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Part 2 out of 6



had plenty of arrows, because if not he would find four dozen of the
best that could be made in Norwich done up in a cloak on the grey
horse he was to ride, and a spare bow also.

"I thank you for the arrows, Master, but as for the bow, I use none
but my own, the black bow which the sea brought to me and death alone
shall part from me. Perchance both will be wanted, since the
Claverings will scarcely let us out of the sanctuary if they can help
it. Still, it is true they may not know where we lie hid, and that is
our best chance of eating more good breakfasts this side the grave."

"A pest on your evil talk," said de Cressi with an uneasy laugh, for
he loved Hugh best of all his sons and was afraid of him. "Get through
safely, man, and though I like not your grim face and bloody ways you
shall lose little by it. I promise you," he added in a whisper, "that
if you bring my boy safe home again, you shall not want for all your
life; ay, and if there is need, I'll pay your blood-scot for you."

"Thank you, master, thank you. I'll remember, and for my part promise
you this, that if he does not return safe, Dick the Archer never will.
But I think I'll live to shoot more than your four dozen of arrows."

As he spoke there came a knock upon the outer door and every one
sprang up.

"Fear not," said Sir Andrew; "doubtless it will be the men with the
horses. I'll go look. Come you with me, Richard."

Presently he returned, saying that it was so, and that Master de
Cressi's servants were waiting with the beasts in the courtyard. Also
that they brought tidings that some of the Clavering party were now at
the Mayor's house, rousing him from his sleep, doubtless to lay
information of the slayings and ask for warrant to take those who
wrought them, should they be in the borough.

"Then we had best be going," said Hugh, "since soon they will be here
with or without their warrant."

"Ay," answered Sir Andrew. "Here are the papers. Take them, Hugh, and
hide them well; and if any accident should befall you, try to pass
them on to Richard that they may be delivered into the King's hands at
Westminster. Say that Sir Andrew Arnold sends you on business that has
to do with his Grace's safety, and neither of you will be refused a
hearing. Then act as he may command you, and maybe ere long we shall
see you back at Dunwich pardoned."

"I think it is the Claverings and their French lord who need pardon,
not I," said Hugh. "But be that as it may, what of Eve?"

"Fear not for Eve, son, for here she bides in sanctuary until the
Frenchman is out of England, or perchance," he added grimly, "under
English soil."

"Ay, ay, we'll guard the maid," broke in Master de Cressi. "Come! to
saddle ere you be trapped."

So they descended to a back entrance, and through it into the
courtyard, where the four armed men waited with six good horses, one
of them Hugh's own. Here he bade farewell to his brothers, to his
father, who kissed him on the brow, and to Sir Andrew, who stretched
his hand above his head in blessing. Then he turned to Eve and was
about to embrace her even before that company, when Sir Andrew looked
at him, and, remembering the penance that had been laid upon him, he
but pressed her hand, whispering:

"God be with you, sweetheart!"

"He is with us all, but I would that you could be with me also," she
answered in the same low voice. "Still, man must forth to battle and
woman must wait and watch, for that is the world's way. Whate'er
befalls, remember that dead or living I'll be wife to no man but you.
Begone now ere my heart fails me, and guard yourself well, remembering
that you bear in your breast not one life, but two."

Then Hugh swung himself to the saddle of which Grey Dick had already
tested the girths and stirrup leathers. In another minute the six of
them were clattering over the stones of Middlegate Street, while the
burgesses of Dunwich peeped from their window places, wondering what
knight with armed men rode through their town thus early.

Just as the grey dawn broke they passed the gate, which, there being
peace in the land, was already open. Fifteen minutes later they were
on the lonely Westleton Heath, where for a while naught was to be
heard save the scream of the curlew and the rush of the wings of the
wild-duck passing landward from the sea. Presently, however, another
sound reached their ears, that of horses galloping behind them. Grey
Dick pulled rein and listened.

"Seven, I think, not more," he said. "Now, master, do you stand or
run, for these will be Clavering horses?"

Hugh thought for a moment. His aim was not to fight, but to get
through to London. Yet if he fled the pursuers would raise the country
on them as they came, so that in the end they must be taken, since
those who followed would find fresh horses.

"It seems best to stand," he said.

"So say I," answered Grey Dick; and led the way to a little hillock by
the roadside on which grew some wind-bent firs.

Here they dismounted and gave their horses into the keeping of one
man, while Grey Dick and the others drew their bows from the cases and
strung them. Scarcely had they done so when the mist, lifting in the
morning breeze, showed them their pursuers--seven of them, as Dick had
said--headed by one of the French knights, and riding scattered,
between two and three hundred yards away. At the same moment a shout
told them that they had been seen.

"Hark now all!" said Hugh. "I would shed no more blood if it may be
so, who have earned enough of penance. Therefore shoot at the horses,
not at the riders, who without them will be helpless. And let no man
harm a Clavering unless it be to save his own life."

"Poor sport!" grunted Grey Dick.

Nevertheless, when the Norman knight who led came within two hundred
yards, shouting to them in French to surrender, Dick lifted his great
bow, drew and loosed carelessly, as though he shot at hazard, the
others holding their bows till the Claverings were nearer. Yet there
was little of hazard when Grey Dick shot, save to that at which he
aimed. Away rushed the arrow, rising high and, as it seemed, bearing
somewhat to the left of the knight. Yet when it drew near to that
knight the wind told on it and bent it inward, as he knew it would.
Fair and full it struck upon the horse's chest, piercing through to
the heart, so that down the poor beast came, throwing its rider to the
ground.

"A good shot enough," grumbled Grey Dick. "Still, it is a shame to
slay nags of such a breed and let the rogues who ride them go."

But his companions only stared at him almost in awe, while the other
Clavering men rode on. Before they had covered fifty paces, again the
great bow twanged, and again a horse was seen to rear itself up,
shaking the rider from its back, and then plunge away to die. Now
Hugh's serving-men also lifted their bows, but Grey Dick hissed:

"Leave them to me! This is fine work, and you'd muddle it!"

Ere the words had ceased to echo another horse was down.

Then, as those who remained still came on, urged by the knight who ran
shouting behind them, all loosed, and though some arrows went wide,
the end of it was that ere they reached the little mound every
Clavering horse was dead or sore wounded, while on the heath stood or
lay seven helpless men.

"Now," said Grey Dick, "let us go and talk with these foot-soldiers."

So they went out, all of them, except he who had the horses, and Hugh
called aloud that the first man of the Claverings who lifted a bow or
drew a sword should die without mercy. And he pointed to Grey Dick,
who stood beside him, arrow on string.

The Claverings began to talk together excitedly.

"Throw down your weapons!" commanded Hugh.

Still they hesitated. Then, without further warning Dick sent an
artful arrow through the cap of one of them, lifting it from his head,
and instantly set another shaft to his string. After this, down went
the swords and bows.

"Daggers and knives, too, if it please you, masters!"

Then these followed.

Now Hugh spoke a word to his men, who, going to the dead and dying
horses, took from them the stirrup-leathers and bridle-reins and
therewith bound the Claverings back to back. But the French knight, in
acknowledgment of his rank, they trussed up by himself, having first
relieved him of his purse by way of fine. As it chanced, however, Hugh
turned and saw them in the act.

"God's truth! Would you make common thieves of us?" he said angrily.
"Their weapons and harness are ours by right of war, but I'll hunt the
man who steals their money out of my company."

So the purse was restored. When it was safe in the knight's pouch
again Hugh saluted him, begging his pardon that it should have been
touched.

"But how are you named, sir?" he added.

"Sir Pierre de la Roche is my name," replied the knight sadly, and in
French.

"Then, Sir Pierre de la Roche," said Hugh, "here you and your people
must bide until some come to set you free, which, as this place is
lonely and little crossed in winter, may be to-day or may be
to-morrow. When at length you get back to Blythburgh Manor, however,
or to Dunwich town, I trust it to your honour to declare that Hugh de
Cressi has dealt well with you. For whereas he might have slain you
every one, as you would have slain him and his if you could, he has
harmed no hair of your heads. As for your horses, these, to his
sorrow, he was obliged to kill lest they should be used to ride him
down. Will you do this of your courtesy?"

"Ay," answered the knight, "since to your gentleness we owe our lives.
But with your leave I will add that we were overcome not by men, but
by a devil"--and he nodded toward Grey Dick--"since no one who is only
man can have such hellish skill in archery as we saw yesterday, and
now again this morning. Moreover," he went on, contemplating Dick's
ashen hair and cold eyes set wide apart in the rocky face, like to
those of a Suffolk horse, "the man's air shows that he is in league
with Satan."

"I'll not render your words into our English talk, Sir Pierre,"
replied Hugh, "lest he of whom you speak should take them amiss and
send you where you might learn them false. For know, had he been what
you say, the arrow that lies in your horse's heart would have nailed
the breastplate to your own. Now take a message from me to your lord,
Sir Edmund Acour, the traitor. Tell him that I shall return ere long,
and that if he should dare to attempt ill toward the Lady Eve, who is
my betrothed, or toward my father and brethren, or any of my House, I
promise, in Grey Dick's name and my own, to kill him or those who may
aid him as I would kill a forest wolf that had slunk into my
sheepfold. Farewell! There is bracken and furze yonder where you may
lie warm till some pass your way. Mount, men!"

So they rode forward, bearing all the Clavering weapons with them,
which a mile or two further on Grey Dick hid in an empty fox's earth
where he knew he could find them again. Only he kept the French
knight's beautiful dagger that was made of Spanish steel, inlaid with
gold, and used it to his life's end.

Here it may be told that it was not until thirty-six hours had gone
by, as Hugh learned afterward, that a countryman brought this knight
and his companions, more dead than alive, to Dunwich in his wain. As
he was travelling across Westleton Heath, with a load of corn to be
ground at the Dunwich mill, it seemed that he heard voices calling
feebly, and guided by them found these unhappy men half buried in the
snow that had fallen on that day, and so rescued them from death.

But when Sir Edmund Acour knew the story of their overthrow and of the
message that Hugh had sent to him, he raved at them, and especially at
Sir Pierre de la Roche, saying that the worst of young de Cressi's
crimes against him was that he had left such cowardly hounds alive
upon the earth. So he went on madly till Sir John Clavering checked
him, bidding him wait to revile these men until he, and not his horse,
had met Grey Dick's arrows and Hugh de Cressi's sword.

"For," he added, "it may happen then that you will fare no better than
they have done, or than did John, my son."



On the morning of the third day after they left Dunwich, having been
much delayed by foul weather and fouler roads, Hugh de Cressi and his
company came at length to London. They had suffered no further
adventure on their way for, though the times were rough and they met
many evil-looking fellows, none ventured to lift hand against six men
so well armed and sturdy. Guided by one of their number who had often
been to London on Master de Cressi's business, they rode straight to
Westminster. Having stabled their horses at an inn near by, and
cleaned the mire of the road from their mail and garments, they went
up to the palace, where Hugh told his errand to an officer whom he
found on duty at the gate.

"Then it is a fool's errand," said the captain, "seeing that his Grace
rode yesterday to his castle at Windsor to hunt and revel, and will be
gone eight days at the least."

"Then to Windsor I must follow," answered Hugh.



CHAPTER V

GREY DICK SHOWS HIS ARCHERY

So sorely did the horses need rest, that Hugh and his people could not
ride from London till the following morning, and evening was closing
in before they found themselves drawing near the gate of Windsor
Castle. In the market-place of the little town they pulled rein, while
one of them went to search for a good inn at which they might lie, for
the place seemed to be very full of people. Suddenly, as they stood
there, wondering at the mighty, new-built keep which towered above
them, a trumpet was blown and from round a corner appeared a gay
procession of noble-looking men, and with them some ladies, who
carried hawk on wrist, all mounted on splendid horses.

Now, the people who had gathered to study the strangers or tout for
their custom, took off their bonnets and bent low, saying: "The King!
The King! God save him!"

"Which is his Grace?" asked Hugh of one of them, whereon the man
pointed to a royal-eyed and bearded knight, still in early middle
life, who rode toward him, talking to a gallant youth at his side.

Now a thought came into Hugh's mind that the present time is always
the best time to strike. Leaping from his horse, he advanced bowing,
and stood in the pathway of the King. Seeing this, two of the fine
Court lords spurred their horses and rode straight at him, thinking to
drive him back. But he held his ground, for their insolence made him
angry, and, catching the bridle of one of the horses, threw it on its
haunches so sharply that the knight who rode it rolled from his saddle
into the mire, whereupon every one laughed. In a moment he was on his
feet again, and shouting:

"Out of the road, jackanapes, dressed in your grandfather's mail,
unless you would stop there in the stocks. Do you know whose path you
block?"

"That of his Grace," answered Hugh, "for whom I have a message that he
will be glad to hear, and, popinjay, this for yourself; were it not
for his presence it is you who should stop upon the road till you were
carried thence."

Now, noting this disturbance, the King spoke to the youth at his side,
who came forward and said, in a pleasant, courteous voice, addressing
Hugh:

"Sir, why do you make trouble in these streets, and tumble the good
Sir Ambrose Lacey from his horse with such scant ceremony?"

"Sir," answered Hugh, "because the good Sir Ambrose tried to ride his
horse over me for no offence save that I would deliver a message to
his Grace, which he will wish to hear."

"This is scarcely a time for the giving of messages," replied the
young man, "but what is your name, and who sends the message? I am the
Prince Edward," he added modestly, "so you may speak to me without
fear."

"My name is Hugh de Cressi, your Highness, and I am sent by the
Reverend Father Sir Andrew Arnold, of Dunwich, and have followed his
Grace from Westminster, whither I and my men rode first."

Now, the Prince went to the King and spoke to him, and, returning
presently, said:

"My father says that he knows both the names you give well enough and
holds them dear. He bids that you and your people should follow him to
the castle, where you will be entertained, with your horses. Sir
Ambrose," he added, "the King desires that you should forget your
choler, since he saw what passed, and deems that this young stranger
did well to check your horse. Follow on, Hugh de Cressi, the officers
will show you where you and your men may lodge."

So Hugh obeyed, and rode with the rest of the train and his folks
through the gates of Windsor Castle. Nor did they do so unobserved,
since many of the Court had no love for Sir Ambrose, and were glad to
see him tumbled in the mire.

After they had stabled their beasts, as Hugh, followed by Grey Dick,
was advancing toward a hall which he was told that he might enter, an
officer came up.

"His Grace desires your presence before you sup," he said.

Pointing to Grey Dick, at whom the officer looked doubtfully, Hugh
asked that he might accompany him, as he had much to do with the
message. After some argument they were led through various passages to
a chamber, at the door of which the officer wished to take away Dick's
bow. But he would not give it up.

"The bow and I do not part," he said, in his croaking voice, "for we
are husband and wife, and live and sleep together as the married
should."

As Dick spoke the door was opened, and Prince Edward appeared.

"And do you eat together also, good fellow?" he asked, having
overheard the talk.

"Ay, sir, we feed full together," replied Dick grimly; "or so thought
some on Blythburgh Marsh a few days gone."

"I should like to hear that tale," said the Prince. "Meanwhile, since
both my father and I love archers, let him pass with his bow. Only
keep his arrows lest it should happen to grow hungry here."

Then they entered the chamber, led by the Prince. It was a fine place,
with a vaulted stone roof and windows of coloured glass, that looked
like the chancel of a church. Only at the head of it, where the altar
should have been, was a kind of dais. On this dais were set some high-
backed oaken chairs with many lanterns behind them in which burned
tapers that, together with a great wood fire, gave light to the
chamber.

In one of these chairs sat a gracious lady, who was embroidering
something silken in a frame. This was Queen Philippa, and talking to
her stood the tall King, clad in a velvet robe lined with fur. Behind,
seated at a little table on which lay parchments, was a man in a
priest's robe, writing. There was no one else in the room.

Hugh and Dick advanced to the foot of the dais, and stood there
bowing.

"Who are these?" asked the King of the Prince. "Oh, I remember, the
man who overthrew Sir Ambrose and said he had a message!"

"Ay, Sire," answered the Prince; "and this dust-coloured fellow is his
servant, who will not part with his bow, which he calls his wife and
says he sleeps with."

"I would all Englishmen did the same," broke in the King. "Say, man,
can you shoot straight?"

"I know not, Sire," replied Grey Dick, "but perhaps straighter than
most, for God, Who withheld all else from me, gave me this gift. At
least, if I be not made drunk overnight, I'll match myself against any
man at this Court, noble or simple, and stake twenty angels on it."

"Twenty angels! Have you so much, fellow?"

"Nay, Sire, nor more than one; but as I know I shall win, what does
that matter?"

"Son," said the King, "see that this man is kept sober to-night, and
to-morrow we will have a shooting match. But, sirrah, if you prove
yourself to be a boaster you shall be whipped round the walls, for I
love not tall words and small deeds. And now, young Master de Cressi,
what is this message of yours?"

Hugh thrust his hand into his bosom, and produced a sealed packet
which was addressed to "His Grace King Edward of England, sent from
Andrew Arnold, priest, by the hand of Hugh de Cressi."

"Can you read?" the King asked of Hugh when he had spelt out this
superscription.

"Ay, Sire; at least if the writing be that of Sir Andrew Arnold, for
he was my master."

"A learned one and a brave, Hugh de Cressi. Well, break seal; we
listen."

Hugh obeyed, and read as follows:

"Your Grace:

"Mayhap, Sire, you will remember me, Andrew Arnold, late master of
the Templars in this town of Dunwich, in whose house, by your
warrant for certain services rendered to your grandsire, your
sire, and to yourself, I still dwell on as a priest ordained.
Sire, the bearer of this, Hugh de Cressi, my godchild, is the son
of Geoffrey de Cressi, of this town, the great wool-merchant, with
whom your Highness has had dealings----"

"In truth I have!" interrupted the King, with a laugh. "Also I think
the account is still open--against myself. Well, it shall be paid some
day, when I have conquered France. Forward!"

"Sire, this Hugh is enamoured of Eve Clavering, daughter of Sir
John Clavering of Blythburgh, a cousin of his House, a very
beauteous maiden, commonly known as Red Eve, and she in turn is
enamoured of and betrothed to him----"

Here Queen Philippa suddenly became interested.

"Why is the lady called Red Eve, sir?" she asked in her soft voice.
"Because her cheeks are red?"

"No, Madam," answered Hugh, blushing; "because she always loves to
wear red garments."

"Ah, then she is dark!"

"That is so, Madam; her eyes and hair are black as ash-buds."

"God's truth! Lady," interrupted King Edward, "is this young man's
message of the colour of the eyes of his mistress, which, without
doubt, being in love, he describes falsely? On with the letter!"

"Out of this matter," continued Hugh, "rose a feud yesterday,
during which Hugh de Cressi killed his cousin John, fighting /à
outrance/, and his servant, Richard the Archer, who accompanies
him, commonly known as Grey Dick, slew three men with as many
arrows, two of them being Normans whose names are unknown to us,
and the third a grieve to Sir John Clavering, called Thomas of
Kessland. Also, he killed a horse, and when another Frenchman
tried to grasp his master, sent a shaft through the palm of his
hand."

"By St. George," said the King, "but here is shooting! Were they near
to you, Grey Dick?"

"Not so far away, Sire. Only the light was very bad, or I should have
had the fourth. I aimed low, Sire, fearing to miss his skull, and he
jerked up his horse's head to take the arrow."

"A good trick! I've played it myself. Well, let us have done with the
letter, and then we'll come to archery."

"Sire," read on Hugh, "I ask your royal pardon to Hugh de Cressi
and Richard the Archer for these slayings, believing that when you
have read these letters it will be granted."

"That remains to be seen," muttered the King.

"Sire, Sir Edmund Acour, who has lands here in Suffolk, Count de
Noyon in Normandy, and Seigneur of Cattrina in Italy----"

"I know the man," exclaimed Edward to the Queen, "and so do you. A
handsome knight and a pleasant, but one of whom I have always
misdoubted me."

"--Is also enamoured of Eve Clavering, and with her father's will
seeks to make her his wife, though she hates him, and by the
charter of Dunwich, of which she is a citizen, has the right to
wed whom she will."

"It is well there are not many such charters. The old story--brave men
done to death for the sake of a woman who is rightly named Red Eve,"
mused the King.

"My Liege, I pray that you will read the letter herein enclosed.
Hugh de Cressi will tell you how it came to my hand, since I lack
time to write all the story. If it seems good to your Grace, I
pray you scotch this snake while he is in your garden, lest he
should live to sting you when you walk abroad. If it please you to
give your royal warrant to the bearer of this letter, and to
address the same to such of your subjects in Dunwich as you may
think good, I doubt not but that men can be found to execute the
same. Thus would a great and traitorous plot be brought to
nothing, to your own glory and the discomfiture of your foes in
France, who hope to lay their murderous hands upon the throne of
England.
"Your humble servant and subject,
"Andrew Arnold."

"What's this?" exclaimed the King starting from his seat. "To lay
hands upon the throne of England! Quick with the other letter, man!"

"I was charged that it is for your Grace's eye alone," said Hugh as he
unfolded the paper. "Is it your pleasure that I read it aloud, if I
can, for it is writ in French?"

"Give it me," said the King. "Philippa, come help me with this crabbed
stuff."

Then they withdrew to the side of the dais, and, standing under a
lantern, spelled out Sir Edmund Acour's letter to the Duke of
Normandy, word by word.

The King finished the letter, and, still holding it in his hand, stood
for a minute silent. Then his rage broke out.

"'He of England,'" he quoted. "That's your husband, Edward, Lady, who
is to be overthrown and killed 'that Philip's son may take his seat
and be crowned King at Westminster,' which God is to bring about
before this year is out. Yes; and my cities are to be sacked and my
people slain, and this French dog, Edmund Acour, who has sworn fealty
to me, is to be rewarded with wide English lands and high English
titles. Well, by God's blood I swear that, dead or living, he shall be
lifted higher than he hopes, though not by Normandy or my brother of
France! Let me think! Let me think! If I send men-at-arms he'll hear
of it and slip away. Did not good old Sir Andrew call him a snake?
Now, where's this girl, Red Eve?"

"In sanctuary, Sire, at the Temple Church in Dunwich," answered Hugh.

"Ah, and she's a great heiress now, for you killed her brother, and
Acour, although he has wide possessions in sundry lands, was ever a
spendthrift and deep in debt. No, he'll not leave unless he can get
the girl; and old Sir Andrew will guard her well with the power of the
Church, and with his own right arm if need be, for he's still more
knight than priest. So there's no hurry. Tell me all you know of this
story, Hugh de Cressi, omitting nothing, however small. Nay, have no
fear, if you can vouch for your fellow there, all of us in this
chamber are loyal to England. Speak out, man."

So Hugh began and told of the de Cressis and the Claverings and their
feud, and of how he and Eve had always loved each other. He told of
their meeting in the reeds of Blythburgh Fen, and of the death of John
de Clavering at his hand and of the others at the hand of Grey Dick,
and of the escape of Acour from the fourth arrow. He told how he and
Eve had swum the Blyth in flood though the ice cut them, and hid on
the moor while Grey Dick led the Claverings astray, and came at last
safe to sanctuary. He told how Acour's letter had been won from his
messenger by Sir Andrew's loyal guile. He told of the penance that Sir
Andrew had laid upon them because of the new-shed blood of John
Clavering, of the flight from Dunwich and the shooting of the horses
of the Clavering men, and of their ride to London and to Windsor. He
told everything, save only the tale of what Sir Andrew had seen in the
House of Murgh in far Cathay.

When at last he had finished, and though it was long none there grew
weary of that story, the King turned to the clerk, and said:

"Brother Peter, make out a full pardon to Hugh de Cressi of Dunwich
and Richard Archer his servant for all slayings or other deeds wrought
by them contrary to our general peace. Draw it wide, and bring the
same to me for execution ere I sleep to-night. Make out a commission
also to the Mayor of Dunwich--nay, I'll think that matter over and
instruct you further. Hugh de Cressi, you have our thanks, and if you
go on as you have begun you shall have more ere long, for I need such
men about me. You also, strange and death-like man named Grey Dick,
shall not lack our favour if it proves that you can shoot but half as
well as you have boasted, and, unless you lie, both of you, as it
seems that you have done. And now to supper, though in truth this news
does not kindle appetite. Son, see that this gentleman is well served,
and that none mock him more about the fashion of his armour, above all
Sir Ambrose, for I'll not suffer it. Plate and damascene do not make a
man, and this, it seems, was borrowed from as brave, ay, and as
learned, a knight as ever bestrode a horse in war. Come, Lady," and
taking the Queen by the hand, he left the chamber.

That evening Hugh ate his food seated among the knights of the
Household at a high table in the great hall, at the head of which, for
the King supped in private, was placed the young Prince Edward. He
noted that now none laughed at him about the fashion of his mail or
his country ways. Indeed, when after supper Sir Ambrose Lacey came to
him and asked his pardon for the talk that he had used to him in the
Windsor street--he was sure that some word had been sent round that
his business had brought him favour with the King and that he must be
treated with all courtesy. Several of those who sat round him tried to
discover what that business was. But of this he would say nothing,
parrying their questions with others about the wars in France, and
listening with open ears to the tales of great deeds done there.

"Ah, would that I could see such things!" he said.

To which one of them answered:

"Well, why not? There'll be chance enough ere long, and many of us
would be glad of a square built like you."

Now, at lower tables, in that vast hall, Hugh's servants, and with
them Grey Dick, sat among the men-at-arms of the King's Guard, who
were all chosen for their courage, and skill in archery. These
soldiers, noting the strange-faced, ashen-haired fellow who ate with
his bow resting on the bench beside him, inquired about him from the
other Dunwich men, and soon heard enough to cause them to open their
eyes. When the ale had got hold of them they opened their mouths also,
and, crowding round Dick, asked if it were true that he could shoot
well.

"As well as another," he answered, and would say no more.

Then they looked at his bow, and saw that it was old-fashioned, like
his master's mail, and of some foreign make and wood, but a mighty
weapon such as few could handle and hold straight. Lastly, they began
to challenge him to a match upon the morrow, to which he answered, who
also had been drinking ale and was growing angry, that he'd give the
best of them five points in fifty.

Now they mocked, for among them were some famous archers, and asked at
what range.

"At any ye will," answered Grey Dick, "from twelve score yards down to
one score yards. Now trouble me no longer, who if I must shoot
to-morrow would sleep first and drink no more of your strong ale that
breeds bad humours in one reared upon dyke water."

Then, seizing his bow, he glided away in his curious stoat-like
fashion to the hole where he had been shown that he should sleep.

"A braggart!" said one.

"I am not so sure," answered a grizzled captain of archers, who had
fought in many wars. "Braggarts make a noise, but this fellow only
spoke when we squeezed him and perhaps what came out of those thin
lips was truth. At least, from his look I'd sooner not find him
against me bow to bow."

Then they fell to betting which of them would beat Grey Dick by the
heaviest points.



Next morning about nine o'clock the King sent a messenger to Hugh,
bidding him and his servant Richard wait upon them. They went with
this messenger, who led them to a little chamber, where his Grace sat,
attended only by the clerk, Brother Peter, and a dark-browed minister,
whose name he never learned.

"Hugh de Cressi and Richard Archer," said Edward, motioning to the
minister to hand Hugh a parchment to which hung a great seal, "here is
the pardon which I promised you. No need to stay to read it, since it
is as wide as Windsor Keep, and woe betide him who lifts hand against
either of you for aught you may have done or left undone in the past
contrary to the laws of our realm. Yet remember well that this grace
runs not to the future. Now that matter is ended, and we come to one
that is greater. Because of the faith put in you by our loyal and
beloved subject, Sir Andrew Arnold, your godsire, and because we like
the fashion of you, Hugh de Cressi, and hold you brave and honest, it
has pleased us to give you a commission under which we direct the
Mayor of Dunwich and all true and lawful men of that town and hundred
to aid you in the taking or, if need be, in the slaying of our
subject, Sir Edmund Acour, Count of Noyon and Seigneur of Cattrina. We
command you to bring this man before us alive or dead, that his cause
may be judged of our courts and the truth of the matter alleged
against him by the Reverend Father Sir Andrew Arnold therein
determined. Nevertheless, we command you not to wound or kill the said
knight unless he resists the authority of us by you conveyed and you
cannot otherwise hold him safe from escaping from out this our realm.
This commission you will presently go forth to execute, keeping its
tenor and your aim secret until the moment comes to strike, and, as
you perform your duty, of which you will return and make report to us,
so shall we judge and reward you. Do you understand?"

"Sire," answered Hugh, bowing, "I understand, and I will obey to my
last breath."

"Good! When the parchments are engrossed my officer here will read
them to you and explain aught that may need it. Meanwhile, we have an
hour or two during which your horses can eat, for there are no fresh
beasts here to give you, and it is best, to avoid doubts, that you
should return as you came, only showing your powers if any should
attempt to arrest you. So let us have done with these heavy matters,
and disport us for a while. This servant of yours has made a common
boast that he will outshoot any of our picked archers, and now we are
ready to go forth and put him to the proof of the butts. Let him know,
however, that, notwithstanding our words of yesterday, we shall not
hold him to blame if he fails, since many a man of higher degree
promises more at night than he can perform in the morning."

"Sire, I'll do my best. I can no more," said Grey Dick. "Only I pray
that none may be suffered to hang about or pester me at the butts,
since I am a lonely man who love not company when I use my art."

"That shall be so," said the King. "And now to the sport."

"The sport!" grumbled Grey Dick, when he and Hugh were alone together.
"Why, it is other sport we should be seeking, with Acour and his
knaves for targets. Go to the King, master, and show him that while we
linger here the Frenchman may slip away, or work more and worse
treasons."

"I cannot, Dick; the parchments are not written out, and his Grace is
bent upon this pleasure match. Moreover, man, all these archers here--
yes, and their betters also--would say that you had fled because you
were an empty boaster who dared not face the trial."

"They'd say that, would they?" snarled Grey Dick. "Yes, they'd say
that, which would be bitter hearing for you and me. Well, they shall
not say it. Yet I tell you, master," he added in a burst of words,
"although I know not why, I'd rather bear their scorn and be away on
the road to Dunwich."

"It may not be, Dick," replied Hugh, shaking his head doubtfully.
"See, here they come to fetch us."



In a glade of the forest of Windsor situated near to the castle and
measuring some twenty-five score yards of open level ground, stood
Grey Dick, a strange, uncouth figure, at whom the archers of the guard
laughed, nudging each other. In his bony hand, however, he held that
at which they did not laugh, namely, the great black bow, six feet six
inches long, which he said had come to him "from the sea," and was
fashioned, not of yew, but of some heavy, close-grained wood, grown
perhaps in Southern or even in far Eastern lands. Still, one of them,
who had tried to draw this bow to his ear and could not, said aloud
that "the Suffolk man would do naught with that clumsy pole." Whereat,
Grey Dick, who heard him, grinning, showing his white teeth like an
angry dog.

Near by, on horseback and on foot, were the King, the young Prince
Edward, and many knights and ladies; while on the other side stood
scores of soldiers and other folk from the castle, who came to see
this ugly fellow well beaten at his own game.

"Dick," whispered Hugh, "shoot now as you never shot before. Teach
them a lesson for the honour of Suffolk."

"Let me be, master," he grumbled. "I told you I would do my best."

Then he sat himself down on the grass and began to examine his arrows
one by one, to all appearance taking no heed of anything else.

Presently came the first test. At a distance of five score yards was
set a little "clout," or target, of white wood, not more than two feet
square. This clout had a red mark, or eye, three inches across,
painted in its centre, and stood not very high above the sward.

"Now, Richard," said the King, "three of the best archers that we have
about us have been chosen to shoot against you and each other by their
fellows. Say, will you draw first or last?"

"Last, Sire," he answered, "that I may know their mettle."

Then a man stepped forward, a strong and gallant looking fellow, and
loosed his three arrows. The first missed the clout, the second
pierced the white wood, and the third hit the red eye.

The clout having been changed, and the old one brought to the King
with the arrows in it, the second man took his turn. This time all
three of the arrows hit the mark, one of them being in the red. Again
it was changed, and forth came the great archer of the guard, a tall
and clear-eyed man named Jack Green, and whom, it was said, none had
ever beaten. He drew, and the arrow went home in the red on its left
edge. He drew again, and the arrow went home in the red on its right
edge. He drew a third time, and the arrow went home straight in the
very centre of the red, where was a little black spot.

Now a great laugh went up, since clearly the Suffolk man was beaten
ere ever he began.

"Your Dick may do as well; he can do no better," said the King, when
the target was brought to him.

Grey Dick looked at it.

"A boon, your Grace," said Dick. "Grant that this clout may be set up
again with the arrows fast. Any may know them from mine since they are
grey, whereas those I make are black, for I am a fletcher in my spare
hours, and love my own handiwork."

"So be it," said the King, wondering; and the clout was replaced upon
its stand.

Now Grey Dick stretched himself, looked at the clout, looked at his
bow, and set a black-winged arrow on the string. Then he drew, it
seemed but lightly and carelessly, as though he thought the distance
small. Away flew the shaft, and sank into the red a good inch within
the leftmost arrow of Jack Green.

"Ah," said the onlookers, "a lucky shot indeed!"

Again he drew, and again the arrow sank into the red, a good inch
within the rightmost shot of Jack Green.

"Oh!" said the onlookers, "this man is an archer; but Jack's last he
cannot best, let the devil help him how he will."

"In the devil's name, then, be silent!" wheezed Grey Dick, with a
flash of his half-opened eye.

"Ay, be silent--be silent!" said the King. "We do not see such
shooting every day."

Now Dick set his foot apart and, arrow on string, thrice he lifted his
bow and thrice let it sink again, perhaps because he felt some breath
of wind stir the still air. A fourth time he lifted, and drew, not as
he had before, but straight to the ear, then loosed at once.

Away rushed the yard-long shaft, and folk noted that it scarcely
seemed to rise as arrows do, or at least not half so high. It rushed,
it smote, and there was silence, for none could see exactly what had
happened. Then he who stood near the target to mark ran forward, and
screamed out:

"By God's name, he has shattered Jack Green's centre arrow, and shot
/clean through the clout!/"

Then from all sides rose the old archer cry, "/He, He! He, He!/" while
the young Prince threw his cap on high, and the King said:

"Would that there were more such men as this in England! Jack Green,
it seems that you are beaten."

"Nay," said Grey Dick, seating himself again upon the grass, "there is
naught to choose between us in this round. What next, your Grace?"

Only Hugh, who watched him, saw the big veins swell beneath the pale
skin of his forehead, as they ever did when he was moved.

"The war game," said the King; "that is, if you will, for here rough
knocks may be going. Set it out, one of you."

Then a captain of the archers explained this sport. In short it was
that man should stand against man clad in leather jerkins, and wearing
a vizor to protect the face, and shoot at each other with blunt arrows
rubbed with chalk, he who first took what would have been a mortal
wound to be held worsted.

"I like not blunted arrows," said Grey Dick; "or, for the matter of
that, any other arrows save my own. Against how many must I play? The
three?"

The captain nodded.

"Then, by your leave, I will take them all at once."

Now some said that this was not fair, but in the end Dick won his
point, and those archers whom he had beaten, among them Jack Green,
were placed against him, standing five yards apart, and blunted arrows
served out to all. Dick set one of them on the string, and laid the
two others in front of them. Then a knight rode to halfway between
them, but a little to one side, and shouted: "Loose!"

As the word struck his ear Dick shot with wonderful swiftness, and
almost as the arrow left the bow flung himself down, grasping another
as he fell. Next instant, three shafts whistled over where he had
stood. But his found its mark on the body of him at whom he had aimed,
causing the man to stagger backward and throw down his bow, as he was
bound to do, if hit.

Next instant Dick was up again and his second arrow flew, striking
full and fair before ever he at whom it was aimed had drawn.

Now there remained Jack Green alone, and, as Dick set the third arrow,
but before he could draw, Jack Green shot.

"Beat!" said Dick, and stood quite still.

At him rushed the swift shaft, and passed over his shoulder within a
hairbreadth of his ear. Then came Dick's turn. On Jack Green's cap was
an archer's plume.

"Mark the plume, lords," he said, and lo! the feather leapt from that
cap.

Now there was silence. No one spoke, but Dick drew out three more
arrows.

"Tell me, captain," he said, "is your ground marked out in scores; and
what is the farthest that any one of you has sent a flighting shot?"

"Ay," answered the officer, "and twenty score and one yard is the
farthest, nor has that been done for many a day."

Dick steadied himself, and seemed to fill his lungs with air. Then,
stretching his long arms to the full, he drew the great bow till the
horns looked as though they came quite close together, and loosed.
High and far flew that shaft; men's eyes could scarcely follow it, and
all must wait long before a man came running to say where it had
fallen.

"Twenty score and two yards!" he cried.

"Not much to win by," grunted Dick, "though enough. I have done twenty
and one score once, but that was somewhat downhill."

Then, while the silence still reigned, he set the second arrow on the
string, and waited, as though he knew not what to do. Presently, about
fifty paces from him, a wood dove flew from out a tree and, as such
birds do at the first breath of spring, for the day was mild and
sunny, hovered a moment in the air ere it dipped toward a great fir
where doubtless it had built for years. Never, poor fowl, was it
destined to build again, for as it turned its beak downward Dick's
shaft pierced it through and through and bore it onward to the earth.

Still in the midst of a great silence, Dick took up his quiver and
emptied it on the ground, then gave it to the captain of the archers,
saying:

"And you will, step sixty, nay, seventy paces, and set this mouth
upward in the grass where a man may see it well."

The captain did so, propping the quiver straight with stones and a bit
of wood. Then, having studied all things with his eyes, Dick shot
upward, but softly. Making a gentle curve, the arrow turned in the air
as it drew near the quiver, and fell into its mouth, striking it flat.

"Ill done," grumbled Dick; "had I shot well, it should have been
pinned to earth. Well, yon shadow baulked me, and it might have been
worse."

Then he unstrung his bow, and slipped it into its case.

Now, at length, the silence was broken, and in good earnest. Men,
especially those of Dunwich, screamed and shouted, hurling up their
caps. Jack Green, for all jealousy was forgotten at the sight of this
wondrous skill, ran to Dick, clasped him in his arms, and, dragging
the badge from off his breast, tried to pin it to his rough doublet.
The young Prince came and clapped him on the shoulder, saying:

"Be my man! Be my man!"

But Dick only growled, "Paws off! What have I done that I have not
done a score of times before with no fine folk to watch me? I shot to
please my master and for the honour of Suffolk, not for you, and
because some dogs keep their tails too tightly curled."

"A sulky fellow," said the Prince, "but, by heaven, I like him!"

Then the King pushed his horse through the throng, and all fell back
before his Grace.

"Richard Archer," he said, "never has such marksmanship as yours been
seen in England since we sat upon the throne, nor shall it go
unrewarded. The twenty angels that you said you would stake last night
shall be paid to you by the treasurer of our household. Moreover, here
is a gift from Edward of England, the friend of archers, that you may
be pleased to wear," and taking his velvet cap from off his head, the
King unpinned from it a golden arrow of which the barbed head was cut
from a ruby, and gave it to him.

"I thank you, Sire," said Dick, his pale skin flushing with pride and
pleasure. "I'll wear it while I live, and may the sight of it mean
death to many of your enemies."

"Without doubt it will, and that ere long, Richard, for know you that
soon we sail again for France, whence the tempest held us back, and it
is my pleasure that you sail with us. Therefore I name you one of our
fletchers, with place about our person in our bodyguard of archers.
Jack Green will show you your quarters, and instruct you in your
duties, and soon you shall match your skill against his again, but
next time with Frenchmen for your targets."

"Sire," said Dick, very slowly, "take back your arrow, for I cannot do
as you will."

"Why, man? Are you a Frenchman?" asked the King, angrily, for he was
not wont to have his favours thus refused.

"My mother never told me so, Sire, although I don't know for certain
who my father may have been. Still, I think not, since I hate the
sight of that breed as a farmer's dog hates rats. But, Sire, I have a
good master, and do not wish to change him for one who, saving your
presence, may prove a worse, since King's favour on Monday has been
known to mean King's halter on Tuesday. Did you not promise to whip me
round your walls last night unless I shot as well as I thought I
could, and now do you not change your face and give me golden arrows?"

At these bold words a roar of laughter went up from all who heard
them, in which the King himself joined heartily enough.

"Silence!" he cried presently. "This yeoman's tongue is as sharp as
his shafts. I am pierced. Let us hear whom he will hit next."

"You again, Sire, I think," went on Dick, "because, after the fashion
of kings, you are unjust. You praise me for my shooting, whereas you
should praise God, seeing that it is no merit of mine, but a gift He
gave me at my birth in place of much which He withheld. Moreover, my
master there," and he pointed to Hugh, "who has just done you better
service than hitting a clout in the red and a dow beneath the wing,
you forget altogether, though I tell you he can shoot almost as well
as I, for I taught him."

"Dick, Dick!" broke in Hugh in an agony of shame. Taking no heed, Dick
went on imperturbably: "And is the best man with a sword in Suffolk,
as the ghost of John Clavering knows to-day. Lastly, Sire, you send
this master of mine upon a certain business where straight arrows may
be wanted as well as sharp swords, and yet you'd keep me here
whittling them out of ashwood, who, if I could have had my will, would
have been on the road these two hours gone. Is that a king's wisdom?"

"By St. George!" exclaimed Edward, "I think that I should make you
councillor as well as fletcher, since without doubt, man, you have a
bitter wit, and, what is more rare, do not fear to speak the truth as
you see it. Moreover, in this matter, you see it well. Go with Hugh de
Cressi on the business which I have given him to do, and, when it is
finished, should both or either of you live, neglect not our command
to rejoin us here, or--if we have crossed the sea--in France. Edward
of England needs the service of such a sword and such a bow."

"You shall have them both, Sire," broke in Hugh, "for what they are
worth. Moreover, I pray your Grace be not angry with Grey Dick's
words, for if God gave him a quick eye, He also gave him a rough
tongue."

"Not I, Hugh de Cressi, for know, we love what is rough if it be also
honest. It is smooth, false words of treachery that we hate, such
words as are ever on the lips of one whom we send you forth to bring
to his account. Now to your duty. Farewell till we meet again, whether
it be here or where all men, true or traitors, must foot their bill at
last."



CHAPTER VI

THE SNARE

About noon of the day on which Hugh and his company had ridden for
London, another company entered Dunwich--namely, Sir John Clavering
and many of his folk, though with him were neither Sir Edmund Acour
nor any of his French train. Sir John's temper had never been of the
best, for he was a man who, whatever his prosperity, found life hard
and made it harder for all those about him. But seldom had he been
angrier than he was this day, when his rage was mingled with real
sorrow for the loss of his only son, slain in a fight brought about by
the daughter of one of them and the sister of the other and urged for
honour's sake by himself, the father of them both.

Moreover, the marriage on which he had set his heart between Eve and
the glittering French lord whose future seemed so great had been
brought to naught, and this turbulent, hot-hearted Eve had fled into
sanctuary. Her lover, too, the youngest son of a merchant, had ridden
away to London, doubtless upon some mission which boded no good to him
or his, leaving a blood feud behind him between the wealthy de Cressis
and all the Clavering kin.

There was but one drop of comfort in his cup. By now, as he hoped,
Hugh and his death's-head, Grey Dick, a spawn of Satan that all the
country feared, and who, men said, was a de Cressi bastard by a witch,
were surely slain or taken by those who followed upon their heels.

Sir John rode to the Preceptory and hammered fiercely on its oaken
door. Presently it was opened by Sir Andrew Arnold himself, who stood
in the entrance, grey and grim, a long sword girt about his loins and
armour gleaming beneath his monkish robe.

"What would you, Sir John Clavering, that you knock at this holy house
thus rudely?" he asked.

"My daughter, priest, who, they say, has sheltered here."

"They say well, knight, she has sheltered here beneath the wings of
St. Mary and St. John. Begone and leave her in peace."

"I make no more of such wings than if they were those of farmyard
geese," roared the furious man. "Bring her or I will pluck her forth."

"Do so," replied Sir Andrew, "if you live to pass this consecrated
sword," and he laid his hand upon its hilt. "Take with her also the
curse of the Mother of God, and His beloved Apostle, and that of the
whole Church of Christ, by me declared upon your head in this world
and upon your soul in the world to come. Man, this is sanctuary, and
if you dare to set foot within it in violence, may your body perish
and your soul scorch everlastingly in the fires of hell. And you," he
added, raising his voice till it rang like a trumpet, addressing the
followers of Sir John, "on you also let the curse of excommunication
fall. Now slay me and enter if you will, but then every drop of blood
in these veins shall find a separate tongue and cry out for vengeance
on you before the judgment seat of God, where presently I summon you
to meet me."

Then he crossed himself, drew the great sword, and, holding it in his
left hand, stretched out his right toward them in malediction.

The Clavering men heard and saw. They looked at each other, and, as
though by common consent, turned and rode away, crossing themselves
also. In truth, they had no stomach for the curse of the Church when
it was thundered forth from the lips of such a monk as Sir Andrew
Arnold, who, they knew well, had been one of the greatest and holiest
warriors of his generation, and, so said rumour, was a white wizard to
boot with all the magic of the East at his command.

"Your men have gone, Sir John," said the old priest; "will you follow
them or will you enter?"

Now fear drove out the knight's rage and he spoke in another voice.

"Sir Andrew, why do you bring all these wrongs upon me? My boy is dead
at the hand of Hugh de Cressi, your godson, and he has robbed me of my
daughter, whom I have affianced to a better and a nobler man. Now you
give her sanctuary and threaten me with the curse of the Church
because I would claim her, my own flesh and blood; ay, and my heiress
too to-day. Tell me, as one man to another, why do you do these
things?"

"And tell me, Sir John Clavering, why for the sake of pelf and of
honours that you will never harvest do you seek to part those who love
each other and whom God has willed to bring together? Why would you
sell your child to a gilded knave whom she hates? Nay, stop me not.
I'd call him that and more to his face and none have ever known me
lie. Why did you suffer this Frenchman or your dead son, or both of
them, to try to burn out Hugh de Cressi and Red Eve as though they
were rats in rubbish?"

"Would you know, Father? Then I'll tell you. Because I wish to see my
daughter set high among lords and princes and not the wife of a
merchant's lad, who by law may wear cloth only and rabbit fur.
Because, also, I hate him and all his kin, and if this is true of
yesterday, how much more true is it now that he has killed my son, and
by the arrows of that wolf-man who dogs his heels, slain my guests and
my grieve. Think not I'll rest till I have vengeance of him and all
his cursed House. I'll appeal to the King, and if he will not give me
justice I'll take it for myself. Ay, though you are old, I tell you
you shall live to see the de Cressi vault crowded with the de Cressi
dead."

Sir Andrew hid his eyes for a moment with his hand, then let it fall
and spoke in a changed voice.

"It comes upon me that you speak truth, Sir John, for since I met a
certain great Master in the East, at times I have a gift of foresight.
I think that much sorrow draws near this land; ay, and others. I think
that many vaults and many churchyards, too, will ere long be filled
with dead; also that the tomb of the Claverings at Blythburgh will
soon be opened. Mayhap the end of this world draws near to all men, as
surely it draws near to you and me. I know not--yet truth was in your
lips just now, and in mine as well, I think. Oh, man, man!" he went on
after a pause, "appeal not unto the world's Cæsar lest Cæsar render
different judgment to that which you desire. Get you home, and on your
knees appeal unto God to forgive you your proud, vengeance-seeking
heart. Sickness draws near to you; death draws near to you, and after
death, hell--or heaven. I have finished."

As he heard these words Sir John's swarthy face grew pale and for a
little while his rage died down. Then it flared up again.

"Don't dream to frighten me with your spells, old wizard," he said.
"I'm a hale man yet, though I do lose my breath at times when my mind
is vexed with wrongs, and I'll square my own account with God without
your help or counsel. So you'll not give me my daughter?"

"Nay, here she bides in sanctuary for so long as it shall please her."

"Does she in truth? Perhaps you married her to this merchant fellow
ere he rode this morning."

"Nay, Sir John, they betrothed themselves before the altar and in
presence of his kin, no more. Moreover, if you would know, because of
your son's blood which runs between them I, after thought and prayer,
speaking in the name of the Church, swore them to this penance--that
for a year from yesterday they should not wed nor play the part of
lovers."

"I thank you, priest, for this small grace," answered Sir John, with a
bitter laugh, "and in my turn I swear this, that after the year they
shall not wed, since the one of them will be clay and the other the
wife of the man whom I have chosen. Now, play no tricks on me, lest I
burn this sanctuary of yours about your head and throw your old
carcass to roast among the flames."

Sir Andrew made no reply, only, resting his long sword on the
threshold, he leant upon its hilt, and fixed his clear grey eyes upon
Clavering's face. What Sir John saw in those eyes he never told, but
it was something which scared him. At least that shortening of the
breath of which he had spoken seemed to take a hold of him, for he
swayed upon his horse as though he were about to fall, then,
recovering, turned and rode straight for Blythburgh.



It was the second night after that day when Sir Andrew had looked John
Clavering in the eyes.

Secretly and in darkness those three whom Grey Dick had killed were
borne into the nave of Blythburgh church and there laid in the grave
which had been made ready for them. Till now their corpses had been
kept above ground in the hope that the body of John Clavering the
younger might be added to their number. But search as they would upon
seashore and river-bank, nothing of him was ever seen again. This
funeral was celebrated in the darkness, since neither Sir John nor
Acour desired that all men should see three bodies that had been slain
by one archer, aided by a merchant's lad, standing alone against a
score, and know, to say naught of the wounded, that there was yet
another to be added to the tale. Therefore they interred them by night
with no notice of the ceremony.

It was a melancholy scene. The nave of the great church, lighted only
with the torches borne by the six monks of the black Augustines from
the neighbouring priory of St. Osyth; the candles, little stars of
light, burning far away upon the altar; the bearers of the household
of the Claverings and the uncoffined corpses lying on their biers by
the edge of the yawning graves; the mourners in their mail; the low
voice of the celebrating priest, a Frenchman, Father Nicholas,
chaplain to Acour, who hurried through the Latin service as though he
wished to be done with it; the deep shadows of the groined roof
whereon the rain pattered--such were the features of this interment.
It was done at last, and the poor dead, but a few days before so full
of vigour and of passion, were left to their last sleep in the
unremembered grave. Then the mourners marched back to the manor across
the Middle Marsh and sought their beds in a sad silence.

Shortly after daybreak they were called from them again by the news
that those who had followed Hugh de Cressi had returned. Quickly they
rose, thinking that these came back with tidings of accomplished
vengeance, to find themselves face to face with seven starved and
miserable men who, all their horses being dead, had walked hither from
Dunwich.

The wretched story was learned at length, and then followed that
violent scene, which has been told already, when Acour cursed his
followers as cowards, and Clavering, sobered perhaps by the sadness of
the midnight burial or by the memory of Arnold's words, reproved him.
Lastly, stung by the taunts that were heaped upon them, Sir Pierre de
la Roche gave Hugh's message--that if they lifted hand against his
love or his House he would kill them like ravening wolves, "which I
think he certainly will do, for none can conquer him and his
henchman," he added shortly.

Then Sir John's rage flared up again like fire when fresh fuel is
thrown on ashes. He cursed Hugh and Grey Dick; he cursed his daughter;
he even cursed Acour and asked for the second time how it came about
that he who had brought all this trouble on him was given the evil
name of traitor.

"I know not," answered Sir Edmund fiercely, and laying his hand upon
his sword, "but this I know, that you or any man will do well not to
repeat it if you value life."

"Do you threaten me?" asked Sir John. "Because, if so, you will do
well to begone out of this house of shame and woe lest you be borne
out feet first. Nay, nay, I forgot," he added slowly, clasping his
head in his hands, "you are my daughter's affianced, are you not, and
will give her high place and many famous titles, and her son shall be
called Clavering, that the old name may not die but be great in
England, in France, and in Italy. You must bide to marry her, lest
that cuckoo, Hugh de Cressi, that cuckoo with the sharp bill, should
creep into my nest. I'll not be worsted by a stripling clad in
merchant's cloth who slew my only son. Take not my words ill, noble
Noyon, for I am overdone with grief for the past and fear for the
future. You must bide to marry her by fair means or by foul. Draw her
from the sanctuary and marry her whether she say you yea or nay. You
have my leave, noble Noyon," and so speaking he swayed and fell prone
upon the floor.

At first they thought that he was dead. But the chaplain, Nicholas,
who was a leech, bled him, and he came to himself again, although he
still wandered in his talk and lay abed.

Then Acour and Nicholas took counsel together.

"What is to be done?" said Sir Edmund, "for I am on fire for this
maid, and all her scorn and hate do but fan my flame. Moreover, she is
now very rich, for that old hot-head cannot live long. His violent
humours will kill him, and, as you know, Father, although I have great
possessions, my costs are large and I have still greater debts.
Lastly, shall de Noyon and his knights be worsted by a wool-merchant's
younger son, a mere 'prentice lad, and his henchman, a common archer
of the fens? Show me how to get her, Nicholas, and I'll make an abbot
of you yet. This sanctuary, now? will it hold? If we stormed the place
and took her, would the Holy Father give us absolution, do you think?"

"No, my lord," answered the fox-faced Nicholas. "The Church is great
because the Church is one, and what the priest does the Pope upholds,
especially when that priest is no mean man. This holy monk, Sir Andrew
Arnold, has reputation throughout Europe, and, though he seems so
humble, because of his wisdom is in the counsel of many great men
whose fathers or grandfathers were guided by him long ago. Commit what
crime you will, dip yourself to the lips in blood, and you may find
forgiveness, but touch not an ancient and acknowledged sanctuary of
the Church, since for this offence there will be none."

"What then, Nicholas? Must I give up the chase and fly? To speak
truth, things seem to threaten me. Why has that Hugh twice called me
traitor? Have any of my letters fallen into strange hands, think you?
I have written several, and you know my mission here."

"It is possible, lord; all things are possible, but I think not. I
think that he only draws the bow at a hazard, which is more than Grey
Dick does," he added with a chuckle. "These brute English hate us
French, whom they know to be their masters in all that makes a man,
and traitor to their fool king is the least of the words they throw at
us."

"Well, priest, my mother was English, as my wife will be. Therefore
stay your tongue on that matter and tell me how I am to make her my
wife," answered Acour haughtily.

The chaplain cringed and bowed, rubbing his thin hands together.

"I thought you wished to speak of the English, my lord, otherwise I
should not have ventured--but as to the lady Eve, something comes to
me. Why does she stay in sanctuary who herself has committed no crime?
Is it not, such is her madness, because she would be out of reach of
you and your endearments? Now if she believed you gone far enough
away, let us say to France, and knew that her father lay ill, why
then----" and he paused.

"You mean that she might come out of sanctuary of her own accord?"

"Yes, lord, and we might set a springe to catch this bird so rare and
shy, and though she'd flutter, flutter, flutter, and peck, peck, peck,
what could she do when you smoothed her plumage with your loving hand,
and a priest was waiting to say the word that should cause her to
forget her doubts and that merchant bumpkin?"

"Ah, Nicholas, you have a good wit, and if all goes well you shall
certainly be an abbot. But would her father, do you think----"

"Lord, that beef-eating knight is in such a rage that he would do
anything. What did he say just before the stroke took him? That you
were to marry her by fair means or by foul. Yes, and he told me an
hour ago that if only he knew she was your wife, he would die happy.
Oh, you have his warrant for anything you do to bring about this end.
Still there is no need to tell him too much lest it should cause his
good name to be aspersed by the vulgar. Many, it seems, love this Red
Eve for her high spirit, and are friends to the de Cressis, an open-
handed race who know how to bind folk to them. Listen how it must be
done."



That day it was given out that Sir Edmund Acour, those of his knights
who remained alive and all his following were about to leave for
London and lay their cause before the King, having learned that Hugh
de Cressi had gone thither to prejudice his Grace on his own behalf.
It was added, moreover, that they would not return to Suffolk, but
proposed when they had found justice or the promise of it, to take
ship at Dover for France. Next morning, accordingly, they rode away
from Blythburgh Manor and passed through Dunwich with much pomp, where
the citizens of that town, who were friends of the de Cressis, stared
at them with no kind eyes. Indeed, one of these as they crossed the
market-place called to them to be careful not to meet Hugh de Cressi
and Grey Dick upon their journey, lest there should be more midnight
burials and men-at-arms turned into foot-soldiers, whereat all about
him laughed rudely.

But Acour did not laugh. He ground his teeth and said into the ear of
Nicholas:

"Register this vow for me, priest, that in payment for that jest I'll
sack and burn Dunwich when our army comes, and give its men and
children to the sword and its women to the soldiers."

"It shall be done, lord," answered the chaplain, "and should your
heart soften at the appointed time I'll put you in memory of this
solemn oath."

At the great house of the Mayor of Dunwich Sir Edmund drew rein and
demanded to see him. Presently this Mayor, a timid, uncertain-looking
man, came in his robes of office and asked anxiously what might be the
cause of this message and why an armed band halted at his gate.

"For no ill purpose, sir," answered Acour, "though little of justice
have I found at your hands, who, therefore, must seek it at the Court
of my liege lord, King Edward. All I ask of you is that you will cause
this letter to be delivered safely to the lady Eve Clavering, who lies
in sanctuary at the Preceptory of St. Mary and St. John. It is one of
farewell, since it seems that this lady who, by her own will and her
father's, was my affianced, wishes to break troth, and I am not a man
who needs an unwilling bride. I'd deliver it myself only that old
knave, half priest and half knight, but neither good----"

"You'd best speak no ill of Sir Andrew Arnold here," said a voice in
the crowd.

"Only the master of the Preceptory," went on Acour, changing his tone
somewhat, "might take fright and think I wished to violate his
sanctuary if I came there with thirty spears at my back."

"And no fool either," said the voice, "seeing that they are French
spears and his is an English sanctuary."

"Therefore," continued Acour, "I pray you, deliver the letter.
Perchance when we meet again, Master Mayor," he added with a venomous
glance of his dark eyes, "you will have some boon to ask of me, and be
sure I'll grant it--if I can."

Then without waiting for an answer, for the mob of sturdy fishermen,
many of whom had served in the French wars, looked threatening, he and
his following rode away through the Ipswich gate and out on to the
moorlands beyond, which some of them knew but too well.

All the rest of that day they rode slowly, but when night came, having
halted their horses at a farm and given it out that they meant to push
on to Woodbridge, they turned up a by-track on the lonely heath, and,
unseen by any, made their through the darkness to a certain empty
house in the marshes not far from Beccles town. This house, called
Frog Hall, was part of Acour's estate, and because of the ague
prevalent there in autumn, had been long unattended. Nor did any visit
it at this season of the year, when no cattle grazed upon these salt
marshes.

Here, then, he and his people lay hid, cursing their fortunes, since,
notwithstanding the provisions that they had conveyed thither in
secret, the place was icy cold in the bitter, easterly winds which
tore over it from the sea. So lonely was it, also, that the Frenchmen
swore that their comrades slain by Grey Dick haunted them at nights,
bidding them prepare to join the number of the dead. Indeed, had not
Acour vowed that he would hang the first man who attempted to desert,
some of them would have left him to make the best of their way back to
France. For always as they crouched by the smoking hearth they dreamed
of Grey Dick and his terrible arrows.

Sir Edmund Acour's letter came safely into the hands of Eve, brought
to her by the Mayor himself. It read thus:

Lady,

You will no more of me, so however much you should live to ask it,
I will have no more of you. I go hang your merchant lout, and
afterward away to France, who wish to have done with your cold
Suffolk, where you may buy my lands cheap if you will. Yet, should
Master Hugh de Cressi chance to escape me, I counsel you to marry
him, for I can wish you no worse fate, seeing what you will be,
than to remember what you might have been. Meanwhile it is my duty
as a Christian to tell you, in case you should desire to speak to
him ere it be too late, that your father lies at the point of
death from a sickness brought on by his grief at the slaying of
his son and your cruel desertion of him, and calls for you in his
ravings. May God forgive you, as I try to do, all the evil that
you have wrought, which, perhaps, is not done with yet. Unless
Fate should bring us together again, for as aught I know it may, I
bid you farewell forever. Would that I had never seen your face,
but well are you named Red Eve, who, like the false Helen in a
story you have never heard, were born to bring brave men to their
deaths. Again farewell,

De Noyon.

"Who is this Helen?" asked Eve of Sir Andrew when the letter had been
read.

"A fair Grecian, daughter, over whom nations fought when the world was
young, because of her beauty."

"Ah, well! she did not make herself beautiful, did she? and,
perchance, was more sinned against than sinning, since women, having
but one life to live, must follow their own hearts. But this Helen has
been dead a long while, so let her rest, if rest she may. And now it
seems that Acour is away and that my father lies very sick. What shall
I do? Return to him?"

"First I will make sure that the Frenchman has gone, and then we will
see, daughter."

So Sir Andrew sent out messengers who reported it to be true that
Acour had ridden straight to London to see the King and then sail for
Dover. Also they said that no Frenchmen were left at Blythburgh save
those who would never leave the place again, and that Sir John
Clavering lay sick in his bed at the manor.

"God fights for us!" said Sir Andrew with a little laugh. "This
Acour's greeting at Court may be warmer than he thinks and at the
least you and Dunwich are well rid of him. Though I had sooner that
you stayed here, to-morrow, daughter, you shall ride to Blythburgh.
Should your father die, as I think he will ere long, it might grieve
you in the after years to remember that you had bid him no farewell.
If he recovers or is harsh with you it will be easy for you to seek
sanctuary again."



CHAPTER VII

THE LOVE PHILTRE

So it came about that on the morrow Eve and Sir Andrew, accompanied
only by a single serving man, fearing no guile since it seemed certain
that the Frenchmen were so far away, rode across the moor to
Blythburgh. At the manor-house they found the drawbridge up. The
watchman at the gate said also that his orders were to admit none, for
the Frenchmen being gone, there were but few to guard the place.

"What, good fellow," asked Eve, "not even the daughter of the house
who has heard that her father lies so sick?"

"Ay, he lies sick, lady," the man replied, "but such are his orders.
Yet if you will bide here a while, I'll go and learn his mind."

So he went and returned presently, saying that Sir John commanded that
his daughter was to be admitted, but that if Sir Andrew attempted to
enter he should be driven back by force.

"Will you go in or will you return with me?" asked her companion of
Eve.

"God's truth!" she answered, "am I one to run away from my father,
however bad his humour? I'll go in and set my case before him, for
after all he loves me in his own fashion and when he understands will,
I think, relent."

"Your heart is your best guide, daughter, and it would be an ill task
for me to stand between sire and child. Enter then, for I am sure that
the Saints and your own innocence will protect you from all harm. At
the worst you can come or send to me for help."

So they parted, and the bridge having been lowered, Eve walked boldly
to her father's sleeping chamber, where she was told he lay. As she
approached the door she met several of the household leaving it with
scared faces, who scarcely stayed to salute her. Among these were two
servants of her dead brother John, men whom she had never liked, and a
woman, the wife of one of them, whom she liked least of all.

Pushing open the door, which was shut behind her, she advanced toward
Sir John, who was not, as she had thought, in bed, but clad in a
furred robe and standing by the hearth, on which burnt a fire. He
watched her come, but said no word, and the look of him frightened her
somewhat.

"Father," she said, "I heard that you were sick and alone----"

"Ay," he broke in, "sick, very sick here," and he laid his hand upon
his heart, "where grief strikes a man. Alone, too, since you and your
fellow have done my only son to death, murdered my guests, and caused
them to depart from so bloody a house."

Now Eve, who had come expecting to find her father at the point of
death and was prepared to plead with him, at these violent words took
fire as was her nature.

"You know well that you speak what is not true," she said. "You and
your Frenchmen strove to burn us out of Middle Marsh; my brother John
struck Hugh de Cressi as though he were a dog and used words toward
him that no knave would bear, let alone one better born than we are.
Moreover, afterward once he spared his life, and Grey Dick, standing
alone against a crowd, did but use his skill to save us. Is it murder,
then to protect our honour and to save ourselves from death? And am I
wrong to refuse to marry a fine French knave when I chance to love an
honest man?"

"And, pray, am I your father, girl, that you dare to scold at me
thus?" shouted Sir John, growing purple with wrath. "If I choose a
husband for you, by what right do you refuse him, saying that you love
a Dunwich shop-boy? Down on your knees and beg my pardon, or you shall
have the whipping you have earned."

Now Eve's black eyes glittered dangerously.

"Ill would it go with any man who dared to lay a hand upon me," she
said, drawing herself up and grasping the dagger in her girdle. "Yes,
very ill, even though he were my own father. Look at me and say am I
one to threaten? Ay, and before you answer bear in mind that there are
those at my call who can strike hard, and that among them I think
you'll find the King of England."

She paused.

"What hellish plot is this that you hatch against me?" asked Sir John,
with some note of doubt in his voice. "What have I to fear from my
liege lord, the King of England?"

"Only, sir, that you consort with and would wed me to one who,
although you may not know it, has, I am told, much to fear from him,
so much that I wonder that he has ridden to seek his Grace's presence.
Well, you are ill and I am angered and together we are but as steel
and flint, from the meeting of which comes fire that may burn us both.
Therefore, since being better than I thought, you need me not and have
only cruel words for greeting, I'll bid you farewell and get me back
to those who are kindlier. God be with you, and give you your health
again."

"Ah!" said or rather snarled Sir John, "I thought as much and am ready
for the trick. You'd win back to sanctuary, would you, and the company
of that old wizard, Andrew Arnold, thence to make a mock of me? Well,
not one step do you take upon that road while I live," and pushing
past her he opened the door and shouted aloud.

Apparently the men and woman whom Eve had met in the passage were
still waiting there, for instantly they all reappeared.

"Now, fellows," said Sir John, "and you, Jane Mell, take this
rebellious girl of mine to the chamber in the prisoners' tower, whence
I think she'll find it hard to fly to sanctuary. There lock her fast,
feeding her with the bread and water of affliction to tame her proud
spirit, and suffering none to go near her save this woman, Jane Mell.
Stay, give me that bodkin which she wears lest she, who has learned
bloody ways of late, should do some of you or herself a mischief."

As he spoke one of the men deftly snatched the dagger from Eve's
girdle and handed it to Sir John who threw it into the farthest corner
of the room. Then he turned and said:

"Now, girl, will you go, or must you be dragged?"

She raised her head slowly and looked him in the eyes. Mad as he was
with passion there was something in her face that frightened him.

"Can you be my father?" she said in a strained, quiet voice. "Oh! glad
am I that my mother did not live to see this hour."

Then she wheeled round and addressed the men.

"Hearken, fellows. He who lays a finger on me, dies. Soon or late
assuredly he dies as he would not wish to die. Yes, even if you murder
me, for I have friends who will learn the truth and pay back coin for
coin with interest a hundredfold. Now I'll go. Stand clear, knaves,
and pray to God that never again may Red Eve cross the threshold of
her prison. Pray also that never again may you look on Hugh de
Cressi's sword or hear Grey Dick's arrows sing, or face the curse of
old Sir Andrew."

So proud and commanding was her mien and so terrible the import of her
words, that these rough hinds shrank away from her and the woman hid
her face in her hands. But Sir John thundered threats and oaths at
them, so that slowly and unwillingly they ringed Eve round. Then with
head held high she walked thence in the midst of them.

The prisoners' chamber beneath the leads of the lofty tower was cold
and unfurnished save for a stool and a truckle-bed. It had a great
door of oak locked and barred on the outer side, with a grille in it
through which the poor wretch within could be observed. There was no
window, only high up beneath the ceiling were slits like loopholes
that not a child could have passed. Such was the place to which Eve
was led.

Here they left her. At nightfall the door was opened and Jane Mell
entered, bearing a loaf of bread and a jug of water, which she set
down upon the floor.

"Would you aught else?" she asked.

"Ay, woman," answered Eve, "my thick red woollen cloak from my
chamber, and hood to match. Also water to wash me, for this place is
cold and foul, and I would die warm and clean."

"First I must get leave from my lord your father," said the woman in a
surly voice.

"Get it then and be swift," said Eve, "or leave it ungotten; I care
little."

Mell went and within half an hour returned with the garments, the
water and some other things. Setting them down without a word she
departed, locking and bolting the door behind her.

While there remained a few rays of light to see by, Eve ate and drank
heartily, for she needed food. Then having prayed according to her
custom, she laid herself down and slept as a child sleeps, for she was
very strong of will and one who had always taught herself to make the
best of evil fortune. When she woke the daws were cawing around the
tower and the sun shone through the loopholes. She rose refreshed and
ate the remainder of her bread, then combed her hair and dressed
herself as best she could.

Two or three hours later the door was opened and her father entered.
Glancing at him she saw that little sleep had visited him that night,
for he looked old and very weary, so weary that she motioned to him to
sit upon the stool. This he did, breathing heavily and muttering
something about the steepness of the tower stairs. Presently he spoke.

"Eve," he said, "is your proud spirit broken yet?"

"No," she answered, "nor ever will be, living or dead! You may kill my
body, but my spirit is me, and that you will never kill. As God gave
it so I will return it to Him again."

He stared at her, with something of wonder and more of admiration in
his look.

"Christ's truth," he said, "how proud I could be of you, if only you'd
let me! I deem your courage comes from your mother, but she never had
your shape and beauty. And now you are the only one left, and you hate
me with all your proud heart, you, the heiress of the Claverings!"

"Whose estate is this," she answered, pointing to the bare stone
walls. "Think you, my father, that such treatment as I have met with
at your hands of late would breed love in the humblest heart? What
devil drives you on to deal with me as you have done?"

"No devil, girl, but a desire for your own good, and," he added with a
burst of truth, "for the greatness of my House after I am gone, which
will be soon. For your old wizard spoke rightly when he said that I
stand near to death."

"Will marrying me to a man I hate be for my good and make your House
great? I tell you, sir, it would kill me and bring the Claverings to
an end. Do you desire also that your broad lands should go to patch a
spendthrift Frenchman's cloak? But what matters your desire seeing
that I'll not do it, who love another man worth a score of him; one,
too, who will sit higher than any Count of Noyon ever stood."

"Pish!" he said. "'Tis but a girl's whim. You speak folly, being young
and headstrong. Now, to have done with all this mummer's talk, will
you swear to me by our Saviour and on the welfare of your soul to
break with Hugh de Cressi once and forever? For if so I'll let you
free, to leave me if you will, and dwell where it pleases you."

She opened her lips to answer, but he held up his hand, saying:

"Wait ere you speak, I have not done. If you take my offer I'll not
even press Sir Edmund Acour on you; that matter shall stand the chance
of time and tide. Only while you live you must have no more to do with
the man who slew your brother. Now will you swear?"

"Not I," she answered. "How can I who but a few days ago before God's
altar and His priest vowed myself to this same Hugh de Cressi for all
his life?"

Sir John rose from the stool and walked, or, rather, tottered to the
door.

"Then stay here till you rot," he said quite quietly, "for I'll give
you no burial. As for this Hugh, I would have spared him, but you have
signed his death-warrant."

He was gone. The heavy door shut, the bars clanged into their sockets.
Thus these two parted, for when they met once more no word passed
between them; and although she knew not how these things would end,
Eve felt that parting to be dreadful. Turning her face to the wall,
for a while she wept, then, when the woman Mell came with her bread
and water, wiped away her tears and faced her calmly. After all, she
could have answered no otherwise; her soul was pure of sin, and, for
the rest, God must rule it. At least she would die clean and honest.

That night she was wakened from her sleep by the clatter of horses'
hoofs on the courtyard stones. She could hear no more because a wind
blew that drowned all sound of voices. For a while a wild hope had
filled her that Hugh had come, or perchance Sir Andrew, with the
Dunwich folk, but presently she remembered that this was foolish,
since these would never have been admitted within the moat. So sighing
sadly she turned to rest again, thinking to herself that doubtless her
father had called in some of his vassal tenants from the outlying
lands to guard the manor in case it should be attacked.

Next morning the woman Jane Mell brought her better garments to wear,
of her best indeed, and, though she wondered why they were sent, for
the lack of anything else to do she arrayed herself in them, and
braided her hair with the help of a silver mirror that was among the
garments. A little later this woman appeared again, bearing not bread
and water, but good food and a cup of wine. The food she ate with
thankfulness, but the wine she would not drink, because she knew that
it was French and had heard Acour praise it.

The morning wore away to noon, and again the door opened and there
stood before her--Sir Edmund Acour himself, gallantly dressed, as she
noticed vaguely, in close-fitting tunic of velvet, long shoes that
turned up at the toes and a cap in which was set a single nodding
plume. She rose from her stool and set her back against the wall with
a prayer to God in her heart, but no word upon her lips, for she felt
that her best refuge was silence. He drew the cap from his head, and
began to speak.

"Lady," he said, "you will wonder to see me here after my letter to
you, bidding you farewell, but you will remember that in this letter I
wrote that Fate might bring us together again, and it has done so
through no fault or wish of mine. The truth is that when I was near to
London I heard that danger awaited me there on account of certain
false accusations, such danger that I must return again to Suffolk and
seek a ship at some eastern port. Well, I came here last night, and
learned that you were back out of sanctuary and also that you had
quarrelled with your father who in his anger had imprisoned you in
this poor place. An ill deed, as I think, but in truth he is so
distraught with grief and racked with sickness that he scarce knows
what he does."

Now he paused, but as Eve made no answer went on:

"Pity for your lot, yes, and my love for you that eats my heart out,
caused me to seek your father's leave to visit you and see if
perchance I could not soften your wrath against me."

Again he paused and again there was no answer.

"Moreover," he added, "I have news for you which I fear you will think
sad and which, believe me, I pray you, it pains me to give, though the
man was my rival and my enemy. Hugh de Cressi, to whom you held
yourself affianced, is dead."

She quivered a little at the words, but still made no answer, for her
will was very strong.

"I had the story," he continued, "from two of his own men, whom we met
flying back to Dunwich from London. It seems that messengers from your
father reached the Court of the King before this Hugh, telling him of
the slaying in Blythburgh Marsh. Then came Hugh himself, whereon the
King seized him and his henchman, the archer, and at once put them on
their trial as the murderers of John Clavering, of my knights, and
Thomas of Kessland, which they admitted boldly. Thereon his Grace, who
was beside himself with rage, said that in a time of war, when every
man was needed to fight the French, he was determined by a signal
example to put a stop to the shedding of blood in these private feuds.
So he ordered the merchant to the block, and his henchman, the archer,
to the gallows, giving them but one hour to make their peace with God.
Moreover," he went on, searching her cold impassive face with his
eyes, "I did not escape his wrath, for he gave command that I was to
be seized wherever I might be found and cast into prison till I could
be put upon my trial, and my knights with me. Of your father's case he
is considering since his only son has been slain and he holds him in
regard. Therefore it is that I am obliged to avoid London and take
refuge here."

Still Eve remained silent, and in his heart Acour cursed her
stubbornness.

"Lady," he proceeded, though with somewhat less assurance--for now he
must leave lies and get to pleading, and never did a suit seem more
hopeless, "these things being so through no fault of mine whose hands
are innocent of any share in this young man's end, I come to pray of
you, the sword of death having cut all your oaths, that you will have
pity on my love and take me as your husband, as is your father's wish
and my heart's desire. Let not your young life be swallowed up in
grief, but make it joyous in my company. I can give you greatness, I
can give you wealth, but most of all I can give you such tender
adoration as never woman had before. Oh! sweet Eve, your answer," and
he cast himself upon the ground before her, and, snatching the hem of
her robe, pressed it to his lips.

Then at length Eve spoke in a voice that rang like steel:

"Get you gone, knave, whose spurs should be hacked from your heels by
scullions. Get you gone, traitor and liar, for well I know that Hugh
de Cressi is not dead, who had a certain tale to tell of you to the
King of England. Get you back to the Duke of Normandy and there ask
the price of your betrayal of your liege lord, Edward, and show him
the plans of our eastern coast and the shores where his army may land
in safety."

Acour sprang to his feet and his face went white as ashes. Thrice he
strove to speak but could not. Then with a curse he turned and left
the chamber.



"The hunt's up," said Father Nicholas when he had heard all this tale
a little later, "and now, lord, I think that you had better away to
France, unless you desire to stop without companions in the church
yonder."

"Ay, priest, I'll away, but by God's blood, I'll take that Red Eve
with me! For one thing she knows too much to leave her behind. For a
second I mean to pay her back, and for a third, although you may think
it strange, I'm mad for her. I tell you she looked wondrous standing
with her back against that wall, her marble face never wincing when I
told her all the lie about young de Cressi's death--which will be holy
truth when I get a chance at him--watching me out of those great, dark
eyes of hers."

"Doubtless, lord, but how did she look when she called you knave and
traitor? I think you said those were her wicked words. Oh!" he added
with a ring of earnestness in his smooth voice, "let this Red Eve be.
At bed or board she's no mate for you. Something fights at her side,
be it angel or devil, or just raw chance. At the least she'll prove
your ruin unless you let her be."

"Then I'll be ruined, Nicholas, for I'll not leave her, for a while,
at any rate. What! de Noyon, whom they call Danger of Dames, beaten by
a country girl who has never seen London or Paris! I'd sooner die."

"As well may chance if the country lad and the country archer come
back with Edward's warrant in their pouch," answered the priest,
shrugging his lean shoulders. "Well, lord, what is your plan?"

"To carry her off. Can't we manage nine stone of womanhood between
us?"

"If she were dead it might be done, though hardly--over these Suffolk
roads. But being very much alive with a voice to scream with, hands to
fight with, a brain to think with and friends who know her from here
to Yarmouth, or to Hull, and Monsieur Grey Dick's arrows pricking us
behind perchance--well, I don't know."

"Friend," said Acour, tapping him on the shoulder meaningly, "there
must be some way; there are always ways, and I pray you to hunt them
out. Come, find me one, or stay here alone to explain affairs, first
to this Dick whom you have so much upon the brain, and afterward to
Edward of England or his officers."

Father Nicholas looked at the great Count's face. Then he looked at
the ground, and, having studied it a while without result, turned his
beady eyes to the heavens, where it would seem that he found
inspiration.

"I am a stranger to love, thank the Saints," he said, "but, as you
know, lord, I am a master leech, and amongst other things have studied
certain medicines which breed that passion in the human animal."

"Love philtres?" queried Acour doubtfully.

"Yes, that kind of thing. One dose, and those who hate become
enamoured, and those who are enamoured hate."

"Then in God's or Satan's name, give her one. Only be careful it is
the right sort, for if you made a mistake so that she hated me any
more than she does at present, I know not what would happen. Also if
you kill her I'll dig a sword point through you. How would the stuff
work?"

"She'll seem somewhat stupid for a while, perhaps not speak, but only
smile kindly. That will last twelve hours or so, plenty of time for
you to be married, and afterward, when the grosser part of the potion
passes off leaving only its divine essence, why, afterward she'll love
you furiously."

"A powerful medicine, truly, that can change the nature of woman.
Moreover, I'd rather that she loved me--well, as happy brides do.
Still I put up with the fury provided it be of the good kind. And now
how is it to be done?"

"Leave that to me, lord," said Nicholas, with a cunning smile. "Give
me a purse of gold, not less than ten pieces, for some is needed to
melt in the mixture, and more to bribe that woman and others. For the
rest, hold yourself ready to become a husband before sunset to-morrow.
Go see Sir John and tell him that the lady softens. Send men on to
King's Lynn also to bid them have our ship prepared to sail the minute
we appear, which with good fortune should be within forty-eight hours
from now. Above all, forget not that I run great risk to soul and body
for your sake and that there are abbeys vacant in Normandy. Now,
farewell, I must to my work, for this medicine takes much skill such
as no other leech has save myself. Ay, and much prayer also, that
naught may hinder its powerful working."

"Prayer to the devil, I think," said his master looking after him with
a shrug of his shoulders. "God's truth! if any one had told me three
months gone that de Noyon would live to seek the aid of priests and
potions to win a woman's favour, I'd have named him liar to his face.
What would those who have gone before her think of this story, I
wonder?"

Then with a bitter laugh he turned and went about his business, which
was to lie to the father as he had lied to the daughter. Only in this
second case he found one more willing to listen and easier to deceive.



On the following morning, as it chanced, Eve had no relish for the
food that was brought to her, for confinement in that narrow place had
robbed her of her appetite. Also she had suffered much from grievous
fear and doubt, for whatever she might say to Acour, how could she be
sure that his story was not true? How could she be sure that her lover
did not, in fact, now lie dead at the headsman's hands? Such things
often happened when kings were wroth and would not listen. Or perhaps
Acour himself had found and murdered him, or hired others to do the
deed. She did not know, and, imprisoned here without a friend, what
means had she of coming at the truth? Oh! if only she could escape! If
only she could speak with Sir Andrew for one brief minute, she, poor
fool, who had walked into this trap of her own will.

She sent away the food and bade the woman Mell bring her milk, for
that would be easy to swallow and give her sustenance. After some
hours it came, Mell explaining that she had been obliged to send for
it to the farmsteading, as none drank milk in the manor-house. Being
thirsty, Eve took the pitcher and drained it to the last drop, then
threw it down, saying that the vessel was foul and made the milk taste
ill.

The woman did not answer, only smiled a little as she left the
chamber, and Eve wondered why she smiled.

A while later she grew very sleepy, and, as it seemed to her, had
strange dreams in her sleep. She dreamed of her childhood, when she
and Hugh played together upon the Dunwich shore. She dreamed of her
mother, and thought dimly that she was warning her of something. She
heard voices about her and thought that they were calling her to be
free. Yes, and followed them readily enough, or so it seemed in her
dream, followed them out of that hateful prison, for the bolts clanged
behind her, down stairs and into the courtyard, where the sun's light
almost blinded her and the fresh air struck her hot brow like ice.
Then there were more voices, and people moving to and fro and the
drone of a priest praying and a touch upon her hand from which she
shrank. And oh! she wished that dream were done, for it was long,
long. It wearied her, and grasped her heart with a cold clutch of
fear.



CHAPTER VIII



 


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