The Messenger of the Black Prince 4
I breathed a great sigh of relief when I tramped up the gravel walk that
led to the house. With no ado I pushed open the front door and entered.
In the great hall there were two men, the one my brother André and the
old Count of Gramont who lived in the castle on the hill. They had just
finished lighting the candles. There was no fire in the open hearth and
the room was cold and chilled with the damp. The old Count was pacing
nervously up and down the floor muttering to himself in his deep rolling
tones. My brother’s face was as white as chalk and lines of worry lay
across his forehead. He was standing at the long oaken table that stood
in the centre of the room winding a piece of linen about his lower arm.
I did not speak for at the first glance I noticed that, as he wound, the
blood kept oozing through the bandages from the place where he had been
wounded.
CHAPTER III
A VISITOR IN THE NIGHT
I stood stock still in the middle of the floor. My brother looked at me
from head to foot.
“Le Brun has been here, Henri,” he said calmly. And then in a low voice,
“I was afraid that something had happened to you, you return so late.”
“Something has happened,” I burst forth and in shaking tones told him of
my adventures in the woods.
“They are agents of the King,” cried the old Count. “They are everywhere
about us. They are not satisfied that they have taken my son. They
will——”
My mouth fell open in amazement.
“They have taken Charles?” I asked. “Is it true then that he was at the
meeting at Rouen? You can——”
“It was a meeting of the nobles of Normandy,” he interrupted. “I thought
I was too old to go myself so I sent my only son. They were to make
plans to protect us against the aggressions of the King. But the secret
leaked out. Some traitor in our ranks betrayed us. Every man in the
gathering was taken. A full dozen were beheaded behind the walls of the
town. A few were sent off as prisoners, to be scattered among the
castles of the King.”
“—and Charles?” I cried.
The old man sighed and ground his teeth.
“He is on his way down the valley of the Loire,” he rumbled deep in his
throat, “to be mewed up till the crack of doom.”
The blood left my face. A chill of horror ran through every limb.
“We shall bring him back, Henri,” said André with a ring in his voice.
“If it takes the last drop of blood of the last Norman, we shall bring
him back. But we shall have to wait.”
The old Count flung his hand in the air. The fire flashed from his eyes
and he began to stride again across the floor.
“Wait!” he demanded. “Wait! That is the only word you know. We have
waited long enough already. I’ll not bide another day.” He turned wildly
towards the rack that held my brother’s arms. “I’ll take this,” he cried
laying his strong hand upon a battle-ax. “I’ll go to the King, where he
sits upon his throne. I’ll demand of him why he dared to lay his finger
upon my son. I’ll offer him his choice, whether he will give me my son
back—or perish at my feet.”
Here André raised his hand for peace.
“If you do that,” he said quietly, “you will only be playing into their
nets. It will mean the destruction of us all.”
The Count flung himself into a chair.
“There’s one last fight in me yet, André,” he growled in his heavy
voice. “I’ll summon a thousand archers from the countryside. I’ll find
the castle where they have him prisoner. We’ll storm it and burn it to
the ground.”
But André, who ever was on the side of wisdom, saw the folly of his
intentions.
“If you do,” he warned, “it will only be a signal for an attack. The
armies of France will sweep us from our homes.”
He took two or three paces to and fro in the room and returned to me.
There was a smile of sadness on his face as he spoke.
“The Black Prince of England is our only hope,” he said.
“He is ravaging the western coast of France,” I told him. “It is his
presence there that holds the King in check.”
He opened his mouth to answer but the long whine of one of the dogs out
of doors interrupted him. We kept silent until the sound died away. Then
he took up a tinder and went to the hearth.
“I shall make a fire,” he said. “The chill of the air has pierced me to
the bone.”
I looked at his wounded arm.
“How did you get that, André?” I asked.
He laughed.
“We were attacked by knaves as we came along the road.”
The whine of the dog began again. Then like a chorus there arose a
barking and yelping as though the whole pack of them had gone suddenly
mad.
“There is someone in the yard,” muttered the old Count without raising
his head. “I thought I heard the crunching of the gravel on the walk.”
With a kind of instinct I turned towards the window. I could not see
clearly what it was, but there flashed across the pane what seemed to be
the image of a man’s face. By the suddenness with which he moved away,
it struck me that he must have been loitering there, peering in. My
heart rose in my throat for I thought of the enemies who were lurking
about the house.
I was on the verge of raising my hand to point and call out, when amid
the sharp howling of the dogs there came a rapping on the panels of the
door. Like a flash André sprang forward. Without a single weapon in case
he was attacked he jerked the door open. The light of the candles shone
dimly into the haze. For all that, I was able to see the figure of a man
standing on the stone step. He was booted and spurred and clad from neck
to heels in the long black cloak of a traveler. He wore a broad brimmed
hat with a feather in it. When he saw the anxious __EXPRESSION__ on my
brother’s face he smiled and touched his forehead like a salute. Then he
bowed with the gravity of a courtier.
“May I come in out of the rain?” he asked.
CHAPTER IV
A TRICKSTER
Of all the men I ever saw this stranger struck my fancy to the highest
degree. He strode into the room with as much confidence and poise as
though he were the actual master of the house and we the humblest of his
servants. He looked neither to the right nor the left. Yet, as he passed
us, without shifting his gaze, he seemed to sweep each of us out of the
corner of his eye with a glance that measured us from head to heel.
He stopped at the great oaken table and raised his hat with a sort of
mincing delicacy. With a swish through the air he knocked the water from
it and laid it carefully down. When he took off his cloak we saw that he
carried a silver mounted sword and wore a doublet and breeches of the
finest velvet ornamented about the edges with a fine lace. He curled his
moustache with his thumb and forefinger. Then, with his hand over his
heart and a bland smile on his face he turned and bowed with as much
reverence as you would pay to a king.
“I’ll never forget this,” he said, but there his voice dropped so that
the rest of it sounded like hollow mockery,“—this unexpected
hospitality.”
André was the first to speak.
“It’s a sour night,” said he carefully eyeing the stranger’s wet boots
and dripping clothes, “for a man to be abroad.”
The visitor gave a short laugh.
“A little warmth,” he replied with a nod towards the hearth, “would add
greatly to my comfort.” He began to chafe his hands the one in the other
as though he were frozen to the marrow. “Will you please bestir
yourself!”
There was a ring of insolence in his tone. His words, though uttered
smoothly, had a kind of sly meaning at the bottom that touched us to the
quick. It was clear that he intended to nettle us. The old Lord of
Gramont squared his shoulders. He let out a low quiet whistle and walked
away. But André, who was quicker and more easily hurt, flushed the color
of scarlet and knotted his fists.
For a moment there was empty silence. Our visitor looked at each of us
in turn with the corners of his lips curved in a taunting smile. He
strutted past the hearth with his spurs clanking and glanced with a
sneer about the room.
“I have often heard that the cattle in Normandy were better housed than
their masters,” he began. “It’s even colder here than it is out of
doors.”“That is one reason why we are so healthy,” replied my brother looking him full in the face. “And that is why we are so strong.”
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