bracket, and
once more looked all around.</p>
<p>For what reason had he been given this chamber? It was
larger and finer than his own. Could it conceal a
snare? Was there a secret entrance? Was it, indeed,
haunted? His blood ran a little chilly in his veins.</p>
<p>Immediately over him the heavy foot of a sentry trod the
leads. Below him, he knew, was the arched roof of the
chapel; and next to the chapel was the hall. Certainly
there was a secret passage in the hall; the eye that had watched
him from the arras gave him proof of that. Was it not more
than probable that the passage extended to the chapel, and, if
so, that it had an opening in his room?</p>
<p>To sleep in such a place, he felt, would be foolhardy.
He made his weapons ready, and took his position in a corner of
the room behind the door. If ill was intended, he would
sell his life dear.</p>
<p>The sound of many feet, the challenge, and the password,
sounded overhead along the battlements; the watch was being
changed.</p>
<p>And just then there came a scratching at the door of the
chamber; it grew a little louder; then a whisper:</p>
<p>“Dick, Dick, it is I!”</p>
<p>Dick ran to the door, drew the bolt, and admitted
Matcham. He was very pale, and carried a lamp in one hand
and a drawn dagger in the other.</p>
<p>“Shut me the door,” he whispered.
“Swift, Dick! This house is full of spies; I hear
their feet follow me in the corridors; I hear them breathe behind
the arras.”</p>
<p>“Well, content you,” returned Dick, “it is
closed. We are safe for this while, if there be safety
anywhere within these walls. But my heart is glad to see
you. By the mass, lad, I thought ye were sped! Where
hid ye?”</p>
<p>“It matters not,” returned Matcham.
“Since we be met, it matters not. But, Dick, are your
eyes open? Have they told you of to-morrow’s
doings?”</p>
<p>“Not they,” replied Dick. “What make
they to-morrow?”</p>
<p>“To-morrow, or to-night, I know not,” said the
other, “but one time or other, Dick, they do intend upon
your life. I had the proof of it; I have heard them
whisper; nay, they as good as told me.”</p>
<p>“Ay,” returned Dick, “is it so? I had
thought as much.”</p>
<p>And he told him the day’s occurrences at length.</p>
<p>When it was done, Matcham arose and began, in turn, to examine
the apartment.</p>
<p>“No,” he said, “there is no entrance
visible. Yet ’tis a pure certainty there is
one. Dick, I will stay by you. An y’ are to
die, I will die with you. And I can help—look!
I have stolen a dagger—I will do my best! And
meanwhile, an ye know of any issue, any sally-port we could get
opened, or any window that we might descend by, I will most
joyfully face any jeopardy to flee with you.”</p>
<p>“Jack,” said Dick, “by the mass, Jack,
y’ are the best soul, and the truest, and the bravest in
all England! Give me your hand, Jack.”</p>
<p>And he grasped the other’s hand in silence.</p>
<p>“I will tell you,” he resumed. “There
is a window, out of which the messenger descended; the rope
should still be in the chamber. ’Tis a
hope.”</p>
<p>“Hist!” said Matcham.</p>
<p>Both gave ear. There was a sound below the floor; then
it paused, and then began again.</p>
<p>“Some one walketh in the room below,” whispered
Matcham.</p>
<p>“Nay,” returned Dick, “there is no room
below; we are above the chapel. It is my murderer in the
secret passage. Well, let him come; it shall go hard with
him;” and he ground his teeth.</p>
<p>“Blow me the lights out,” said the other.
“Perchance he will betray himself.”</p>
<p>They blew out both the lamps and lay still as death. The
footfalls underneath were very soft, but they were clearly
audible. Several times they came and went; and then there
was a loud jar of a key turning in a lock, followed by a
considerable silence.</p>
<p>Presently the steps began again, and then, all of a sudden, a
chink of light appeared in the planking of the room in a far
corner. It widened; a trap-door was being opened, letting
in a gush of light. They could see the strong hand pushing
it up; and Dick raised his cross-bow, waiting for the head to
follow.</p>
<p>But now there came an interruption. From a distant
corner of the Moat House shouts began to be heard, and first one
voice, and then several, crying aloud upon a name. This
noise had plainly disconcerted the murderer, for the trap-door
was silently lowered to its place, and the steps hurriedly
returned, passed once more close below the lads, and died away in
the distance.</p>
<p>Here was a moment’s respite. Dick breathed deep,
and then, and not till then, he gave ear to the disturbance which
had interrupted the attack, and which was now rather increasing
than diminishing. All about the Moat House feet were
running, doors were opening and slamming, and still the voice of
Sir Daniel towered above all this bustle, shouting for
“Joanna.”</p>
<p>“Joanna!” repeated Dick. “Why, who the
murrain should this be? Here is no Joanna, nor ever hath
been. What meaneth it?”</p>
<p>Matcham was silent. He seemed to have drawn further
away. But only a little faint starlight entered by the
window, and at the far end of the apartment, where the pair were,
the darkness was complete.</p>
<p>“Jack,” said Dick, “I wot not where ye were
all day. Saw ye this Joanna?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” returned Matcham, “I saw her
not.”</p>
<p>“Nor heard tell of her?” he pursued.</p>
<p>The steps drew nearer. Sir Daniel was still roaring the
name of Joanna from the courtyard.</p>
<p>“Did ye hear of her?” repeated Dick.</p>
<p>“I heard of her,” said Matcham.</p>
<p>“How your voice twitters! What aileth you?”
said Dick. “’Tis a most excellent good fortune,
this Joanna; it will take their minds from us.”</p>
<p>“Dick,” cried Matcham, “I am lost; we are
both lost. Let us flee if there be yet time. They
will not rest till they have found me. Or, see! let me go
forth; when they have found me, ye may flee. Let me forth,
Dick—good Dick, let me away!”</p>
<p>She was groping for the bolt, when Dick at last
comprehended.</p>
<p>“By the mass!” he cried, “y’ are no
Jack; y’ are Joanna Sedley; y’ are the maid that
would not marry me!”</p>
<p>The girl paused, and stood silent and motionless. Dick,
too, was silent for a little; then he spoke again.</p>
<p>“Joanna,” he said, “y’ ’ave
saved my life, and I have saved yours; and we have seen blood
flow, and been friends and enemies—ay, and I took my belt
to thrash you; and all that time I thought ye were a boy.
But now death has me, and my time’s out, and before I die I
must say this: Y’ are the best maid and the bravest under
heaven, and, if only I could live, I would marry you blithely;
and, live or die, I love you.”</p>
<p>She answered nothing.</p>
<p>“Come,” he said, “speak up, Jack.
Come, be a good maid, and say ye love me!”</p>
<p>“Why, Dick,” she cried, “would I be
here?”</p>
<p>“Well, see ye here,” continued Dick, “an we
but escape whole we’ll marry; and an we’re to die, we
die, and there’s an end on’t. But now that I
think, how found ye my chamber?”</p>
<p>“I asked it of Dame Hatch,” she answered.</p>
<p>“Well, the dame’s staunch,” he answered;
“she’ll not tell upon you. We have time before
us.”</p>
<p>And just then, as if to contradict his words, feet came down
the corridor, and a fist beat roughly on the door.</p>
<p>“Here!” cried a voice. “Open, Master
Dick; open!” Dick neither moved nor answered.</p>
<p>“It is all over,” said the girl; and she put her
arms about Dick’s neck.</p>
<p>One after another, men came trooping to the door. Then
Sir Daniel arrived himself, and there was a sudden cessation of
the noise.</p>
<p>“Dick,” cried the knight, “be not an
ass. The Seven Sleepers had been awake ere now. We
know she is within there. Open, then, the door,
man.”</p>
<p>Dick was again silent.</p>
<p>“Down with it,” said Sir Daniel. And
immediately his followers fell savagely upon the door with foot
and fist. Solid as it was, and strongly bolted, it would
soon have given way; but once more fortune interfered. Over
the thunderstorm of blows the cry of a sentinel was heard; it was
followed by another; shouts ran along the battlements, shouts
answered out of the wood. In the first moment of alarm it
sounded as if the foresters were carrying the Moat House by
assault. And Sir Daniel and his men, desisting instantly
from their attack upon Dick’s chamber, hurried to defend
the walls.</p>
<p>“Now,” cried Dick, “we are saved.”</p>
<p>He seized the great old bedstead with both hands, and bent
himself in vain to move it.</p>
<p>“Help me, Jack. For your life’s sake, help
me stoutly!” he cried.</p>
<p>Between them, with a huge effort, they dragged the big frame
of oak across the room, and thrust it endwise to the chamber
door.</p>
<p>“Ye do but make things worse,” said Joanna,
sadly. “He will then enter by the trap.”</p>
<p>“Not so,” replied Dick. “He durst not
tell his secret to so many. It is by the trap that we shall
flee. Hark! The attack is over. Nay, it was
none!”</p>
<p>It had, indeed, been no attack; it was the arrival of another
party of stragglers from the defeat of Risingham that had
disturbed Sir Daniel. They had run the gauntlet under cover
of the darkness; they had been admitted by the great gate; and
now, with a great stamping of hoofs and jingle of accoutrements
and arms, they were dismounting in the court.</p>
<p>“He will return anon,” said Dick. “To
the trap!”</p>
<p>He lighted a lamp, and they went together into the corner of
the room. The open chink through which some light still
glittered was easily discovered, and, taking a stout sword from
his small armoury, Dick thrust it deep into the seam, and weighed
strenuously on the hilt. The trap moved, gaped a little,
and at length came widely open. Seizing it with their
hands, the two young folk threw it back. It disclosed a few
steps descending, and at the foot of them, where the would-be
murderer had left it, a burning lamp.</p>
<p>“Now,” said Dick, “go first and take the
lamp. I will follow to close the trap.”</p>
<p>So they descended one after the other, and as Dick lowered the
trap, the blows began once again to thunder on the panels of the
door.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER IV—THE PASSAGE</h3>
<p>The passage in which Dick and Joanna now found themselves was
narrow, dirty, and short. At the other end of it, a door
stood partly open; the same door, without doubt, that they had
heard the man unlocking. Heavy cobwebs hung from the roof;
and the paved flooring echoed hollow under the lightest
tread.</p>
<p>Beyond the door there were two branches, at right
angles. Dick chose one of them at random, and the pair
hurried, with echoing footsteps, along the hollow of the chapel
roof. The top of the arched ceiling rose like a
whale’s back in the dim glimmer of the lamp. Here and
there were spyholes, concealed, on the other side, by the carving
of the cornice; and looking down through one of these, Dick saw
the paved floor of the chapel—the altar, with its burning
tapers—and stretched before it on the steps, the figure of
Sir Oliver praying with uplifted hands.</p>
<p>At the other end, they descended a few steps. The
passage grew narrower; the wall upon one hand was now of wood;
the noise of people talking, and a faint flickering of lights,
came through the interstices; and presently they came to a round
hole about the size of a man’s eye, and Dick, looking down
through it, beheld the interior of the hall, and some half a
dozen men sitting, in their jacks, about the table, drinking deep
and demolishing a venison pie. These were certainly some of
the late arrivals.</p>
<p>“Here is no help,” said Dick. “Let us
try back.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Joanna; “maybe the passage goeth
farther.”</p>
<p>And she pushed on. But a few yards farther the passage
ended at the top of a short flight of steps; and it became plain
that, as long as the soldiers occupied the hall, escape was
impossible upon that side.</p>
<p>They retraced their steps with all imaginable speed, and set
forward to explore the other branch. It was exceedingly
narrow, scarce wide enough for a large man; and it led them
continually up and down by little break-neck stairs, until even
Dick had lost all notion of his whereabouts.</p>
<p>At length it grew both narrower and lower; the stairs
continued to descend; the walls on either hand became damp and
slimy to the touch; and far in front of them they heard the
squeaking and scuttling of the rats.</p>
<p>“We must be in the dungeons,” Dick remarked.</p>
<p>“And still there is no outlet,” added Joanna.</p>
<p>“Nay, but an outlet there must be!” Dick
answered. Presently, sure enough, they came to a sharp
angle, and then the passage ended in a flight of steps. On
the top of that there was a solid flag of stone by way of trap,
and to this they both set their backs. It was
immovable. “Some one holdeth it,” suggested
Joanna.</p>
<p>“Not so,” said Dick; “for were a man strong
as ten, he must still yield a little. But this resisteth
like dead rock. There is a weight upon the trap. Here
is no issue; and, by my sooth, good Jack, we are here as fairly
prisoners as though the gyves were on our ankle bones. Sit
ye then down, and let us talk. After a while we shall
return, when perchance they shall be less carefully upon their
guard; and, who knoweth? we may break out and stand a
chance. But, in my poor opinion, we are as good as
shent.”</p>
<p>“Dick!” she cried, “alas the day that ever
ye should have seen me! For like a most unhappy and
unthankful maid, it is I have led you hither.”</p>
<p>“What cheer!” returned Dick. “It was
all written, and that which is written, willy nilly, cometh still
to pass. But tell me a little what manner of a maid ye are,
and how ye came into Sir Daniel’s hands; that will do
better than to bemoan yourself, whether for your sake or
mine.”</p>
<p>“I am an orphan, like yourself, of father and
mother,” said Joanna; “and for my great misfortune,
Dick, and hitherto for yours, I am a rich marriage. My Lord
Foxham had me to ward; yet it appears Sir Daniel bought the
marriage of me from the king, and a right dear price he paid for
it. So here was I, poor babe, with two great and rich men
fighting which should marry me, and I still at nurse! Well,
then the world changed, and there was a new chancellor, and Sir
Daniel bought the warding of me over the Lord Foxham’s
head. And then the world changed again, and Lord Foxham
bought my marriage over Sir Daniel’s; and from then to now
it went on ill betwixt the two of them. But still Lord
Foxham kept me in his hands, and was a good lord to me. And
at last I was to be married—or sold, if ye like it
better. Five hundred pounds Lord Foxham was to get for
me. Hamley was the groom’s name, and to-morrow, Dick,
of all days in the year, was I to be betrothed. Had it not
come to Sir Daniel, I had been wedded, sure—and never seen
thee, Dick—dear Dick!”</p>
<p>And here she took his hand, and kissed it, with the prettiest
grace; and Dick drew her hand to him and did the like.</p>
<p>“Well,” she went on, “Sir Daniel took me
unawares in the garden, and made me dress in these men’s
clothes, which is a deadly sin for a woman; and, besides, they
fit me not. He rode with me to Kettley, as ye saw, telling
me I was to marry you; but I, in my heart, made sure I would
marry Hamley in his teeth.”</p>
<p>“Ay!” cried Dick, “and so ye loved this
Hamley!”</p>
<p>“Nay,” replied Joanna, “not I. I did
but hate Sir Daniel. And then, Dick, ye helped me, and ye
were right kind, and very bold, and my heart turned towards you
in mine own despite; and now, if we can in any way compass it, I
would marry you with right goodwill. And if, by cruel
destiny, it may not be, still ye’ll be dear to me.
While my heart beats, it’ll be true to you.”</p>
<p>“And I,” said Dick, “that never cared a
straw for any manner of woman until now, I took to you when I
thought ye were a boy. I had a pity to you, and knew not
why. When I would have belted you, the hand failed
me. But when ye owned ye were a maid, Jack—for still
I will call you Jack—I made sure ye were the maid for
me. Hark!” he said, breaking off—“one
cometh.”</p>
<p>And indeed a heavy tread was now audible in the echoing
passage, and the rats again fled in armies.</p>
<p>Dick reconnoitred his position. The sudden turn gave him
a post of vantage. He could thus shoot in safety from the
cover of the wall. But it was plain the light was too near
him, and, running some way forward, he set down the lamp in the
middle of the passage, and then returned to watch.</p>
<p>Presently, at the far end of the passage, Bennet hove in
sight. He seemed to be alone, and he carried in his hand a
burning torch, which made him the better mark.</p>
<p>“Stand, Bennet!” cried Dick. “Another
step, and y’ are dead.”</p>
<p>“So here ye are,” returned Hatch, peering forward
into the darkness. “I see you not. Aha!
y’ ’ave done wisely, Dick; y’ ’ave put
your lamp before you. By my sooth, but, though it was done
to shoot my own knave body, I do rejoice to see ye profit of my
lessons! And now, what make ye? what seek ye here?
Why would ye shoot upon an old, kind friend? And have ye
the young gentlewoman there?”</p>
<p>“Nay, Bennet, it is I should question and you
answer,” replied Dick. “Why am I in this
jeopardy of my life? Why do men come privily to slay me in
my bed? Why am I now fleeing in mine own guardian’s
strong house, and from the friends that I have lived among and
never injured?”</p>
<p>“Master Dick, Master Dick,” said Bennet,
“what told I you? Y’ are brave, but the most
uncrafty lad that I can think upon!”</p>
<p>“Well,” returned Dick, “I see ye know all,
and that I am doomed indeed. It is well. Here, where
I am, I stay. Let Sir Daniel get me out if he be
able!”</p>
<p>Hatch was silent for a space.</p>
<p>“Hark ye,” he began, “return to Sir Daniel,
to tell him where ye are, and how posted; for, in truth, it was
to that end he sent me. But you, if ye are no fool, had
best be gone ere I return.”</p>
<p>“Begone!” repeated Dick. “I would be
gone already, an’ I wist how. I cannot move the
trap.”</p>
<p>“Put me your hand into the corner, and see what ye find
there,” replied Bennet. “Throgmorton’s
rope is still in the brown chamber. Fare ye
well.”</p>
<p>And Hatch, turning upon his heel, disappeared again into the
windings of the passage.</p>
<p>Dick instantly returned for his lamp, and proceeded to act
upon the hint. At one corner of the trap there was a deep
cavity in the wall. Pushing his arm into the aperture, Dick
found an iron bar, which he thrust vigorously upwards.
There followed a snapping noise, and the slab of stone instantly
started in its bed.</p>
<p>They were free of the passage. A little exercise of
strength easily raised the trap; and they came forth into a
vaulted chamber, opening on one hand upon the court, where one or
two fellows, with bare arms, were rubbing down the horses of the
last arrivals. A torch or two, each stuck in an iron ring
against the wall, changefully lit up the scene.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER V—HOW DICK CHANGED SIDES</h3>
<p>Dick, blowing out his lamp lest it should attract attention,
led the way up-stairs and along the corridor. In the brown
chamber the rope had been made fast to the frame of an exceeding
heavy and ancient bed. It had not been detached, and Dick,
taking the coil to the window, began to lower it slowly and
cautiously into the darkness of the night. Joan stood by;
but as the rope lengthened, and still Dick continued to pay it
out, extreme fear began to conquer her resolution.</p>
<p>“Dick,” she said, “is it so deep? I
may not essay it. I should infallibly fall, good Dick.”</p>
<p>It was just at the delicate moment of the operations that she
spoke. Dick started; the remainder of the coil slipped from
his grasp, and the end fell with a splash into the moat.
Instantly, from the battlement above, the voice of a sentinel
cried, “Who goes?”</p>
<p>“A murrain!” cried Dick. “We are paid
now! Down with you—take the rope.”</p>
<p>“I cannot,” she cried, recoiling.</p>
<p>“An ye cannot, no more can I,” said Shelton.
“How can I swim the moat without you? Do you desert
me, then?”</p>
<p>“Dick,” she gasped, “I cannot. The
strength is gone from me.”</p>
<p>“By the mass, then, we are all shent!” he shouted,
stamping with his foot; and then, hearing steps, he ran to the
room door and sought to close it.</p>
<p>Before he could shoot the bolt, strong arms were thrusting it
back upon him from the other side. He struggled for a
second; then, feeling himself overpowered, ran back to the
window. The girl had fallen against the wall in the
embrasure of the window; she was more than half insensible; and
when he tried to raise her in his arms, her body was limp and
unresponsive.</p>
<p>At the same moment the men who had forced the door against him
laid hold upon him. The first he poinarded at a blow, and
the others falling back for a second in some disorder, he
profited by the chance, bestrode the window-sill, seized the cord
in both hands, and let his body slip.</p>
<p>The cord was knotted, which made it the easier to descend; but
so furious was Dick’s hurry, and so small his experience of
such gymnastics, that he span round and round in mid-air like a
criminal upon a gibbet, and now beat his head, and now bruised
his hands, against the rugged stonework of the wall. The
air roared in his ears; he saw the stars overhead, and the
reflected stars below him in the moat, whirling like dead leaves
before the tempest. And then he lost hold, and fell, and
soused head over ears into the icy water.</p>
<p>When he came to the surface his hand encountered the rope,
which, newly lightened of his weight, was swinging wildly to and
fro. There was a red glow overhead, and looking up, he saw,
by the light of several torches and a cresset full of burning
coals, the battlements lined with faces. He saw the
men’s eyes turning hither and thither in quest of him; but
he was too far below, the light reached him not, and they looked
in vain.</p>
<p>And now he perceived that the rope was considerably too long,
and he began to struggle as well as he could towards the other
side of the moat, still keeping his head above water. In
this way he got much more than halfway over; indeed the bank was
almost within reach, before the rope began to draw him back by
its own weight. Taking his courage in both hands, he left
go and made a leap for the trailing sprays of willow that had
already, that same evening, helped Sir Daniel’s messenger
to land. He went down, rose again, sank a second time, and
then his hand caught a branch, and with the speed of thought he
had dragged himself into the thick of the tree and clung there,
dripping and panting, and still half uncertain of his escape.</p>
<p>But all this had not been done without a considerable
splashing, which had so far indicated his position to the men
along the battlements. Arrows and quarrels fell thick
around him in the darkness, thick like driving hail; and suddenly
a torch was thrown down—flared through the air in its swift
passage—stuck for a moment on the edge of the bank, where
it burned high and lit up its whole surroundings like a
bonfire—and then, in a good hour for Dick, slipped off,
plumped into the moat, and was instantly extinguished.</p>
<p>It had served its purpose. The marksmen had had time to
see the willow, and Dick ensconced among its boughs; and though
the lad instantly sprang higher up the bank, and ran for his
life, he was yet not quick enough to escape a shot. An
arrow struck him in the shoulder, another grazed his head.</p>
<p>The pain of his wounds lent him wings; and he had no sooner
got upon the level than he took to his heels and ran straight
before him in the dark, without a thought for the direction of
his flight.</p>
<p>For a few steps missiles followed him, but these soon ceased;
and when at length he came to a halt and looked behind, he was
already a good way from the Moat House, though he could still see
the torches moving to and fro along its battlements.</p>
<p>He leaned against a tree, streaming with blood and water,
bruised, wounded, alone, and unarmed. For all that, he had
saved his life for that bout; and though Joanna remained behind
in the power of Sir Daniel, he neither blamed himself for an
accident that it had been beyond his power to prevent, nor did he
augur any fatal consequences to the girl herself. Sir
Daniel was cruel, but he was not likely to be cruel to a young
gentlewoman who had other protectors, willing and able to bring
him to account. It was more probable he would make haste to
marry her to some friend of his own.</p>
<p>“Well,” thought Dick, “between then and now
I will find me the means to bring that traitor under; for I
think, by the mass, that I be now absolved from any gratitude or
obligation; and when war is open, there is a fair chance for
all.”</p>
<p>In the meanwhile, here he was in a sore plight.</p>
<p>For some little way farther he struggled forward through the
forest; but what with the pain of his wounds, the darkness of the
night, and the extreme uneasiness and confusion of his mind, he
soon became equally unable to guide himself or to continue to
push through the close undergrowth, and he was fain at length to
sit down and lean his back against a tree.</p>
<p>When he awoke from something betwixt sleep and swooning, the
grey of the morning had begun to take the place of night. A
little chilly breeze was bustling among the trees, and as he
still sat staring before him, only half awake, he became aware of
something dark that swung to and fro among the branches, some
hundred yards in front of him. The progressive brightening
of the day and the return of his own senses at last enabled him
to recognise the object. It was a man hanging from the
bough of a tall oak. His head had fallen forward on his
breast; but at every stronger puff of wind his body span round
and round, and his legs and arms tossed, like some ridiculous
plaything.</p>
<p>Dick clambered to his feet, and, staggering and leaning on the
tree-trunks as he went, drew near to this grim object.</p>
<p>The bough was perhaps twenty feet above the ground, and the
poor fellow had been drawn up so high by his executioners that
his boots swung clear above Dick’s reach; and as his hood
had been drawn over his face, it was impossible to recognise the
man.</p>
<p>Dick looked about him right and left; and at last he perceived
that the other end of the cord had been made fast to the trunk of
a little hawthorn which grew, thick with blossom, under the lofty
arcade of the oak. With his dagger, which alone remained to
him of all his arms, young Shelton severed the rope, and
instantly, with a dead thump, the corpse fell in a heap upon the
ground.</p>
<p>Dick raised the hood; it was Throgmorton, Sir Daniel’s
messenger. He had not gone far upon his errand. A
paper, which had apparently escaped the notice of the men of the
Black Arrow, stuck from the bosom of his doublet, and Dick,
pulling it forth, found it was Sir Daniel’s letter to Lord
Wensleydale.</p>
<p>“Come,” thought he, “if the world changes
yet again, I may have here the wherewithal to shame Sir
Daniel—nay, and perchance to bring him to the
block.”</p>
<p>And he put the paper in his own bosom, said a prayer over the
dead man, and set forth again through the woods.</p>
<p>His fatigue and weakness increased; his ears sang, his steps
faltered, his mind at intervals failed him, so low had he been
brought by loss of blood. Doubtless he made many deviations
from his true path, but at last he came out upon the high-road,
not very far from Tunstall hamlet.</p>
<p>A rough voice bid him stand.</p>
<p>“Stand?” repeated Dick. “By the mass,
but I am nearer falling.”</p>
<p>And he suited the action to the word, and fell all his length
upon the road.</p>
<p>Two men came forth out of the thicket, each in green forest
jerkin, each with long-bow and quiver and short sword.</p>
<p>“Why, Lawless,” said the younger of the two,
“it is young Shelton.”</p>
<p>“Ay, this will be as good as bread to John
Amend-All,” returned the other. “Though, faith,
he hath been to the wars. Here is a tear in his scalp that
must ’a’ cost him many a good ounce of
blood.”</p>
<p>“And here,” added Greensheve, “is a hole in
his shoulder that must have pricked him well. Who hath done
this, think ye? If it be one of ours, he may all to prayer;
Ellis will give him a short shrift and a long rope.”</p>
<p>“Up with the cub,” said Lawless. “Clap
him on my back.”</p>
<p>And then, when Dick had been hoisted to his shoulders, and he
had taken the lad’s arms about his neck, and got a firm
hold of him, the ex-Grey Friar added:</p>
<p>“Keep ye the post, brother Greensheve. I will on
with him by myself.”</p>
<p>So Greensheve returned to his ambush on the wayside, and
Lawless trudged down the hill, whistling as he went, with Dick,
still in a dead faint, comfortably settled on his shoulders.</p>
<p>The sun rose as he came out of the skirts of the wood and saw
Tunstall hamlet straggling up the opposite hill. All seemed
quiet, but a strong post of some half a score of archers lay
close by the bridge on either side of the road, and, as soon as
they perceived Lawless with his burthen, began to bestir
themselves and set arrow to string like vigilant sentries.</p>
<p>“Who goes?” cried the man in command.</p>
<p>“Will Lawless, by the rood—ye know me as well as
your own hand,” returned the outlaw, contemptuously.</p>
<p>“Give the word, Lawless,” returned the other.</p>
<p>“Now, Heaven lighten thee, thou great fool,”
replied Lawless. “Did I not tell it thee
myself? But ye are all mad for this playing at
soldiers. When I am in the greenwood, give me greenwood
ways; and my word for this tide is: ‘A fig for all mock
soldiery!’”</p>
<p>“Lawless, ye but show an ill example; give us the word,
fool jester,” said the commander of the post.</p>
<p>“And if I had forgotten it?” asked the other.</p>
<p>“An ye had forgotten it—as I know y’
’ave not—by the mass, I would clap an arrow into your
big body,” returned the first.</p>
<p>“Nay, an y’ are so ill a jester,” said
Lawless, “ye shall have your word for me.
‘Duckworth and Shelton’ is the word; and here, to the
illustration, is Shelton on my shoulders, and to Duckworth do I
carry him.”</p>
<p>“Pass, Lawless,” said the sentry.</p>
<p>“And where is John?” asked the Grey Friar.</p>
<p>“He holdeth a court, by the mass, and taketh rents as to
the manner born!” cried another of the company.</p>
<p>So it proved. When Lawless got as far up the village as
the little inn, he found Ellis Duckworth surrounded by Sir
Daniel’s tenants, and, by the right of his good company of
archers, coolly taking rents, and giving written receipts in
return for them. By the faces of the tenants, it was plain
how little this proceeding pleased them; for they argued very
rightly that they would simply have to pay them twice.</p>
<p>As soon as he knew what had brought Lawless, Ellis dismissed
the remainder of the tenants, and, with every mark of interest
and apprehension, conducted Dick into an inner chamber of the
inn. There the lad’s hurts were looked to; and he was
recalled, by simple remedies, to consciousness.</p>
<p>“Dear lad,” said Ellis, pressing his hand,
“y’ are in a friend’s hands that loved your
father, and loves you for his sake. Rest ye a little
quietly, for ye are somewhat out of case. Then shall ye
tell me your story, and betwixt the two of us we shall find a
remedy for all.”</p>
<p>A little later in the day, and after Dick had awakened from a
comfortable slumber to find himself still very weak, but clearer
in mind and easier in body, Ellis returned, and sitting down by
the bedside, begged him, in the name of his father, to relate the
circumstance of his escape from Tunstall Moat House. There
was something in the strength of Duckworth’s frame, in the
honesty of his brown face, in the clearness and shrewdness of his
eyes, that moved Dick to obey him; and from first to last the lad
told him the story of his two days’ adventures.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Ellis, when he had done, “see
what the kind saints have done for you, Dick Shelton, not alone
to save your body in so numerous and deadly perils, but to bring
you into my hands that have no dearer wish than to assist your
father’s son. Be but true to me—and I see
y’ are true—and betwixt you and me, we shall bring
that false-heart traitor to the death.”</p>
<p>“Will ye assault the house?” asked Dick.</p>
<p>“I were mad, indeed, to think of it,” returned
Ellis. “He hath too much power; his men gather to
him; those that gave me the slip last night, and by the mass came
in so handily for you—those have made him safe. Nay,
Dick, to the contrary, thou and I and my brave bowmen, we must
all slip from this forest speedily, and leave Sir Daniel
free.”</p>
<p>“My mind misgiveth me for Jack,” said the lad.</p>
<p>“For Jack!” repeated Duckworth. “O, I
see, for the wench! Nay, Dick, I promise you, if there come
talk of any marriage we shall act at once; till then, or till the
time is ripe, we shall all disappear, even like shadows at
morning; Sir Daniel shall look east and west, and see none
enemies; he shall think, by the mass, that he hath dreamed
awhile, and hath now awakened in his bed. But our four
eyes, Dick, shall follow him right close, and our four
hands—so help us all the army of the saints!—shall
bring that traitor low!”</p>
<p>Two days later Sir Daniel’s garrison had grown to such a
strength that he ventured on a sally, and at the head of some two
score horsemen, pushed without opposition as far as Tunstall
hamlet. Not an arrow flew, not a man stirred in the
thicket; the bridge was no longer guarded, but stood open to all
corners; and as Sir Daniel crossed it, he saw the villagers
looking timidly from their doors.</p>
<p>Presently one of them, taking heart of grace, came forward,
and with the lowliest salutations, presented a letter to the
knight.</p>
<p>His face darkened as he read the contents. It ran
thus:</p>
<blockquote><p><i>To the most untrue and cruel gentylman</i>,
<i>Sir Daniel Brackley</i>, <i>Knyght</i>, <i>These</i>:</p>
<p>I fynde ye were untrue and unkynd fro the first. Ye have
my father’s blood upon your hands; let be, it will not
wasshe. Some day ye shall perish by my procurement, so much
I let you to wytte; and I let you to wytte farther, that if ye
seek to wed to any other the gentylwoman, Mistresse Joan Sedley,
whom that I am bound upon a great oath to wed myself, the blow
will be very swift. The first step therinne will be thy
first step to the grave.</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Ric.
Shelton</span>.</p>
</blockquote>
<h2>BOOK III—MY LORD FOXHAM</h2>
<h3>CHAPTER I—THE HOUSE BY THE SHORE</h3>
<p>Months had passed away since Richard Shelton made his escape
from the hands of his guardian. These months had been
eventful for England. The party of Lancaster, which was
then in the very article of death, had once more raised its
head. The Yorkists defeated and dispersed, their leader
butchered on the field, it seemed,—for a very brief season
in the winter following upon the events already recorded, as if
the House of Lancaster had finally triumphed over its foes.</p>
<p>The small town of Shoreby-on-the-Till was full of the
Lancastrian nobles of the neighbourhood. Earl Risingham was
there, with three hundred men-at-arms; Lord Shoreby, with two
hundred; Sir Daniel himself, high in favour and once more growing
rich on confiscations, lay in a house of his own, on the main
street, with three-score men. The world had changed
indeed.</p>
<p>It was a black, bitter cold evening in the first week of
January, with a hard frost, a high wind, and every likelihood of
snow before the morning.</p>
<p>In an obscure alehouse in a by-street near the harbour, three
or four men sat drinking ale and eating a hasty mess of
eggs. They were all likely, lusty, weather-beaten fellows,
hard of hand, bold of eye; and though they wore plain tabards,
like country ploughmen, even a drunken soldier might have looked
twice before he sought a quarrel in such company.</p>
<p>A little apart before the huge fire sat a younger man, almost
a boy, dressed in much the same fashion, though it was easy to
see by his looks that he was better born, and might have worn a
sword, had the time suited.</p>
<p>“Nay,” said one of the men at the table, “I
like it not. Ill will come of it. This is no place
for jolly fellows. A jolly fellow loveth open country, good
cover, and scarce foes; but here we are shut in a town, girt
about with enemies; and, for the bull’s-eye of misfortune,
see if it snow not ere the morning.”</p>
<p>“’Tis for Master Shelton there,” said
another, nodding his head towards the lad before the fire.</p>
<p>“I will do much for Master Shelton,” returned the
first; “but to come to the gallows for any man—nay,
brothers, not that!”</p>
<p>The door of the inn opened, and another man entered hastily
and approached the youth before the fire.</p>
<p>“Master Shelton,” he said, “Sir Daniel goeth
forth with a pair of links and four archers.”</p>
<p>Dick (for this was our young friend) rose instantly to his
feet.</p>
<p>“Lawless,” he said, “ye will take John
Capper’s watch. Greensheve, follow with me.
Capper, lead forward. We will follow him this time, an he
go to York.”</p>
<p>The next moment they were outside in the dark street, and
Capper, the man who had just come, pointed to where two torches
flared in the wind at a little distance.</p>
<p>The town was already sound asleep; no one moved upon the
streets, and there was nothing easier than to follow the party
without observation. The two link-bearers went first; next
followed a single man, whose long cloak blew about him in the
wind; and the rear was brought up by the four archers, each with
his bow upon his arm. They moved at a brisk walk, threading
the intricate lanes and drawing nearer to the shore.</p>
<p>“He hath gone each night in this direction?” asked
Dick, in a whisper.</p>
<p>“This is the third night running, Master Shelton,”
returned Capper, “and still at the same hour and with the
same small following, as though his end were secret.”</p>
<p>Sir Daniel and his six men were now come to the outskirts of
the country. Shoreby was an open town, and though the
Lancastrian lords who lay there kept a strong guard on the main
roads, it was still possible to enter or depart unseen by any of
the lesser streets or across the open country.</p>
<p>The lane which Sir Daniel had been following came to an abrupt
end. Before him there was a stretch of rough down, and the
noise of the sea-surf was audible upon one hand. There were
no guards in the neighbourhood, nor any light in that quarter of
the town.</p>
<p>Dick and his two outlaws drew a little closer to the object of
their chase, and presently, as they came forth from between the
houses and could see a little farther upon either hand, they were
aware of another torch drawing near from another direction.</p>
<p>“Hey,” said Dick, “I smell
treason.”</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Sir Daniel had come to a full halt. The
torches were stuck into the sand, and the men lay down, as if to
await the arrival of the other party.</p>
<p>This drew near at a good rate. It consisted of four men
only—a pair of archers, a varlet with a link, and a cloaked
gentleman walking in their midst.</p>
<p>“Is it you, my lord?” cried Sir Daniel.</p>
<p>“It is I, indeed; and if ever true knight gave proof I
am that man,” replied the leader of the second troop;
“for who would not rather face giants, sorcerers, or
pagans, than this pinching cold?”</p>
<p>“My lord,” returned Sir Daniel, “beauty will
be the more beholden, misdoubt it not. But shall we forth?
for the sooner ye have seen my merchandise, the sooner shall we
both get home.”</p>
<p>“But why keep ye her here, good knight?” inquired
the other. “An she be so young, and so fair, and so
wealthy, why do ye not bring her forth among her mates? Ye
would soon make her a good marriage, and no need to freeze your
fingers and risk arrow-shots by going abroad at such untimely
seasons in the dark.”</p>
<p>“I have told you, my lord,” replied Sir Daniel,
“the reason thereof concerneth me only. Neither do I
purpose to explain it farther. Suffice it, that if ye be
weary of your old gossip, Daniel Brackley, publish it abroad that
y’ are to wed Joanna Sedley, and I give you my word ye will
be quit of him right soon. Ye will find him with an arrow
in his back.”</p>
<p>Meantime the two gentlemen were walking briskly forward over
the down; the three torches going before them, stooping against
the wind and scattering clouds of smoke and tufts of flame, and
the rear brought up by the six archers.</p>
<p>Close upon the heels of these, Dick followed. He had, of
course, heard no word of this conversation; but he had recognised
in the second of the speakers old Lord Shoreby himself, a man of
an infamous reputation, whom even Sir Daniel affected, in public,
to condemn.</p>
<p>Presently they came close down upon the beach. The air
smelt salt; the noise of the surf increased; and here, in a large
walled garden, there stood a small house of two storeys, with
stables and other offices.</p>
<p>The foremost torch-bearer unlocked a door in the wall, and
after the whole party had passed into the garden, again closed
and locked it on the other side.</p>
<p>Dick and his men were thus excluded from any farther
following, unless they should scale the wall and thus put their
necks in a trap.</p>
<p>They sat down in a tuft of furze and waited. The red
glow of the torches moved up and down and to and fro within the
enclosure, as if the link bearers steadily patrolled the
garden.</p>
<p>Twenty minutes passed, and then the whole party issued forth
again upon the down; and Sir Daniel and the baron, after an
elaborate salutation, separated and turned severally homeward,
each with his own following of men and lights.</p>
<p>As soon as the sound of their steps had been swallowed by the
wind, Dick got to his feet as briskly as he was able, for he was
stiff and aching with the cold.</p>
<p>“Capper, ye will give me a back up,” he said.</p>
<p>They advanced, all three, to the wall; Capper stooped, and
Dick, getting upon his shoulders, clambered on to the
cope-stone.</p>
<p>“Now, Greensheve,” whispered Dick, “follow
me up here; lie flat upon your face, that ye may be the less
seen; and be ever ready to give me a hand if I fall foully on the
other side.”</p>
<p>And so saying he dropped into the garden.</p>
<p>It was all pitch dark; there was no light in the house.
The wind whistled shrill among the poor shrubs, and the surf beat
upon the beach; there was no other sound. Cautiously Dick
footed it forth, stumbling among bushes, and groping with his
hands; and presently the crisp noise of gravel underfoot told him
that he had struck upon an alley.</p>
<p>Here he paused, and taking his crossbow from where he kept it
concealed under his long tabard, he prepared it for instant
action, and went forward once more with greater resolution and
assurance. The path led him straight to the group of
buildings.</p>
<p>All seemed to be sorely dilapidated: the windows of the house
were secured by crazy shutters; the stables were open and empty;
there was no hay in the hay-loft, no corn in the corn-box.
Any one would have supposed the place to be deserted. But
Dick had good reason to think otherwise. He continued his
inspection, visiting the offices, trying all the windows.
At length he came round to the sea-side of the house, and there,
sure enough, there burned a pale light in one of the upper
windows.</p>
<p>He stepped back a little way, till he thought he could see the
movement of a shadow on the wall of the apartment. Then he
remembered that, in the stable, his groping hand had rested for a
moment on a ladder, and he returned with all despatch to bring
it. The ladder was very short, but yet, by standing on the
topmost round, he could bring his hands as high as the iron bars
of the window; and seizing these, he raised his body by main
force until his eyes commanded the interior of the room.</p>
<p>Two persons were within; the first he readily knew to be Dame
Hatch; the second, a tall and beautiful and grave young lady, in
a long, embroidered dress—could that be Joanna Sedley? his
old wood-companion, Jack, whom he had thought to punish with a
belt?</p>
<p>He dropped back again to the top round of the ladder in a kind
of amazement. He had never thought of his sweetheart as of
so superior a being, and he was instantly taken with a feeling of
diffidence. But he had little opportunity for
thought. A low “Hist!” sounded from close by,
and he hastened to descend the ladder.</p>
<p>“Who goes?” he whispered.</p>
<p>“Greensheve,” came the reply, in tones similarly
guarded.</p>
<p>“What want ye?” asked Dick.</p>
<p>“The house is watched, Master Shelton,” returned
the outlaw. “We are not alone to watch it; for even
as I lay on my belly on the wall I saw men prowling in the dark,
and heard them whistle softly one to the other.”</p>
<p>“By my sooth,” said Dick, “but this is
passing strange! Were they not men of Sir
Daniel’s?”</p>
<p>“Nay, sir, that they were not,” returned
Greensheve; “for if I have eyes in my head, every man-Jack
of them weareth me a white badge in his bonnet, something
chequered with dark.”</p>
<p>“White, chequered with dark,” repeated Dick.
“Faith, ’tis a badge I know not. It is none of
this country’s badges. Well, an that be so, let us
slip as quietly forth from this garden as we may; for here we are
in an evil posture for defence. Beyond all question there
are men of Sir Daniel’s in that house, and to be taken
between two shots is a beggarman’s position. Take me
this ladder; I must leave it where I found it.”</p>
<p>They returned the ladder to the stable, and groped their way
to the place where they had entered.</p>
<p>Capper had taken Greensheve’s position on the cope, and
now he leaned down his hand, and, first one and then the other,
pulled them up.</p>
<p>Cautiously and silently, they dropped again upon the other
side; nor did they dare to speak until they had returned to their
old ambush in the gorse.</p>
<p>“Now, John Capper,” said Dick, “back with
you to Shoreby, even as for your life. Bring me instantly
what men ye can collect. Here shall be the rendezvous; or
if the men be scattered and the day be near at hand before they
muster, let the place be something farther back, and by the
entering in of the town. Greensheve and I lie here to
watch. Speed ye, John Capper, and the saints aid you to
despatch. And now, Greensheve,” he continued, as soon
as Capper had departed, “let thou and I go round about the
garden in a wide circuit. I would fain see whether thine
eyes betrayed thee.”</p>
<p>Keeping well outwards from the wall, and profiting by every
height and hollow, they passed about two sides, beholding
nothing. On the third side the garden wall was built close
upon the beach, and to preserve the distance necessary to their
purpose, they had to go some way down upon the sands.
Although the tide was still pretty far out, the surf was so high,
and the sands so flat, that at each breaker a great sheet of
froth and water came careering over the expanse, and Dick and
Greensheve made this part of their inspection wading, now to the
ankles, and now as deep as to the knees, in the salt and icy
waters of the German Ocean.</p>
<p>Suddenly, against the comparative whiteness of the garden
wall, the figure of a man was seen, like a faint Chinese shadow,
violently signalling with both arms. As he dropped again to
the earth, another arose a little farther on and repeated the
same performance. And so, like a silent watch word, these
gesticulations made the round of the beleaguered garden.</p>
<p>“They keep good watch,” Dick whispered.</p>
<p>“Let us back to land, good master,” answered
Greensheve. “We stand here too open; for, look ye,
when the seas break heavy and white out there behind us, they
shall see us plainly against the foam.”</p>
<p>“Ye speak sooth,” returned Dick.
“Ashore with us, right speedily.”</p>
<h3>CHAPTER II—A SKIRMISH IN THE DARK</h3>
<p>Thoroughly drenched and chilled, the two adventurers returned
to their position in the gorse.</p>
<p>“I pray Heaven that Capper make good speed!” said
Dick. “I vow a candle to St. Mary of Shoreby if he
come before the hour!”</p>
<p>“Y’ are in a hurry, Master Dick?” asked
Greensheve.</p>
<p>“Ay, good fellow,” answered Dick; “for in
that house lieth my lady, whom I love, and who should these be
that lie about her secretly by night? Unfriends, for
sure!”</p>
<p>“Well,” returned Greensheve, “an John come
speedily, we shall give a good account of them. They are
not two score at the outside—I judge so by the spacing of
their sentries—and, taken where they are, lying so widely,
one score would scatter them like sparrows. And yet, Master
Dick, an she be in Sir Daniel’s power already, it will
little hurt that she should change into another’s.
Who should these be?”</p>
<p>“I do suspect the Lord of Shoreby,” Dick
replied. “When came they?”</p>
<p>“They began to come, Master Dick,” said
Greensheve, “about the time ye crossed the wall. I
had not lain there the space of a minute ere I marked the first
of the knaves crawling round the corner.”</p>
<p>The last light had been already extinguished in the little
house when they were wading in the wash of the breakers, and it
was impossible to predict at what moment the lurking men about
the garden wall might make their onslaught. Of two evils,
Dick preferred the least. He preferred that Joanna should
remain under the guardianship of Sir Daniel rather than pass into
the clutches of Lord Shoreby; and his mind was made up, if the
house should be assaulted, to come at once to the relief of the
besieged.</p>
<p>But the time passed, and still there was no movement.
From quarter of an hour to quarter of an hour the same signal
passed about the garden wall, as if the leader desired to assure
himself of the vigilance of his scattered followers; but in every
other particular the neighbourhood of the little house lay
undisturbed.</p>
<p>Presently Dick’s reinforcements began to arrive.
The night was not yet old before nearly a score of men crouched
beside him in the gorse.</p>
<p>Separating these into two bodies, he took the command of the
smaller himself, and entrusted the larger to the leadership of
Greensheve.</p>
<p>“Now, Kit,” said he to this last, “take me
your men to the near angle of the garden wall upon the
beach. Post them strongly, and wait till that ye hear me
falling on upon the other side. It is those upon the sea
front that I would fain make certain of, for there will be the
leader. The rest will run; even let them. And now,
lads, let no man draw an arrow; ye will but hurt friends.
Take to the steel, and keep to the steel; and if we have the
uppermost, I promise every man of you a gold noble when I come to
mine estate.”</p>
<p>Out of the odd collection of broken men, thieves, murderers,
and ruined peasantry, whom Duckworth had gathered together to
serve the purposes of his revenge, some of the boldest and the
most experienced in war had volunteered to follow Richard
Shelton. The service of watching Sir Daniel’s
movements in the town of Shoreby had from the first been irksome
to their temper, and they had of late begun to grumble loudly and
threaten to disperse. The prospect of a sharp encounter and
possible spoils restored them to good humour, and they joyfully
prepared for battle.</p>
<p>Their long tabards thrown aside, they appeared, some in plain
green jerkins, and some in stout leathern jacks; under their
hoods many wore bonnets strengthened by iron plates; and, for
offensive armour, swords, daggers, a few stout boar-spears, and a
dozen of bright bills, put them in a posture to engage even
regular feudal troops. The bows, quivers, and tabards were
concealed among the gorse, and the two bands set resolutely
forward.</p>
<p>Dick, when he had reached the other side of the house, posted
his six men in a line, about twenty yards from the garden wall,
and took position himself a few paces in front. Then they
all shouted with one voice, and closed upon the enemy.</p>
<p>These, lying widely scattered, stiff with cold, and taken at
unawares, sprang stupidly to their feet, and stood
undecided. Before they had time to get their courage about
them, or even to form an idea of the number and mettle of their
assailants, a similar shout of onslaught sounded in their ears
from the far side of the enclosure. Thereupon they gave
themselves up for lost and ran.</p>
<p>In this way the two small troops of the men of the Black Arrow
closed upon the sea front of the garden wall, and took a part of
the strangers, as it were, between two fires; while the whole of
the remainder ran for their lives in different directions, and
were soon scattered in the darkness.</p>
<p>For all that, the fight was but beginning. Dick’s
outlaws, although they had the advantage of the surprise, were
still considerably outnumbered by the men they had
surrounded. The tide had flowed, in the meanwhile; the
beach was narrowed to a strip; and on this wet field, between the
surf and the garden wall, there began, in the darkness, a
doubtful, furious, and deadly contest.</p>
<p>The strangers were well armed; they fell in silence upon their
assailants; and the affray became a series of single
combats. Dick, who had come first into the mellay, was
engaged by three; the first he cut down at the first blow, but
the other two coming upon him, hotly, he was fain to give ground
before their onset. One of these two was a huge fellow,
almost a giant for stature, and armed with a two-handed sword,
which he brandished like a switch. Against this opponent,
with his reach of arm and the length and weight of his weapon,
Dick and his bill were quite defenceless; and had the other
continued to join vigorously in the attack, the lad must have
indubitably fallen. This second man, however, less in
stature and slower in his movements, paused for a moment to peer
about him in the darkness, and to give ear to the sounds of the
battle.</p>
<p>The giant still pursued his advantage, and still Dick fled
before him, spying for his chance. Then the huge blade
flashed and descended, and the lad, leaping on one side and
running in, slashed sideways and upwards with his bill. A
roar of agony responded, and, before the wounded man could raise
his formidable weapon, Dick, twice repeating his blow, had
brought him to the ground.</p>
<p>The next moment he was engaged, upon more equal terms, with
his second pursuer. Here there was no great difference in
size, and though the man, fighting with sword and dagger against
a bill, and being wary and quick of fence, had a certain
superiority of arms, Dick more than made it up by his greater
agility on foot. Neither at first gained any obvious
advantage; but the older man was still insensibly profiting by
the ardour of the younger to lead him where he would; and
presently Dick found that they had crossed the whole width of the
beach, and were now fighting above the knees in the spume and
bubble of the breakers. Here his own superior activity was
rendered useless; he found himself more or less at the discretion
of his foe; yet a little, and he had his back turned upon his own
men, and saw that this adroit and skilful adversary was bent upon
drawing him farther and farther away.</p>
<p>Dick ground his teeth. He determined to decide the
combat instantly; and when the wash of the next wave had ebbed
and left them dry, he rushed in, caught a blow upon his bill, and
leaped right at the throat of his opponent. The man went
down backwards, with Dick still upon the top of him; and the next
wave, speedily succeeding to the last, buried him below a rush of
water.</p>
<p>While he was still submerged, Dick forced his dagger from his
grasp, and rose to his feet, victorious.</p>
<p>“Yield ye!” he said. “I give you
life.”</p>
<p>“I yield me,” said the other, getting to his
knees. “Ye fight, like a young man, ignorantly and
foolhardily; but, by the array of the saints, ye fight
bravely!”</p>
<p>Dick turned to the beach. The combat was still raging
doubtfully in the night; over the hoarse roar of the breakers
steel clanged upon steel, and cries of pain and the shout of
battle resounded.</p>
<p>“Lead me to your captain, youth,” said the
conquered knight. “It is fit this butchery should
cease.”</p>
<p>“Sir,” replied Dick, “so far as these brave
fellows have a captain, the poor gentleman who here addresses you
is he.”</p>
<p>“Call off your dogs, then, and I will bid my villains
hold,” returned the other.</p>
<p>There was something noble both in the voice and manner of his
late opponent, and Dick instantly dismissed all fears of
treachery.</p>
<p>“Lay down your arms, men!” cried the stranger
knight. “I have yielded me, upon promise of
life.”</p>
<p>The tone of the stranger was one of absolute command, and
almost instantly the din and confusion of the mellay ceased.</p>
<p>“Lawless,” cried Dick, “are ye
safe?”</p>
<p>“Ay,” cried Lawless, “safe and
hearty.”</p>
<p>“Light me the lantern,” said Dick.</p>
<p>“Is not Sir Daniel here?” inquired the knight.</p>
<p>“Sir Daniel?” echoed Dick. “Now, by
the rood, I pray not. It would go ill with me if he
were.”</p>
<p>“Ill with <i>you</i>, fair sir?” inquired the
other. “Nay, then, if ye be not of Sir Daniel’s
party, I profess I comprehend no longer. Wherefore, then,
fell ye upon mine ambush? in what quarrel, my young and very
fiery friend? to what earthly purpose? and, to make a clear end
of questioning, to what good gentleman have I
surrendered?”</p>
<p>But before Dick could answer, a voice spoke in the darkness
from close by. Dick could see the speaker’s black and
white badge, and the respectful salute which he addressed to his
superior.</p>
<p>“My lord,” said he, “if these gentlemen be
unfriends to Sir Daniel, it is pity, indeed, we should have been
at blows with them; but it were tenfold greater that either they
or we should linger here. The watchers in the
house—unless they be all dead or deaf—have heard our
hammering this quarter-hour agone; instantly they will have
signalled to the town; and unless we be the livelier in our
departure, we are like to be taken, both of us, by a fresh
foe.”</p>
<p>“Hawksley is in the right,” added the lord.
“How please ye, sir? Whither shall we
march?”</p>
<p>“Nay, my lord,” said Dick, “go where ye will
for me. I do begin to suspect we have some ground of
friendship, and if, indeed, I began our acquaintance somewhat
ruggedly, I would not churlishly continue. Let us, then,
separate, my lord, you laying your right hand in mine; and at the
hour and place that ye shall name, let us encounter and
agree.”</p>
<p>“Y’ are too trustful, boy,” said the other;
“but this time your trust is not misplaced. I will
meet you at the point of day at St. Bride’s Cross.
Come, lads, follow!”</p>
<p>The strangers disappeared from the scene with a rapidity that
seemed suspicious; and, while the outlaws fell to the congenial
task of rifling the dead bodies, Dick made once more the circuit
of the garden wall to examine the front of the house. In a
little upper loophole of the roof he beheld a light set; and as
it would certainly be visible in town from the back windows of
Sir Daniel’s mansion, he doubted not that this was the
signal feared by Hawksley, and that ere long the lances of the
Knight of Tunstall would arrive upon the scene.</p>
<p>He put his ear to the ground, and it seemed to him as if he
heard a jarring and hollow noise from townward. Back to the
beach he went hurrying. But the work was already done; the
last body was disarmed and stripped to the skin, and four fellows
were already wading seaward to commit it to the mercies of the
deep.</p>
<p>A few minutes later, when there debauched out of the nearest
lanes of Shoreby some two score horsemen, hastily arrayed and
moving at the gallop of their steeds, the neighbourhood of the
house beside the sea was entirely silent and deserted.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Dick and his men had returned to the ale-house of
the Goat and Bagpipes to snatch some hours of sleep before the
morning tryst.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER III—ST. BRIDE’S CROSS</h3>
<p>St. Bride’s cross stood a little way back from Shoreby,
on the skirts of Tunstall Forest. Two roads met: one, from
Holywood across the forest; one, that road from Risingham down
which we saw the wrecks of a Lancastrian army fleeing in
disorder. Here the two joined issue, and went on together
down the hill to Shoreby; and a little back from the point of
junction, the summit of a little knoll was crowned by the ancient
and weather-beaten cross.</p>
<p>Here, then, about seven in the morning, Dick arrived. It
was as cold as ever; the earth was all grey and silver with the
hoarfrost, and the day began to break in the east with many
colours of purple and orange.</p>
<p>Dick set him down upon the lowest step of the cross, wrapped
himself well in his tabard, and looked vigilantly upon all
sides. He had not long to wait. Down the road from
Holywood a gentleman in very rich and bright armour, and wearing
over that a surcoat of the rarest furs, came pacing on a splendid
charger. Twenty yards behind him followed a clump of
lances; but these halted as soon as they came in view of the
trysting-place, while the gentleman in the fur surcoat continued
to advance alone.</p>
<p>His visor was raised, and showed a countenance of great
command and dignity, answerable to the richness of his attire and
arms. And it was with some confusion of manner that Dick
arose from the cross and stepped down the bank to meet his
prisoner.</p>
<p>“I thank you, my lord, for your exactitude,” he
said, louting very low. “Will it please your lordship
to set foot to earth?”</p>
<p>“Are ye here alone, young man?” inquired the
other.</p>
<p>“I was not so simple,” answered Dick; “and,
to be plain with your lordship, the woods upon either hand of
this cross lie full of mine honest fellows lying on their
weapons.”</p>
<p>“Y’ ’ave done wisely,” said the
lord. “It pleaseth me the rather, since last night ye
fought foolhardily, and more like a salvage Saracen lunatic than
any Christian warrior. But it becomes not me to complain
that had the undermost.”</p>
<p>“Ye had the undermost indeed, my lord, since ye so
fell,” returned Dick; “but had the waves not holpen
me, it was I that should have had the worst. Ye were
pleased to make me yours with several dagger marks, which I still
carry. And in fine, my lord, methinks I had all the danger,
as well as all the profit, of that little blind-man’s
mellay on the beach.”</p>
<p>“Y’ are shrewd enough to make light of it, I
see,” returned the stranger.</p>
<p>“Nay, my lord, not shrewd,” replied Dick,
“in that I shoot at no advantage to myself. But when,
by the light of this new day, I see how stout a knight hath
yielded, not to my arms alone, but to fortune, and the darkness,
and the surf—and how easily the battle had gone otherwise,
with a soldier so untried and rustic as myself—think it not
strange, my lord, if I feel confounded with my
victory.”</p>
<p>“Ye speak well,” said the stranger.
“Your name?”</p>
<p>“My name, an’t like you, is Shelton,”
answered Dick.</p>
<p>“Men call me the Lord Foxham,” added the
other.</p>
<p>“Then, my lord, and under your good favour, ye are
guardian to the sweetest maid in England,” replied Dick;
“and for your ransom, and the ransom of such as were taken
with you on the beach, there will be no uncertainty of
terms. I pray you, my lord, of your goodwill and charity,
yield me the hand of my mistress, Joan Sedley; and take ye, upon
the other part, your liberty, the liberty of these your
followers, and (if ye will have it) my gratitude and service till
I die.”</p>
<p>“But are ye not ward to Sir Daniel? Methought, if
y’ are Harry Shelton’s son, that I had heard it so
reported,” said Lord Foxham.</p>
<p>“Will it please you, my lord, to alight? I would
fain tell you fully who I am, how situate, and why so bold in my
demands. Beseech you, my lord, take place upon these steps,
hear me to a full end, and judge me with allowance.”</p>
<p>And so saying, Dick lent a hand to Lord Foxham to dismount;
led him up the knoll to the cross; installed him in the place
where he had himself been sitting; and standing respectfully
before his noble prisoner, related the story of his fortunes up
to the events of the evening before.</p>
<p>Lord Foxham listened gravely, and when Dick had done,
“Master Shelton,” he said, “ye are a most
fortunate-unfortunate young gentleman; but what fortune y’
’ave had, that ye have amply merited; and what unfortune,
ye have noways deserved. Be of a good cheer; for ye have
made a friend who is devoid neither of power nor favour.
For yourself, although it fits not for a person of your birth to
herd with outlaws, I must own ye are both brave and honourable;
very dangerous in battle, right courteous in peace; a youth of
excellent disposition and brave bearing. For your estates,
ye will never see them till the world shall change again; so long
as Lancaster hath the strong hand, so long shall Sir Daniel enjoy
them for his own. For my ward, it is another matter; I had
promised her before to a gentleman, a kinsman of my house, one
Hamley; the promise is old—”</p>
<p>“Ay, my lord, and now Sir Daniel hath promised her to my
Lord Shoreby,” interrupted Dick. “And his
promise, for all it is but young, is still the likelier to be
made good.”</p>
<p>“’Tis the plain truth,” returned his
lordship. “And considering, moreover, that I am your
prisoner, upon no better composition than my bare life, and over
and above that, that the maiden is unhappily in other hands, I
will so far consent. Aid me with your good
fellows”—</p>
<p>“My lord,” cried Dick, “they are these same
outlaws that ye blame me for consorting with.”</p>
<p>“Let them be what they will, they can fight,”
returned Lord Foxham. “Help me, then; and if between
us we regain the maid, upon my knightly honour, she shall marry
you!”</p>
<p>Dick bent his knee before his prisoner; but he, leaping up
lightly from the cross, caught the lad up and embraced him like a
son.</p>
<p>“Come,” he said, “an y’ are to marry
Joan, we must be early friends.”</p>
<h3>CHAPTER IV—THE GOOD HOPE</h3>
<p>An hour thereafter, Dick was back at the Goat and Bagpipes,
breaking his fast, and receiving the report of his messengers and
sentries. Duckworth was still absent from Shoreby; and this
was frequently the case, for he played many parts in the world,
shared many different interests, and conducted many various
affairs. He had founded that fellowship of the Black Arrow,
as a ruined man longing for vengeance and money; and yet among
those who knew him best, he was thought to be the agent and
emissary of the great King-maker of England, Richard, Earl of
Warwick.</p>
<p>In his absence, at any rate, it fell upon Richard Shelton to
command affairs in Shoreby; and, as he sat at meat, his mind was
full of care, and his face heavy with consideration. It had
been determined, between him and the Lord Foxham, to make one
bold stroke that evening, and, by brute force, to set Joanna
free. The obstacles, however, were many; and as one after
another of his scouts arrived, each brought him more
discomfortable news.</p>
<p>Sir Daniel was alarmed by the skirmish of the night
before. He had increased the garrison of the house in the
garden; but not content with that, he had stationed horsemen in
all the neighbouring lanes, so that he might have instant word of
any movement. Meanwhile, in the court of his mansion,
steeds stood saddled, and the riders, armed at every point,
awaited but the signal to ride.</p>
<p>The adventure of the night appeared more and more difficult of
execution, till suddenly Dick’s countenance lightened.</p>
<p>“Lawless!” he cried, “you that were a
shipman, can ye steal me a ship?”</p>
<p>“Master Dick,” replied Lawless, “if ye would
back me, I would agree to steal York Minster.”</p>
<p>Presently after, these two set forth and descended to the
harbour. It was a considerable basin, lying among sand
hills, and surrounded with patches of down, ancient ruinous
lumber, and tumble-down slums of the town. Many decked
ships and many open boats either lay there at anchor, or had been
drawn up on the beach. A long duration of bad weather had
driven them from the high seas into the shelter of the port; and
the great trooping of black clouds, and the cold squalls that
followed one another, now with a sprinkling of dry snow, now in a
mere swoop of wind, promised no improvement but rather threatened
a more serious storm in the immediate future.</p>
<p>The seamen, in view of the cold and the wind, had for the most
part slunk ashore, and were now roaring and singing in the
shoreside taverns. Many of the ships already rode unguarded
at their anchors; and as the day wore on, and the weather offered
no appearance of improvement, the number was continually being
augmented. It was to these deserted ships, and, above all,
to those of them that lay far out, that Lawless directed his
attention; while Dick, seated upon an anchor that was half
embedded in the sand, and giving ear, now to the rude, potent,
and boding voices of the gale, and now to the hoarse singing of
the shipmen in a neighbouring tavern, soon forgot his immediate
surroundings and concerns in the agreeable recollection of Lord
Foxham’s promise.</p>
<p>He was disturbed by a touch upon his shoulder. It was
Lawless, pointing to a small ship that lay somewhat by itself,
and within but a little of the harbour mouth, where it heaved
regularly and smoothly on the entering swell. A pale gleam
of winter sunshine fell, at that moment, on the vessel’s
deck, relieving her against a bank of scowling cloud; and in this
momentary glitter Dick could see a couple of men hauling the
skiff alongside.</p>
<p>“There, sir,” said Lawless, “mark ye it
well! There is the ship for to-night.”</p>
<p>Presently the skiff put out from the vessel’s side, and
the two men, keeping her head well to the wind, pulled lustily
for shore. Lawless turned to a loiterer.</p>
<p>“How call ye her?” he asked, pointing to the
little vessel.</p>
<p>“They call her the Good Hope, of Dartmouth,”
replied the loiterer. “Her captain, Arblaster by
name. He pulleth the bow oar in yon skiff.”</p>
<p>This was all that Lawless wanted. Hurriedly thanking the
man, he moved round the shore to a certain sandy creek, for which
the skiff was heading. There he took up his position, and
as soon as they were within earshot, opened fire on the sailors
of the Good Hope.</p>
<p>“What! Gossip Arblaster!” he cried.
“Why, ye be well met; nay, gossip, ye be right well met,
upon the rood! And is that the Good Hope? Ay, I would
know her among ten thousand!—a sweet shear, a sweet
boat! But marry come up, my gossip, will ye drink? I
have come into mine estate which doubtless ye remember to have
heard on. I am now rich; I have left to sail upon the sea;
I do sail now, for the most part, upon spiced ale. Come,
fellow; thy hand upon ’t! Come, drink with an old
shipfellow!”</p>
<p>Skipper Arblaster, a long-faced, elderly, weather-beaten man,
with a knife hanging about his neck by a plaited cord, and for
all the world like any modern seaman in his gait and bearing, had
hung back in obvious amazement and distrust. But the name
of an estate, and a certain air of tipsified simplicity and
good-fellowship which Lawless very well affected, combined to
conquer his suspicious jealousy; his countenance relaxed, and he
at once extended his open hand and squeezed that of the outlaw in
a formidable grasp.</p>
<p>“Nay,” he said, “I cannot mind you.
But what o’ that? I would drink with any man, gossip,
and so would my man Tom. Man Tom,” he added,
addressing his follower, “here is my gossip, whose name I
cannot mind, but no doubt a very good seaman. Let’s
go drink with him and his shore friend.”</p>
<p>Lawless led the way, and they were soon seated in an alehouse,
which, as it was very new, and stood in an exposed and solitary
station, was less crowded than those nearer to the centre of the
port. It was but a shed of timber, much like a blockhouse
in the backwoods of to-day, and was coarsely furnished with a
press or two, a number of naked benches, and boards set upon
barrels to play the part of tables. In the middle, and
besieged by half a hundred violent draughts, a fire of wreck-wood
blazed and vomited thick smoke.</p>
<p>“Ay, now,” said Lawless, “here is a
shipman’s joy—a good fire and a good stiff cup
ashore, with foul weather without and an off-sea gale a-snoring
in the roof! Here’s to the Good Hope! May she
ride easy!”</p>
<p>“Ay,” said Skipper Arblaster, “’tis
good weather to be ashore in, that is sooth. Man Tom, how
say ye to that? Gossip, ye speak well, though I can never
think upon your name; but ye speak very well. May the Good
Hope ride easy! Amen!”</p>
<p>“Friend Dickon,” resumed Lawless, addressing his
commander, “ye have certain matters on hand, unless I
err? Well, prithee be about them incontinently. For
here I be with the choice of all good company, two tough old
shipmen; and till that ye return I will go warrant these brave
fellows will bide here and drink me cup for cup. We are not
like shore-men, we old, tough tarry-Johns!”</p>
<p>“It is well meant,” returned the skipper.
“Ye can go, boy; for I will keep your good friend and my
good gossip company till curfew—ay, and by St. Mary, till
the sun get up again! For, look ye, when a man hath been
long enough at sea, the salt getteth me into the clay upon his
bones; and let him drink a draw-well, he will never be
quenched.”</p>
<p>Thus encouraged upon all hands, Dick rose, saluted his
company, and going forth again into the gusty afternoon, got him
as speedily as he might to the Goat and Bagpipes. Thence he
sent word to my Lord Foxham that, so soon as ever the evening
closed, they would have a stout boat to keep the sea in.
And then leading along with him a couple of outlaws who had some
experience of the sea, he returned himself to the harbour and the
little sandy creek.</p>
<p>The skiff of the Good Hope lay among many others, from which
it was easily distinguished by its extreme smallness and
fragility. Indeed, when Dick and his two men had taken
their places, and begun to put forth out of the creek into the
open harbour, the little cockle dipped into the swell and
staggered under every gust of wind, like a thing upon the point
of sinking.</p>
<p>The Good Hope, as we have said, was anchored far out, where
the swell was heaviest. No other vessel lay nearer than
several cables’ length; those that were the nearest were
themselves entirely deserted; and as the skiff approached, a
thick flurry of snow and a sudden darkening of the weather
further concealed the movements of the outlaws from all possible
espial. In a trice they had leaped upon the heaving deck,
and the skiff was dancing at the stern. The Good Hope was
captured.</p>
<p>She was a good stout boat, decked in the bows and amidships,
but open in the stern. She carried one mast, and was rigged
between a felucca and a lugger. It would seem that Skipper
Arblaster had made an excellent venture, for the hold was full of
pieces of French wine; and in the little cabin, besides the
Virgin Mary in the bulkhead which proved the captain’s
piety, there were many lockfast chests and cupboards, which
showed him to be rich and careful.</p>
<p>A dog, who was the sole occupant of the vessel, furiously
barked and bit the heels of the boarders; but he was soon kicked
into the cabin, and the door shut upon his just resentment.
A lamp was lit and fixed in the shrouds to mark the vessel
clearly from the shore; one of the wine pieces in the hold was
broached, and a cup of excellent Gascony emptied to the adventure
of the evening; and then, while one of the outlaws began to get
ready his bow and arrows and prepare to hold the ship against all
comers, the other hauled in the skiff and got overboard, where he
held on, waiting for Dick.</p>
<p>“Well, Jack, keep me a good watch,” said the young
commander, preparing to follow his subordinate. “Ye
will do right well.”</p>
<p>“Why,” returned Jack, “I shall do excellent
well indeed, so long as we lie here; but once we put the nose of
this poor ship outside the harbour—See, there she
trembles! Nay, the poor shrew heard the words, and the
heart misgave her in her oak-tree ribs. But look, Master
Dick! how black the weather gathers!”</p>
<p>The darkness ahead was, indeed, astonishing. Great
billows heaved up out of the blackness, one after another; and
one after another the Good Hope buoyantly climbed, and giddily
plunged upon the further side. A thin sprinkle of snow and
thin flakes of foam came flying, and powdered the deck; and the
wind harped dismally among the rigging.</p>
<p>“In sooth, it looketh evilly,” said Dick.
“But what cheer! ’Tis but a squall, and
presently it will blow over.” But, in spite of his
words, he was depressingly affected by the bleak disorder of the
sky and the wailing and fluting of the wind; and as he got over
the side of the Good Hope and made once more for the
landing-creek with the best speed of oars, he crossed himself
devoutly, and recommended to Heaven the lives of all who should
adventure on the sea.</p>
<p>At the landing-creek there had already gathered about a dozen
of the outlaws. To these the skiff was left, and they were
bidden embark without delay.</p>
<p>A little further up the beach Dick found Lord Foxham hurrying
in quest of him, his face concealed with a dark hood, and his
bright armour covered by a long russet mantle of a poor
appearance.</p>
<p>“Young Shelton,” he said, “are ye for sea,
then, truly?”</p>
<p>“My lord,” replied Richard, “they lie about
the house with horsemen; it may not be reached from the land side
without alarum; and Sir Daniel once advertised of our adventure,
we can no more carry it to a good end than, saving your presence,
we could ride upon the wind. Now, in going round by sea, we
do run some peril by the elements; but, what much outweighteth
all, we have a chance to make good our purpose and bear off the
maid.”</p>
<p>“Well,” returned Lord Foxham, “lead
on. I will, in some sort, follow you for shame’s
sake; but I own I would I were in bed.”</p>
<p>“Here, then,” said Dick. “Hither we go
to fetch our pilot.”</p>
<p>And he led the way to the rude alehouse where he had given
rendezvous to a portion of his men. Some of these he found
lingering round the door outside; others had pushed more boldly
in, and, choosing places as near as possible to where they saw
their comrade, gathered close about Lawless and the two
shipmen. These, to judge by the distempered countenance and
cloudy eye, had long since gone beyond the boundaries of
moderation; and as Richard entered, closely followed by Lord
Foxham, they were all three tuning up an old, pitiful sea-ditty,
to the chorus of the wailing of the gale.</p>
<p>The young leader cast a rapid glance about the shed. The
fire had just been replenished, and gave forth volumes of black
smoke, so that it was difficult to see clearly in the further
corners. It was plain, however, that the outlaws very
largely outnumbered the remainder of the guests. Satisfied
upon this point, in case of any failure in the operation of his
plan, Dick strode up to the table and resumed his place upon the
bench.</p>
<p>“Hey?” cried the skipper, tipsily, “who are
ye, hey?”</p>
<p>“I want a word with you without, Master
Arblaster,” returned Dick; “and here is what we shall
talk of.” And he showed him a gold noble in the
glimmer of the firelight.</p>
<p>The shipman’s eyes burned, although he still failed to
recognise our hero.</p>
<p>“Ay, boy,” he said, “I am with you.
Gossip, I will be back anon. Drink fair, gossip;”
and, taking Dick’s arm to steady his uneven steps, he
walked to the door of the alehouse.</p>
<p>As soon as he was over the threshold, ten strong arms had
seized and bound him; and in two minutes more, with his limbs
trussed one to another, and a good gag in his mouth, he had been
tumbled neck and crop into a neighbouring hay-barn.
Presently, his man Tom, similarly secured, was tossed beside him,
and the pair were left to their uncouth reflections for the
night.</p>
<p>And now, as the time for concealment had gone by, Lord
Foxham’s followers were summoned by a preconcerted signal,
and the party, boldly taking possession of as many boats as their
numbers required, pulled in a flotilla for the light in the
rigging of the ship. Long before the last man had climbed
to the deck of the Good Hope, the sound of furious shouting from
the shore showed that a part, at least, of the seamen had
discovered the loss of their skiffs.</p>
<p>But it was now too late, whether for recovery or
revenge. Out of some forty fighting men now mustered in the
stolen ship, eight had been to sea, and could play the part of
mariners. With the aid of these, a slice of sail was got
upon her. The cable was cut. Lawless, vacillating on
his feet, and still shouting the chorus of sea-ballads, took the
long tiller in his hands: and the Good Hope began to flit forward
into the darkness of the night, and to face the great waves
beyond the harbour bar.</p>
<p>Richard took his place beside the weather rigging.
Except for the ship’s own lantern, and for some lights in
Shoreby town, that were already fading to leeward, the whole
world of air was as black as in a pit. Only from time to
time, as the Good Hope swooped dizzily down into the valley of
the rollers, a crest would break—a great cataract of snowy
foam would leap in one instant into being—and, in an
instant more, would stream into the wake and vanish.</p>
<p>Many of the men lay holding on and praying aloud; many more
were sick, and had crept into the bottom, where they sprawled
among the cargo. And what with the extreme violence of the
motion, and the continued drunken bravado of Lawless, still
shouting and singing at the helm, the stoutest heart on board may
have nourished a shrewd misgiving as to the result.</p>
<p>But Lawless, as if guided by an instinct, steered the ship
across the breakers, struck the lee of a great sandbank, where
they sailed for awhile in smooth water, and presently after laid
her alongside a rude, stone pier, where she was hastily made
fast, and lay ducking and grinding in the dark.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER V—THE GOOD HOPE (continued)</h3>
<p>The pier was not far distant from the house in which Joanna
lay; it now only remained to get the men on shore, to surround
the house with a strong party, burst in the door and carry off
the captive. They might then regard themselves as done with
the Good Hope; it had placed them on the rear of their enemies;
and the retreat, whether they should succeed or fail in the main
enterprise, would be directed with a greater measure of hope in
the direction of the forest and my Lord Foxham’s
reserve.</p>
<p>To get the men on shore, however, was no easy task; many had
been sick, all were pierced with cold; the promiscuity and
disorder on board had shaken their discipline; the movement of
the ship and the darkness of the night had cowed their
spirits. They made a rush upon the pier; my lord, with his
sword drawn on his own retainers, must throw himself in front;
and this impulse of rabblement was not restrained without a
certain clamour of voices, highly to be regretted in the
case.</p>
<p>When some degree of order had been restored, Dick, with a few
chosen men, set forth in advance. The darkness on shore, by
contrast with the flashing of the surf, appeared before him like
a solid body; and the howling and whistling of the gale drowned
any lesser noise.</p>
<p>He had scarce reached the end of the pier, however, when there
fell a lull of the wind; and in this he seemed to hear on shore
the hollow footing of horses and the clash of arms.
Checking his immediate followers, he passed forward a step or two
alone, even setting foot upon the down; and here he made sure he
could detect the shape of men and horses moving. A strong
discouragement assailed him. If their enemies were really
on the watch, if they had beleaguered the shoreward end of the
pier, he and Lord Foxham were taken in a posture of very poor
defence, the sea behind, the men jostled in the dark upon a
narrow causeway. He gave a cautious whistle, the signal
previously agreed upon.</p>
<p>It proved to be a signal far more than he desired.
Instantly there fell, through the black night, a shower of arrows
sent at a venture; and so close were the men huddled on the pier
that more than one was hit, and the arrows were answered with
cries of both fear and pain. In this first discharge, Lord
Foxham was struck down; Hawksley had him carried on board again
at once; and his men, during the brief remainder of the skirmish,
fought (when they fought at all) without guidance. That was
perhaps the chief cause of the disaster which made haste to
follow.</p>
<p>At the shore end of the pier, for perhaps a minute, Dick held
his own with a handful; one or two were wounded upon either side;
steel crossed steel; nor had there been the least signal of
advantage, when in the twinkling of an eye the tide turned
against the party from the ship. Someone cried out that all
was lost; the men were in the very humour to lend an ear to a
discomfortable counsel; the cry was taken up. “On
board, lads, for your lives!” cried another. A third,
with the true instinct of the coward, raised that inevitable
report on all retreats: “We are betrayed!” And
in a moment the whole mass of men went surging and jostling
backward down the pier, turning their defenceless backs on their
pursuers and piercing the night with craven outcry.</p>
<p>One coward thrust off the ship’s stern, while another
still held her by the bows. The fugitives leaped,
screaming, and were hauled on board, or fell back and perished in
the sea. Some were cut down upon the pier by the
pursuers. Many were injured on the ship’s deck in the
blind haste and terror of the moment, one man leaping upon
another, and a third on both. At last, and whether by
design or accident, the bows of the Good Hope were liberated; and
the ever-ready Lawless, who had maintained his place at the helm
through all the hurly-burly by sheer strength of body and a
liberal use of the cold steel, instantly clapped her on the
proper tack. The ship began to move once more forward on
the stormy sea, its scuppers running blood, its deck heaped with
fallen men, sprawling and struggling in the dark.</p>
<p>Thereupon, Lawless sheathed his dagger, and turning to his
next neighbour, “I have left my mark on them,
gossip,” said he, “the yelping, coward
hounds.”</p>
<p>Now, while they were all leaping and struggling for their
lives, the men had not appeared to observe the rough shoves and
cutting stabs with which Lawless had held his post in the
confusion. But perhaps they had already begun to understand
somewhat more clearly, or perhaps another ear had overheard, the
helmsman’s speech.</p>
<p>Panic-stricken troops recover slowly, and men who have just
disgraced themselves by cowardice, as if to wipe out the memory
of their fault, will sometimes run straight into the opposite
extreme of insubordination. So it was now; and the same men
who had thrown away their weapons and been hauled, feet foremost,
into the Good Hope, began to cry out upon their leaders, and
demand that someone should be punished.</p>
<p>This growing ill-feeling turned upon Lawless.</p>
<p>In order to get a proper offing, the old outlaw had put the
head of the Good Hope to seaward.</p>
<p>“What!” bawled one of the grumblers, “he
carrieth us to seaward!”</p>
<p>“’Tis sooth,” cried another.
“Nay, we are betrayed for sure.”</p>
<p>And they all began to cry out in chorus that they were
betrayed, and in shrill tones and with abominable oaths bade
Lawless go about-ship and bring them speedily ashore.
Lawless, grinding his teeth, continued in silence to steer the
true course, guiding the Good Hope among the formidable
billows. To their empty terrors, as to their dishonourable
threats, between drink and dignity he scorned to make
reply. The malcontents drew together a little abaft the
mast, and it was plain they were like barnyard cocks,
“crowing for courage.” Presently they would be
fit for any extremity of injustice or ingratitude. Dick
began to mount by the ladder, eager to interpose; but one of the
outlaws, who was also something of a seaman, got beforehand.</p>
<p>“Lads,” he began, “y’ are right wooden
heads, I think. For to get back, by the mass, we must have
an offing, must we not? And this old
Lawless—”</p>
<p>Someone struck the speaker on the mouth, and the next moment,
as a fire springs among dry straw, he was felled upon the deck,
trampled under the feet, and despatched by the daggers of his
cowardly companions. At this the wrath of Lawless rose and
broke.</p>
<p>“Steer yourselves,” he bellowed, with a curse;
and, careless of the result, he left the helm.</p>
<p>The Good Hope was, at that moment, trembling on the summit of
a swell. She subsided, with sickening velocity, upon the
farther side. A wave, like a great black bulwark, hove
immediately in front of her; and, with a staggering blow, she
plunged headforemost through that liquid hill. The green
water passed right over her from stem to stern, as high as a
man’s knees; the sprays ran higher than the mast; and she
rose again upon the other side, with an appalling, tremulous
indecision, like a beast that has been deadly wounded.</p>
<p>Six or seven of the malcontents had been carried bodily
overboard; and as for the remainder, when they found their
tongues again, it was to bellow to the saints and wail upon
Lawless to come back and take the tiller.</p>
<p>Nor did Lawless wait to be twice bidden. The terrible
result of his fling of just resentment sobered him
completely. He knew, better than any one on board, how
nearly the Good Hope had gone bodily down below their feet; and
he could tell, by the laziness with which she met the sea, that
the peril was by no means over.</p>
<p>Dick, who had been thrown down by the concussion and half
drowned, rose wading to his knees in the swamped well of the
stern, and crept to the old helmsman’s side.</p>
<p>“Lawless,” he said, “we do all depend on
you; y’ are a brave, steady man, indeed, and crafty in the
management of ships; I shall put three sure men to watch upon
your safety.”</p>
<p>“Bootless, my master, bootless,” said the
steersman, peering forward through the dark. “We come
every moment somewhat clearer of these sandbanks; with every
moment, then, the sea packeth upon us heavier, and for all these
whimperers, they will presently be on their backs. For, my
master, ’tis a right mystery, but true, there never yet was
a bad man that was a good shipman. None but the honest and
the bold can endure me this tossing of a ship.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Lawless,” said Dick, laughing, “that
is a right shipman’s byword, and hath no more of sense than
the whistle of the wind. But, prithee, how go we? Do
we lie well? Are we in good case?”</p>
<p>“Master Shelton,” replied Lawless, “I have
been a Grey Friar—I praise fortune—an archer, a
thief, and a shipman. Of all these coats, I had the best
fancy to die in the Grey Friar’s, as ye may readily
conceive, and the least fancy to die in John Shipman’s
tarry jacket; and that for two excellent good reasons: first,
that the death might take a man suddenly; and second, for the
horror of that great, salt smother and welter under my foot
here”—and Lawless stamped with his foot.
“Howbeit,” he went on, “an I die not a
sailor’s death, and that this night, I shall owe a tall
candle to our Lady.”</p>
<p>“Is it so?” asked Dick.</p>
<p>“It is right so,” replied the outlaw.
“Do ye not feel how heavy and dull she moves upon the
waves? Do ye not hear the water washing in her hold?
She will scarce mind the rudder even now. Bide till she has
settled a bit lower; and she will either go down below your boots
like a stone image, or drive ashore here, under our lee, and come
all to pieces like a twist of string.”</p>
<p>“Ye speak with a good courage,” returned
Dick. “Ye are not then appalled?”</p>
<p>“Why, master,” answered Lawless, “if ever a
man had an ill crew to come to port with, it is I—a
renegade friar, a thief, and all the rest on’t. Well,
ye may wonder, but I keep a good hope in my wallet; and if that I
be to drown, I will drown with a bright eye, Master Shelton, and
a steady hand.”</p>
<p>Dick returned no answer; but he was surprised to find the old
vagabond of so resolute a temper, and fearing some fresh violence
or treachery, set forth upon his quest for three sure men.
The great bulk of the men had now deserted the deck, which was
continually wetted with the flying sprays, and where they lay
exposed to the shrewdness of the winter wind. They had
gathered, instead, into the hold of the merchandise, among the
butts of wine, and lighted by two swinging lanterns.</p>
<p>Here a few kept up the form of revelry, and toasted each other
deep in Arblaster’s Gascony wine. But as the Good
Hope continued to tear through the smoking waves, and toss her
stem and stern alternately high in air and deep into white foam,
the number of these jolly companions diminished with every moment
and with every lurch. Many sat apart, tending their hurts,
but the majority were already prostrated with sickness, and lay
moaning in the bilge.</p>
<p>Greensheve, Cuckow, and a young fellow of Lord Foxham’s
whom Dick had already remarked for his intelligence and spirit,
were still, however, both fit to understand and willing to
obey. These Dick set, as a body-guard, about the person of
the steersman, and then, with a last look at the black sky and
sea, he turned and went below into the cabin, whither Lord Foxham
had been carried by his servants.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER VI—THE GOOD HOPE (concluded)</h3>
<p>The moans of the wounded baron blended with the wailing of the
ship’s dog. The poor animal, whether he was merely
sick at heart to be separated from his friends, or whether he
indeed recognised some peril in the labouring of the ship, raised
his cries, like minute-guns, above the roar of wave and weather;
and the more superstitious of the men heard, in these sounds, the
knell of the Good Hope.</p>
<p>Lord Foxham had been laid in a berth upon a fur cloak. A
little lamp burned dim before the Virgin in the bulkhead, and by
its glimmer Dick could see the pale countenance and hollow eyes
of the hurt man.</p>
<p>“I am sore hurt,” said he. “Come near
to my side, young Shelton; let there be one by me who, at least,
is gentle born; for after having lived nobly and richly all the
days of my life, this is a sad pass that I should get my hurt in
a little ferreting skirmish, and die here, in a foul, cold ship
upon the sea, among broken men and churls.”</p>
<p>“Nay, my lord,” said Dick, “I pray rather to
the saints that ye will recover you of your hurt, and come soon
and sound ashore.”</p>
<p>“How!” demanded his lordship. “Come
sound ashore? There is, then, a question of it?”</p>
<p>“The ship laboureth—the sea is grievous and
contrary,” replied the lad; “and by what I can learn
of my fellow that steereth us, we shall do well, indeed, if we
come dryshod to land.”</p>
<p>“Ha!” said the baron, gloomily, “thus shall
every terror attend upon the passage of my soul! Sir, pray rather
to live hard, that ye may die easy, than to be fooled and fluted
all through life, as to the pipe and tabor, and, in the last
hour, be plunged among misfortunes! Howbeit, I have that
upon my mind that must not be delayed. We have no priest
aboard?”</p>
<p>“None,” replied Dick.</p>
<p>“Here, then, to my secular interests,” resumed
Lord Foxham: “ye must be as good a friend to me dead, as I
found you a gallant enemy when I was living. I fall in an
evil hour for me, for England, and for them that trusted
me. My men are being brought by Hamley—he that was
your rival; they will rendezvous in the long holm at Holywood;
this ring from off my finger will accredit you to represent mine
orders; and I shall write, besides, two words upon this paper,
bidding Hamley yield to you the damsel. Will he obey?
I know not.”</p>
<p>“But, my lord, what orders?” inquired Dick.</p>
<p>“Ay,” quoth the baron, “ay—the
orders;” and he looked upon Dick with hesitation.
“Are ye Lancaster or York?” he asked, at length.</p>
<p>“I shame to say it,” answered Dick, “I can
scarce clearly answer. But so much I think is certain:
since I serve with Ellis Duckworth, I serve the house of
York. Well, if that be so, I declare for York.”</p>
<p>“It is well,” returned the other; “it is
exceeding well. For, truly, had ye said Lancaster, I wot
not for the world what I had done. But sith ye are for
York, follow me. I came hither but to watch these lords at
Shoreby, while mine excellent young lord, Richard of Gloucester,
<SPAN name="citation1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote1" class="citation">[1]</SPAN> prepareth a sufficient force to fall
upon and scatter them. I have made me notes of their
strength, what watch they keep, and how they lie; and these I was
to deliver to my young lord on Sunday, an hour before noon, at
St. Bride’s Cross beside the forest. This tryst I am
not like to keep, but I pray you, of courtesy, to keep it in my
stead; and see that not pleasure, nor pain, tempest, wound, nor
pestilence withhold you from the hour and place, for the welfare
of England lieth upon this cast.”</p>
<p>“I do soberly take this up on me,” said
Dick. “In so far as in me lieth, your purpose shall
be done.”</p>
<p>“It is good,” said the wounded man. “My lord
duke shall order you farther, and if ye obey him with spirit and
good will, then is your fortune made. Give me the lamp a
little nearer to mine eyes, till that I write these words for
you.”</p>
<p>He wrote a note “to his worshipful kinsman, Sir John
Hamley;” and then a second, which he left without external
superscripture.</p>
<p>“This is for the duke,” he said. “The
word is ‘England and Edward,’ and the counter,
‘England and York.’”</p>
<p>“And Joanna, my lord?” asked Dick.</p>
<p>“Nay, ye must get Joanna how ye can,” replied the
baron. “I have named you for my choice in both these
letters; but ye must get her for yourself, boy. I have
tried, as ye see here before you, and have lost my life.
More could no man do.”</p>
<p>By this time the wounded man began to be very weary; and Dick,
putting the precious papers in his bosom, bade him be of good
cheer, and left him to repose.</p>
<p>The day was beginning to break, cold and blue, with flying
squalls of snow. Close under the lee of the Good Hope, the
coast lay in alternate rocky headlands and sandy bays; and
further inland the wooded hill-tops of Tunstall showed along the
sky. Both the wind and the sea had gone down; but the
vessel wallowed deep, and scarce rose upon the waves.</p>
<p>Lawless was still fixed at the rudder; and by this time nearly
all the men had crawled on deck, and were now gazing, with blank
faces, upon the inhospitable coast.</p>
<p>“Are we going ashore?” asked Dick.</p>
<p>“Ay,” said Lawless, “unless we get first to
the bottom.”</p>
<p>And just then the ship rose so languidly to meet a sea, and
the water weltered so loudly in her hold, that Dick involuntarily
seized the steersman by the arm.</p>
<p>“By the mass!” cried Dick, as the bows of the Good
Hope reappeared above the foam, “I thought we had
foundered, indeed; my heart was at my throat.”</p>
<p>In the waist, Greensheve, Hawksley, and the better men of both
companies were busy breaking up the deck to build a raft; and to
these Dick joined himself, working the harder to drown the memory
of his predicament. But, even as he worked, every sea that
struck the poor ship, and every one of her dull lurches, as she
tumbled wallowing among the waves, recalled him with a horrid
pang to the immediate proximity of death.</p>
<p>Presently, looking up from his work, he saw that they were
close in below a promontory; a piece of ruinous cliff, against
the base of which the sea broke white and heavy, almost
overplumbed the deck; and, above that, again, a house appeared,
crowning a down.</p>
<p>Inside the bay the seas ran gayly, raised the Good Hope upon
their foam-flecked shoulders, carried her beyond the control of
the steersman, and in a moment dropped her, with a great
concussion, on the sand, and began to break over her half-mast
high, and roll her to and fro. Another great wave followed,
raised her again, and carried her yet farther in; and then a
third succeeded, and left her far inshore of the more dangerous
breakers, wedged upon a bank.</p>
<p>“Now, boys,” cried Lawless, “the saints have
had a care of us, indeed. The tide ebbs; let us but sit
down and drink a cup of wine, and before half an hour ye may all
march me ashore as safe as on a bridge.”</p>
<p>A barrel was broached, and, sitting in what shelter they could
find from the flying snow and spray, the shipwrecked company
handed the cup around, and sought to warm their bodies and
restore their spirits.</p>
<p>Dick, meanwhile, returned to Lord Foxham, who lay in great
perplexity and fear, the floor of his cabin washing knee-deep in
water, and the lamp, which had been his only light, broken and
extinguished by the violence of the blow.</p>
<p>“My lord,” said young Shelton, “fear not at
all; the saints are plainly for us; the seas have cast us high
upon a shoal, and as soon as the tide hath somewhat ebbed, we may
walk ashore upon our feet.”</p>
<p>It was nearly an hour before the vessel was sufficiently
deserted by the ebbing sea; and they could set forth for the
land, which appeared dimly before them through a veil of driving
snow.</p>
<p>Upon a hillock on one side of their way a party of men lay
huddled together, suspiciously observing the movements of the new
arrivals.</p>
<p>“They might draw near and offer us some comfort,”
Dick remarked.</p>
<p>“Well, an’ they come not to us, let us even turn
aside to them,” said Hawksley. “The sooner we
come to a good fire and a dry bed the better for my poor
lord.”</p>
<p>But they had not moved far in the direction of the hillock,
before the men, with one consent, rose suddenly to their feet,
and poured a flight of well-directed arrows on the shipwrecked
company.</p>
<p>“Back! back!” cried his lordship.
“Beware, in Heaven’s name, that ye reply
not.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” cried Greensheve, pulling an arrow from his
leather jack. “We are in no posture to fight, it is
certain, being drenching wet, dog-weary, and three-parts frozen;
but, for the love of old England, what aileth them to shoot thus
cruelly on their poor country people in distress?”</p>
<p>“They take us to be French pirates,” answered Lord
Foxham. “In these most troublesome and degenerate
days we cannot keep our own shores of England; but our old
enemies, whom we once chased on sea and land, do now range at
pleasure, robbing and slaughtering and burning. It is the
pity and reproach of this poor land.”</p>
<p>The men upon the hillock lay, closely observing them, while
they trailed upward from the beach and wound inland among
desolate sand-hills; for a mile or so they even hung upon the
rear of the march, ready, at a sign, to pour another volley on
the weary and dispirited fugitives; and it was only when,
striking at length upon a firm high-road, Dick began to call his
men to some more martial order, that these jealous guardians of
the coast of England silently disappeared among the snow.
They had done what they desired; they had protected their own
homes and farms, their own families and cattle; and their private
interest being thus secured, it mattered not the weight of a
straw to any one of them, although the Frenchmen should carry
blood and fire to every other parish in the realm of England.</p>
<h2>BOOK IV—THE DISGUISE</h2>
<h3>CHAPTER I—THE DEN</h3>
<p>The place where Dick had struck the line of a high-road was
not far from Holywood, and within nine or ten miles of
Shoreby-on-the-Till; and here, after making sure that they were
pursued no longer, the two bodies separated. Lord
Foxham’s followers departed, carrying their wounded master
towards the comfort and security of the great abbey; and Dick, as
he saw them wind away and disappear in the thick curtain of the
falling snow, was left alone with near upon a dozen outlaws, the
last remainder of his troop of volunteers.</p>
<p>Some were wounded; one and all were furious at their
ill-success and long exposure; and though they were now too cold
and hungry to do more, they grumbled and cast sullen looks upon
their leaders. Dick emptied his purse among them, leaving
himself nothing; thanked them for the courage they had displayed,
though he could have found it more readily in his heart to rate
them for poltroonery; and having thus somewhat softened the
effect of his prolonged misfortune, despatched them to find their
way, either severally or in pairs, to Shoreby and the Goat and
Bagpipes.</p>
<p>For his own part, influenced by what he had seen on board of
the Good Hope, he chose Lawless to be his companion on the
walk. The snow was falling, without pause or variation, in
one even, blinding cloud; the wind had been strangled, and now
blew no longer; and the whole world was blotted out and sheeted
down below that silent inundation. There was great danger
of wandering by the way and perishing in drifts; and Lawless,
keeping half a step in front of his companion, and holding his
head forward like a hunting dog upon the scent, inquired his way
of every tree, and studied out their path as though he were
conning a ship among dangers.</p>
<p>About a mile into the forest they came to a place where
several ways met, under a grove of lofty and contorted
oaks. Even in the narrow horizon of the falling snow, it
was a spot that could not fail to be recognised; and Lawless
evidently recognised it with particular delight.</p>
<p>“Now, Master Richard,” said he, “an y’
are not too proud to be the guest of a man who is neither a
gentleman by birth nor so much as a good Christian, I can offer
you a cup of wine and a good fire to melt the marrow in your
frozen bones.”</p>
<p>“Lead on, Will,” answered Dick. “A cup
of wine and a good fire! Nay, I would go a far way round to
see them.”</p>
<p>Lawless turned aside under the bare branches of the grove,
and, walking resolutely forward for some time, came to a steepish
hollow or den, that had now drifted a quarter full of snow.
On the verge, a great beech-tree hung, precariously rooted; and
here the old outlaw, pulling aside some bushy underwood, bodily
disappeared into the earth.</p>
<p>The beech had, in some violent gale, been half-uprooted, and
had torn up a considerable stretch of turf and it was under this
that old Lawless had dug out his forest hiding-place. The
roots served him for rafters, the turf was his thatch; for walls
and floor he had his mother the earth. Rude as it was, the
hearth in one corner, blackened by fire, and the presence in
another of a large oaken chest well fortified with iron, showed
it at one glance to be the den of a man, and not the burrow of a
digging beast.</p>
<p>Though the snow had drifted at the mouth and sifted in upon
the floor of this earth cavern, yet was the air much warmer than
without; and when Lawless had struck a spark, and the dry furze
bushes had begun to blaze and crackle on the hearth, the place
assumed, even to the eye, an air of comfort and of home.</p>
<p>With a sigh of great contentment, Lawless spread his broad
hands before the fire, and seemed to breathe the smoke.</p>
<p>“Here, then,” he said, “is this old
Lawless’s rabbit-hole; pray Heaven there come no
terrier! Far I have rolled hither and thither, and here and
about, since that I was fourteen years of mine age and first ran
away from mine abbey, with the sacrist’s gold chain and a
mass-book that I sold for four marks. I have been in
England and France and Burgundy, and in Spain, too, on a
pilgrimage for my poor soul; and upon the sea, which is no
man’s country. But here is my place, Master
Shelton. This is my native land, this burrow in the
earth! Come rain or wind—and whether it’s
April, and the birds all sing, and the blossoms fall about my
bed—or whether it’s winter, and I sit alone with my
good gossip the fire, and robin red breast twitters in the
woods—here, is my church and market, and my wife and
child. It’s here I come back to, and it’s here,
so please the saints, that I would like to die.”</p>
<p>“’Tis a warm corner, to be sure,” replied
Dick, “and a pleasant, and a well hid.”</p>
<p>“It had need to be,” returned Lawless, “for
an they found it, Master Shelton, it would break my heart.
But here,” he added, burrowing with his stout fingers in
the sandy floor, “here is my wine cellar; and ye shall have
a flask of excellent strong stingo.”</p>
<p>Sure enough, after but a little digging, he produced a big
leathern bottle of about a gallon, nearly three-parts full of a
very heady and sweet wine; and when they had drunk to each other
comradely, and the fire had been replenished and blazed up again,
the pair lay at full length, thawing and steaming, and divinely
warm.</p>
<p>“Master Shelton,” observed the outlaw,
“y’ ’ave had two mischances this last while,
and y’ are like to lose the maid—do I take it
aright?”</p>
<p>“Aright!” returned Dick, nodding his head.</p>
<p>“Well, now,” continued Lawless, “hear an old
fool that hath been nigh-hand everything, and seen nigh-hand
all! Ye go too much on other people’s errands, Master
Dick. Ye go on Ellis’s; but he desireth rather the
death of Sir Daniel. Ye go on Lord Foxham’s;
well—the saints preserve him!—doubtless he meaneth
well. But go ye upon your own, good Dick. Come right
to the maid’s side. Court her, lest that she forget
you. Be ready; and when the chance shall come, off with her
at the saddle-bow.”</p>
<p>“Ay, but, Lawless, beyond doubt she is now in Sir
Daniel’s own mansion.” answered Dick.</p>
<p>“Thither, then, go we,” replied the outlaw.</p>
<p>Dick stared at him.</p>
<p>“Nay, I mean it,” nodded Lawless. “And
if y’ are of so little faith, and stumble at a word, see
here!”</p>
<p>And the outlaw, taking a key from about his neck, opened the
oak chest, and dipping and groping deep among its contents,
produced first a friar’s robe, and next a girdle of rope;
and then a huge rosary of wood, heavy enough to be counted as a
weapon.</p>
<p>“Here,” he said, “is for you. On with
them!”</p>
<p>And then, when Dick had clothed himself in this clerical
disguise, Lawless produced some colours and a pencil, and
proceeded, with the greatest cunning, to disguise his face.
The eyebrows he thickened and produced; to the moustache, which
was yet hardly visible, he rendered a like service; while, by a
few lines around the eye, he changed the expression and increased
the apparent age of this young monk.</p>
<p>“Now,” he resumed, “when I have done the
like, we shall make as bonny a pair of friars as the eye could
wish. Boldly to Sir Daniel’s we shall go, and there
be hospitably welcome for the love of Mother Church.”</p>
<p>“And how, dear Lawless,” cried the lad,
“shall I repay you?”</p>
<p>“Tut, brother,” replied the outlaw, “I do
naught but for my pleasure. Mind not for me. I am
one, by the mass, that mindeth for himself. When that I
lack, I have a long tongue and a voice like the monastery
bell—I do ask, my son; and where asking faileth, I do most
usually take.”</p>
<p>The old rogue made a humorous grimace; and although Dick was
displeased to lie under so great favours to so equivocal a
personage, he was yet unable to restrain his mirth.</p>
<p>With that, Lawless returned to the big chest, and was soon
similarly disguised; but, below his gown, Dick wondered to
observe him conceal a sheaf of black arrows.</p>
<p>“Wherefore do ye that?” asked the lad.
“Wherefore arrows, when ye take no bow?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” replied Lawless, lightly, “’tis
like there will be heads broke—not to say backs—ere
you and I win sound from where we’re going to; and if any
fall, I would our fellowship should come by the credit
on’t. A black arrow, Master Dick, is the seal of our
abbey; it showeth you who writ the bill.”</p>
<p>“An ye prepare so carefully,” said Dick, “I
have here some papers that, for mine own sake, and the interest
of those that trusted me, were better left behind than found upon
my body. Where shall I conceal them, Will?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” replied Lawless, “I will go forth
into the wood and whistle me three verses of a song; meanwhile,
do you bury them where ye please, and smooth the sand upon the
place.”</p>
<p>“Never!” cried Richard. “I trust you,
man. I were base indeed if I not trusted you.”</p>
<p>“Brother, y’ are but a child,” replied the
old outlaw, pausing and turning his face upon Dick from the
threshold of the den. “I am a kind old Christian, and
no traitor to men’s blood, and no sparer of mine own in a
friend’s jeopardy. But, fool, child, I am a thief by
trade and birth and habit. If my bottle were empty and my
mouth dry, I would rob you, dear child, as sure as I love,
honour, and admire your parts and person! Can it be clearer
spoken? No.”</p>
<p>And he stumped forth through the bushes with a snap of his big
fingers.</p>
<p>Dick, thus left alone, after a wondering thought upon the
inconsistencies of his companion’s character, hastily
produced, reviewed, and buried his papers. One only he
reserved to carry along with him, since it in nowise compromised
his friends, and yet might serve him, in a pinch, against Sir
Daniel. That was the knight’s own letter to Lord
Wensleydale, sent by Throgmorton, on the morrow of the defeat at
Risingham, and found next day by Dick upon the body of the
messenger.</p>
<p>Then, treading down the embers of the fire, Dick left the den,
and rejoined the old outlaw, who stood awaiting him under the
leafless oaks, and was already beginning to be powdered by the
falling snow. Each looked upon the other, and each laughed,
so thorough and so droll was the disguise.</p>
<p>“Yet I would it were but summer and a clear day,”
grumbled the outlaw, “that I might see myself in the mirror
of a pool. There be many of Sir Daniel’s men that
know me; and if we fell to be recognised, there might be two
words for you, brother, but as for me, in a paternoster while, I
should be kicking in a rope’s-end.”</p>
<p>Thus they set forth together along the road to Shoreby, which,
in this part of its course, kept near along the margin or the
forest, coming forth, from time to time, in the open country, and
passing beside poor folks’ houses and small farms.</p>
<p>Presently at sight of one of these, Lawless pulled up.</p>
<p>“Brother Martin,” he said, in a voice capitally
disguised, and suited to his monkish robe, “let us enter
and seek alms from these poor sinners. <i>Pax
vobiscum</i>! Ay,” he added, in his own voice,
“’tis as I feared; I have somewhat lost the whine of
it; and by your leave, good Master Shelton, ye must suffer me to
practise in these country places, before that I risk my fat neck
by entering Sir Daniel’s. But look ye a little, what
an excellent thing it is to be a Jack-of-all-trades! An I
had not been a shipman, ye had infallibly gone down in the Good
Hope; an I had not been a thief, I could not have painted me your
face; and but that I had been a Grey Friar, and sung loud in the
choir, and ate hearty at the board, I could not have carried this
disguise, but the very dogs would have spied us out and barked at
us for shams.”</p>
<p>He was by this time close to the window of the farm, and he
rose on his tip-toes and peeped in.</p>
<p>“Nay,” he cried, “better and better.
We shall here try our false faces with a vengeance, and have a
merry jest on Brother Capper to boot.”</p>
<p>And so saying, he opened the door and led the way into the
house.</p>
<p>Three of their own company sat at the table, greedily
eating. Their daggers, stuck beside them in the board, and
the black and menacing looks which they continued to shower upon
the people of the house, proved that they owed their
entertainment rather to force than favour. On the two
monks, who now, with a sort of humble dignity, entered the
kitchen of the farm, they seemed to turn with a particular
resentment; and one—it was John Capper in person—who
seemed to play the leading part, instantly and rudely ordered
them away.</p>
<p>“We want no beggars here!” he cried.</p>
<p>But another—although he was as far from recognising Dick
and Lawless—inclined to more moderate counsels.</p>
<p>“Not so,” he cried. “We be strong men,
and take; these be weak, and crave; but in the latter end these
shall be uppermost and we below. Mind him not, my father;
but come, drink of my cup, and give me a benediction.”</p>
<p>“Y’ are men of a light mind, carnal, and
accursed,” said the monk. “Now, may the saints
forbid that ever I should drink with such companions! But
here, for the pity I bear to sinners, here I do leave you a
blessed relic, the which, for your soul’s interest, I bid
you kiss and cherish.”</p>
<p>So far Lawless thundered upon them like a preaching friar; but
with these words he drew from under his robe a black arrow,
tossed it on the board in front of the three startled outlaws,
turned in the same instant, and, taking Dick along with him, was
out of the room and out of sight among the falling snow before
they had time to utter a word or move a finger.</p>
<p>“So,” he said, “we have proved our false
faces, Master Shelton. I will now adventure my poor carcase
where ye please.”</p>
<p>“Good!” returned Richard. “It irks me
to be doing. Set we on for Shoreby!”</p>
<h3>CHAPTER II—“IN MINE ENEMIES’ HOUSE”</h3>
<p>Sir Daniel’s residence in Shoreby was a tall,
commodious, plastered mansion, framed in carven oak, and covered
by a low-pitched roof of thatch. To the back there
stretched a garden, full of fruit-trees, alleys, and thick
arbours, and overlooked from the far end by the tower of the
abbey church.</p>
<p>The house might contain, upon a pinch, the retinue of a
greater person than Sir Daniel; but even now it was filled with
hubbub. The court rang with arms and horseshoe-iron; the
kitchens roared with cookery like a bees’-hive; minstrels,
and the players of instruments, and the cries of tumblers,
sounded from the hall. Sir Daniel, in his profusion, in the
gaiety and gallantry of his establishment, rivalled with Lord
Shoreby, and eclipsed Lord Risingham.</p>
<p>All guests were made welcome. Minstrels, tumblers,
players of chess, the sellers of relics, medicines, perfumes, and
enchantments, and along with these every sort of priest, friar,
or pilgrim, were made welcome to the lower table, and slept
together in the ample lofts, or on the bare boards of the long
dining-hall.</p>
<p>On the afternoon following the wreck of the Good Hope, the
buttery, the kitchens, the stables, the covered cartshed that
surrounded two sides of the court, were all crowded by idle
people, partly belonging to Sir Daniel’s establishment, and
attired in his livery of murrey and blue, partly nondescript
strangers attracted to the town by greed, and received by the
knight through policy, and because it was the fashion of the
time.</p>
<p>The snow, which still fell without interruption, the extreme
chill of the air, and the approach of night, combined to keep
them under shelter. Wine, ale, and money were all
plentiful; many sprawled gambling in the straw of the barn, many
were still drunken from the noontide meal. To the eye of a
modern it would have looked like the sack of a city; to the eye
of a contemporary it was like any other rich and noble household
at a festive season.</p>
<p>Two monks—a young and an old—had arrived late, and
were now warming themselves at a bonfire in a corner of the
shed. A mixed crowd surrounded them—jugglers,
mountebanks, and soldiers; and with these the elder of the two
had soon engaged so brisk a conversation, and exchanged so many
loud guffaws and country witticisms, that the group momentarily
increased in number.</p>
<p>The younger companion, in whom the reader has already
recognised Dick Shelton, sat from the first somewhat backward,
and gradually drew himself away. He listened, indeed,
closely, but he opened not his mouth; and by the grave expression
of his countenance, he made but little account of his
companion’s pleasantries.</p>
<p>At last his eye, which travelled continually to and fro, and
kept a guard upon all the entrances of the house, lit upon a
little procession entering by the main gate and crossing the
court in an oblique direction. Two ladies, muffled in thick
furs, led the way, and were followed by a pair of waiting-women
and four stout men-at-arms. The next moment they had
disappeared within the house; and Dick, slipping through the
crowd of loiterers in the shed, was already giving hot
pursuit.</p>
<p>“The taller of these twain was Lady Brackley,” he
thought; “and where Lady Brackley is, Joan will not be
far.”</p>
<p>At the door of the house the four men-at-arms had ceased to
follow, and the ladies were now mounting the stairway of polished
oak, under no better escort than that of the two
waiting-women. Dick followed close behind. It was
already the dusk of the day; and in the house the darkness of the
night had almost come. On the stair-landings, torches
flared in iron holders; down the long, tapestried corridors, a
lamp burned by every door. And where the door stood open,
Dick could look in upon arras-covered walls and rush-bescattered
floors, glowing in the light of the wood fires.</p>
<p>Two floors were passed, and at every landing the younger and
shorter of the two ladies had looked back keenly at the
monk. He, keeping his eyes lowered, and affecting the
demure manners that suited his disguise, had but seen her once,
and was unaware that he had attracted her attention. And
now, on the third floor, the party separated, the younger lady
continuing to ascend alone, the other, followed by the
waiting-maids, descending the corridor to the right.</p>
<p>Dick mounted with a swift foot, and holding to the corner,
thrust forth his head and followed the three women with his
eyes. Without turning or looking behind them, they
continued to descend the corridor.</p>
<p>“It is right well,” thought Dick. “Let
me but know my Lady Brackley’s chamber, and it will go hard
an I find not Dame Hatch upon an errand.”</p>
<p>And just then a hand was laid upon his shoulder, and, with a
bound and a choked cry, he turned to grapple his assailant.</p>
<p>He was somewhat abashed to find, in the person whom he had so
roughly seized, the short young lady in the furs. She, on
her part, was shocked and terrified beyond expression, and hung
trembling in his grasp.</p>
<p>“Madam,” said Dick, releasing her, “I cry
you a thousand pardons; but I have no eyes behind, and, by the
mass, I could not tell ye were a maid.”</p>
<p>The girl continued to look at him, but, by this time, terror
began to be succeeded by surprise, and surprise by
suspicion. Dick, who could read these changes on her face,
became alarmed for his own safety in that hostile house.</p>
<p>“Fair maid,” he said, affecting easiness,
“suffer me to kiss your hand, in token ye forgive my
roughness, and I will even go.”</p>
<p>“Y’ are a strange monk, young sir,” returned
the young lady, looking him both boldly and shrewdly in the face;
“and now that my first astonishment hath somewhat passed
away, I can spy the layman in each word you utter. What do
ye here? Why are ye thus sacrilegiously tricked out?
Come ye in peace or war? And why spy ye after Lady Brackley
like a thief?”</p>
<p>“Madam,” quoth Dick, “of one thing I pray
you to be very sure: I am no thief. And even if I come here
in war, as in some degree I do, I make no war upon fair maids,
and I hereby entreat them to copy me so far, and to leave me
be. For, indeed, fair mistress, cry out—if such be
your pleasure—cry but once, and say what ye have seen, and
the poor gentleman before you is merely a dead man. I
cannot think ye would be cruel,” added Dick; and taking the
girl’s hand gently in both of his, he looked at her with
courteous admiration.</p>
<p>“Are ye, then, a spy—a Yorkist?” asked the
maid.</p>
<p>“Madam,” he replied, “I am indeed a Yorkist,
and, in some sort, a spy. But that which bringeth me into
this house, the same which will win for me the pity and interest
of your kind heart, is neither of York nor Lancaster. I
will wholly put my life in your discretion. I am a lover,
and my name—”</p>
<p>But here the young lady clapped her hand suddenly upon
Dick’s mouth, looked hastily up and down and east and west,
and, seeing the coast clear, began to drag the young man, with
great strength and vehemence, up-stairs.</p>
<p>“Hush!” she said, “and come! Shalt
talk hereafter.”</p>
<p>Somewhat bewildered, Dick suffered himself to be pulled
up-stairs, bustled along a corridor, and thrust suddenly into a
chamber, lit, like so many of the others, by a blazing log upon
the hearth.</p>
<p>“Now,” said the young lady, forcing him down upon
a stool, “sit ye there and attend my sovereign good
pleasure. I have life and death over you, and I will not
scruple to abuse my power. Look to yourself; y’
’ave cruelly mauled my arm. He knew not I was a maid,
quoth he! Had he known I was a maid, he had ta’en his
belt to me, forsooth!”</p>
<p>And with these words, she whipped out of the room and left
Dick gaping with wonder, and not very sure if he were dreaming or
awake.</p>
<p>“Ta’en my belt to her!” he repeated.
“Ta’en my belt to her!” And the
recollection of that evening in the forest flowed back upon his
mind, and he once more saw Matcham’s wincing body and
beseeching eyes.</p>
<p>And then he was recalled to the dangers of the present.
In the next room he heard a stir, as of a person moving; then
followed a sigh, which sounded strangely near; and then the
rustle of skirts and tap of feet once more began. As he
stood hearkening, he saw the arras wave along the wall; there was
the sound of a door being opened, the hangings divided, and, lamp
in hand, Joanna Sedley entered the apartment.</p>
<p>She was attired in costly stuffs of deep and warm colours,
such as befit the winter and the snow. Upon her head, her
hair had been gathered together and became her as a crown.
And she, who had seemed so little and so awkward in the attire of
Matcham, was now tall like a young willow, and swam across the
floor as though she scorned the drudgery of walking.</p>
<p>Without a start, without a tremor, she raised her lamp and
looked at the young monk.</p>
<p>“What make ye here, good brother?” she
inquired. “Ye are doubtless ill-directed. Whom
do ye require? And she set her lamp upon the bracket.</p>
<p>“Joanna,” said Dick; and then his voice failed
him. “Joanna,” he began again, “ye said
ye loved me; and the more fool I, but I believed it!”</p>
<p>“Dick!” she cried. “Dick!”</p>
<p>And then, to the wonder of the lad, this beautiful and tall
young lady made but one step of it, and threw her arms about his
neck and gave him a hundred kisses all in one.</p>
<p>“Oh, the fool fellow!” she cried. “Oh,
dear Dick! Oh, if ye could see yourself!
Alack!” she added, pausing. “I have spoilt you,
Dick! I have knocked some of the paint off. But that
can be mended. What cannot be mended, Dick—or I much
fear it cannot!—is my marriage with Lord
Shoreby.”</p>
<p>“Is it decided, then?” asked the lad.</p>
<p>“To-morrow, before noon, Dick, in the abbey
church,” she answered, “John Matcham and Joanna
Sedley both shall come to a right miserable end. There is
no help in tears, or I could weep mine eyes out. I have not
spared myself to pray, but Heaven frowns on my petition.
And, dear Dick—good Dick—but that ye can get me forth
of this house before the morning, we must even kiss and say
good-bye.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Dick, “not I; I will never say
that word. ’Tis like despair; but while there’s
life, Joanna, there is hope. Yet will I hope. Ay, by
the mass, and triumph! Look ye, now, when ye were but a
name to me, did I not follow—did I not rouse good
men—did I not stake my life upon the quarrel? And now
that I have seen you for what ye are—the fairest maid and
stateliest of England—think ye I would turn?—if the
deep sea were there, I would straight through it; if the way were
full of lions, I would scatter them like mice.”</p>
<p>“Ay,” she said, dryly, “ye make a great ado
about a sky-blue robe!”</p>
<p>“Nay, Joan,” protested Dick, “’tis not
alone the robe. But, lass, ye were disguised. Here am
I disguised; and, to the proof, do I not cut a figure of
fun—a right fool’s figure?”</p>
<p>“Ay, Dick, an’ that ye do!” she answered,
smiling.</p>
<p>“Well, then!” he returned, triumphant.
“So was it with you, poor Matcham, in the forest. In
sooth, ye were a wench to laugh at. But now!”</p>
<p>So they ran on, holding each other by both hands, exchanging
smiles and lovely looks, and melting minutes into seconds; and so
they might have continued all night long. But presently
there was a noise behind them; and they were aware of the short
young lady, with her finger on her lips.</p>
<p>“Saints!” she cried, “but what a noise ye
keep! Can ye not speak in compass? And now, Joanna,
my fair maid of the woods, what will ye give your gossip for
bringing you your sweetheart?”</p>
<p>Joanna ran to her, by way of answer, and embraced her
fierily.</p>
<p>“And you, sir,” added the young lady, “what
do ye give me?”</p>
<p>“Madam,” said Dick, “I would fain offer to
pay you in the same money.”</p>
<p>“Come, then,” said the lady, “it is
permitted you.”</p>
<p>But Dick, blushing like a peony, only kissed her hand.</p>
<p>“What ails ye at my face, fair sir?” she inquired,
curtseying to the very ground; and then, when Dick had at length
and most tepidly embraced her, “Joanna,” she added,
“your sweetheart is very backward under your eyes; but I
warrant you, when first we met he was more ready. I am all
black and blue, wench; trust me never, if I be not black and
blue! And now,” she continued, “have ye said
your sayings? for I must speedily dismiss the paladin.”</p>
<p>But at this they both cried out that they had said nothing,
that the night was still very young, and that they would not be
separated so early.</p>
<p>“And supper?” asked the young lady.
“Must we not go down to supper?”</p>
<p>“Nay, to be sure!” cried Joan. “I had
forgotten.”</p>
<p>“Hide me, then,” said Dick, “put me behind
the arras, shut me in a chest, or what ye will, so that I may be
here on your return. Indeed, fair lady,” he added,
“bear this in mind, that we are sore bested, and may never
look upon each other’s face from this night forward till we
die.”</p>
<p>At this the young lady melted; and when, a little after, the
bell summoned Sir Daniel’s household to the board, Dick was
planted very stiffly against the wall, at a place where a
division in the tapestry permitted him to breathe the more
freely, and even to see into the room.</p>
<p>He had not been long in this position, when he was somewhat
strangely disturbed. The silence, in that upper storey of
the house, was only broken by the flickering of the flames and
the hissing of a green log in the chimney; but presently, to
Dick’s strained hearing, there came the sound of some one
walking with extreme precaution; and soon after the door opened,
and a little black-faced, dwarfish fellow, in Lord
Shoreby’s colours, pushed first his head, and then his
crooked body, into the chamber. His mouth was open, as
though to hear the better; and his eyes, which were very bright,
flitted restlessly and swiftly to and fro. He went round
and round the room, striking here and there upon the hangings;
but Dick, by a miracle, escaped his notice. Then he looked
below the furniture, and examined the lamp; and, at last, with an
air of cruel disappointment, was preparing to go away as silently
as he had come, when down he dropped upon his knees, picked up
something from among the rushes on the floor, examined it, and,
with every signal of delight, concealed it in the wallet at his
belt.</p>
<p>Dick’s heart sank, for the object in question was a
tassel from his own girdle; and it was plain to him that this
dwarfish spy, who took a malign delight in his employment, would
lose no time in bearing it to his master, the baron. He was
half-tempted to throw aside the arras, fall upon the scoundrel,
and, at the risk of his life, remove the telltale token.
And while he was still hesitating, a new cause of concern was
added. A voice, hoarse and broken by drink, began to be
audible from the stair; and presently after, uneven, wandering,
and heavy footsteps sounded without along the passage.</p>
<p>“What make ye here, my merry men, among the greenwood
shaws?” sang the voice. “What make ye
here? Hey! sots, what make ye here?” it added, with a
rattle of drunken laughter; and then, once more breaking into
song:</p>
<blockquote><p>“If ye should drink the clary wine,<br/>
Fat Friar John, ye friend o’ mine—<br/>
If I should eat, and ye should drink,<br/>
Who shall sing the mass, d’ye think?”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Lawless, alas! rolling drunk, was wandering the house, seeking
for a corner wherein to slumber off the effect of his
potations. Dick inwardly raged. The spy, at first
terrified, had grown reassured as he found he had to deal with an
intoxicated man, and now, with a movement of cat-like rapidity,
slipped from the chamber, and was gone from Richard’s
eyes.</p>
<p>What was to be done? If he lost touch of Lawless for the
night, he was left impotent, whether to plan or carry forth
Joanna’s rescue. If, on the other hand, he dared to
address the drunken outlaw, the spy might still be lingering
within sight, and the most fatal consequences ensue.</p>
<p>It was, nevertheless, upon this last hazard that Dick
decided. Slipping from behind the tapestry, he stood ready
in the doorway of the chamber, with a warning hand
upraised. Lawless, flushed crimson, with his eyes injected,
vacillating on his feet, drew still unsteadily nearer. At
last he hazily caught sight of his commander, and, in despite of
Dick’s imperious signals, hailed him instantly and loudly
by his name.</p>
<p>Dick leaped upon and shook the drunkard furiously.</p>
<p>“Beast!” he hissed—“beast and no
man! It is worse than treachery to be so witless. We
may all be shent for thy sotting.”</p>
<p>But Lawless only laughed and staggered, and tried to clap
young Shelton on the back.</p>
<p>And just then Dick’s quick ear caught a rapid brushing
in the arras. He leaped towards the sound, and the next
moment a piece of the wall-hanging had been torn down, and Dick
and the spy were sprawling together in its folds. Over and
over they rolled, grappling for each other’s throat, and
still baffled by the arras, and still silent in their deadly
fury. But Dick was by much the stronger, and soon the spy
lay prostrate under his knee, and, with a single stroke of the
long poniard, ceased to breathe.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER III—THE DEAD SPY</h3>
<p>Throughout this furious and rapid passage, Lawless had looked
on helplessly, and even when all was over, and Dick, already
re-arisen to his feet, was listening with the most passionate
attention to the distant bustle in the lower storeys of the
house, the old outlaw was still wavering on his legs like a shrub
in a breeze of wind, and still stupidly staring on the face of
the dead man.</p>
<p>“It is well,” said Dick, at length; “they
have not heard us, praise the saints! But, now, what shall
I do with this poor spy? At least, I will take my tassel
from his wallet.”</p>
<p>So saying, Dick opened the wallet; within he found a few
pieces of money, the tassel, and a letter addressed to Lord
Wensleydale, and sealed with my Lord Shoreby’s seal.
The name awoke Dick’s recollection; and he instantly broke
the wax and read the contents of the letter. It was short,
but, to Dick’s delight, it gave evident proof that Lord
Shoreby was treacherously corresponding with the House of
York.</p>
<p>The young fellow usually carried his ink-horn and implements
about him, and so now, bending a knee beside the body of the dead
spy, he was able to write these words upon a corner of the
paper:</p>
<blockquote><p>My Lord of Shoreby, ye that writt the letter, wot
ye why your man is ded? But let me rede you, marry not.</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Jon
Amend-All</span>.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>He laid this paper on the breast of the corpse; and then
Lawless, who had been looking on upon these last manoeuvres with
some flickering returns of intelligence, suddenly drew a black
arrow from below his robe, and therewith pinned the paper in its
place. The sight of this disrespect, or, as it almost
seemed, cruelty to the dead, drew a cry of horror from young
Shelton; but the old outlaw only laughed.</p>
<p>“Nay, I will have the credit for mine order,” he
hiccupped. “My jolly boys must have the credit
on’t—the credit, brother;” and then, shutting
his eyes tight and opening his mouth like a precentor, he began
to thunder, in a formidable voice:</p>
<blockquote><p>“If ye should drink the clary
wine”—</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“Peace, sot!” cried Dick, and thrust him hard
against the wall. “In two words—if so be that
such a man can understand me who hath more wine than wit in
him—in two words, and, a-Mary’s name, begone out of
this house, where, if ye continue to abide, ye will not only hang
yourself, but me also! Faith, then, up foot! be yare, or,
by the mass, I may forget that I am in some sort your captain and
in some your debtor! Go!”</p>
<p>The sham monk was now, in some degree, recovering the use of
his intelligence; and the ring in Dick’s voice, and the
glitter in Dick’s eye, stamped home the meaning of his
words.</p>
<p>“By the mass,” cried Lawless, “an I be not
wanted, I can go;” and he turned tipsily along the corridor
and proceeded to flounder down-stairs, lurching against the
wall.</p>
<p>So soon as he was out of sight, Dick returned to his
hiding-place, resolutely fixed to see the matter out.
Wisdom, indeed, moved him to be gone; but love and curiosity were
stronger.</p>
<p>Time passed slowly for the young man, bolt upright behind the
arras. The fire in the room began to die down, and the lamp
to burn low and to smoke. And still there was no word of
the return of any one to these upper quarters of the house; still
the faint hum and clatter of the supper party sounded from far
below; and still, under the thick fall of the snow, Shoreby town
lay silent upon every side.</p>
<p>At length, however, feet and voices began to draw near upon
the stair; and presently after several of Sir Daniel’s
guests arrived upon the landing, and, turning down the corridor,
beheld the torn arras and the body of the spy.</p>
<p>Some ran forward and some back, and all together began to cry
aloud.</p>
<p>At the sound of their cries, guests, men-at-arms, ladies,
servants, and, in a word, all the inhabitants of that great
house, came flying from every direction, and began to join their
voices to the tumult.</p>
<p>Soon a way was cleared, and Sir Daniel came forth in person,
followed by the bridegroom of the morrow, my Lord Shoreby.</p>
<p>“My lord,” said Sir Daniel, “have I not told
you of this knave Black Arrow? To the proof, behold
it! There it stands, and, by the rood, my gossip, in a man
of yours, or one that stole your colours!”</p>
<p>“In good sooth, it was a man of mine,” replied
Lord Shoreby, hanging back. “I would I had more
such. He was keen as a beagle and secret as a
mole.”</p>
<p>“Ay, gossip, truly?” asked Sir Daniel,
keenly. “And what came he smelling up so many stairs
in my poor mansion? But he will smell no more.”</p>
<p>“An’t please you, Sir Daniel,” said one,
“here is a paper written upon with some matter, pinned upon
his breast.”</p>
<p>“Give it me, arrow and all,” said the
knight. And when he had taken into his hand the shaft, he
continued for some time to gaze upon it in a sullen musing.
“Ay,” he said, addressing Lord Shoreby, “here
is a hate that followeth hard and close upon my heels. This
black stick, or its just likeness, shall yet bring me down.
And, gossip, suffer a plain knight to counsel you; and if these
hounds begin to wind you, flee! ’Tis like a
sickness—it still hangeth, hangeth upon the limbs.
But let us see what they have written. It is as I thought,
my lord; y’ are marked, like an old oak, by the woodman;
to-morrow or next day, by will come the axe. But what wrote
ye in a letter?”</p>
<p>Lord Shoreby snatched the paper from the arrow, read it,
crumpled it between his hands, and, overcoming the reluctance
which had hitherto withheld him from approaching, threw himself
on his knees beside the body and eagerly groped in the
wallet.</p>
<p>He rose to his feet with a somewhat unsettled countenance.</p>
<p>“Gossip,” he said, “I have indeed lost a
letter here that much imported; and could I lay my hand upon the
knave that took it, he should incontinently grace a halter.
But let us, first of all, secure the issues of the house.
Here is enough harm already, by St. George!”</p>
<p>Sentinels were posted close around the house and garden; a
sentinel on every landing of the stair, a whole troop in the main
entrance-hall; and yet another about the bonfire in the
shed. Sir Daniel’s followers were supplemented by
Lord Shoreby’s; there was thus no lack of men or weapons to
make the house secure, or to entrap a lurking enemy, should one
be there.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the body of the spy was carried out through the
falling snow and deposited in the abbey church.</p>
<p>It was not until these dispositions had been taken, and all
had returned to a decorous silence, that the two girls drew
Richard Shelton from his place of concealment, and made a full
report to him of what had passed. He, upon his side,
recounted the visit of the spy, his dangerous discovery, and
speedy end.</p>
<p>Joanna leaned back very faint against the curtained wall.</p>
<p>“It will avail but little,” she said.
“I shall be wed to-morrow, in the morning, after
all!”</p>
<p>“What!” cried her friend. “And here is
our paladin that driveth lions like mice! Ye have little
faith, of a surety. But come, friend lion-driver, give us
some comfort; speak, and let us hear bold counsels.”</p>
<p>Dick was confounded to be thus outfaced with his own
exaggerated words; but though he coloured, he still spoke
stoutly.</p>
<p>“Truly,” said he, “we are in straits.
Yet, could I but win out of this house for half an hour, I do
honestly tell myself that all might still go well; and for the
marriage, it should be prevented.”</p>
<p>“And for the lions,” mimicked the girl,
“they shall be driven.”</p>
<p>“I crave your excuse,” said Dick. “I
speak not now in any boasting humour, but rather as one inquiring
after help or counsel; for if I get not forth of this house and
through these sentinels, I can do less than naught. Take
me, I pray you, rightly.”</p>
<p>“Why said ye he was rustic, Joan?” the girl
inquired. “I warrant he hath a tongue in his head;
ready, soft, and bold is his speech at pleasure. What would
ye more?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” sighed Joanna, with a smile, “they
have changed me my friend Dick, ’tis sure enough.
When I beheld him, he was rough indeed. But it matters
little; there is no help for my hard case, and I must still be
Lady Shoreby!”</p>
<p>“Nay, then,” said Dick, “I will even make
the adventure. A friar is not much regarded; and if I found
a good fairy to lead me up, I may find another belike to carry me
down. How call they the name of this spy?”</p>
<p>“Rutter,” said the young lady; “and an
excellent good name to call him by. But how mean ye,
lion-driver? What is in your mind to do?”</p>
<p>“To offer boldly to go forth,” returned Dick;
“and if any stop me, to keep an unchanged countenance, and
say I go to pray for Rutter. They will be praying over his
poor clay even now.”</p>
<p>“The device is somewhat simple,” replied the girl,
“yet it may hold.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said young Shelton, “it is no device,
but mere boldness, which serveth often better in great
straits.”</p>
<p>“Ye say true,” she said. “Well, go,
a-Mary’s name, and may Heaven speed you! Ye leave
here a poor maid that loves you entirely, and another that is
most heartily your friend. Be wary, for their sakes, and
make not shipwreck of your safety.”</p>
<p>“Ay,” added Joanna, “go, Dick. Ye run
no more peril, whether ye go or stay. Go; ye take my heart
with you; the saints defend you!”</p>
<p>Dick passed the first sentry with so assured a countenance
that the fellow merely figeted and stared; but at the second
landing the man carried his spear across and bade him name his
business.</p>
<p>“<i>Pax vobiscum</i>,” answered Dick.
“I go to pray over the body of this poor Rutter.”</p>
<p>“Like enough,” returned the sentry; “but to
go alone is not permitted you.” He leaned over the
oaken balusters and whistled shrill. “One
cometh!” he cried; and then motioned Dick to pass.</p>
<p>At the foot of the stair he found the guard afoot and awaiting
his arrival; and when he had once more repeated his story, the
commander of the post ordered four men out to accompany him to
the church.</p>
<p>“Let him not slip, my lads,” he said.
“Bring him to Sir Oliver, on your lives!”</p>
<p>The door was then opened; one of the men took Dick by either
arm, another marched ahead with a link, and the fourth, with bent
bow and the arrow on the string, brought up the rear. In
this order they proceeded through the garden, under the thick
darkness of the night and the scattering snow, and drew near to
the dimly-illuminated windows of the abbey church.</p>
<p>At the western portal a picket of archers stood, taking what
shelter they could find in the hollow of the arched doorways, and
all powdered with the snow; and it was not until Dick’s
conductors had exchanged a word with these, that they were
suffered to pass forth and enter the nave of the sacred
edifice.</p>
<p>The church was doubtfully lighted by the tapers upon the great
altar, and by a lamp or two that swung from the arched roof
before the private chapels of illustrious families. In the
midst of the choir the dead spy lay, his limbs piously composed,
upon a bier.</p>
<p>A hurried mutter of prayer sounded along the arches; cowled
figures knelt in the stalls of the choir, and on the steps of the
high altar a priest in pontifical vestments celebrated mass.</p>
<p>Upon this fresh entrance, one of the cowled figures arose,
and, coming down the steps which elevated the level of the choir
above that of the nave, demanded from the leader of the four men
what business brought him to the church. Out of respect for
the service and the dead, they spoke in guarded tones; but the
echoes of that huge, empty building caught up their words, and
hollowly repeated and repeated them along the aisles.</p>
<p>“A monk!” returned Sir Oliver (for he it was),
when he had heard the report of the archer. “My
brother, I looked not for your coming,” he added, turning
to young Shelton. “In all civility, who are ye? and
at whose instance do ye join your supplications to
ours?”</p>
<p>Dick, keeping his cowl about his face, signed to Sir Oliver to
move a pace or two aside from the archers; and, so soon as the
priest had done so, “I cannot hope to deceive you,
sir,” he said. “My life is in your
hands.”</p>
<p>Sir Oliver violently started; his stout cheeks grew pale, and
for a space he was silent.</p>
<p>“Richard,” he said, “what brings you here, I
know not; but I much misdoubt it to be evil. Nevertheless,
for the kindness that was, I would not willingly deliver you to
harm. Ye shall sit all night beside me in the stalls: ye
shall sit there till my Lord of Shoreby be married, and the party
gone safe home; and if all goeth well, and ye have planned no
evil, in the end ye shall go whither ye will. But if your
purpose be bloody, it shall return upon your head.
Amen!”</p>
<p>And the priest devoutly crossed himself, and turned and louted
to the altar.</p>
<p>With that, he spoke a few words more to the soldiers, and
taking Dick by the hand, led him up to the choir, and placed him
in the stall beside his own, where, for mere decency, the lad had
instantly to kneel and appear to be busy with his devotions.</p>
<p>His mind and his eyes, however, were continually
wandering. Three of the soldiers, he observed, instead of
returning to the house, had got them quietly into a point of
vantage in the aisle; and he could not doubt that they had done
so by Sir Oliver’s command. Here, then, he was
trapped. Here he must spend the night in the ghostly
glimmer and shadow of the church, and looking on the pale face of
him he slew; and here, in the morning, he must see his sweetheart
married to another man before his eyes.</p>
<p>But, for all that, he obtained a command upon his mind, and
built himself up in patience to await the issue.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER IV—IN THE ABBEY CHURCH</h3>
<p>In Shoreby Abbey Church the prayers were kept up all night
without cessation, now with the singing of psalms, now with a
note or two upon the bell.</p>
<p>Rutter, the spy, was nobly waked. There he lay,
meanwhile, as they had arranged him, his dead hands crossed upon
his bosom, his dead eyes staring on the roof; and hard by, in the
stall, the lad who had slain him waited, in sore disquietude, the
coming of the morning.</p>
<p>Once only, in the course of the hours, Sir Oliver leaned
across to his captive.</p>
<p>“Richard,” he whispered, “my son, if ye mean
me evil, I will certify, on my soul’s welfare, ye design
upon an innocent man. Sinful in the eye of Heaven I do
declare myself; but sinful as against you I am not, neither have
been ever.”</p>
<p>“My father,” returned Dick, in the same tone of
voice, “trust me, I design nothing; but as for your
innocence, I may not forget that ye cleared yourself but
lamely.”</p>
<p>“A man may be innocently guilty,” replied the
priest. “He may be set blindfolded upon a mission,
ignorant of its true scope. So it was with me. I did
decoy your father to his death; but as Heaven sees us in this
sacred place, I knew not what I did.”</p>
<p>“It may be,” returned Dick. “But see
what a strange web ye have woven, that I should be, at this hour,
at once your prisoner and your judge; that ye should both
threaten my days and deprecate my anger. Methinks, if ye
had been all your life a true man and good priest, ye would
neither thus fear nor thus detest me. And now to your
prayers. I do obey you, since needs must; but I will not be
burthened with your company.”</p>
<p>The priest uttered a sigh so heavy that it had almost touched
the lad into some sentiment of pity, and he bowed his head upon
his hands like a man borne down below a weight of care. He
joined no longer in the psalms; but Dick could hear the beads
rattle through his fingers and the prayers a-pattering between
his teeth.</p>
<p>Yet a little, and the grey of the morning began to struggle
through the painted casements of the church, and to put to shame
the glimmer of the tapers. The light slowly broadened and
brightened, and presently through the south-eastern clerestories
a flush of rosy sunlight flickered on the walls. The storm
was over; the great clouds had disburdened their snow and fled
farther on, and the new day was breaking on a merry winter
landscape sheathed in white.</p>
<p>A bustle of church officers followed; the bier was carried
forth to the deadhouse, and the stains of blood were cleansed
from off the tiles, that no such ill-omened spectacle should
disgrace the marriage of Lord Shoreby. At the same time,
the very ecclesiastics who had been so dismally engaged all night
began to put on morning faces, to do honour to the merrier
ceremony which was about to follow. And further to announce
the coming of the day, the pious of the town began to assemble
and fall to prayer before their favourite shrines, or wait their
turn at the confessionals.</p>
<p>Favoured by this stir, it was of course easily possible for
any man to avoid the vigilance of Sir Daniel’s sentries at
the door; and presently Dick, looking about him wearily, caught
the eye of no less a person than Will Lawless, still in his
monk’s habit.</p>
<p>The outlaw, at the same moment, recognised his leader, and
privily signed to him with hand and eye.</p>
<p>Now, Dick was far from having forgiven the old rogue his most
untimely drunkenness, but he had no desire to involve him in his
own predicament; and he signalled back to him, as plain as he was
able, to begone.</p>
<p>Lawless, as though he had understood, disappeared at once
behind a pillar, and Dick breathed again.</p>
<p>What, then, was his dismay to feel himself plucked by the
sleeve and to find the old robber installed beside him, upon the
next seat, and, to all appearance, plunged in his devotions!</p>
<p>Instantly Sir Oliver arose from his place, and, gliding behind
the stalls, made for the soldiers in the aisle. If the
priest’s suspicions had been so lightly wakened, the harm
was already done, and Lawless a prisoner in the church.</p>
<p>“Move not,” whispered Dick. “We are in
the plaguiest pass, thanks, before all things, to thy swinishness
of yestereven. When ye saw me here, so strangely seated
where I have neither right nor interest, what a murrain! could
ye not smell harm and get ye gone from evil?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” returned Lawless, “I thought ye had
heard from Ellis, and were here on duty.”</p>
<p>“Ellis!” echoed Dick. “Is Ellis, then,
returned?</p>
<p>“For sure,” replied the outlaw. “He
came last night, and belted me sore for being in wine—so
there ye are avenged, my master. A furious man is Ellis
Duckworth! He hath ridden me hot-spur from Craven to
prevent this marriage; and, Master Dick, ye know the way of
him—do so he will!”</p>
<p>“Nay, then,” returned Dick, with composure,
“you and I, my poor brother, are dead men; for I sit here a
prisoner upon suspicion, and my neck was to answer for this very
marriage that he purposeth to mar. I had a fair choice, by
the rood! to lose my sweetheart or else lose my life! Well,
the cast is thrown—it is to be my life.”</p>
<p>“By the mass,” cried Lawless, half arising,
“I am gone!”</p>
<p>But Dick had his hand at once upon his shoulder.</p>
<p>“Friend Lawless, sit ye still,” he said.
“An ye have eyes, look yonder at the corner by the chancel
arch; see ye not that, even upon the motion of your rising, yon
armed men are up and ready to intercept you? Yield ye,
friend. Ye were bold aboard ship, when ye thought to die a
sea-death; be bold again, now that y’ are to die presently
upon the gallows.”</p>
<p>“Master Dick,” gasped Lawless, “the thing
hath come upon me somewhat of the suddenest. But give me a
moment till I fetch my breath again; and, by the mass, I will be
as stout-hearted as yourself.”</p>
<p>“Here is my bold fellow!” returned Dick.
“And yet, Lawless, it goes hard against the grain with me
to die; but where whining mendeth nothing, wherefore
whine?”</p>
<p>“Nay, that indeed!” chimed Lawless.
“And a fig for death, at worst! It has to be done, my
master, soon or late. And hanging in a good quarrel is an
easy death, they say, though I could never hear of any that came
back to say so.”</p>
<p>And so saying, the stout old rascal leaned back in his stall,
folded his arms, and began to look about him with the greatest
air of insolence and unconcern.</p>
<p>“And for the matter of that,” Dick added,
“it is yet our best chance to keep quiet. We wot not
yet what Duckworth purposes; and when all is said, and if the
worst befall, we may yet clear our feet of it.”</p>
<p>Now that they ceased talking, they were aware of a very
distant and thin strain of mirthful music which steadily drew
nearer, louder, and merrier. The bells in the tower began
to break forth into a doubling peal, and a greater and greater
concourse of people to crowd into the church, shuffling the snow
from off their feet, and clapping and blowing in their
hands. The western door was flung wide open, showing a
glimpse of sunlit, snowy street, and admitting in a great gust
the shrewd air of the morning; and in short, it became plain by
every sign that Lord Shoreby desired to be married very early in
the day, and that the wedding-train was drawing near.</p>
<p>Some of Lord Shoreby’s men now cleared a passage down
the middle aisle, forcing the people back with lance-stocks; and
just then, outside the portal, the secular musicians could be
descried drawing near over the frozen snow, the fifers and
trumpeters scarlet in the face with lusty blowing, the drummers
and the cymbalists beating as for a wager.</p>
<p>These, as they drew near the door of the sacred building,
filed off on either side, and, marking time to their own vigorous
music, stood stamping in the snow. As they thus opened
their ranks, the leaders of this noble bridal train appeared
behind and between them; and such was the variety and gaiety of
their attire, such the display of silks and velvet, fur and
satin, embroidery and lace, that the procession showed forth upon
the snow like a flower-bed in a path or a painted window in a
wall.</p>
<p>First came the bride, a sorry sight, as pale as winter,
clinging to Sir Daniel’s arm, and attended, as brides-maid,
by the short young lady who had befriended Dick the night
before. Close behind, in the most radiant toilet, followed
the bridegroom, halting on a gouty foot; and as he passed the
threshold of the sacred building and doffed his hat, his bald
head was seen to be rosy with emotion.</p>
<p>And now came the hour of Ellis Duckworth.</p>
<p>Dick, who sat stunned among contrary emotions, grasping the
desk in front of him, beheld a movement in the crowd, people
jostling backward, and eyes and arms uplifted. Following
these signs, he beheld three or four men with bent bows leaning
from the clerestory gallery. At the same instant they
delivered their discharge, and before the clamour and cries of
the astounded populace had time to swell fully upon the ear, they
had flitted from their perch and disappeared.</p>
<p>The nave was full of swaying heads and voices screaming; the
ecclesiastics thronged in terror from their places; the music
ceased, and though the bells overhead continued for some seconds
to clang upon the air, some wind of the disaster seemed to find
its way at last even to the chamber where the ringers were
leaping on their ropes, and they also desisted from their merry
labours.</p>
<p>Right in the midst of the nave the bridegroom lay stone-dead,
pierced by two black arrows. The bride had fainted.
Sir Daniel stood, towering above the crowd in his surprise and
anger, a clothyard shaft quivering in his left forearm, and his
face streaming blood from another which had grazed his brow.</p>
<p>Long before any search could be made for them, the authors of
this tragic interruption had clattered down a turnpike stair and
decamped by a postern door.</p>
<p>But Dick and Lawless still remained in pawn; they had, indeed,
arisen on the first alarm, and pushed manfully to gain the door;
but what with the narrowness of the stalls and the crowding of
terrified priests and choristers, the attempt had been in vain,
and they had stoically resumed their places.</p>
<p>And now, pale with horror, Sir Oliver rose to his feet and
called upon Sir Daniel, pointing with one hand to Dick.</p>
<p>“Here,” he cried, “is Richard
Shelton—alas the hour!—blood guilty! Seize
him!—bid him be seized! For all our lives’
sakes, take him and bind him surely! He hath sworn our
fall.”</p>
<p>Sir Daniel was blinded by anger—blinded by the hot blood
that still streamed across his face.</p>
<p>“Where?” he bellowed. “Hale him
forth! By the cross of Holywood, but he shall rue this
hour!”</p>
<p>The crowd fell back, and a party of archers invaded the choir,
laid rough hands on Dick, dragged him head-foremost from the
stall, and thrust him by the shoulders down the chancel
steps. Lawless, on his part, sat as still as a mouse.</p>
<p>Sir Daniel, brushing the blood out of his eyes, stared
blinkingly upon his captive.</p>
<p>“Ay,” he said, “treacherous and insolent, I
have thee fast; and by all potent oaths, for every drop of blood
that now trickles in mine eyes, I will wring a groan out of thy
carcase. Away with him!” he added. “Here
is no place! Off with him to my house. I will number
every joint of thy body with a torture.”</p>
<p>But Dick, putting off his captors, uplifted his voice.</p>
<p>“Sanctuary!” he shouted.
“Sanctuary! Ho, there, my fathers! They would
drag me from the church!”</p>
<p>“From the church thou hast defiled with murder,
boy,” added a tall man, magnificently dressed.</p>
<p>“On what probation?” cried Dick. “They
do accuse me, indeed, of some complicity, but have not proved one
tittle. I was, in truth, a suitor for this damsel’s
hand; and she, I will be bold to say it, repaid my suit with
favour. But what then? To love a maid is no offence,
I trow—nay, nor to gain her love. In all else, I
stand here free from guiltiness.”</p>
<p>There was a murmur of approval among the bystanders, so boldly
Dick declared his innocence; but at the same time a throng of
accusers arose upon the other side, crying how he had been found
last night in Sir Daniel’s house, how he wore a
sacrilegious disguise; and in the midst of the babel, Sir Oliver
indicated Lawless, both by voice and gesture, as accomplice to
the fact. He, in his turn, was dragged from his seat and
set beside his leader. The feelings of the crowd rose high
on either side, and while some dragged the prisoners to and fro
to favour their escape, others cursed and struck them with their
fists. Dick’s ears rang and his brain swam dizzily,
like a man struggling in the eddies of a furious river.</p>
<p>But the tall man who had already answered Dick, by a
prodigious exercise of voice restored silence and order in the
mob.</p>
<p>“Search them,” he said, “for arms. We
may so judge of their intentions.”</p>
<p>Upon Dick they found no weapon but his poniard, and this told
in his favour, until one man officiously drew it from its sheath,
and found it still uncleansed of the blood of Rutter. At
this there was a great shout among Sir Daniel’s followers,
which the tall man suppressed by a gesture and an imperious
glance. But when it came to the turn of Lawless, there was
found under his gown a sheaf of arrows identical with those that
had been shot.</p>
<p>“How say ye now?” asked the tall man, frowningly,
of Dick.</p>
<p>“Sir,” replied Dick, “I am here in
sanctuary, is it not so? Well, sir, I see by your bearing
that ye are high in station, and I read in your countenance the
marks of piety and justice. To you, then, I will yield me
prisoner, and that blithely, foregoing the advantage of this holy
place. But rather than to be yielded into the discretion of
that man—whom I do here accuse with a loud voice to be the
murderer of my natural father and the unjust retainer of my lands
and revenues—rather than that, I would beseech you, under
favour, with your own gentle hand, to despatch me on the
spot. Your own ears have heard him, how before that I was
proven guilty he did threaten me with torments. It standeth
not with your own honour to deliver me to my sworn enemy and old
oppressor, but to try me fairly by the way of law, and, if that I
be guilty indeed, to slay me mercifully.”</p>
<p>“My lord,” cried Sir Daniel, “ye will not
hearken to this wolf? His bloody dagger reeks him the lie
into his face.”</p>
<p>“Nay, but suffer me, good knight,” returned the
tall stranger; “your own vehemence doth somewhat tell
against yourself.”</p>
<p>And here the bride, who had come to herself some minutes past
and looked wildly on upon this scene, broke loose from those that
held her, and fell upon her knees before the last speaker.</p>
<p>“My Lord of Risingham,” she cried, “hear me,
in justice. I am here in this man’s custody by mere
force, reft from mine own people. Since that day I had
never pity, countenance, nor comfort from the face of
man—but from him only—Richard Shelton—whom they
now accuse and labour to undo. My lord, if he was
yesternight in Sir Daniel’s mansion, it was I that brought
him there; he came but at my prayer, and thought to do no
hurt. While yet Sir Daniel was a good lord to him, he
fought with them of the Black Arrow loyally; but when his foul
guardian sought his life by practices, and he fled by night, for
his soul’s sake, out of that bloody house, whither was he
to turn—he, helpless and penniless? Or if he be
fallen among ill company, whom should ye blame—the lad that
was unjustly handled, or the guardian that did abuse his
trust?”</p>
<p>And then the short young lady fell on her knees by
Joanna’s side.</p>
<p>“And I, my good lord and natural uncle,” she
added, “I can bear testimony, on my conscience and before
the face of all, that what this maiden saith is true. It
was I, unworthy, that did lead the young man in.”</p>
<p>Earl Risingham had heard in silence, and when the voices
ceased, he still stood silent for a space. Then he gave
Joanna his hand to arise, though it was to be observed that he
did not offer the like courtesy to her who had called herself his
niece.</p>
<p>“Sir Daniel,” he said, “here is a right
intricate affair, the which, with your good leave, it shall be
mine to examine and adjust. Content ye, then; your business
is in careful hands; justice shall be done you; and in the
meanwhile, get ye incontinently home, and have your hurts
attended. The air is shrewd, and I would not ye took cold
upon these scratches.”</p>
<p>He made a sign with his hand; it was passed down the nave by
obsequious servants, who waited there upon his smallest
gesture. Instantly, without the church, a tucket sounded
shrill, and through the open portal archers and men-at-arms,
uniformly arrayed in the colours and wearing the badge of Lord
Risingham, began to file into the church, took Dick and Lawless
from those who still detained them, and, closing their files
about the prisoners, marched forth again and disappeared.</p>
<p>As they were passing, Joanna held both her hands to Dick and
cried him her farewell; and the bridesmaid, nothing downcast by
her uncle’s evident displeasure, blew him a kiss, with a
“Keep your heart up, lion-driver!” that for the first
time since the accident called up a smile to the faces of the
crowd.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER V—EARL RISINGHAM</h3>
<p>Earl Risingham, although by far the most important person then
in Shoreby, was poorly lodged in the house of a private gentleman
upon the extreme outskirts of the town. Nothing but the
armed men at the doors, and the mounted messengers that kept
arriving and departing, announced the temporary residence of a
great lord.</p>
<p>Thus it was that, from lack of space, Dick and Lawless were
clapped into the same apartment.</p>
<p>“Well spoken, Master Richard,” said the outlaw;
“it was excellently well spoken, and, for my part, I thank
you cordially. Here we are in good hands; we shall be
justly tried, and, some time this evening, decently hanged on the
same tree.”</p>
<p>“Indeed, my poor friend, I do believe it,”
answered Dick.</p>
<p>“Yet have we a string to our bow,” returned
Lawless. “Ellis Duckworth is a man out of ten
thousand; he holdeth you right near his heart, both for your own
and for your father’s sake; and knowing you guiltless of
this fact, he will stir earth and heaven to bear you
clear.”</p>
<p>“It may not be,” said Dick. “What can
he do? He hath but a handful. Alack, if it were but
to-morrow—could I but keep a certain tryst an hour before
noon to-morrow—all were, I think, otherwise. But now
there is no help.”</p>
<p>“Well,” concluded Lawless, “an ye will stand
to it for my innocence, I will stand to it for yours, and that
stoutly. It shall naught avail us; but an I be to hang, it
shall not be for lack of swearing.”</p>
<p>And then, while Dick gave himself over to his reflections, the
old rogue curled himself down into a corner, pulled his monkish
hood about his face, and composed himself to sleep. Soon he
was loudly snoring, so utterly had his long life of hardship and
adventure blunted the sense of apprehension.</p>
<p>It was long after noon, and the day was already failing,
before the door was opened and Dick taken forth and led up-stairs
to where, in a warm cabinet, Earl Risingham sat musing over the
fire.</p>
<p>On his captive’s entrance he looked up.</p>
<p>“Sir,” he said, “I knew your father, who was
a man of honour, and this inclineth me to be the more lenient;
but I may not hide from you that heavy charges lie against your
character. Ye do consort with murderers and robbers; upon a
clear probation ye have carried war against the king’s
peace; ye are suspected to have piratically seized upon a ship;
ye are found skulking with a counterfeit presentment in your
enemy’s house; a man is slain that very
evening—”</p>
<p>“An it like you, my lord,” Dick interposed,
“I will at once avow my guilt, such as it is. I slew
this fellow Rutter; and to the proof”—searching in
his bosom—“here is a letter from his
wallet.”</p>
<p>Lord Risingham took the letter, and opened and read it
twice.</p>
<p>“Ye have read this?” he inquired.</p>
<p>“I have read it,” answered Dick.</p>
<p>“Are ye for York or Lancaster?” the earl
demanded.</p>
<p>“My lord, it was but a little while back that I was
asked that question, and knew not how to answer it,” said
Dick; “but having answered once, I will not vary. My
lord, I am for York.”</p>
<p>The earl nodded approvingly.</p>
<p>“Honestly replied,” he said. “But
wherefore, then, deliver me this letter?”</p>
<p>“Nay, but against traitors, my lord, are not all sides
arrayed?” cried Dick.</p>
<p>“I would they were, young gentleman,” returned the
earl; “and I do at least approve your saying. There
is more youth than guile in you, I do perceive; and were not Sir
Daniel a mighty man upon our side, I were half-tempted to espouse
your quarrel. For I have inquired, and it appears ye have
been hardly dealt with, and have much excuse. But look ye,
sir, I am, before all else, a leader in the queen’s
interest; and though by nature a just man, as I believe, and
leaning even to the excess of mercy, yet must I order my goings
for my party’s interest, and, to keep Sir Daniel, I would
go far about.”</p>
<p>“My lord,” returned Dick, “ye will think me
very bold to counsel you; but do ye count upon Sir Daniel’s
faith? Methought he had changed sides intolerably
often.”</p>
<p>“Nay, it is the way of England. What would ye
have?” the earl demanded. “But ye are unjust to
the knight of Tunstall; and as faith goes, in this unfaithful
generation, he hath of late been honourably true to us of
Lancaster. Even in our last reverses he stood
firm.”</p>
<p>“An it pleased you, then,” said Dick, “to
cast your eye upon this letter, ye might somewhat change your
thought of him;” and he handed to the earl Sir
Daniel’s letter to Lord Wensleydale.</p>
<p>The effect upon the earl’s countenance was instant; he
lowered like an angry lion, and his hand, with a sudden movement,
clutched at his dagger.</p>
<p>“Ye have read this also?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Even so,” said Dick. “It is your
lordship’s own estate he offers to Lord
Wensleydale?”</p>
<p>“It is my own estate, even as ye say!” returned
the earl. “I am your bedesman for this letter.
It hath shown me a fox’s hole. Command me, Master
Shelton; I will not be backward in gratitude, and to begin with,
York or Lancaster, true man or thief, I do now set you at
freedom. Go, a Mary’s name! But judge it right
that I retain and hang your fellow, Lawless. The crime hath
been most open, and it were fitting that some open punishment
should follow.”</p>
<p>“My lord, I make it my first suit to you to spare him
also,” pleaded Dick.</p>
<p>“It is an old, condemned rogue, thief, and vagabond,
Master Shelton,” said the earl. “He hath been
gallows-ripe this score of years. And, whether for one
thing or another, whether to-morrow or the day after, where is
the great choice?”</p>
<p>“Yet, my lord, it was through love to me that he came
hither,” answered Dick, “and I were churlish and
thankless to desert him.”</p>
<p>“Master Shelton, ye are troublesome,” replied the
earl, severely. “It is an evil way to prosper in this
world. Howbeit, and to be quit of your importunity, I will
once more humour you. Go, then, together; but go warily,
and get swiftly out of Shoreby town. For this Sir Daniel
(whom may the saints confound!) thirsteth most greedily to have
your blood.”</p>
<p>“My lord, I do now offer you in words my gratitude,
trusting at some brief date to pay you some of it in
service,” replied Dick, as he turned from the
apartment.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER VI—ARBLASTER AGAIN</h3>
<p>When Dick and Lawless were suffered to steal, by a back way,
out of the house where Lord Risingham held his garrison, the
evening had already come.</p>
<p>They paused in shelter of the garden wall to consult on their
best course. The danger was extreme. If one of Sir
Daniel’s men caught sight of them and raised the
view-hallo, they would be run down and butchered instantly.
And not only was the town of Shoreby a mere net of peril for
their lives, but to make for the open country was to run the risk
of the patrols.</p>
<p>A little way off, upon some open ground, they spied a windmill
standing; and hard by that, a very large granary with open
doors.</p>
<p>“How if we lay there until the night fall?” Dick
proposed.</p>
<p>And Lawless having no better suggestion to offer, they made a
straight push for the granary at a run, and concealed themselves
behind the door among some straw. The daylight rapidly
departed; and presently the moon was silvering the frozen
snow. Now or never was their opportunity to gain the Goat
and Bagpipes unobserved and change their tell-tale
garments. Yet even then it was advisable to go round by the
outskirts, and not run the gauntlet of the market-place, where,
in the concourse of people, they stood the more imminent peril to
be recognised and slain.</p>
<p>This course was a long one. It took them not far from
the house by the beach, now lying dark and silent, and brought
them forth at last by the margin of the harbour. Many of
the ships, as they could see by the clear moonshine, had weighed
anchor, and, profiting by the calm sky, proceeded for more
distant parts; answerably to this, the rude alehouses along the
beach (although in defiance of the curfew law, they still shone
with fire and candle) were no longer thronged with customers, and
no longer echoed to the chorus of sea-songs.</p>
<p>Hastily, half-running, with their monkish raiment kilted to
the knee, they plunged through the deep snow and threaded the
labyrinth of marine lumber; and they were already more than half
way round the harbour when, as they were passing close before an
alehouse, the door suddenly opened and let out a gush of light
upon their fleeting figures.</p>
<p>Instantly they stopped, and made believe to be engaged in
earnest conversation.</p>
<p>Three men, one after another, came out of the ale-house, and
the last closed the door behind him. All three were
unsteady upon their feet, as if they had passed the day in deep
potations, and they now stood wavering in the moonlight, like men
who knew not what they would be after. The tallest of the
three was talking in a loud, lamentable voice.</p>
<p>“Seven pieces of as good Gascony as ever a tapster
broached,” he was saying, “the best ship out o’
the port o’ Dartmouth, a Virgin Mary parcel-gilt, thirteen
pounds of good gold money—”</p>
<p>“I have bad losses, too,” interrupted one of the
others. “I have had losses of mine own, gossip
Arblaster. I was robbed at Martinmas of five shillings and
a leather wallet well worth ninepence farthing.”</p>
<p>Dick’s heart smote him at what he heard. Until
that moment he had not perhaps thought twice of the poor skipper
who had been ruined by the loss of the Good Hope; so careless, in
those days, were men who wore arms of the goods and interests of
their inferiors. But this sudden encounter reminded him
sharply of the high-handed manner and ill-ending of his
enterprise; and both he and Lawless turned their heads the other
way, to avoid the chance of recognition.</p>
<p>The ship’s dog had, however, made his escape from the
wreck and found his way back again to Shoreby. He was now
at Arblaster’s heels, and suddenly sniffing and pricking
his ears, he darted forward and began to bark furiously at the
two sham friars.</p>
<p>His master unsteadily followed him.</p>
<p>“Hey, shipmates!” he cried. “Have ye
ever a penny pie for a poor old shipman, clean destroyed by
pirates? I am a man that would have paid for you both
o’ Thursday morning; and now here I be, o’ Saturday
night, begging for a flagon of ale! Ask my man Tom, if ye
misdoubt me. Seven pieces of good Gascon wine, a ship that
was mine own, and was my father’s before me, a Blessed Mary
of plane-tree wood and parcel-gilt, and thirteen pounds in gold
and silver. Hey! what say ye? A man that fought the
French, too; for I have fought the French; I have cut more French
throats upon the high seas than ever a man that sails out of
Dartmouth. Come, a penny piece.”</p>
<p>Neither Dick nor Lawless durst answer him a word, lest he
should recognise their voices; and they stood there as helpless
as a ship ashore, not knowing where to turn nor what to hope.</p>
<p>“Are ye dumb, boy?” inquired the skipper.
“Mates,” he added, with a hiccup, “they be
dumb. I like not this manner of discourtesy; for an a man
be dumb, so be as he’s courteous, he will still speak when
he was spoken to, methinks.”</p>
<p>By this time the sailor, Tom, who was a man of great personal
strength, seemed to have conceived some suspicion of these two
speechless figures; and being soberer than his captain, stepped
suddenly before him, took Lawless roughly by the shoulder, and
asked him, with an oath, what ailed him that he held his
tongue. To this the outlaw, thinking all was over, made
answer by a wrestling feint that stretched the sailor on the
sand, and, calling upon Dick to follow him, took to his heels
among the lumber.</p>
<p>The affair passed in a second. Before Dick could run at
all, Arblaster had him in his arms; Tom, crawling on his face,
had caught him by one foot, and the third man had a drawn cutlass
brandishing above his head.</p>
<p>It was not so much the danger, it was not so much the
annoyance, that now bowed down the spirits of young Shelton; it
was the profound humiliation to have escaped Sir Daniel,
convinced Lord Risingham, and now fall helpless in the hands of
this old, drunken sailor; and not merely helpless, but, as his
conscience loudly told him when it was too late, actually
guilty—actually the bankrupt debtor of the man whose ship
he had stolen and lost.</p>
<p>“Bring me him back into the alehouse, till I see his
face,” said Arblaster.</p>
<p>“Nay, nay,” returned Tom; “but let us first
unload his wallet, lest the other lads cry share.”</p>
<p>But though he was searched from head to foot, not a penny was
found upon him; nothing but Lord Foxham’s signet, which
they plucked savagely from his finger.</p>
<p>“Turn me him to the moon,” said the skipper; and
taking Dick by the chin, he cruelly jerked his head into the
air. “Blessed Virgin!” he cried, “it is
the pirate!”</p>
<p>“Hey!” cried Tom.</p>
<p>“By the Virgin of Bordeaux, it is the man
himself!” repeated Arblaster. “What, sea-thief,
do I hold you?” he cried. “Where is my
ship? Where is my wine? Hey! have I you in my
hands? Tom, give me one end of a cord here; I will so truss
me this sea-thief, hand and foot together, like a basting
turkey—marry, I will so bind him up—and thereafter I
will so beat—so beat him!”</p>
<p>And so he ran on, winding the cord meanwhile about
Dick’s limbs with the dexterity peculiar to seamen, and at
every turn and cross securing it with a knot, and tightening the
whole fabric with a savage pull.</p>
<p>When he had done, the lad was a mere package in his
hands—as helpless as the dead. The skipper held him
at arm’s length, and laughed aloud. Then he fetched
him a stunning buffet on the ear; and then turned him about, and
furiously kicked and kicked him. Anger rose up in
Dick’s bosom like a storm; anger strangled him, and he
thought to have died; but when the sailor, tired of this cruel
play, dropped him all his length upon the sand and turned to
consult with his companions, he instantly regained command of his
temper. Here was a momentary respite; ere they began again
to torture him, he might have found some method to escape from
this degrading and fatal misadventure.</p>
<p>Presently, sure enough, and while his captors were still
discussing what to do with him, he took heart of grace, and, with
a pretty steady voice, addressed them.</p>
<p>“My masters,” he began, “are ye gone clean
foolish? Here hath Heaven put into your hands as pretty an
occasion to grow rich as ever shipman had—such as ye might
make thirty over-sea adventures and not find again—and, by
the mass I what do ye? Beat me?—nay; so would an
angry child! But for long-headed tarry-Johns, that fear not
fire nor water, and that love gold as they love beef, methinks ye
are not wise.”</p>
<p>“Ay,” said Tom, “now y’ are trussed ye
would cozen us.”</p>
<p>“Cozen you!” repeated Dick. “Nay, if
ye be fools, it would be easy. But if ye be shrewd fellows,
as I trow ye are, ye can see plainly where your interest
lies. When I took your ship from you, we were many, we were
well clad and armed; but now, bethink you a little, who mustered
that array? One incontestably that hath much gold.
And if he, being already rich, continueth to hunt after more even
in the face of storms—bethink you once more—shall
there not be a treasure somewhere hidden?”</p>
<p>“What meaneth he?” asked one of the men.</p>
<p>“Why, if ye have lost an old skiff and a few jugs of
vinegary wine,” continued Dick, “forget them, for the
trash they are; and do ye rather buckle to an adventure worth the
name, that shall, in twelve hours, make or mar you for
ever. But take me up from where I lie, and let us go
somewhere near at hand and talk across a flagon, for I am sore
and frozen, and my mouth is half among the snow.”</p>
<p>“He seeks but to cozen us,” said Tom,
contemptuously.</p>
<p>“Cozen! cozen!” cried the third man.
“I would I could see the man that could cozen me! He
were a cozener indeed! Nay, I was not born yesterday.
I can see a church when it hath a steeple on it; and for my part,
gossip Arblaster, methinks there is some sense in this young
man. Shall we go hear him, indeed? Say, shall we go
hear him?”</p>
<p>“I would look gladly on a pottle of strong ale, good
Master Pirret,” returned Arblaster. “How say
ye, Tom? But then the wallet is empty.”</p>
<p>“I will pay,” said the other—“I will
pay. I would fain see this matter out; I do believe, upon
my conscience, there is gold in it.”</p>
<p>“Nay, if ye get again to drinking, all is lost!”
cried Tom.</p>
<p>“Gossip Arblaster, ye suffer your fellow to have too
much liberty,” returned Master Pirret. “Would
ye be led by a hired man? Fy, fy!”</p>
<p>“Peace, fellow!” said Arblaster, addressing
Tom. “Will ye put your oar in? Truly a fine
pass, when the crew is to correct the skipper!”</p>
<p>“Well, then, go your way,” said Tom; “I wash
my hands of you.”</p>
<p>“Set him, then, upon his feet,” said Master
Pirret. “I know a privy place where we may drink and
discourse.”</p>
<p>“If I am to walk, my friends, ye must set my feet at
liberty,” said Dick, when he had been once more planted
upright like a post.</p>
<p>“He saith true,” laughed Pirret.
“Truly, he could not walk accoutred as he is. Give it
a slit—out with your knife and slit it, gossip.”</p>
<p>Even Arblaster paused at this proposal; but as his companion
continued to insist, and Dick had the sense to keep the merest
wooden indifference of expression, and only shrugged his
shoulders over the delay, the skipper consented at last, and cut
the cords which tied his prisoner’s feet and legs.
Not only did this enable Dick to walk; but the whole network of
his bonds being proportionately loosened, he felt the arm behind
his back begin to move more freely, and could hope, with time and
trouble, to entirely disengage it. So much he owed already
to the owlish silliness and greed of Master Pirret.</p>
<p>That worthy now assumed the lead, and conducted them to the
very same rude alehouse where Lawless had taken Arblaster on the
day of the gale. It was now quite deserted; the fire was a
pile of red embers, radiating the most ardent heat; and when they
had chosen their places, and the landlord had set before them a
measure of mulled ale, both Pirret and Arblaster stretched forth
their legs and squared their elbows like men bent upon a pleasant
hour.</p>
<p>The table at which they sat, like all the others in the
alehouse, consisted of a heavy, square board, set on a pair of
barrels; and each of the four curiously-assorted cronies sat at
one side of the square, Pirret facing Arblaster, and Dick
opposite to the common sailor.</p>
<p>“And now, young man,” said Pirret, “to your
tale. It doth appear, indeed, that ye have somewhat abused
our gossip Arblaster; but what then? Make it up to
him—show him but this chance to become wealthy—and I
will go pledge he will forgive you.”</p>
<p>So far Dick had spoken pretty much at random; but it was now
necessary, under the supervision of six eyes, to invent and tell
some marvellous story, and, if it were possible, get back into
his hands the all-important signet. To squander time was
the first necessity. The longer his stay lasted, the more
would his captors drink, and the surer should he be when he
attempted his escape.</p>
<p>Well, Dick was not much of an inventor, and what he told was
pretty much the tale of Ali Baba, with Shoreby and Tunstall
Forest substituted for the East, and the treasures of the cavern
rather exaggerated than diminished. As the reader is aware,
it is an excellent story, and has but one drawback—that it
is not true; and so, as these three simple shipmen now heard it
for the first time, their eyes stood out of their faces, and
their mouths gaped like codfish at a fishmonger’s.</p>
<p>Pretty soon a second measure of mulled ale was called for; and
while Dick was still artfully spinning out the incidents a third
followed the second.</p>
<p>Here was the position of the parties towards the end:
Arblaster, three-parts drunk and one-half asleep, hung helpless
on his stool. Even Tom had been much delighted with the
tale, and his vigilance had abated in proportion.
Meanwhile, Dick had gradually wormed his right arm clear of its
bonds, and was ready to risk all.</p>
<p>“And so,” said Pirret, “y’ are one of
these?”</p>
<p>“I was made so,” replied Dick, “against my
will; but an I could but get a sack or two of gold coin to my
share, I should be a fool indeed to continue dwelling in a filthy
cave, and standing shot and buffet like a soldier. Here be
we four; good! Let us, then, go forth into the forest
to-morrow ere the sun be up. Could we come honestly by a
donkey, it were better; but an we cannot, we have our four strong
backs, and I warrant me we shall come home staggering.”</p>
<p>Pirret licked his lips.</p>
<p>“And this magic,” he said—“this
password, whereby the cave is opened—how call ye it,
friend?”</p>
<p>“Nay, none know the word but the three chiefs,”
returned Dick; “but here is your great good fortune, that,
on this very evening, I should be the bearer of a spell to open
it. It is a thing not trusted twice a year beyond the
captain’s wallet.”</p>
<p>“A spell!” said Arblaster, half awakening, and
squinting upon Dick with one eye. “Aroint thee! no
spells! I be a good Christian. Ask my man Tom,
else.”</p>
<p>“Nay, but this is white magic,” said Dick.
“It doth naught with the devil; only the powers of numbers,
herbs, and planets.”</p>
<p>“Ay, ay,” said Pirret; “’tis but white
magic, gossip. There is no sin therein, I do assure
you. But proceed, good youth. This spell—in
what should it consist?”</p>
<p>“Nay, that I will incontinently show you,”
answered Dick. “Have ye there the ring ye took from
my finger? Good! Now hold it forth before you by the
extreme finger-ends, at the arm’s-length, and over against
the shining of these embers. ’Tis so exactly.
Thus, then, is the spell.”</p>
<p>With a haggard glance, Dick saw the coast was clear between
him and the door. He put up an internal prayer. Then
whipping forth his arm, he made but one snatch of the ring, and
at the same instant, levering up the table, he sent it bodily
over upon the seaman Tom. He, poor soul, went down bawling
under the ruins; and before Arblaster understood that anything
was wrong, or Pirret could collect his dazzled wits, Dick had run
to the door and escaped into the moonlit night.</p>
<p>The moon, which now rode in the mid-heavens, and the extreme
whiteness of the snow, made the open ground about the harbour
bright as day; and young Shelton leaping, with kilted robe, among
the lumber, was a conspicuous figure from afar.</p>
<p>Tom and Pirret followed him with shouts; from every
drinking-shop they were joined by others whom their cries
aroused; and presently a whole fleet of sailors was in full
pursuit. But Jack ashore was a bad runner, even in the
fifteenth century, and Dick, besides, had a start, which he
rapidly improved, until, as he drew near the entrance of a narrow
lane, he even paused and looked laughingly behind him.</p>
<p>Upon the white floor of snow, all the shipmen of Shoreby came
clustering in an inky mass, and tailing out rearward in isolated
clumps. Every man was shouting or screaming; every man was
gesticulating with both arms in air; some one was continually
falling; and to complete the picture, when one fell, a dozen
would fall upon the top of him.</p>
<p>The confused mass of sound which they rolled up as high as to
the moon was partly comical and partly terrifying to the fugitive
whom they were hunting. In itself, it was impotent, for he
made sure no seaman in the port could run him down. But the
mere volume of noise, in so far as it must awake all the sleepers
in Shoreby and bring all the skulking sentries to the street, did
really threaten him with danger in the front. So, spying a
dark doorway at a corner, he whipped briskly into it, and let the
uncouth hunt go by him, still shouting and gesticulating, and all
red with hurry and white with tumbles in the snow.</p>
<p>It was a long while, indeed, before this great invasion of the
town by the harbour came to an end, and it was long before
silence was restored. For long, lost sailors were still to
be heard pounding and shouting through the streets in all
directions and in every quarter of the town. Quarrels
followed, sometimes among themselves, sometimes with the men of
the patrols; knives were drawn, blows given and received, and
more than one dead body remained behind upon the snow.</p>
<p>When, a full hour later, the last seaman returned grumblingly
to the harbour side and his particular tavern, it may fairly be
questioned if he had ever known what manner of man he was
pursuing, but it was absolutely sure that he had now
forgotten. By next morning there were many strange stories
flying; and a little while after, the legend of the devil’s
nocturnal visit was an article of faith with all the lads of
Shoreby.</p>
<p>But the return of the last seaman did not, even yet, set free
young Shelton from his cold imprisonment in the doorway.</p>
<p>For some time after, there was a great activity of patrols;
and special parties came forth to make the round of the place and
report to one or other of the great lords, whose slumbers had
been thus unusually broken.</p>
<p>The night was already well spent before Dick ventured from his
hiding-place and came, safe and sound, but aching with cold and
bruises, to the door of the Goat and Bagpipes. As the law
required, there was neither fire nor candle in the house; but he
groped his way into a corner of the icy guest-room, found an end
of a blanket, which he hitched around his shoulders, and creeping
close to the nearest sleeper, was soon lost in slumber.</p>
<h2>BOOK V—CROOKBACK</h2>
<h3>CHAPTER I—THE SHRILL TRUMPET</h3>
<p>Very early the next morning, before the first peep of the day,
Dick arose, changed his garments, armed himself once more like a
gentleman, and set forth for Lawless’s den in the
forest. There, it will be remembered, he had left Lord
Foxham’s papers; and to get these and be back in time for
the tryst with the young Duke of Gloucester could only be managed
by an early start and the most vigorous walking.</p>
<p>The frost was more rigorous than ever; the air windless and
dry, and stinging to the nostril. The moon had gone down,
but the stars were still bright and numerous, and the reflection
from the snow was clear and cheerful. There was no need for
a lamp to walk by; nor, in that still but ringing air, the least
temptation to delay.</p>
<p>Dick had crossed the greater part of the open ground between
Shoreby and the forest, and had reached the bottom of the little
hill, some hundred yards below the Cross of St. Bride, when,
through the stillness of the black morn, there rang forth the
note of a trumpet, so shrill, clear, and piercing, that he
thought he had never heard the match of it for audibility.
It was blown once, and then hurriedly a second time; and then the
clash of steel succeeded.</p>
<p>At this young Shelton pricked his ears, and drawing his sword,
ran forward up the hill.</p>
<p>Presently he came in sight of the cross, and was aware of a
most fierce encounter raging on the road before it. There
were seven or eight assailants, and but one to keep head against
them; but so active and dexterous was this one, so desperately
did he charge and scatter his opponents, so deftly keep his
footing on the ice, that already, before Dick could intervene, he
had slain one, wounded another, and kept the whole in check.</p>
<p>Still, it was by a miracle that he continued his defence, and
at any moment, any accident, the least slip of foot or error of
hand, his life would be a forfeit.</p>
<p>“Hold ye well, sir! Here is help!” cried
Richard; and forgetting that he was alone, and that the cry was
somewhat irregular, “To the Arrow! to the Arrow!” he
shouted, as he fell upon the rear of the assailants.</p>
<p>These were stout fellows also, for they gave not an inch at
this surprise, but faced about, and fell with astonishing fury
upon Dick. Four against one, the steel flashed about him in
the starlight; the sparks flew fiercely; one of the men opposed
to him fell—in the stir of the fight he hardly knew why;
then he himself was struck across the head, and though the steel
cap below his hood protected him, the blow beat him down upon one
knee, with a brain whirling like a windmill sail.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the man whom he had come to rescue, instead of
joining in the conflict, had, on the first sign of intervention,
leaped aback and blown again, and yet more urgently and loudly,
on that same shrill-voiced trumpet that began the alarm.
Next moment, indeed, his foes were on him, and he was once more
charging and fleeing, leaping, stabbing, dropping to his knee,
and using indifferently sword and dagger, foot and hand, with the
same unshaken courage and feverish energy and speed.</p>
<p>But that ear-piercing summons had been heard at last.
There was a muffled rushing in the snow; and in a good hour for
Dick, who saw the sword-points glitter already at his throat,
there poured forth out of the wood upon both sides a disorderly
torrent of mounted men-at-arms, each cased in iron, and with
visor lowered, each bearing his lance in rest, or his sword bared
and raised, and each carrying, so to speak, a passenger, in the
shape of an archer or page, who leaped one after another from
their perches, and had presently doubled the array.</p>
<p>The original assailants; seeing themselves outnumbered and
surrounded, threw down their arms without a word.</p>
<p>“Seize me these fellows!” said the hero of the
trumpet; and when his order had been obeyed, he drew near to Dick
and looked him in the face.</p>
<p>Dick, returning this scrutiny, was surprised to find in one
who had displayed such strength, skill and energy, a lad no older
than himself—slightly deformed, with one shoulder higher
than the other, and of a pale, painful, and distorted
countenance. <SPAN name="citation2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote2" class="citation">[2]</SPAN> The eyes, however, were very clear
and bold.</p>
<p>“Sir,” said this lad, “ye came in good time
for me, and none too early.”</p>
<p>“My lord,” returned Dick, with a faint sense that
he was in the presence of a great personage, “ye are
yourself so marvellous a good swordsman that I believe ye had
managed them single-handed. Howbeit, it was certainly well
for me that your men delayed no longer than they did.”</p>
<p>“How knew ye who I was?” demanded the
stranger.</p>
<p>“Even now, my lord,” Dick answered, “I am
ignorant of whom I speak with.”</p>
<p>“Is it so?” asked the other. “And yet
ye threw yourself head first into this unequal battle.”</p>
<p>“I saw one man valiantly contending against many,”
replied Dick, “and I had thought myself dishonoured not to
bear him aid.”</p>
<p>A singular sneer played about the young nobleman’s mouth
as he made answer:</p>
<p>“These are very brave words. But to the more
essential—are ye Lancaster or York?”</p>
<p>“My lord, I make no secret; I am clear for York,”
Dick answered.</p>
<p>“By the mass!” replied the other, “it is
well for you.”</p>
<p>And so saying, he turned towards one of his followers.</p>
<p>“Let me see,” he continued, in the same sneering
and cruel tones—“let me see a clean end of these
brave gentlemen. Truss me them up.”</p>
<p>There were but five survivors of the attacking party.
Archers seized them by the arms; they were hurried to the borders
of the wood, and each placed below a tree of suitable dimension;
the rope was adjusted; an archer, carrying the end of it, hastily
clambered overhead; and before a minute was over, and without a
word passing upon either hand, the five men were swinging by the
neck.</p>
<p>“And now,” cried the deformed leader, “back
to your posts, and when I summon you next, be readier to
attend.”</p>
<p>“My lord duke,” said one man, “beseech you,
tarry not here alone. Keep but a handful of lances at your
hand.”</p>
<p>“Fellow,” said the duke, “I have forborne to
chide you for your slowness. Cross me not, therefore.
I trust my hand and arm, for all that I be crooked. Ye were
backward when the trumpet sounded; and ye are now too forward
with your counsels. But it is ever so; last with the lance
and first with tongue. Let it be reversed.”</p>
<p>And with a gesture that was not without a sort of dangerous
nobility, he waved them off.</p>
<p>The footmen climbed again to their seats behind the
men-at-arms, and the whole party moved slowly away and
disappeared in twenty different directions, under the cover of
the forest.</p>
<p>The day was by this time beginning to break, and the stars to
fade. The first grey glimmer of dawn shone upon the
countenances of the two young men, who now turned once more to
face each other.</p>
<p>“Here,” said the duke, “ye have seen my
vengeance, which is, like my blade, both sharp and ready.
But I would not have you, for all Christendom, suppose me
thankless. You that came to my aid with a good sword and a
better courage—unless that ye recoil from my
misshapenness—come to my heart.”</p>
<p>And so saying, the young leader held out his arms for an
embrace.</p>
<p>In the bottom of his heart Dick already entertained a great
terror and some hatred for the man whom he had rescued; but the
invitation was so worded that it would not have been merely
discourteous, but cruel, to refuse or hesitate; and he hastened
to comply.</p>
<p>“And now, my lord duke,” he said, when he had
regained his freedom, “do I suppose aright? Are ye my
Lord Duke of Gloucester?”</p>
<p>“I am Richard of Gloucester,” returned the
other. “And you—how call they you?”</p>
<p>Dick told him his name, and presented Lord Foxham’s
signet, which the duke immediately recognised.</p>
<p>“Ye come too soon,” he said; “but why should
I complain? Ye are like me, that was here at watch two
hours before the day. But this is the first sally of mine
arms; upon this adventure, Master Shelton, shall I make or mar
the quality of my renown. There lie mine enemies, under two
old, skilled captains—Risingham and Brackley—well
posted for strength, I do believe, but yet upon two sides without
retreat, enclosed betwixt the sea, the harbour, and the
river. Methinks, Shelton, here were a great blow to be
stricken, an we could strike it silently and suddenly.”</p>
<p>“I do think so, indeed,” cried Dick, warming.</p>
<p>“Have ye my Lord Foxham’s notes?” inquired
the duke.</p>
<p>And then, Dick, having explained how he was without them for
the moment, made himself bold to offer information every jot as
good, of his own knowledge. “And for mine own part,
my lord duke,” he added, “an ye had men enough, I
would fall on even at this present. For, look ye, at the
peep of day the watches of the night are over; but by day they
keep neither watch nor ward—only scour the outskirts with
horsemen. Now, then, when the night watch is already
unarmed, and the rest are at their morning cup—now were the
time to break them.”</p>
<p>“How many do ye count?” asked Gloucester.</p>
<p>“They number not two thousand,” Dick replied.</p>
<p>“I have seven hundred in the woods behind us,”
said the duke; “seven hundred follow from Kettley, and will
be here anon; behind these, and further, are four hundred more;
and my Lord Foxham hath five hundred half a day from here, at
Holywood. Shall we attend their coming, or fall
on?”</p>
<p>“My lord,” said Dick, “when ye hanged these
five poor rogues ye did decide the question. Churls
although they were, in these uneasy times they will be lacked
and looked for, and the alarm be given. Therefore, my lord,
if ye do count upon the advantage of a surprise, ye have not, in
my poor opinion, one whole hour in front of you.”</p>
<p>“I do think so indeed,” returned Crookback.
“Well, before an hour, ye shall be in the thick on’t,
winning spurs. A swift man to Holywood, carrying Lord
Foxham’s signet; another along the road to speed my
laggards! Nay, Shelton, by the rood, it may be
done!”</p>
<p>Therewith he once more set his trumpet to his lips and
blew.</p>
<p>This time he was not long kept waiting. In a moment the
open space about the cross was filled with horse and foot.
Richard of Gloucester took his place upon the steps, and
despatched messenger after messenger to hasten the concentration
of the seven hundred men that lay hidden in the immediate
neighbourhood among the woods; and before a quarter of an hour
had passed, all his dispositions being taken, he put himself at
their head, and began to move down the hill towards Shoreby.</p>
<p>His plan was simple. He was to seize a quarter of the
town of Shoreby lying on the right hand of the high road, and
make his position good there in the narrow lanes until his
reinforcements followed.</p>
<p>If Lord Risingham chose to retreat, Richard would follow upon
his rear, and take him between two fires; or, if he preferred to
hold the town, he would be shut in a trap, there to be gradually
overwhelmed by force of numbers.</p>
<p>There was but one danger, but that was imminent and
great—Gloucester’s seven hundred might be rolled up
and cut to pieces in the first encounter, and, to avoid this, it
was needful to make the surprise of their arrival as complete as
possible.</p>
<p>The footmen, therefore, were all once more taken up behind the
riders, and Dick had the signal honour meted out to him of
mounting behind Gloucester himself. For as far as there was
any cover the troops moved slowly, and when they came near the
end of the trees that lined the highway, stopped to breathe and
reconnoitre.</p>
<p>The sun was now well up, shining with a frosty brightness out
of a yellow halo, and right over against the luminary, Shoreby, a
field of snowy roofs and ruddy gables, was rolling up its columns
of morning smoke. Gloucester turned round to Dick.</p>
<p>“In that poor place,” he said, “where people
are cooking breakfast, either you shall gain your spurs and I
begin a life of mighty honour and glory in the world’s eye,
or both of us, as I conceive it, shall fall dead and be unheard
of. Two Richards are we. Well, then, Richard Shelton,
they shall be heard about, these two! Their swords shall
not ring more loudly on men’s helmets than their names
shall ring in people’s ears.”</p>
<p>Dick was astonished at so great a hunger after fame, expressed
with so great vehemence of voice and language, and he answered
very sensibly and quietly, that, for his part, he promised he
would do his duty, and doubted not of victory if everyone did the
like.</p>
<p>By this time the horses were well breathed, and the leader
holding up his sword and giving rein, the whole troop of chargers
broke into the gallop and thundered, with their double load of
fighting men, down the remainder of the hill and across the
snow-covered plain that still divided them from Shoreby.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER II—THE BATTLE OF SHOREBY</h3>
<p>The whole distance to be crossed was not above a quarter of a
mile. But they had no sooner debauched beyond the cover of
the trees than they were aware of people fleeing and screaming in
the snowy meadows upon either hand. Almost at the same
moment a great rumour began to arise, and spread and grow
continually louder in the town; and they were not yet halfway to
the nearest house before the bells began to ring backward from
the steeple.</p>
<p>The young duke ground his teeth together. By these so
early signals of alarm he feared to find his enemies prepared;
and if he failed to gain a footing in the town, he knew that his
small party would soon be broken and exterminated in the
open.</p>
<p>In the town, however, the Lancastrians were far from being in
so good a posture. It was as Dick had said. The
night-guard had already doffed their harness; the rest were still
hanging—unlatched, unbraced, all unprepared for
battle—about their quarters; and in the whole of Shoreby
there were not, perhaps, fifty men full armed, or fifty chargers
ready to be mounted.</p>
<p>The beating of the bells, the terrifying summons of men who
ran about the streets crying and beating upon the doors, aroused
in an incredibly short space at least two score out of that half
hundred. These got speedily to horse, and, the alarm still
flying wild and contrary, galloped in different directions.</p>
<p>Thus it befell that, when Richard of Gloucester reached the
first house of Shoreby, he was met in the mouth of the street by
a mere handful of lances, whom he swept before his onset as the
storm chases the bark.</p>
<p>A hundred paces into the town, Dick Shelton touched the
duke’s arm; the duke, in answer, gathered his reins, put
the shrill trumpet to his mouth, and blowing a concerted point,
turned to the right hand out of the direct advance.
Swerving like a single rider, his whole command turned after him,
and, still at the full gallop of the chargers, swept up the
narrow bye-street. Only the last score of riders drew rein
and faced about in the entrance; the footmen, whom they carried
behind them, leapt at the same instant to the earth, and began,
some to bend their bows, and others to break into and secure the
houses upon either hand.</p>
<p>Surprised at this sudden change of direction, and daunted by
the firm front of the rear-guard, the few Lancastrians, after a
momentary consultation, turned and rode farther into town to seek
for reinforcements.</p>
<p>The quarter of the town upon which, by the advice of Dick,
Richard of Gloucester had now seized, consisted of five small
streets of poor and ill-inhabited houses, occupying a very gentle
eminence, and lying open towards the back.</p>
<p>The five streets being each secured by a good guard, the
reserve would thus occupy the centre, out of shot, and yet ready
to carry aid wherever it was needed.</p>
<p>Such was the poorness of the neighbourhood that none of the
Lancastrian lords, and but few of their retainers, had been
lodged therein; and the inhabitants, with one accord, deserted
their houses and fled, squalling, along the streets or over
garden walls.</p>
<p>In the centre, where the five ways all met, a somewhat
ill-favoured alehouse displayed the sign of the Chequers; and
here the Duke of Gloucester chose his headquarters for the
day.</p>
<p>To Dick he assigned the guard of one of the five streets.</p>
<p>“Go,” he said, “win your spurs. Win
glory for me: one Richard for another. I tell you, if I
rise, ye shall rise by the same ladder. Go,” he
added, shaking him by the hand.</p>
<p>But, as soon as Dick was gone, he turned to a little shabby
archer at his elbow.</p>
<p>“Go, Dutton, and that right speedily,” he
added. “Follow that lad. If ye find him
faithful, ye answer for his safety, a head for a head. Woe
unto you, if ye return without him! But if he be
faithless—or, for one instant, ye misdoubt him—stab
him from behind.”</p>
<p>In the meanwhile Dick hastened to secure his post. The
street he had to guard was very narrow, and closely lined with
houses, which projected and overhung the roadway; but narrow and
dark as it was, since it opened upon the market-place of the
town, the main issue of the battle would probably fall to be
decided on that spot.</p>
<p>The market-place was full of townspeople fleeing in disorder;
but there was as yet no sign of any foeman ready to attack, and
Dick judged he had some time before him to make ready his
defence.</p>
<p>The two houses at the end stood deserted, with open doors, as
the inhabitants had left them in their flight, and from these he
had the furniture hastily tossed forth and piled into a barrier
in the entry of the lane. A hundred men were placed at his
disposal, and of these he threw the more part into the houses,
where they might lie in shelter and deliver their arrows from the
windows. With the rest, under his own immediate eye, he
lined the barricade.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the utmost uproar and confusion had continued to
prevail throughout the town; and what with the hurried clashing
of bells, the sounding of trumpets, the swift movement of bodies
of horse, the cries of the commanders, and the shrieks of women,
the noise was almost deafening to the ear. Presently,
little by little, the tumult began to subside; and soon after,
files of men in armour and bodies of archers began to assemble
and form in line of battle in the market-place.</p>
<p>A large portion of this body were in murrey and blue, and in
the mounted knight who ordered their array Dick recognised Sir
Daniel Brackley.</p>
<p>Then there befell a long pause, which was followed by the
almost simultaneous sounding of four trumpets from four different
quarters of the town. A fifth rang in answer from the
market-place, and at the same moment the files began to move, and
a shower of arrows rattled about the barricade, and sounded like
blows upon the walls of the two flanking houses.</p>
<p>The attack had begun, by a common signal, on all the five
issues of the quarter. Gloucester was beleaguered upon
every side; and Dick judged, if he would make good his post, he
must rely entirely on the hundred men of his command.</p>
<p>Seven volleys of arrows followed one upon the other, and in
the very thick of the discharges Dick was touched from behind
upon the arm, and found a page holding out to him a leathern
jack, strengthened with bright plates of mail.</p>
<p>“It is from my Lord of Gloucester,” said the
page. “He hath observed, Sir Richard, that ye went
unarmed.”</p>
<p>Dick, with a glow at his heart at being so addressed, got to
his feet and, with the assistance of the page, donned the
defensive coat. Even as he did so, two arrows rattled
harmlessly upon the plates, and a third struck down the page,
mortally wounded, at his feet.</p>
<p>Meantime the whole body of the enemy had been steadily drawing
nearer across the market-place; and by this time were so close at
hand that Dick gave the order to return their shot.
Immediately, from behind the barrier and from the windows of the
houses, a counterblast of arrows sped, carrying death. But
the Lancastrians, as if they had but waited for a signal, shouted
loudly in answer; and began to close at a run upon the barrier,
the horsemen still hanging back, with visors lowered.</p>
<p>Then followed an obstinate and deadly struggle, hand to
hand. The assailants, wielding their falchions with one
hand, strove with the other to drag down the structure of the
barricade. On the other side, the parts were reversed; and
the defenders exposed themselves like madmen to protect their
rampart. So for some minutes the contest raged almost in
silence, friend and foe falling one upon another. But it is
always the easier to destroy; and when a single note upon the
tucket recalled the attacking party from this desperate service,
much of the barricade had been removed piecemeal, and the whole
fabric had sunk to half its height, and tottered to a general
fall.</p>
<p>And now the footmen in the market-place fell back, at a run,
on every side. The horsemen, who had been standing in a
line two deep, wheeled suddenly, and made their flank into their
front; and as swift as a striking adder, the long, steel-clad
column was launched upon the ruinous barricade.</p>
<p>Of the first two horsemen, one fell, rider and steed, and was
ridden down by his companions. The second leaped clean upon
the summit of the rampart, transpiercing an archer with his
lance. Almost in the same instant he was dragged from the
saddle and his horse despatched.</p>
<p>And then the full weight and impetus of the charge burst upon
and scattered the defenders. The men-at-arms, surmounting
their fallen comrades, and carried onward by the fury of their
onslaught, dashed through Dick’s broken line and poured
thundering up the lane beyond, as a stream bestrides and pours
across a broken dam.</p>
<p>Yet was the fight not over. Still, in the narrow jaws of
the entrance, Dick and a few survivors plied their bills like
woodmen; and already, across the width of the passage, there had
been formed a second, a higher, and a more effectual rampart of
fallen men and disembowelled horses, lashing in the agonies of
death.</p>
<p>Baffled by this fresh obstacle, the remainder of the cavalry
fell back; and as, at the sight of this movement, the flight of
arrows redoubled from the casements of the houses, their retreat
had, for a moment, almost degenerated into flight.</p>
<p>Almost at the same time, those who had crossed the barricade
and charged farther up the street, being met before the door of
the Chequers by the formidable hunchback and the whole reserve of
the Yorkists, began to come scattering backward, in the excess of
disarray and terror.</p>
<p>Dick and his fellows faced about, fresh men poured out of the
houses; a cruel blast of arrows met the fugitives full in the
face, while Gloucester was already riding down their rear; in the
inside of a minute and a half there was no living Lancastrian in
the street.</p>
<p>Then, and not till then, did Dick hold up his reeking blade
and give the word to cheer.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Gloucester dismounted from his horse and came
forward to inspect the post. His face was as pale as linen;
but his eyes shone in his head like some strange jewel, and his
voice, when he spoke, was hoarse and broken with the exultation
of battle and success. He looked at the rampart, which
neither friend nor foe could now approach without precaution, so
fiercely did the horses struggle in the throes of death, and at
the sight of that great carnage he smiled upon one side.</p>
<p>“Despatch these horses,” he said; “they keep
you from your vantage. Richard Shelton,” he added,
“ye have pleased me. Kneel.”</p>
<p>The Lancastrians had already resumed their archery, and the
shafts fell thick in the mouth of the street; but the duke,
minding them not at all, deliberately drew his sword and dubbed
Richard a knight upon the spot.</p>
<p>“And now, Sir Richard,” he continued, “if
that ye see Lord Risingham, send me an express upon the
instant. Were it your last man, let me hear of it
incontinently. I had rather venture the post than lose my
stroke at him. For mark me, all of ye,” he added,
raising his voice, “if Earl Risingham fall by another hand
than mine, I shall count this victory a defeat.”</p>
<p>“My lord duke,” said one of his attendants,
“is your grace not weary of exposing his dear life
unneedfully? Why tarry we here?”</p>
<p>“Catesby,” returned the duke, “here is the
battle, not elsewhere. The rest are but feigned
onslaughts. Here must we vanquish. And for the
exposure—if ye were an ugly hunchback, and the children
gecked at you upon the street, ye would count your body cheaper,
and an hour of glory worth a life. Howbeit, if ye will, let
us ride on and visit the other posts. Sir Richard here, my
namesake, he shall still hold this entry, where he wadeth to the
ankles in hot blood. Him can we trust. But mark it,
Sir Richard, ye are not yet done. The worst is yet to
ward. Sleep not.”</p>
<p>He came right up to young Shelton, looking him hard in the
eyes, and taking his hand in both of his, gave it so extreme a
squeeze that the blood had nearly spurted. Dick quailed
before his eyes. The insane excitement, the courage, and
the cruelty that he read therein filled him with dismay about the
future. This young duke’s was indeed a gallant
spirit, to ride foremost in the ranks of war; but after the
battle, in the days of peace and in the circle of his trusted
friends, that mind, it was to be dreaded, would continue to bring
forth the fruits of death.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER III—THE BATTLE OF SHOREBY (Concluded)</h3>
<p>Dick, once more left to his own counsels, began to look about
him. The arrow-shot had somewhat slackened. On all
sides the enemy were falling back; and the greater part of the
market-place was now left empty, the snow here trampled into
orange mud, there splashed with gore, scattered all over with
dead men and horses, and bristling thick with feathered
arrows.</p>
<p>On his own side the loss had been cruel. The jaws of the
little street and the ruins of the barricade were heaped with the
dead and dying; and out of the hundred men with whom he had begun
the battle, there were not seventy left who could still stand to
arms.</p>
<p>At the same time, the day was passing. The first
reinforcements might be looked for to arrive at any moment; and
the Lancastrians, already shaken by the result of their desperate
but unsuccessful onslaught, were in an ill temper to support a
fresh invader.</p>
<p>There was a dial in the wall of one of the two flanking
houses; and this, in the frosty winter sunshine, indicated ten of
the forenoon.</p>
<p>Dick turned to the man who was at his elbow, a little
insignificant archer, binding a cut in his arm.</p>
<p>“It was well fought,” he said, “and, by my
sooth, they will not charge us twice.”</p>
<p>“Sir,” said the little archer, “ye have
fought right well for York, and better for yourself. Never
hath man in so brief space prevailed so greatly on the
duke’s affections. That he should have entrusted such
a post to one he knew not is a marvel. But look to your
head, Sir Richard! If ye be vanquished—ay, if ye give
way one foot’s breadth—axe or cord shall punish it;
and I am set if ye do aught doubtful, I will tell you honestly,
here to stab you from behind.”</p>
<p>Dick looked at the little man in amaze.</p>
<p>“You!” he cried. “And from
behind!”</p>
<p>“It is right so,” returned the archer; “and
because I like not the affair I tell it you. Ye must make
the post good, Sir Richard, at your peril. O, our Crookback
is a bold blade and a good warrior; but, whether in cold blood or
in hot, he will have all things done exact to his
commandment. If any fail or hinder, they shall die the
death.”</p>
<p>“Now, by the saints!” cried Richard, “is
this so? And will men follow such a leader?”</p>
<p>“Nay, they follow him gleefully,” replied the
other; “for if he be exact to punish, he is most
open-handed to reward. And if he spare not the blood and
sweat of others, he is ever liberal of his own, still in the
first front of battle, still the last to sleep. He will go
far, will Crookback Dick o’ Gloucester!”</p>
<p>The young knight, if he had before been brave and vigilant,
was now all the more inclined to watchfulness and courage.
His sudden favour, he began to perceive, had brought perils in
its train. And he turned from the archer, and once more
scanned anxiously the market-place. It lay empty as
before.</p>
<p>“I like not this quietude,” he said.
“Doubtless they prepare us some surprise.”</p>
<p>And, as if in answer to his remark, the archers began once
more to advance against the barricade, and the arrows to fall
thick. But there was something hesitating in the
attack. They came not on roundly, but seemed rather to
await a further signal.</p>
<p>Dick looked uneasily about him, spying for a hidden
danger. And sure enough, about half way up the little
street, a door was suddenly opened from within, and the house
continued, for some seconds, and both by door and window, to
disgorge a torrent of Lancastrian archers. These, as they
leaped down, hurriedly stood to their ranks, bent their bows, and
proceeded to pour upon Dick’s rear a flight of arrows.</p>
<p>At the same time, the assailants in the market-place redoubled
their shot, and began to close in stoutly upon the barricade.</p>
<p>Dick called down his whole command out of the houses, and
facing them both ways, and encouraging their valour both by word
and gesture, returned as best he could the double shower of
shafts that fell about his post.</p>
<p>Meanwhile house after house was opened in the street, and the
Lancastrians continued to pour out of the doors and leap down
from the windows, shouting victory, until the number of enemies
upon Dick’s rear was almost equal to the number in his
face. It was plain that he could hold the post no longer;
what was worse, even if he could have held it, it had now become
useless; and the whole Yorkist army lay in a posture of
helplessness upon the brink of a complete disaster.</p>
<p>The men behind him formed the vital flaw in the general
defence; and it was upon these that Dick turned, charging at the
head of his men. So vigorous was the attack, that the
Lancastrian archers gave ground and staggered, and, at last,
breaking their ranks, began to crowd back into the houses from
which they had so recently and so vaingloriously sallied.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the men from the market-place had swarmed across the
undefended barricade, and fell on hotly upon the other side; and
Dick must once again face about, and proceed to drive them
back. Once again the spirit of his men prevailed; they
cleared the street in a triumphant style, but even as they did so
the others issued again out of the houses, and took them, a third
time, upon the rear.</p>
<p>The Yorkists began to be scattered; several times Dick found
himself alone among his foes and plying his bright sword for
life; several times he was conscious of a hurt. And
meanwhile the fight swayed to and fro in the street without
determinate result.</p>
<p>Suddenly Dick was aware of a great trumpeting about the
outskirts of the town. The war-cry of York began to be
rolled up to heaven, as by many and triumphant voices. And
at the same time the men in front of him began to give ground
rapidly, streaming out of the street and back upon the
market-place. Some one gave the word to fly. Trumpets
were blown distractedly, some for a rally, some to charge.
It was plain that a great blow had been struck, and the
Lancastrians were thrown, at least for the moment, into full
disorder, and some degree of panic.</p>
<p>And then, like a theatre trick, there followed the last act of
Shoreby Battle. The men in front of Richard turned tail,
like a dog that has been whistled home, and fled like the
wind. At the same moment there came through the
market-place a storm of horsemen, fleeing and pursuing, the
Lancastrians turning back to strike with the sword, the Yorkists
riding them down at the point of the lance.</p>
<p>Conspicuous in the mellay, Dick beheld the Crookback. He
was already giving a foretaste of that furious valour and skill
to cut his way across the ranks of war, which, years afterwards
upon the field of Bosworth, and when he was stained with crimes,
almost sufficed to change the fortunes of the day and the destiny
of the English throne. Evading, striking, riding down, he
so forced and so manoeuvred his strong horse, so aptly defended
himself, and so liberally scattered death to his opponents, that
he was now far ahead of the foremost of his knights, hewing his
way, with the truncheon of a bloody sword, to where Lord
Risingham was rallying the bravest. A moment more and they
had met; the tall, splendid, and famous warrior against the
deformed and sickly boy.</p>
<p>Yet Shelton had never a doubt of the result; and when the
fight next opened for a moment, the figure of the earl had
disappeared; but still, in the first of the danger, Crookback
Dick was launching his big horse and plying the truncheon of his
sword.</p>
<p>Thus, by Shelton’s courage in holding the mouth of the
street against the first attack, and by the opportune arrival of
his seven hundred reinforcements, the lad, who was afterwards to
be handed down to the execration of posterity under the name of
Richard III., had won his first considerable fight.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER IV—THE SACK OF SHOREBY</h3>
<p>There was not a foe left within striking distance; and Dick,
as he looked ruefully about him on the remainder of his gallant
force, began to count the cost of victory. He was himself,
now that the danger was ended, so stiff and sore, so bruised and
cut and broken, and, above all, so utterly exhausted by his
desperate and unremitting labours in the fight, that he seemed
incapable of any fresh exertion.</p>
<p>But this was not yet the hour for repose. Shoreby had
been taken by assault; and though an open town, and not in any
manner to be charged with the resistance, it was plain that these
rough fighters would be not less rough now that the fight was
over, and that the more horrid part of war would fall to be
enacted. Richard of Gloucester was not the captain to
protect the citizens from his infuriated soldiery; and even if he
had the will, it might be questioned if he had the power.</p>
<p>It was, therefore, Dick’s business to find and to
protect Joanna; and with that end he looked about him at the
faces of his men. The three or four who seemed likeliest to
be obedient and to keep sober he drew aside; and promising them a
rich reward and a special recommendation to the duke, led them
across the market-place, now empty of horsemen, and into the
streets upon the further side.</p>
<p>Every here and there small combats of from two to a dozen
still raged upon the open street; here and there a house was
being besieged, the defenders throwing out stools and tables on
the heads of the assailants. The snow was strewn with arms
and corpses; but except for these partial combats the streets
were deserted, and the houses, some standing open, and some
shuttered and barricaded, had for the most part ceased to give
out smoke.</p>
<p>Dick, threading the skirts of these skirmishers, led his
followers briskly in the direction of the abbey church; but when
he came the length of the main street, a cry of horror broke from
his lips. Sir Daniel’s great house had been carried
by assault. The gates hung in splinters from the hinges,
and a double throng kept pouring in and out through the entrance,
seeking and carrying booty. Meanwhile, in the upper
storeys, some resistance was still being offered to the
pillagers; for just as Dick came within eyeshot of the building,
a casement was burst open from within, and a poor wretch in
murrey and blue, screaming and resisting, was forced through the
embrasure and tossed into the street below.</p>
<p>The most sickening apprehension fell upon Dick. He ran
forward like one possessed, forced his way into the house among
the foremost, and mounted without pause to the chamber on the
third floor where he had last parted from Joanna. It was a
mere wreck; the furniture had been overthrown, the cupboards
broken open, and in one place a trailing corner of the arras lay
smouldering on the embers of the fire.</p>
<p>Dick, almost without thinking, trod out the incipient
conflagration, and then stood bewildered. Sir Daniel, Sir
Oliver, Joanna, all were gone; but whether butchered in the rout
or safe escaped from Shoreby, who should say?</p>
<p>He caught a passing archer by the tabard.</p>
<p>“Fellow,” he asked, “were ye here when this
house was taken?”</p>
<p>“Let be,” said the archer. “A murrain!
let be, or I strike.”</p>
<p>“Hark ye,” returned Richard, “two can play
at that. Stand and be plain.”</p>
<p>But the man, flushed with drink and battle, struck Dick upon
the shoulder with one hand, while with the other he twitched away
his garment. Thereupon the full wrath of the young leader
burst from his control. He seized the fellow in his strong
embrace, and crushed him on the plates of his mailed bosom like a
child; then, holding him at arm’s length, he bid him speak
as he valued life.</p>
<p>“I pray you mercy!” gasped the archer.
“An I had thought ye were so angry I would ’a’
been charier of crossing you. I was here indeed.”</p>
<p>“Know ye Sir Daniel?” pursued Dick.</p>
<p>“Well do I know him,” returned the man.</p>
<p>“Was he in the mansion?”</p>
<p>“Ay, sir, he was,” answered the archer; “but
even as we entered by the yard gate he rode forth by the
garden.”</p>
<p>“Alone?” cried Dick.</p>
<p>“He may ’a’ had a score of lances with
him,” said the man.</p>
<p>“Lances! No women, then?” asked Shelton.</p>
<p>“Troth, I saw not,” said the archer.
“But there were none in the house, if that be your
quest.”</p>
<p>“I thank you,” said Dick. “Here is a
piece for your pains.” But groping in his wallet,
Dick found nothing. “Inquire for me to-morrow,”
he added—“Richard Shelt—Sir Richard
Shelton,” he corrected, “and I will see you
handsomely rewarded.”</p>
<p>And then an idea struck Dick. He hastily descended to
the courtyard, ran with all his might across the garden, and came
to the great door of the church. It stood wide open;
within, every corner of the pavement was crowded with fugitive
burghers, surrounded by their families and laden with the most
precious of their possessions, while, at the high altar, priests
in full canonicals were imploring the mercy of God. Even as
Dick entered, the loud chorus began to thunder in the vaulted
roofs.</p>
<p>He hurried through the groups of refugees, and came to the
door of the stair that led into the steeple. And here a
tall churchman stepped before him and arrested his advance.</p>
<p>“Whither, my son?” he asked, severely.</p>
<p>“My father,” answered Dick, “I am here upon
an errand of expedition. Stay me not. I command here
for my Lord of Gloucester.”</p>
<p>“For my Lord of Gloucester?” repeated the
priest. “Hath, then, the battle gone so
sore?”</p>
<p>“The battle, father, is at an end, Lancaster clean sped,
my Lord of Risingham—Heaven rest him!—left upon the
field. And now, with your good leave, I follow mine
affairs.” And thrusting on one side the priest, who
seemed stupefied at the news, Dick pushed open the door and
rattled up the stairs four at a bound, and without pause or
stumble, till he stepped upon the open platform at the top.</p>
<p>Shoreby Church tower not only commanded the town, as in a map,
but looked far, on both sides, over sea and land. It was
now near upon noon; the day exceeding bright, the snow
dazzling. And as Dick looked around him, he could measure
the consequences of the battle.</p>
<p>A confused, growling uproar reached him from the streets, and
now and then, but very rarely, the clash of steel. Not a
ship, not so much as a skiff remained in harbour; but the sea was
dotted with sails and row-boats laden with fugitives. On
shore, too, the surface of the snowy meadows was broken up with
bands of horsemen, some cutting their way towards the borders of
the forest, others, who were doubtless of the Yorkist side,
stoutly interposing and beating them back upon the town.
Over all the open ground there lay a prodigious quantity of
fallen men and horses, clearly defined upon the snow.</p>
<p>To complete the picture, those of the foot soldiers as had not
found place upon a ship still kept up an archery combat on the
borders of the port, and from the cover of the shoreside
taverns. In that quarter, also, one or two houses had been
fired, and the smoke towered high in the frosty sunlight, and
blew off to sea in voluminous folds.</p>
<p>Already close upon the margin of the woods, and somewhat in
the line of Holywood, one particular clump of fleeing horsemen
riveted the attention of the young watcher on the tower. It
was fairly numerous; in no other quarter of the field did so many
Lancastrians still hold together; thus they had left a wide,
discoloured wake upon the snow, and Dick was able to trace them
step by step from where they had left the town.</p>
<p>While Dick stood watching them, they had gained, unopposed,
the first fringe of the leafless forest, and, turning a little
from their direction, the sun fell for a moment full on their
array, as it was relieved against the dusky wood.</p>
<p>“Murrey and blue!” cried Dick. “I
swear it—murrey and blue!”</p>
<p>The next moment he was descending the stairway.</p>
<p>It was now his business to seek out the Duke of Gloucester,
who alone, in the disorder of the forces, might be able to supply
him with a sufficiency of men. The fighting in the main
town was now practically at an end; and as Dick ran hither and
thither, seeking the commander, the streets were thick with
wandering soldiers, some laden with more booty than they could
well stagger under, others shouting drunk. None of them,
when questioned, had the least notion of the duke’s
whereabouts; and, at last, it was by sheer good fortune that Dick
found him, where he sat in the saddle directing operations to
dislodge the archers from the harbour side.</p>
<p>“Sir Richard Shelton, ye are well found,” he
said. “I owe you one thing that I value little, my
life; and one that I can never pay you for, this victory.
Catesby, if I had ten such captains as Sir Richard, I would march
forthright on London. But now, sir, claim your
reward.”</p>
<p>“Freely, my lord,” said Dick, “freely and
loudly. One hath escaped to whom I owe some grudges, and
taken with him one whom I owe love and service. Give me,
then, fifty lances, that I may pursue; and for any obligation
that your graciousness is pleased to allow, it shall be clean
discharged.”</p>
<p>“How call ye him?” inquired the duke.</p>
<p>“Sir Daniel Brackley,” answered Richard.</p>
<p>“Out upon him, double-face!” cried
Gloucester. “Here is no reward, Sir Richard; here is
fresh service offered, and, if that ye bring his head to me, a
fresh debt upon my conscience. Catesby, get him these
lances; and you, sir, bethink ye, in the meanwhile, what
pleasure, honour, or profit it shall be mine to give
you.”</p>
<p>Just then the Yorkist skirmishers carried one of the shoreside
taverns, swarming in upon it on three sides, and driving out or
taking its defenders. Crookback Dick was pleased to cheer
the exploit, and pushing his horse a little nearer, called to see
the prisoners.</p>
<p>There were four or five of them—two men of my Lord
Shoreby’s and one of Lord Risingham’s among the
number, and last, but in Dick’s eyes not least, a tall,
shambling, grizzled old shipman, between drunk and sober, and
with a dog whimpering and jumping at his heels.</p>
<p>The young duke passed them for a moment under a severe
review.</p>
<p>“Good,” he said. “Hang
them.”</p>
<p>And he turned the other way to watch the progress of the
fight.</p>
<p>“My lord,” said Dick, “so please you, I have
found my reward. Grant me the life and liberty of yon old
shipman.”</p>
<p>Gloucester turned and looked the speaker in the face.</p>
<p>“Sir Richard,” he said, “I make not war with
peacock’s feathers, but steel shafts. Those that are
mine enemies I slay, and that without excuse or favour.
For, bethink ye, in this realm of England, that is so torn in
pieces, there is not a man of mine but hath a brother or a friend
upon the other party. If, then, I did begin to grant these
pardons, I might sheathe my sword.”</p>
<p>“It may be so, my lord; and yet I will be overbold, and
at the risk of your disfavour, recall your lordship’s
promise,” replied Dick.</p>
<p>Richard of Gloucester flushed.</p>
<p>“Mark it right well,” he said, harshly.
“I love not mercy, nor yet mercymongers. Ye have this
day laid the foundations of high fortune. If ye oppose to
me my word, which I have plighted, I will yield. But, by
the glory of heaven, there your favour dies!</p>
<p>“Mine is the loss,” said Dick.</p>
<p>“Give him his sailor,” said the duke; and wheeling
his horse, he turned his back upon young Shelton.</p>
<p>Dick was nor glad nor sorry. He had seen too much of the
young duke to set great store on his affection; and the origin
and growth of his own favour had been too flimsy and too rapid to
inspire much confidence. One thing alone he
feared—that the vindictive leader might revoke the offer of
the lances. But here he did justice neither to
Gloucester’s honour (such as it was) nor, above all, to his
decision. If he had once judged Dick to be the right man to
pursue Sir Daniel, he was not one to change; and he soon proved
it by shouting after Catesby to be speedy, for the paladin was
waiting.</p>
<p>In the meanwhile, Dick turned to the old shipman, who had
seemed equally indifferent to his condemnation and to his
subsequent release.</p>
<p>“Arblaster,” said Dick, “I have done you
ill; but now, by the rood, I think I have cleared the
score.”</p>
<p>But the old skipper only looked upon him dully and held his
peace.</p>
<p>“Come,” continued Dick, “a life is a life,
old shrew, and it is more than ships or liquor. Say ye
forgive me; for if your life be worth nothing to you, it hath
cost me the beginnings of my fortune. Come, I have paid for
it dearly; be not so churlish.”</p>
<p>“An I had had my ship,” said Arblaster, “I
would ’a’ been forth and safe on the high
seas—I and my man Tom. But ye took my ship, gossip,
and I’m a beggar; and for my man Tom, a knave fellow in
russet shot him down. ‘Murrain!’ quoth he, and
spake never again. ‘Murrain’ was the last of
his words, and the poor spirit of him passed. ‘A will
never sail no more, will my Tom.’”</p>
<p>Dick was seized with unavailing penitence and pity; he sought
to take the skipper’s hand, but Arblaster avoided his
touch.</p>
<p>“Nay,” said he, “let be. Y’ have
played the devil with me, and let that content you.”</p>
<p>The words died in Richard’s throat. He saw,
through tears, the poor old man, bemused with liquor and sorrow,
go shambling away, with bowed head, across the snow, and the
unnoticed dog whimpering at his heels, and for the first time
began to understand the desperate game that we play in life; and
how a thing once done is not to be changed or remedied, by any
penitence.</p>
<p>But there was no time left to him for vain regret.</p>
<p>Catesby had now collected the horsemen, and riding up to Dick
he dismounted, and offered him his own horse.</p>
<p>“This morning,” he said, “I was somewhat
jealous of your favour; it hath not been of a long growth; and
now, Sir Richard, it is with a very good heart that I offer you
this horse—to ride away with.”</p>
<p>“Suffer me yet a moment,” replied Dick.
“This favour of mine—whereupon was it
founded?”</p>
<p>“Upon your name,” answered Catesby.
“It is my lord’s chief superstition. Were my
name Richard, I should be an earl to-morrow.”</p>
<p>“Well, sir, I thank you,” returned Dick;
“and since I am little likely to follow these great
fortunes, I will even say farewell. I will not pretend I
was displeased to think myself upon the road to fortune; but I
will not pretend, neither, that I am over-sorry to be done with
it. Command and riches, they are brave things, to be sure;
but a word in your ear—yon duke of yours, he is a fearsome
lad.”</p>
<p>Catesby laughed.</p>
<p>“Nay,” said he, “of a verity he that rides
with Crooked Dick will ride deep. Well, God keep us all
from evil! Speed ye well.”</p>
<p>Thereupon Dick put himself at the head of his men, and giving
the word of command, rode off.</p>
<p>He made straight across the town, following what he supposed
to be the route of Sir Daniel, and spying around for any signs
that might decide if he were right.</p>
<p>The streets were strewn with the dead and the wounded, whose
fate, in the bitter frost, was far the more pitiable. Gangs
of the victors went from house to house, pillaging and stabbing,
and sometimes singing together as they went.</p>
<p>From different quarters, as he rode on, the sounds of violence
and outrage came to young Shelton’s ears; now the blows of
the sledge-hammer on some barricaded door, and now the miserable
shrieks of women.</p>
<p>Dick’s heart had just been awakened. He had just
seen the cruel consequences of his own behaviour; and the thought
of the sum of misery that was now acting in the whole of Shoreby
filled him with despair.</p>
<p>At length he reached the outskirts, and there, sure enough, he
saw straight before him the same broad, beaten track across the
snow that he had marked from the summit of the church.
Here, then, he went the faster on; but still, as he rode, he kept
a bright eye upon the fallen men and horses that lay beside the
track. Many of these, he was relieved to see, wore Sir
Daniel’s colours, and the faces of some, who lay upon their
back, he even recognised.</p>
<p>About half-way between the town and the forest, those whom he
was following had plainly been assailed by archers; for the
corpses lay pretty closely scattered, each pierced by an
arrow. And here Dick spied among the rest the body of a
very young lad, whose face was somehow hauntingly familiar to
him.</p>
<p>He halted his troop, dismounted, and raised the lad’s
head. As he did so, the hood fell back, and a profusion of
long brown hair unrolled itself. At the same time the eyes
opened.</p>
<p>“Ah! lion driver!” said a feeble voice.
“She is farther on. Ride—ride fast!”</p>
<p>And then the poor young lady fainted once again.</p>
<p>One of Dick’s men carried a flask of some strong
cordial, and with this Dick succeeded in reviving
consciousness. Then he took Joanna’s friend upon his
saddlebow, and once more pushed toward the forest.</p>
<p>“Why do ye take me?” said the girl.
“Ye but delay your speed.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Mistress Risingham,” replied Dick.
“Shoreby is full of blood and drunkenness and riot.
Here ye are safe; content ye.”</p>
<p>“I will not be beholden to any of your faction,”
she cried; “set me down.”</p>
<p>“Madam, ye know not what ye say,” returned
Dick. “Y’ are hurt”—</p>
<p>“I am not,” she said. “It was my horse
was slain.”</p>
<p>“It matters not one jot,” replied Richard.
“Ye are here in the midst of open snow, and compassed about
with enemies. Whether ye will or not, I carry you with
me. Glad am I to have the occasion; for thus shall I repay
some portion of our debt.”</p>
<p>For a little while she was silent. Then, very suddenly,
she asked:</p>
<p>“My uncle?”</p>
<p>“My Lord Risingham?” returned Dick. “I
would I had good news to give you, madam; but I have none.
I saw him once in the battle, and once only. Let us hope
the best.”</p>
<h3>CHAPTER V—NIGHT IN THE WOODS: ALICIA RISINGHAM</h3>
<p>It was almost certain that Sir Daniel had made for the Moat
House; but, considering the heavy snow, the lateness of the hour,
and the necessity under which he would lie of avoiding the few
roads and striking across the wood, it was equally certain that
he could not hope to reach it ere the morrow.</p>
<p>There were two courses open to Dick; either to continue to
follow in the knight’s trail, and, if he were able, to fall
upon him that very night in camp, or to strike out a path of his
own, and seek to place himself between Sir Daniel and his
destination.</p>
<p>Either scheme was open to serious objection, and Dick, who
feared to expose Joanna to the hazards of a fight, had not yet
decided between them when he reached the borders of the wood.</p>
<p>At this point Sir Daniel had turned a little to his left, and
then plunged straight under a grove of very lofty timber.
His party had then formed to a narrower front, in order to pass
between the trees, and the track was trod proportionally deeper
in the snow. The eye followed it under the leafless tracery
of the oaks, running direct and narrow; the trees stood over it,
with knotty joints and the great, uplifted forest of their
boughs; there was no sound, whether of man or beast—not so
much as the stirring of a robin; and over the field of snow the
winter sun lay golden among netted shadows.</p>
<p>“How say ye,” asked Dick of one of the men,
“to follow straight on, or strike across for
Tunstall?”</p>
<p>“Sir Richard,” replied the man-at-arms, “I
would follow the line until they scatter.”</p>
<p>“Ye are, doubtless, right,” returned Dick;
“but we came right hastily upon the errand, even as the
time commanded. Here are no houses, neither for food nor
shelter, and by the morrow’s dawn we shall know both cold
fingers and an empty belly. How say ye, lads? Will ye
stand a pinch for expedition’s sake, or shall we turn by
Holywood and sup with Mother Church? The case being
somewhat doubtful, I will drive no man; yet if ye would suffer me
to lead you, ye would choose the first.”</p>
<p>The men answered, almost with one voice, that they would
follow Sir Richard where he would.</p>
<p>And Dick, setting spur to his horse, began once more to go
forward.</p>
<p>The snow in the trail had been trodden very hard, and the
pursuers had thus a great advantage over the pursued. They
pushed on, indeed, at a round trot, two hundred hoofs beating
alternately on the dull pavement of the snow, and the jingle of
weapons and the snorting of horses raising a warlike noise along
the arches of the silent wood.</p>
<p>Presently, the wide slot of the pursued came out upon the high
road from Holywood; it was there, for a moment,
indistinguishable; and, where it once more plunged into the
unbeaten snow upon the farther side, Dick was surprised to see it
narrower and lighter trod. Plainly, profiting by the road,
Sir Daniel had begun already to scatter his command.</p>
<p>At all hazards, one chance being equal to another, Dick
continued to pursue the straight trail; and that, after an
hour’s riding, in which it led into the very depths of the
forest, suddenly split, like a bursting shell, into two dozen
others, leading to every point of the compass.</p>
<p>Dick drew bridle in despair. The short winter’s
day was near an end; the sun, a dull red orange, shorn of rays,
swam low among the leafless thickets; the shadows were a mile
long upon the snow; the frost bit cruelly at the finger-nails;
and the breath and steam of the horses mounted in a cloud.</p>
<p>“Well, we are outwitted,” Dick confessed.
“Strike we for Holywood, after all. It is still
nearer us than Tunstall—or should be by the station of the
sun.”</p>
<p>So they wheeled to their left, turning their backs on the red
shield of sun, and made across country for the abbey. But
now times were changed with them; they could no longer spank
forth briskly on a path beaten firm by the passage of their foes,
and for a goal to which that path itself conducted them.
Now they must plough at a dull pace through the encumbering snow,
continually pausing to decide their course, continually
floundering in drifts. The sun soon left them; the glow of
the west decayed; and presently they were wandering in a shadow
of blackness, under frosty stars.</p>
<p>Presently, indeed, the moon would clear the hilltops, and they
might resume their march. But till then, every random step
might carry them wider of their march. There was nothing
for it but to camp and wait.</p>
<p>Sentries were posted; a spot of ground was cleared of snow,
and, after some failures, a good fire blazed in the midst.
The men-at-arms sat close about this forest hearth, sharing such
provisions as they had, and passing about the flask; and Dick,
having collected the most delicate of the rough and scanty fare,
brought it to Lord Risingham’s niece, where she sat apart
from the soldiery against a tree.</p>
<p>She sat upon one horse-cloth, wrapped in another, and stared
straight before her at the firelit scene. At the offer of
food she started, like one wakened from a dream, and then
silently refused.</p>
<p>“Madam,” said Dick, “let me beseech you,
punish me not so cruelly. Wherein I have offended you, I
know not; I have, indeed, carried you away, but with a friendly
violence; I have, indeed, exposed you to the inclemency of night,
but the hurry that lies upon me hath for its end the preservation
of another, who is no less frail and no less unfriended than
yourself. At least, madam, punish not yourself; and eat, if
not for hunger, then for strength.”</p>
<p>“I will eat nothing at the hands that slew my
kinsman,” she replied.</p>
<p>“Dear madam,” Dick cried, “I swear to you
upon the rood I touched him not.”</p>
<p>“Swear to me that he still lives,” she
returned.</p>
<p>“I will not palter with you,” answered Dick.
“Pity bids me to wound you. In my heart I do believe
him dead.”</p>
<p>“And ye ask me to eat!” she cried.
“Ay, and they call you ‘sir!’ Y’
have won your spurs by my good kinsman’s murder. And
had I not been fool and traitor both, and saved you in your
enemy’s house, ye should have died the death, and
he—he that was worth twelve of you—were
living.”</p>
<p>“I did but my man’s best, even as your kinsman did
upon the other party,” answered Dick. “Were he
still living—as I vow to Heaven I wish it!—he would
praise, not blame me.”</p>
<p>“Sir Daniel hath told me,” she replied.
“He marked you at the barricade. Upon you, he saith,
their party foundered; it was you that won the battle.
Well, then, it was you that killed my good Lord Risingham, as
sure as though ye had strangled him. And ye would have me
eat with you—and your hands not washed from killing?
But Sir Daniel hath sworn your downfall. He ’tis that
will avenge me!”</p>
<p>The unfortunate Dick was plunged in gloom. Old Arblaster
returned upon his mind, and he groaned aloud.</p>
<p>“Do ye hold me so guilty?” he said; “you
that defended me—you that are Joanna’s
friend?”</p>
<p>“What made ye in the battle?” she retorted.
“Y’ are of no party; y’ are but a lad—but
legs and body, without government of wit or counsel!
Wherefore did ye fight? For the love of hurt,
pardy!”</p>
<p>“Nay,” cried Dick, “I know not. But as
the realm of England goes, if that a poor gentleman fight not
upon the one side, perforce he must fight upon the other.
He may not stand alone; ’tis not in nature.”</p>
<p>“They that have no judgment should not draw the
sword,” replied the young lady. “Ye that fight
but for a hazard, what are ye but a butcher? War is but
noble by the cause, and y’ have disgraced it.”</p>
<p>“Madam,” said the miserable Dick, “I do
partly see mine error. I have made too much haste; I have
been busy before my time. Already I stole a
ship—thinking, I do swear it, to do well—and thereby
brought about the death of many innocent, and the grief and ruin
of a poor old man whose face this very day hath stabbed me like a
dagger. And for this morning, I did but design to do myself
credit, and get fame to marry with, and, behold! I have brought
about the death of your dear kinsman that was good to me.
And what besides, I know not. For, alas! I may have set
York upon the throne, and that may be the worser cause, and may
do hurt to England. O, madam, I do see my sin. I am
unfit for life. I will, for penance sake and to avoid worse
evil, once I have finished this adventure, get me to a
cloister. I will forswear Joanna and the trade of
arms. I will be a friar, and pray for your good
kinsman’s spirit all my days.”</p>
<p>It appeared to Dick, in this extremity of his humiliation and
repentance, that the young lady had laughed.</p>
<p>Raising his countenance, he found her looking down upon him,
in the fire-light, with a somewhat peculiar but not unkind
expression.</p>
<p>“Madam,” he cried, thinking the laughter to have
been an illusion of his hearing, but still, from her changed
looks, hoping to have touched her heart, “madam, will not
this content you? I give up all to undo what I have done
amiss; I make heaven certain for Lord Risingham. And all
this upon the very day that I have won my spurs, and thought
myself the happiest young gentleman on ground.”</p>
<p>“O boy,” she said—“good
boy!”</p>
<p>And then, to the extreme surprise of Dick, she first very
tenderly wiped the tears away from his cheeks, and then, as if
yielding to a sudden impulse, threw both her arms about his neck,
drew up his face, and kissed him. A pitiful bewilderment
came over simple-minded Dick.</p>
<p>“But come,” she said, with great cheerfulness,
“you that are a captain, ye must eat. Why sup ye
not?”</p>
<p>“Dear Mistress Risingham,” replied Dick, “I
did but wait first upon my prisoner; but, to say truth, penitence
will no longer suffer me to endure the sight of food. I
were better to fast, dear lady, and to pray.”</p>
<p>“Call me Alicia,” she said; “are we not old
friends? And now, come, I will eat with you, bit for bit
and sup for sup; so if ye eat not, neither will I; but if ye eat
hearty, I will dine like a ploughman.”</p>
<p>So there and then she fell to; and Dick, who had an excellent
stomach, proceeded to bear her company, at first with great
reluctance, but gradually, as he entered into the spirit, with
more and more vigour and devotion: until, at last, he forgot even
to watch his model, and most heartily repaired the expenses of
his day of labour and excitement.</p>
<p>“Lion-driver,” she said, at length, “ye do
not admire a maid in a man’s jerkin?”</p>
<p>The moon was now up; and they were only waiting to repose the
wearied horses. By the moon’s light, the still
penitent but now well-fed Richard beheld her looking somewhat
coquettishly down upon him.</p>
<p>“Madam”—he stammered, surprised at this new
turn in her manners.</p>
<p>“Nay,” she interrupted, “it skills not to
deny; Joanna hath told me, but come, Sir Lion-driver, look at
me—am I so homely—come!”</p>
<p>And she made bright eyes at him.</p>
<p>“Ye are something smallish, indeed”—began
Dick.</p>
<p>And here again she interrupted him, this time with a ringing
peal of laughter that completed his confusion and surprise.</p>
<p>“Smallish!” she cried. “Nay, now, be
honest as ye are bold; I am a dwarf, or little better; but for
all that—come, tell me!—for all that, passably fair
to look upon; is’t not so?”</p>
<p>“Nay, madam, exceedingly fair,” said the
distressed knight, pitifully trying to seem easy.</p>
<p>“And a man would be right glad to wed me?” she
pursued.</p>
<p>“O, madam, right glad!” agreed Dick.</p>
<p>“Call me Alicia,” said she.</p>
<p>“Alicia,” quoth Sir Richard.</p>
<p>“Well, then, lion-driver,” she continued,
“sith that ye slew my kinsman, and left me without stay, ye
owe me, in honour, every reparation; do ye not?”</p>
<p>“I do, madam,” said Dick. “Although,
upon my heart, I do hold me but partially guilty of that brave
knight’s blood.”</p>
<p>“Would ye evade me?” she cried.</p>
<p>“Madam, not so. I have told you; at your bidding,
I will even turn me a monk,” said Richard.</p>
<p>“Then, in honour, ye belong to me?” she
concluded.</p>
<p>“In honour, madam, I suppose”—began the
young man.</p>
<p>“Go to!” she interrupted; “ye are too full
of catches. In honour do ye belong to me, till ye have paid
the evil?”</p>
<p>“In honour, I do,” said Dick.</p>
<p>“Hear, then,” she continued; “Ye would make
but a sad friar, methinks; and since I am to dispose of you at
pleasure, I will even take you for my husband. Nay, now, no
words!” cried she. “They will avail you
nothing. For see how just it is, that you who deprived me
of one home, should supply me with another. And as for
Joanna, she will be the first, believe me, to commend the change;
for, after all, as we be dear friends, what matters it with which
of us ye wed? Not one whit!”</p>
<p>“Madam,” said Dick, “I will go into a
cloister, an ye please to bid me; but to wed with anyone in this
big world besides Joanna Sedley is what I will consent to neither
for man’s force nor yet for lady’s pleasure.
Pardon me if I speak my plain thoughts plainly; but where a maid
is very bold, a poor man must even be the bolder.”</p>
<p>“Dick,” she said, “ye sweet boy, ye must
come and kiss me for that word. Nay, fear not, ye shall
kiss me for Joanna; and when we meet, I shall give it back to
her, and say I stole it. And as for what ye owe me, why,
dear simpleton, methinks ye were not alone in that great battle;
and even if York be on the throne, it was not you that set him
there. But for a good, sweet, honest heart, Dick, y’
are all that; and if I could find it in my soul to envy your
Joanna anything, I would even envy her your love.”</p>
<h3>CHAPTER VI—NIGHT IN THE WOODS (concluded): DICK AND JOAN</h3>
<p>The horses had by this time finished the small store of
provender, and fully breathed from their fatigues. At
Dick’s command, the fire was smothered in snow; and while
his men got once more wearily to saddle, he himself, remembering,
somewhat late, true woodland caution, chose a tall oak and nimbly
clambered to the topmost fork. Hence he could look far
abroad on the moonlit and snow-paven forest. On the
south-west, dark against the horizon, stood those upland, heathy
quarters where he and Joanna had met with the terrifying
misadventure of the leper. And there his eye was caught by
a spot of ruddy brightness no bigger than a needle’s
eye.</p>
<p>He blamed himself sharply for his previous neglect. Were
that, as it appeared to be, the shining of Sir Daniel’s
camp-fire, he should long ago have seen and marched for it; above
all, he should, for no consideration, have announced his
neighbourhood by lighting a fire of his own. But now he
must no longer squander valuable hours. The direct way to
the uplands was about two miles in length; but it was crossed by
a very deep, precipitous dingle, impassable to mounted men; and
for the sake of speed, it seemed to Dick advisable to desert the
horses and attempt the adventure on foot.</p>
<p>Ten men were left to guard the horses; signals were agreed
upon by which they could communicate in case of need; and Dick
set forth at the head of the remainder, Alicia Risingham walking
stoutly by his side.</p>
<p>The men had freed themselves of heavy armour, and left behind
their lances; and they now marched with a very good spirit in the
frozen snow, and under the exhilarating lustre of the moon.
The descent into the dingle, where a stream strained sobbing
through the snow and ice, was effected with silence and order;
and on the further side, being then within a short half mile of
where Dick had seen the glimmer of the fire, the party halted to
breathe before the attack.</p>
<p>In the vast silence of the wood, the lightest sounds were
audible from far; and Alicia, who was keen of hearing, held up
her finger warningly and stooped to listen. All followed
her example; but besides the groans of the choked brook in the
dingle close behind, and the barking of a fox at a distance of
many miles among the forest, to Dick’s acutest hearkening,
not a breath was audible.</p>
<p>“But yet, for sure, I heard the clash of harness,”
whispered Alicia.</p>
<p>“Madam,” returned Dick, who was more afraid of
that young lady than of ten stout warriors, “I would not
hint ye were mistaken; but it might well have come from either of
the camps.”</p>
<p>“It came not thence. It came from westward,”
she declared.</p>
<p>“It may be what it will,” returned Dick;
“and it must be as heaven please. Reck we not a jot,
but push on the livelier, and put it to the touch. Up,
friends—enough breathed.”</p>
<p>As they advanced, the snow became more and more trampled with
hoof-marks, and it was plain that they were drawing near to the
encampment of a considerable force of mounted men.
Presently they could see the smoke pouring from among the trees,
ruddily coloured on its lower edge and scattering bright
sparks.</p>
<p>And here, pursuant to Dick’s orders, his men began to
open out, creeping stealthily in the covert, to surround on every
side the camp of their opponents. He himself, placing
Alicia in the shelter of a bulky oak, stole straight forth in the
direction of the fire.</p>
<p>At last, through an opening of the wood, his eye embraced the
scene of the encampment. The fire had been built upon a
heathy hummock of the ground, surrounded on three sides by
thicket, and it now burned very strong, roaring aloud and
brandishing flames. Around it there sat not quite a dozen
people, warmly cloaked; but though the neighbouring snow was
trampled down as by a regiment, Dick looked in vain for any
horse. He began to have a terrible misgiving that he was
out-manoeuvred. At the same time, in a tall man with a
steel salet, who was spreading his hands before the blaze, he
recognised his old friend and still kindly enemy, Bennet Hatch;
and in two others, sitting a little back, he made out, even in
their male disguise, Joanna Sedley and Sir Daniel’s
wife.</p>
<p>“Well,” thought he to himself, “even if I
lose my horses, let me get my Joanna, and why should I
complain?”</p>
<p>And then, from the further side of the encampment, there came
a little whistle, announcing that his men had joined, and the
investment was complete.</p>
<p>Bennet, at the sound, started to his feet; but ere he had time
to spring upon his arms, Dick hailed him.</p>
<p>“Bennet,” he said—“Bennet, old friend,
yield ye. Ye will but spill men’s lives in vain, if
ye resist.”</p>
<p>“’Tis Master Shelton, by St. Barbary!” cried
Hatch. “Yield me? Ye ask much. What force
have ye?”</p>
<p>“I tell you, Bennet, ye are both outnumbered and
begirt,” said Dick. “Cæsar and
Charlemagne would cry for quarter. I have two score men at
my whistle, and with one shoot of arrows I could answer for you
all.”</p>
<p>“Master Dick,” said Bennet, “it goes against
my heart; but I must do my duty. The saints help
you!” And therewith he raised a little tucket to his
mouth and wound a rousing call.</p>
<p>Then followed a moment of confusion; for while Dick, fearing
for the ladies, still hesitated to give the word to shoot,
Hatch’s little band sprang to their weapons and formed back
to back as for a fierce resistance. In the hurry of their
change of place, Joanna sprang from her seat and ran like an
arrow to her lover’s side.</p>
<p>“Here, Dick!” she cried, as she clasped his hand
in hers.</p>
<p>But Dick still stood irresolute; he was yet young to the more
deplorable necessities of war, and the thought of old Lady
Brackley checked the command upon his tongue. His own men
became restive. Some of them cried on him by name; others,
of their own accord, began to shoot; and at the first discharge
poor Bennet bit the dust. Then Dick awoke.</p>
<p>“On!” he cried. “Shoot, boys, and keep
to cover. England and York!”</p>
<p>But just then the dull beat of many horses on the snow
suddenly arose in the hollow ear of the night, and, with
incredible swiftness, drew nearer and swelled louder. At
the same time, answering tuckets repeated and repeated
Hatch’s call.</p>
<p>“Rally, rally!” cried Dick. “Rally
upon me! Rally for your lives!”</p>
<p>But his men—afoot, scattered, taken in the hour when
they had counted on an easy triumph—began instead to give
ground severally, and either stood wavering or dispersed into the
thickets. And when the first of the horsemen came charging
through the open avenues and fiercely riding their steeds into
the underwood, a few stragglers were overthrown or speared among
the brush, but the bulk of Dick’s command had simply melted
at the rumour of their coming.</p>
<p>Dick stood for a moment, bitterly recognising the fruits of
his precipitate and unwise valour. Sir Daniel had seen the
fire; he had moved out with his main force, whether to attack his
pursuers or to take them in the rear if they should venture the
assault. His had been throughout the part of a sagacious
captain; Dick’s the conduct of an eager boy. And here
was the young knight, his sweetheart, indeed, holding him tightly
by the hand, but otherwise alone, his whole command of men and
horses dispersed in the night and the wide forest, like a paper
of pins in a bay barn.</p>
<p>“The saints enlighten me!” he thought.
“It is well I was knighted for this morning’s matter;
this doth me little honour.”</p>
<p>And thereupon, still holding Joanna, he began to run.</p>
<p>The silence of the night was now shattered by the shouts of
the men of Tunstall, as they galloped hither and thither, hunting
fugitives; and Dick broke boldly through the underwood and ran
straight before him like a deer. The silver clearness of
the moon upon the open snow increased, by contrast, the obscurity
of the thickets; and the extreme dispersion of the vanquished led
the pursuers into wildly divergent paths. Hence, in but a
little while, Dick and Joanna paused, in a close covert, and
heard the sounds of the pursuit, scattering abroad, indeed, in
all directions, but yet fainting already in the distance.</p>
<p>“An I had but kept a reserve of them together,”
Dick cried, bitterly, “I could have turned the tables
yet! Well, we live and learn; next time it shall go better,
by the rood.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Dick,” said Joanna, “what matters
it? Here we are together once again.”</p>
<p>He looked at her, and there she was—John Matcham, as of
yore, in hose and doublet. But now he knew her; now, even
in that ungainly dress, she smiled upon him, bright with love;
and his heart was transported with joy.</p>
<p>“Sweetheart,” he said, “if ye forgive this
blunderer, what care I? Make we direct for Holywood; there
lieth your good guardian and my better friend, Lord Foxham.
There shall we be wed; and whether poor or wealthy, famous or
unknown, what, matters it? This day, dear love, I won my
spurs; I was commended by great men for my valour; I thought
myself the goodliest man of war in all broad England. Then,
first, I fell out of my favour with the great; and now have I
been well thrashed, and clean lost my soldiers. There was a
downfall for conceit! But, dear, I care not—dear, if
ye still love me and will wed, I would have my knighthood done
away, and mind it not a jot.”</p>
<p>“My Dick!” she cried. “And did they
knight you?”</p>
<p>“Ay, dear, ye are my lady now,” he answered,
fondly; “or ye shall, ere noon to-morrow—will ye
not?”</p>
<p>“That will I, Dick, with a glad heart,” she
answered.</p>
<p>“Ay, sir? Methought ye were to be a monk!”
said a voice in their ears.</p>
<p>“Alicia!” cried Joanna.</p>
<p>“Even so,” replied the young lady, coming
forward. “Alicia, whom ye left for dead, and whom
your lion-driver found, and brought to life again, and, by my
sooth, made love to, if ye want to know!”</p>
<p>“I’ll not believe it,” cried Joanna.
“Dick!”</p>
<p>“Dick!” mimicked Alicia. “Dick,
indeed! Ay, fair sir, and ye desert poor damsels in
distress,” she continued, turning to the young
knight. “Ye leave them planted behind oaks. But
they say true—the age of chivalry is dead.”</p>
<p>“Madam,” cried Dick, in despair, “upon my
soul I had forgotten you outright. Madam, ye must try to
pardon me. Ye see, I had new found Joanna!”</p>
<p>“I did not suppose that ye had done it o’
purpose,” she retorted. “But I will be cruelly
avenged. I will tell a secret to my Lady Shelton—she
that is to be,” she added, curtseying.
“Joanna,” she continued, “I believe, upon my
soul, your sweetheart is a bold fellow in a fight, but he is, let
me tell you plainly, the softest-hearted simpleton in
England. Go to—ye may do your pleasure with
him! And now, fool children, first kiss me, either one of
you, for luck and kindness; and then kiss each other just one
minute by the glass, and not one second longer; and then let us
all three set forth for Holywood as fast as we can stir; for
these woods, methinks, are full of peril and exceeding
cold.”</p>
<p>“But did my Dick make love to you?” asked Joanna,
clinging to her sweetheart’s side.</p>
<p>“Nay, fool girl,” returned Alicia; “it was I
made love to him. I offered to marry him, indeed; but he
bade me go marry with my likes. These were his words.
Nay, that I will say: he is more plain than pleasant. But
now, children, for the sake of sense, set forward. Shall we
go once more over the dingle, or push straight for
Holywood?”</p>
<p>“Why,” said Dick, “I would like dearly to
get upon a horse; for I have been sore mauled and beaten, one way
and another, these last days, and my poor body is one
bruise. But how think ye? If the men, upon the alarm
of the fighting, had fled away, we should have gone about for
nothing. ’Tis but some three short miles to Holywood
direct; the bell hath not beat nine; the snow is pretty firm to
walk upon, the moon clear; how if we went even as we
are?”</p>
<p>“Agreed,” cried Alicia; but Joanna only pressed
upon Dick’s arm.</p>
<p>Forth, then, they went, through open leafless groves and down
snow-clad alleys, under the white face of the winter moon; Dick
and Joanna walking hand in hand and in a heaven of pleasure; and
their light-minded companion, her own bereavements heartily
forgotten, followed a pace or two behind, now rallying them upon
their silence, and now drawing happy pictures of their future and
united lives.</p>
<p>Still, indeed, in the distance of the wood, the riders of
Tunstall might be heard urging their pursuit; and from time to
time cries or the clash of steel announced the shock of
enemies. But in these young folk, bred among the alarms of
war, and fresh from such a multiplicity of dangers, neither fear
nor pity could be lightly wakened. Content to find the
sounds still drawing farther and farther away, they gave up their
hearts to the enjoyment of the hour, walking already, as Alicia
put it, in a wedding procession; and neither the rude solitude of
the forest, nor the cold of the freezing night, had any force to
shadow or distract their happiness.</p>
<p>At length, from a rising hill, they looked below them on the
dell of Holywood. The great windows of the forest abbey
shone with torch and candle; its high pinnacles and spires arose
very clear and silent, and the gold rood upon the topmost summit
glittered brightly in the moon. All about it, in the open
glade, camp-fires were burning, and the ground was thick with
huts; and across the midst of the picture the frozen river
curved.</p>
<p>“By the mass,” said Richard, “there are Lord
Foxham’s fellows still encamped. The messenger hath
certainly miscarried. Well, then, so better. We have
power at hand to face Sir Daniel.”</p>
<p>But if Lord Foxham’s men still lay encamped in the long
holm at Holywood, it was from a different reason from the one
supposed by Dick. They had marched, indeed, for Shoreby;
but ere they were half way thither, a second messenger met them,
and bade them return to their morning’s camp, to bar the
road against Lancastrian fugitives, and to be so much nearer to
the main army of York. For Richard of Gloucester, having
finished the battle and stamped out his foes in that district,
was already on the march to rejoin his brother; and not long
after the return of my Lord Foxham’s retainers, Crookback
himself drew rein before the abbey door. It was in honour
of this august visitor that the windows shone with lights; and at
the hour of Dick’s arrival with his sweetheart and her
friend, the whole ducal party was being entertained in the
refectory with the splendour of that powerful and luxurious
monastery.</p>
<p>Dick, not quite with his good will, was brought before
them. Gloucester, sick with fatigue, sat leaning upon one
hand his white and terrifying countenance; Lord Foxham, half
recovered from his wound, was in a place of honour on his
left.</p>
<p>“How, sir?” asked Richard. “Have ye
brought me Sir Daniel’s head?”</p>
<p>“My lord duke,” replied Dick, stoutly enough, but
with a qualm at heart, “I have not even the good fortune to
return with my command. I have been, so please your grace,
well beaten.”</p>
<p>Gloucester looked upon him with a formidable frown.</p>
<p>“I gave you fifty lances, <SPAN name="citation3"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote3" class="citation">[3]</SPAN> sir,” he
said.</p>
<p>“My lord duke, I had but fifty men-at-arms,”
replied the young knight.</p>
<p>“How is this?” said Gloucester. “He
did ask me fifty lances.”</p>
<p>“May it please your grace,” replied Catesby,
smoothly, “for a pursuit we gave him but the
horsemen.”</p>
<p>“It is well,” replied Richard, adding,
“Shelton, ye may go.”</p>
<p>“Stay!” said Lord Foxham. “This young
man likewise had a charge from me. It may be he hath better
sped. Say, Master Shelton, have ye found the
maid?”</p>
<p>“I praise the saints, my lord,” said Dick,
“she is in this house.”</p>
<p>“Is it even so? Well, then, my lord the
duke,” resumed Lord Foxham, “with your good will,
to-morrow, before the army march, I do propose a marriage.
This young squire—”</p>
<p>“Young knight,” interrupted Catesby.</p>
<p>“Say ye so, Sir William?” cried Lord Foxham.</p>
<p>“I did myself, and for good service, dub him
knight,” said Gloucester. “He hath twice
manfully served me. It is not valour of hands, it is a
man’s mind of iron, that he lacks. He will not rise,
Lord Foxham. ’Tis a fellow that will fight indeed
bravely in a mellay, but hath a capon’s heart.
Howbeit, if he is to marry, marry him in the name of Mary, and be
done!”</p>
<p>“Nay, he is a brave lad—I know it,” said
Lord Foxham. “Content ye, then, Sir Richard. I
have compounded this affair with Master Hamley, and to-morrow ye
shall wed.”</p>
<p>Whereupon Dick judged it prudent to withdraw; but he was not
yet clear of the refectory, when a man, but newly alighted at the
gate, came running four stairs at a bound, and, brushing through
the abbey servants, threw himself on one knee before the
duke.</p>
<p>“Victory, my lord,” he cried.</p>
<p>And before Dick had got to the chamber set apart for him as
Lord Foxham’s guest, the troops in the holm were cheering
around their fires; for upon that same day, not twenty miles
away, a second crushing blow had been dealt to the power of
Lancaster.</p>
<h3>CHAPTER VII—DICK’S REVENGE</h3>
<p>The next morning Dick was afoot before the sun, and having
dressed himself to the best advantage with the aid of the Lord
Foxham’s baggage, and got good reports of Joan, he set
forth on foot to walk away his impatience.</p>
<p>For some while he made rounds among the soldiery, who were
getting to arms in the wintry twilight of the dawn and by the red
glow of torches; but gradually he strolled further afield, and at
length passed clean beyond the outposts, and walked alone in the
frozen forest, waiting for the sun.</p>
<p>His thoughts were both quiet and happy. His brief favour
with the Duke he could not find it in his heart to mourn; with
Joan to wife, and my Lord Foxham for a faithful patron, he looked
most happily upon the future; and in the past he found but little
to regret.</p>
<p>As he thus strolled and pondered, the solemn light of the
morning grew more clear, the east was already coloured by the
sun, and a little scathing wind blew up the frozen snow. He
turned to go home; but even as he turned, his eye lit upon a
figure behind, a tree.</p>
<p>“Stand!” he cried. “Who
goes?”</p>
<p>The figure stepped forth and waved its hand like a dumb
person. It was arrayed like a pilgrim, the hood lowered
over the face, but Dick, in an instant, recognised Sir
Daniel.</p>
<p>He strode up to him, drawing his sword; and the knight,
putting his hand in his bosom, as if to seize a hidden weapon,
steadfastly awaited his approach.</p>
<p>“Well, Dickon,” said Sir Daniel, “how is it
to be? Do ye make war upon the fallen?”</p>
<p>“I made no war upon your life,” replied the lad;
“I was your true friend until ye sought for mine; but ye
have sought for it greedily.”</p>
<p>“Nay—self-defence,” replied the
knight. “And now, boy, the news of this battle, and
the presence of yon crooked devil here in mine own wood, have
broken me beyond all help. I go to Holywood for sanctuary;
thence overseas, with what I can carry, and to begin life again
in Burgundy or France.”</p>
<p>“Ye may not go to Holywood,” said Dick.</p>
<p>“How! May not?” asked the knight.</p>
<p>“Look ye, Sir Daniel, this is my marriage morn,”
said Dick; “and yon sun that is to rise will make the
brightest day that ever shone for me. Your life is
forfeit—doubly forfeit, for my father’s death and
your own practices to meward. But I myself have done amiss;
I have brought about men’s deaths; and upon this glad day I
will be neither judge nor hangman. An ye were the devil, I
would not lay a hand on you. An ye were the devil, ye might
go where ye will for me. Seek God’s forgiveness; mine
ye have freely. But to go on to Holywood is
different. I carry arms for York, and I will suffer no spy
within their lines. Hold it, then, for certain, if ye set
one foot before another, I will uplift my voice and call the
nearest post to seize you.”</p>
<p>“Ye mock me,” said Sir Daniel. “I have
no safety out of Holywood.”</p>
<p>“I care no more,” returned Richard. “I
let you go east, west, or south; north I will not. Holywood
is shut against you. Go, and seek not to return. For,
once ye are gone, I will warn every post about this army, and
there will be so shrewd a watch upon all pilgrims that, once
again, were ye the very devil, ye would find it ruin to make the
essay.”</p>
<p>“Ye doom me,” said Sir Daniel, gloomily.</p>
<p>“I doom you not,” returned Richard.
“If it so please you to set your valour against mine, come
on; and though I fear it be disloyal to my party, I will take the
challenge openly and fully, fight you with mine own single
strength, and call for none to help me. So shall I avenge
my father, with a perfect conscience.”</p>
<p>“Ay,” said Sir Daniel, “y’ have a long
sword against my dagger.”</p>
<p>“I rely upon Heaven only,” answered Dick, casting
his sword some way behind him on the snow. “Now, if
your ill-fate bids you, come; and, under the pleasure of the
Almighty, I make myself bold to feed your bones to
foxes.”</p>
<p>“I did but try you, Dickon,” returned the knight,
with an uneasy semblance of a laugh. “I would not
spill your blood.”</p>
<p>“Go, then, ere it be too late,” replied
Shelton. “In five minutes I will call the post.
I do perceive that I am too long-suffering. Had but our
places been reversed, I should have been bound hand and foot some
minutes past.”</p>
<p>“Well, Dickon, I will go,” replied Sir
Daniel. “When we next meet, it shall repent you that
ye were so harsh.”</p>
<p>And with these words, the knight turned and began to move off
under the trees. Dick watched him with strangely-mingled
feelings, as he went, swiftly and warily, and ever and again
turning a wicked eye upon the lad who had spared him, and whom he
still suspected.</p>
<p>There was upon one side of where he went a thicket, strongly
matted with green ivy, and, even in its winter state, impervious
to the eye. Herein, all of a sudden, a bow sounded like a
note of music. An arrow flew, and with a great, choked cry
of agony and anger, the Knight of Tunstall threw up his hands and
fell forward in the snow.</p>
<p>Dick bounded to his side and raised him. His face
desperately worked; his whole body was shaken by contorting
spasms.</p>
<p>“Is the arrow black?” he gasped.</p>
<p>“It is black,” replied Dick, gravely.</p>
<p>And then, before he could add one word, a desperate seizure of
pain shook the wounded man from head to foot, so that his body
leaped in Dick’s supporting arms, and with the extremity of
that pang his spirit fled in silence.</p>
<p>The young man laid him back gently on the snow and prayed for
that unprepared and guilty spirit, and as he prayed the sun came
up at a bound, and the robins began chirping in the ivy.</p>
<p>When he rose to his feet, he found another man upon his knees
but a few steps behind him, and, still with uncovered head, he
waited until that prayer also should be over. It took long;
the man, with his head bowed and his face covered with his hands,
prayed like one in a great disorder or distress of mind; and by
the bow that lay beside him, Dick judged that he was no other
than the archer who had laid Sir Daniel low.</p>
<p>At length he, also, rose, and showed the countenance of Ellis
Duckworth.</p>
<p>“Richard,” he said, very gravely, “I heard
you. Ye took the better part and pardoned; I took the
worse, and there lies the clay of mine enemy. Pray for
me.”</p>
<p>And he wrung him by the hand.</p>
<p>“Sir,” said Richard, “I will pray for you,
indeed; though how I may prevail I wot not. But if ye have
so long pursued revenge, and find it now of such a sorry flavour,
bethink ye, were it not well to pardon others?
Hatch—he is dead, poor shrew! I would have spared a
better; and for Sir Daniel, here lies his body. But for the
priest, if I might anywise prevail, I would have you let him
go.”</p>
<p>A flash came into the eyes of Ellis Duckworth.</p>
<p>“Nay,” he said, “the devil is still strong
within me. But be at rest; the Black Arrow flieth
nevermore—the fellowship is broken. They that still
live shall come to their quiet and ripe end, in Heaven’s
good time, for me; and for yourself, go where your better fortune
calls you, and think no more of Ellis.”</p>
<h3>CHAPTER VIII—CONCLUSION</h3>
<p>About nine in the morning, Lord Foxham was leading his ward,
once more dressed as befitted her sex, and followed by Alicia
Risingham, to the church of Holywood, when Richard Crookback, his
brow already heavy with cares, crossed their path and paused.</p>
<p>“Is this the maid?” he asked; and when Lord Foxham
had replied in the affirmative, “Minion,” he added,
“hold up your face until I see its favour.”</p>
<p>He looked upon her sourly for a little.</p>
<p>“Ye are fair,” he said at last, “and, as
they tell me, dowered. How if I offered you a brave
marriage, as became your face and parentage?”</p>
<p>“My lord duke,” replied Joanna, “may it
please your grace, I had rather wed with Sir Richard.”</p>
<p>“How so?” he asked, harshly. “Marry
but the man I name to you, and he shall be my lord, and you my
lady, before night. For Sir Richard, let me tell you
plainly, he will die Sir Richard.”</p>
<p>“I ask no more of Heaven, my lord, than but to die Sir
Richard’s wife,” returned Joanna.</p>
<p>“Look ye at that, my lord,” said Gloucester,
turning to Lord Foxham. “Here be a pair for
you. The lad, when for good services I gave him his choice
of my favour, chose but the grace of an old, drunken
shipman. I did warn him freely, but he was stout in his
besottedness. ‘Here dieth your favour,’ said I;
and he, my lord, with a most assured impertinence, ‘Mine be
the loss,’ quoth he. It shall be so, by the
rood!”</p>
<p>“Said he so?” cried Alicia. “Then well
said, lion-driver!”</p>
<p>“Who is this?” asked the duke.</p>
<p>“A prisoner of Sir Richard’s,” answered Lord
Foxham; “Mistress Alicia Risingham.”</p>
<p>“See that she be married to a sure man,” said the
duke.</p>
<p>“I had thought of my kinsman, Hamley, an it like your
grace,” returned Lord Foxham. “He hath well
served the cause.”</p>
<p>“It likes me well,” said Richard. “Let
them be wedded speedily. Say, fair maid, will you
wed?”</p>
<p>“My lord duke,” said Alicia, “so as the man
is straight”—And there, in a perfect consternation,
the voice died on her tongue.</p>
<p>“He is straight, my mistress,” replied Richard,
calmly. “I am the only crookback of my party; we are
else passably well shapen. Ladies, and you, my lord,”
he added, with a sudden change to grave courtesy, “judge me
not too churlish if I leave you. A captain, in the time of
war, hath not the ordering of his hours.”</p>
<p>And with a very handsome salutation he passed on, followed by
his officers.</p>
<p>“Alack,” cried Alicia, “I am
shent!”</p>
<p>“Ye know him not,” replied Lord Foxham.
“It is but a trifle; he hath already clean forgot your
words.”</p>
<p>“He is, then, the very flower of knighthood,” said
Alicia.</p>
<p>“Nay, he but mindeth other things,” returned Lord
Foxham. “Tarry we no more.”</p>
<p>In the chancel they found Dick waiting, attended by a few
young men; and there were he and Joan united. When they
came forth again, happy and yet serious, into the frosty air and
sunlight, the long files of the army were already winding forward
up the road; already the Duke of Gloucester’s banner was
unfolded and began to move from before the abbey in a clump of
spears; and behind it, girt by steel-clad knights, the bold,
black-hearted, and ambitious hunchback moved on towards his brief
kingdom and his lasting infamy. But the wedding party
turned upon the other side, and sat down, with sober merriment,
to breakfast. The father cellarer attended on their wants,
and sat with them at table. Hamley, all jealousy forgotten,
began to ply the nowise loth Alicia with courtship. And
there, amid the sounding of tuckets and the clash of armoured
soldiery and horses continually moving forth, Dick and Joan sat
side by side, tenderly held hands, and looked, with ever growing
affection, in each other’s eyes.</p>
<p>Thenceforth the dust and blood of that unruly epoch passed
them by. They dwelt apart from alarms in the green forest
where their love began.</p>
<p>Two old men in the meanwhile enjoyed pensions in great
prosperity and peace, and with perhaps a superfluity of ale and
wine, in Tunstall hamlet. One had been all his life a
shipman, and continued to the last to lament his man Tom.
The other, who had been a bit of everything, turned in the end
towards piety, and made a most religious death under the name of
Brother Honestus in the neighbouring abbey. So Lawless had
his will, and died a friar.</p>
<h2>Footnotes:</h2>
<p><SPAN name="footnote1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation1" class="footnote">[1]</SPAN> At the date of this story, Richard
Crookback could not have been created Duke of Gloucester; but for
clearness, with the reader’s leave, he shall so be
called.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation2" class="footnote">[2]</SPAN> Richard Crookback would have been
really far younger at this date.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote3"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation3" class="footnote">[3]</SPAN> Technically, the term
“lance” included a not quite certain number of foot
soldiers attached to the man-at-arms.</p>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
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