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<h2> CHAPTER XXVII. HOW ROGER CLUB-FOOT WAS PASSED INTO PARADISE. </h2>
<p>It was evening before the three comrades came into Aiguillon, There they
found Sir Nigel Loring and Ford safely lodged at the sign of the "Baton
Rouge," where they supped on good fare and slept between lavender-scented
sheets. It chanced, however, that a knight of Poitou, Sir Gaston
d'Estelle, was staying there on his way back from Lithuania, where he had
served a term with the Teutonic knights under the land-master of the
presbytery of Marienberg. He and Sir Nigel sat late in high converse as to
bushments, outfalls, and the intaking of cities, with many tales of
warlike men and valiant deeds. Then their talk turned to minstrelsy, and
the stranger knight drew forth a cittern, upon which he played the
minne-lieder of the north, singing the while in a high cracked voice of
Hildebrand and Brunhild and Siegfried, and all the strength and beauty of
the land of Almain. To this Sir Nigel answered with the romances of Sir
Eglamour, and of Sir Isumbras, and so through the long winter night they
sat by the crackling wood-fire answering each other's songs until the
crowing cocks joined in their concert. Yet, with scarce an hour of rest,
Sir Nigel was as blithe and bright as ever as they set forth after
breakfast upon their way.</p>
<p>"This Sir Gaston is a very worthy man," said he to his squires as they
rode from the "Baton Rouge." "He hath a very strong desire to advance
himself, and would have entered upon some small knightly debate with me,
had he not chanced to have his arm-bone broken by the kick of a horse. I
have conceived a great love for him, and I have promised him that when his
bone is mended I will exchange thrusts with him. But we must keep to this
road upon the left."</p>
<p>"Nay, my fair lord," quoth Aylward. "The road to Montaubon is over the
river, and so through Quercy and the Agenois."</p>
<p>"True, my good Aylward; but I have learned from this worthy knight, who
hath come over the French marches, that there is a company of Englishmen
who are burning and plundering in the country round Villefranche. I have
little doubt, from what he says, that they are those whom we seek."</p>
<p>"By my hilt! it is like enough," said Aylward. "By all accounts they had
been so long at Montaubon, that there would be little there worth the
taking. Then as they have already been in the south, they would come north
to the country of the Aveyron."</p>
<p>"We shall follow the Lot until we come to Cahors, and then cross the
marches into Villefranche," said Sir Nigel. "By St. Paul! as we are but a
small band, it is very likely that we may have some very honorable and
pleasing adventure, for I hear that there is little peace upon the French
border."</p>
<p>All morning they rode down a broad and winding road, barred with the
shadows of poplars. Sir Nigel rode in front with his squires, while the
two archers followed behind with the sumpter mule between them. They had
left Aiguillon and the Garonne far to the south, and rode now by the
tranquil Lot, which curves blue and placid through a gently rolling
country. Alleyne could not but mark that, whereas in Guienne there had
been many townlets and few castles, there were now many castles and few
houses. On either hand gray walls and square grim keeps peeped out at
every few miles from amid the forests while the few villages which they
passed were all ringed round with rude walls, which spoke of the constant
fear and sudden foray of a wild frontier land. Twice during the morning
there came bands of horsemen swooping down upon them from the black
gateways of wayside strongholds, with short, stern questions as to whence
they came and what their errand. Bands of armed men clanked along the
highway, and the few lines of laden mules which carried the merchandise of
the trader were guarded by armed varlets, or by archers hired for the
service.</p>
<p>"The peace of Bretigny hath not made much change in these parts," quoth
Sir Nigel, "for the country is overrun with free companions and masterless
men. Yonder towers, between the wood and the hill, mark the town of
Cahors, and beyond it is the land of France. But here is a man by the
wayside, and as he hath two horses and a squire I make little doubt that
he is a knight. I pray you, Alleyne, to give him greeting from me, and to
ask him for his titles and coat-armor. It may be that I can relieve him of
some vow, or perchance he hath a lady whom he would wish to advance."</p>
<p>"Nay, my fair lord," said Alleyne, "these are not horses and a squire, but
mules and a varlet. The man is a mercer, for he hath a great bundle beside
him."</p>
<p>"Now, God's blessing on your honest English voice!" cried the stranger,
pricking up his ears at the sound of Alleyne's words. "Never have I heard
music that was so sweet to mine ear. Come, Watkin lad, throw the bales
over Laura's back! My heart was nigh broke, for it seemed that I had left
all that was English behind me, and that I would never set eyes upon
Norwich market square again." He was a tall, lusty, middle-aged man with a
ruddy face, a brown forked beard shot with gray, and a broad Flanders hat
set at the back of his head. His servant, as tall as himself, but gaunt
and raw-boned, had swung the bales on the back of one mule, while the
merchant mounted upon the other and rode to join the party. It was easy to
see, as he approached, from the quality of his dress and the richness of
his trappings, that he was a man of some wealth and position.</p>
<p>"Sir knight," said he, "my name is David Micheldene, and I am a burgher
and alderman of the good town of Norwich, where I live five doors from the
church of Our Lady, as all men know on the banks of Yare. I have here my
bales of cloth which I carry to Cahors—woe worth the day that ever I
started on such an errand! I crave your gracious protection upon the way
for me, my servant, and my mercery; for I have already had many perilous
passages, and have now learned that Roger Club-foot, the robber-knight of
Quercy, is out upon the road in front of me. I hereby agree to give you
one rose-noble if you bring me safe to the inn of the 'Angel' in Cahors,
the same to be repaid to me or my heirs if any harm come to me or my
goods."</p>
<p>"By Saint Paul!" answered Sir Nigel, "I should be a sorry knight if I ask
pay for standing by a countryman in a strange land. You may ride with me
and welcome, Master Micheldene, and your varlet may follow with my
archers."</p>
<p>"God's benison upon thy bounty!" cried the stranger. "Should you come to
Norwich you may have cause to remember that you have been of service to
Alderman Micheldene. It is not very far to Cahors, for surely I see the
cathedral towers against the sky-line; but I have heard much of this Roger
Clubfoot, and the more I hear the less do I wish to look upon his face.
Oh, but I am sick and weary of it all, and I would give half that I am
worth to see my good dame sitting in peace beside me, and to hear the
bells of Norwich town."</p>
<p>"Your words are strange to me," quoth Sir Nigel, "for you have the
appearance of a stout man, and I see that you wear a sword by your side."</p>
<p>"Yet it is not my trade," answered the merchant. "I doubt not that if I
set you down in my shop at Norwich you might scarce tell fustian from
falding, and know little difference between the velvet of Genoa and the
three-piled cloth of Bruges. There you might well turn to me for help. But
here on a lone roadside, with thick woods and robber-knights, I turn to
you, for it is the business to which you have been reared."</p>
<p>"There is sooth in what you say, Master Micheldene," said Sir Nigel, "and
I trust that we may come upon this Roger Clubfoot, for I have heard that
he is a very stout and skilful soldier, and a man from whom much honor is
to be gained."</p>
<p>"He is a bloody robber," said the trader, curtly, "and I wish I saw him
kicking at the end of a halter."</p>
<p>"It is such men as he," Sir Nigel remarked, "who give the true knight
honorable deeds to do, whereby he may advance himself."</p>
<p>"It is such men as he," retorted Micheldene, "who are like rats in a
wheat-rick or moths in a woolfels, a harm and a hindrance to all peaceful
and honest men."</p>
<p>"Yet, if the dangers of the road weigh so heavily upon you, master
alderman, it is a great marvel to me that you should venture so far from
home."</p>
<p>"And sometimes, sir knight, it is a marvel to myself. But I am a man who
may grutch and grumble, but when I have set my face to do a thing I will
not turn my back upon it until it be done. There is one, Francois Villet,
at Cahors, who will send me wine-casks for my cloth-bales, so to Cahors I
will go, though all the robber-knights of Christendom were to line the
roads like yonder poplars."</p>
<p>"Stoutly spoken, master alderman! But how have you fared hitherto?"</p>
<p>"As a lamb fares in a land of wolves. Five times we have had to beg and
pray ere we could pass. Twice I have paid toll to the wardens of the road.
Three times we have had to draw, and once at La Reolle we stood seer our
wool-bales, Watkin and I, and we laid about us for as long as a man might
chant a litany, slaying one rogue and wounding two others. By God's coif!
we are men of peace, but we are free English burghers, not to be
mishandled either in our country or abroad. Neither lord, baron, knight,
or commoner shall have as much as a strike of flax of mine whilst I have
strength to wag this sword."</p>
<p>"And a passing strange sword it is," quoth Sir Nigel. "What make you,
Alleyne, of these black lines which are drawn across the sheath?"</p>
<p>"I cannot tell what they are, my fair lord."</p>
<p>"Nor can I," said Ford.</p>
<p>The merchant chuckled to himself. "It was a thought of mine own," said he;
"for the sword was made by Thomas Wilson, the armorer, who is betrothed to
my second daughter Margery. Know then that the sheath is one cloth-yard,
in length, marked off according to feet and inches to serve me as a
measuring wand. It is also of the exact weight of two pounds, so that I
may use it in the balance."</p>
<p>"By Saint Paul!" quoth Sir Nigel, "it is very clear to me that the sword
is like thyself, good alderman, apt either for war or for peace. But I
doubt not that even in England you have had much to suffer from the hands
of robbers and outlaws."</p>
<p>"It was only last Lammastide, sir knight, that I was left for dead near
Reading as I journeyed to Winchester fair. Yet I had the rogues up at the
court of pie-powder, and they will harm no more peaceful traders."</p>
<p>"You travel much then!"</p>
<p>"To Winchester, Linn mart, Bristol fair, Stourbridge, and Bartholomew's in
London Town. The rest of the year you may ever find me five doors from the
church of Our Lady, where I would from my heart that I was at this moment,
for there is no air like Norwich air, and no water like the Yare, nor can
all the wines of France compare with the beer of old Sam Yelverton who
keeps the 'Dun Cow.' But, out and alack, here is an evil fruit which hangs
upon this chestnut-tree!"</p>
<p>As he spoke they had ridden round a curve of the road and come upon a
great tree which shot one strong brown branch across their path. From the
centre of this branch there hung a man, with his head at a horrid slant to
his body and his toes just touching the ground. He was naked save for a
linen under shirt and pair of woollen drawers. Beside him on a green bank
there sat a small man with a solemn face, and a great bundle of papers of
all colors thrusting forth from the scrip which lay beside him. He was
very richly dressed, with furred robes, a scarlet hood, and wide hanging
sleeves lined with flame-colored silk. A great gold chain hung round his
neck, and rings glittered from every finger of his hands. On his lap he
had a little pile of gold and of silver, which he was dropping, coin by
coin, into a plump pouch which hung from his girdle.</p>
<p>"May the saints be with you, good travellers!" he shouted, as the party
rode up. "May the four Evangelists watch over you! May the twelve Apostles
bear you up! May the blessed army of martyrs direct your feet and lead you
to eternal bliss!"</p>
<p>"Gramercy for these good wishes!" said Sir Nigel. "But I perceive, master
alderman, that this man who hangs here is, by mark of foot, the very
robber-knight of whom we have spoken. But there is a cartel pinned upon
his breast, and I pray you, Alleyne, to read it to me."</p>
<p>The dead robber swung slowly to and fro in the wintry wind, a fixed smile
upon his swarthy face, and his bulging eyes still glaring down the highway
of which he had so long been the terror; on a sheet of parchment upon his
breast was printed in rude characters;</p>
<p>ROGER PIED-BOT.<br/>
<br/>
Par l'ordre du Senechal de<br/>
Castelnau, et de l'Echevin de<br/>
Cahors, servantes fideles du<br/>
tres vaillant et tres puissant<br/>
Edouard, Prince de Galles et<br/>
d'Aquitaine.<br/>
Ne touchez pas,<br/>
Ne coutez pas,<br/>
Ne depechez pas<br/></p>
<p>"He took a sorry time in dying," said the man who sat beside him. "He
could stretch one toe to the ground and bear him self up, so that I
thought he would never have done. Now at last, however, he is safely in
paradise, and so I may jog on upon my earthly way." He mounted, as he
spoke, a white mule which had been grazing by the wayside, all gay with
fustian of gold and silver bells, and rode onward with Sir Nigel's party.</p>
<p>"How know you then that he is in paradise?" asked Sir Nigel. "All things
are possible to God, but, certes, without a miracle, I should scarce
expect to find the soul of Roger Clubfoot amongst the just."</p>
<p>"I know that he is there because I have just passed him in there,"
answered the stranger, rubbing his bejewelled hands together in placid
satisfaction. "It is my holy mission to be a sompnour or pardoner. I am
the unworthy servant and delegate of him who holds the keys. A contrite
heart and ten nobles to holy mother Church may stave off perdition; but he
hath a pardon of the first degree, with a twenty-five livre benison, so
that I doubt if he will so much as feel a twinge of purgatory. I came up
even as the seneschal's archers were tying him up, and I gave him my
fore-word that I would bide with him until he had passed. There were two
leaden crowns among the silver, but I would not for that stand in the way
of his salvation."</p>
<p>"By Saint Paul!" said Sir Nigel, "if you have indeed this power to open
and to shut the gates of hope, then indeed you stand high above mankind.
But if you do but claim to have it, and yet have it not, then it seems to
me, master clerk, that you may yourself find the gate barred when you
shall ask admittance."</p>
<p>"Small of faith! Small of faith!" cried the sompnour. "Ah, Sir Didymus yet
walks upon earth! And yet no words of doubt can bring anger to mine heart,
or a bitter word to my lip, for am I not a poor unworthy worker in the
cause of gentleness and peace? Of all these pardons which I bear every one
is stamped and signed by our holy father, the prop and centre of
Christendom."</p>
<p>"Which of them?" asked Sir Nigel.</p>
<p>"Ha, ha!" cried the pardoner, shaking a jewelled forefinger. "Thou wouldst
be deep in the secrets of mother Church? Know then that I have both in my
scrip. Those who hold with Urban shall have Urban's pardon, while I have
Clement's for the Clementist—or he who is in doubt may have both, so
that come what may he shall be secure. I pray you that you will buy one,
for war is bloody work, and the end is sudden with little time for thought
or shrift. Or you, sir, for you seem to me to be a man who would do ill to
trust to your own merits." This to the alderman of Norwich, who had
listened to him with a frowning brow and a sneering lip.</p>
<p>"When I sell my cloth," quoth he, "he who buys may weigh and feel and
handle. These goods which you sell are not to be seen, nor is there any
proof that you hold them. Certes, if mortal man might control God's mercy,
it would be one of a lofty and God-like life, and not one who is decked
out with rings and chains and silks, like a pleasure-wench at a kermesse.</p>
<p>"Thou wicked and shameless man!" cried the clerk. "Dost thou dare to raise
thy voice against the unworthy servant of mother Church?"</p>
<p>"Unworthy enough!" quoth David Micheldene. "I would have you to know,
clerk, that I am a free English burgher, and that I dare say my mind to
our father the Pope himself, let alone such a lacquey's lacquey as you!"</p>
<p>"Base-born and foul-mouthed knave!" cried the sompnour. "You prate of holy
things, to which your hog's mind can never rise. Keep silence, lest I call
a curse upon you!"</p>
<p>"Silence yourself!" roared the other. "Foul bird! we found thee by the
gallows like a carrion-crow. A fine life thou hast of it with thy silks
and thy baubles, cozening the last few shillings from the pouches of dying
men. A fig for thy curse! Bide here, if you will take my rede, for we will
make England too hot for such as you, when Master Wicliff has the ordering
of it. Thou vile thief! it is you, and such as you, who bring an evil name
upon the many churchmen who lead a pure and a holy life. Thou outside the
door of heaven! Art more like to be inside the door of hell."</p>
<p>At this crowning insult the sompnour, with a face ashen with rage, raised
up a quivering hand and began pouring Latin imprecations upon the angry
alderman. The latter, however, was not a man to be quelled by words, for
he caught up his ell-measure sword-sheath and belabored the cursing clerk
with it. The latter, unable to escape from the shower of blows, set spurs
to his mule and rode for his life, with his enemy thundering behind him.
At sight of his master's sudden departure, the varlet Watkin set off after
him, with the pack-mule beside him, so that the four clattered away down
the road together, until they swept round a curve and their babble was but
a drone in the distance. Sir Nigel and Alleyne gazed in astonishment at
one another, while Ford burst out a-laughing.</p>
<p>"Pardieu!" said the knight, "this David Micheldene must be one of those
Lollards about whom Father Christopher of the priory had so much to say.
Yet he seemed to be no bad man from what I have seen of him."</p>
<p>"I have heard that Wicliff hath many followers in Norwich," answered
Alleyne.</p>
<p>"By St. Paul! I have no great love for them," quoth Sir Nigel. "I am a man
who am slow to change; and, if you take away from me the faith that I have
been taught, it would be long ere I could learn one to set in its place.
It is but a chip here and a chip there, yet it may bring the tree down in
time. Yet, on the other hand, I cannot but think it shame that a man
should turn God's mercy on and off, as a cellarman doth wine with a
spigot."</p>
<p>"Nor is it," said Alleyne, "part of the teachings of that mother Church of
which he had so much to say. There was sooth in what the alderman said of
it."</p>
<p>"Then, by St. Paul! they may settle it betwixt them," quoth Sir Nigel.
"For me, I serve God, the king and my lady; and so long as I can keep the
path of honor I am well content. My creed shall ever be that of Chandos:</p>
<p>"Fais ce que dois—adviegne que peut,<br/>
C'est commande au chevalier."<br/></p>
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