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<h2> CHAPTER XXXII. Judgment. </h2>
<p>On the intimation of the Prince's wishes, the tapestry was again raised to
admit Sir Jocelyn Mounchensey, who, stepping forward, made a profound
reverence to the Prince.</p>
<p>"I greet you well, Sir Jocelyn," said Charles, in the kindest and most
gracious tone, as the young knight advanced towards him. "As your disgrace
was public, so shall your restoration to the King's favour be likewise
public. Your return to Court will be a satisfaction to his Majesty. Any
imprudence of which you have been guilty will be entirely overlooked. All
graver faults imputed to you have been explained—so that no
unfavourable impressions against you remain upon my royal father's mind—or
on mine. Let me assure you that you have now no more zealous friends than
the Conde de Gondomar and the Marquis of Buckingham."</p>
<p>"For any wrong I may have done Sir Jocelyn I am heartily sorry," said
Buckingham, frankly. "And he may rely on my present oiler of friendship."</p>
<p>"And on mine, too," subjoined De Gondomar. "The services I have rendered
him must be set against any mischief I have subsequently done."</p>
<p>"You make me more than amends," said Sir Jocelyn, bowing to them, "and I
at once accept your proffered friendship."</p>
<p>"You are in the midst of friends and foes, Sir Jocelyn," said Prince
Charles, "and have before you a new-found relative; and not far distant
from you one, whom—unless I am greatly mistaken—has the
strongest hold upon your affections; but before you turn to her, or to any
one, listen to the sentence, which in the King's name I shall pronounce
upon those two offenders—a sentence which most assuredly will be
ratified by his Majesty in person, and by the Lords of the Council of the
Star-Chamber, before whom they will be brought. Hear me, then, ye
wrong-doers. Ye shall be despoiled of your unjustly-acquired possessions,
which will be escheated to the Crown. Where restitution is possible, it
shall be made."</p>
<p>"Restitution by the Crown!—a likely thing!" muttered Sir Giles.</p>
<p>"Moreover, ye shall pay for your misdeeds in person," pursued Charles.
"Degraded from the knighthood ye have dishonoured, and with all the
ceremonies of debasement, when ye have become Giles Mompesson and Francis
Mitchell, knaves, ye shall undergo precisely the same ignominious
punishment, with all its dreadful details, which ye caused to be inflicted
upon him you supposed to be Clement Lanyere. This being done to you, and
no part of the torture being on any plea omitted, ye shall be brought back
to the Fleet Prison, and be there incarcerated for the residue of your
lives."</p>
<p>Mompesson heard this sentence apparently unmoved, though his flashing eye
betrayed, in some degree, his secret emotion. Not so his partner. Flinging
himself on his knees before the Prince, he cried in piteous tones—"I
confess my manifold offences, and own that my sentence is lenient in
comparison with them. But I beseech your Highness to spare me the
mutilation and branding. All else I will patiently endure."</p>
<p>"He merits no compassion," said Buckingham, "and yet I would intercede for
him."</p>
<p>"And your intercession shall avail to the extent which he himself hath
mentioned—but no further," rejoined Charles.</p>
<p>"I solicit nothing—and I confess nothing," said Mompesson, in a tone
of defiance. "If I am ever brought to trial I shall know how to defend
myself. But I well know that will never be. I can make such revelations
concerning those in high places—ay, in the highest places," he
added, with a vindictive look at Buckingham, "that they will not dare to
molest me."</p>
<p>"The hound must be muzzled," said Buckingham, in a low tone, to the
Prince.</p>
<p>"He must," replied Charles. "Let the prisoners be removed. They are
committed to the Fleet Prison."</p>
<p>"Prisoners!" exclaimed Mompesson.</p>
<p>"Ay, prisoners," repeated Osmond Mounchensey, "<i>my</i> prisoners. I have
a Star-Chamber warrant for your arrest. Behold it. Under this warrant his
Highness has committed you, and you will be taken hence to the Fleet,
where you, Giles Mompesson, shall occupy the cell you destined for my
nephew! Now, your sword."</p>
<p>"Take it," rejoined Mompesson, plucking the rapier from its sheath, "take
it in your heart. You, at least, shall not live to enjoy your triumph."</p>
<p>But Osmond was too quick for him, and seizing his arm, ere he could deal
the meditated blow, with almost superhuman force, he wrested the sword
from him, and broke it beneath his feet.</p>
<p>At the same time, other personages appeared on the scene. These were the
Serjeant-at-arms and a party of halberdiers. Advancing slowly towards the
prisoners, the officer received the warrant from Osmond Mounchensey, while
the halberdiers closed round the two extortioners.</p>
<p>"Before the prisoner, Mompesson, is removed," said Charles, "see that he
delivers up to you his keys. Let an inventory be taken of all monies
within the house, and let the royal seal be placed upon all boxes and
caskets. All deeds and other documents must be carefully preserved to be
examined hereafter. And let strict search be made—for I have heard
there are many hidden depositories of treasure—especially within the
prisoner's secret cabinet."</p>
<p>"Take heed that the strictest examination be made," subjoined Buckingham,
"in accordance with his Highness's behests—for the knave smiles, as
if he thought his precautions were so well taken that the searchers would
be baffled."</p>
<p>"Fear nothing, my Lord Marquis," replied the Serjant-at-arms. "Now,
prisoner," he added, to Mompesson—"your keys!"</p>
<p>While the officer was thus employed, Luke Hatton stepped forward.</p>
<p>"Those keys will be of little use," he said, to the Prince. "Others have
been beforehand with your Highness."</p>
<p>"How, Sir—what others?" demanded Charles, bending his brows.</p>
<p>"The extortioner's lawless band of attendants—generally known as his
myrmidons, your Highness," replied Hatton. "Instinctively discerning, as
it would seem, that all was over with their master, they had determined to
quit his service, and without giving him any notice of their intention.
Not content with deserting him in the hour of danger, they have robbed him
as well—robbed him of the bulk of his treasure. They have broken
into his secret cabinet—and stripped it of all its valuables that
could be of use to them, and have not left one of his hidden hoards
unvisited."</p>
<p>"Hell's curses upon them!" exclaimed Mompesson, with irrepressible rage.
"May they all swing upon the gibbet!"</p>
<p>"The chief among them—a rascally Alsatian, known as Captain Bludder—has
been captured," pursued Luke Hatton. "And a large sum, together with a
rich casket of jewels, has been found upon him; and it is to be hoped that
the officers will succeed in finding the others. Will your Highness
interrogate Bludder?"</p>
<p>"Not now," replied Charles. "Let him be taken to the Fleet. But there were
other matters of more importance than the treasures—the deeds and
legal instruments. These, as being useless to the robbers, were probably
left untouched."</p>
<p>"They were so, your Highness," replied Luke Hatton.</p>
<p>"Would they had burned them!" ejaculated Mompesson. "Would all had been
destroyed!"</p>
<p>And he gave utterance to such wild exclamations of rage, accompanied by
such frenzied gestures, that the halberdiers seized him, and dragged him
out of the room. The old usurer was removed at the same time.</p>
<p>"And now," said Charles, rising from his chair, "one thing only remains to
be done ere I depart, and it will he pleasanter to me than aught that has
preceded it. I must again address myself to you, Sir Jocelyn Mounchensey,
ay, and to you, also, fair Mistress Aveline. I pray you to come near me,"
he continued, with a gracious smile, to the damsel.</p>
<p>And, as she blushingly complied,—for she half divined his purpose,—he
said—"As I have already told you, Sir Jocelyn, your restoration to
the King's favour is complete, and your re-appearance at Court would be a
gratification to his Majesty, but, after the events which have occurred, a
brief retirement will, I conceive, be most agreeable to you, and I would
counsel a visit to the hall of your ancestors."</p>
<p>"Nothing could be more in accordance with my own wishes, most gracious
Prince, if my newly-found relative will accept me as his guest."</p>
<p>"Not as his guest, my good nephew," said Osmond. "You are sole lord of
Mounchensey. I have made over the mansion and all the estates to you. They
are yours, as by right they should be."</p>
<p>Sir Jocelyn's emotion was too great to allow him to express his gratitude
in words.</p>
<p>"A noble gift!" exclaimed Charles. "But you must not go there alone, Sir
Jocelyn. You must take a bride with you. This fair lady has well approved
her love for you—as you have the depth of your devotion to her. Take
her from my hands. Take her to jour heart; and may years of fondest wedded
happiness attend you both! When you re-appear at Court, you will be all
the more welcome if Lady Mounchensey be with you."</p>
<p>So saying, he placed Aveline's hand in that of her lover; and, with a look
of ineffable delight, they knelt to express their gratitude.</p>
<p>The Prince and the courtly train passed out—and, lastly, Sir Jocelyn
and the object of his affections. Vainly did he seek for his relative and
benefactor. Osmond Mounchensey had disappeared. But, just as the young
Knight and his fair companion were quitting the house, Luke Hatton,
followed by two porters, bearing a stout chest, approached them, and said—</p>
<p>"Sir Jocelyn, you have seen the last of your uncle. He has charged me to
bid you an eternal adieu. You will never hear of him again, unless you
hear of his death. May no thoughts of him mar your happiness—or that
of her you love. This is what he bade me say to you. This chest contains
the title-deeds of your estates—and amongst them is a deed of gift
from him to you. They will be conveyed by these porters whithersoever you
may direct them. And now, having discharged mine office, I must take my
leave."</p>
<p>"Stay, Sir," cried Sir Jocelyn; "I would fain send a message to my uncle."</p>
<p>"I cannot convey it," replied Luke Hatton. "You must rest content with
what I have told you. To you, and to all others, Osmond Mounchensey is as
the dead."</p>
<p>With this, he hastily retreated.</p>
<p>Three days after this, the loving pair were wedded; and the ceremony—which
was performed with strict privacy, in accordance with the wishes of the
bride—being concluded, they set out upon their journey into Norfolk.
Sir Jocelyn had noticed among the spectators of the marriage rites, a tall
personage wrapped in a sable cloak, whom he suspected to be his uncle;
but, as the individual was half hidden by a pillar of the ancient fabric,
and as he lost sight of him before he could seek him out, he never could
be quite sure of the fact.</p>
<p>Sir Jocelyn's arrival at the hall of his ancestors was the occasion of
great rejoicings; and, in spite of the temptations held out to him, many
years elapsed ere he and Lady Mounchensey revisited the scene of their
troubles in London.</p>
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