<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
<p>Osmond de Centeville was soon convinced that no immediate
peril threatened his young Duke at the Court of Laon. Louis
seemed to intend to fulfil his oaths to the Normans by allowing
the child to be the companion of his own sons, and to be treated
in every respect as became his rank. Richard had his proper
place at table, and all due attendance; he learnt, rode, and
played with the Princes, and there was nothing to complain of,
excepting the coldness and inattention with which the King and
Queen treated him, by no means fulfilling the promise of being as
parents to their orphan ward. Gerberge, who had from the
first dreaded his superior strength and his roughness with her
puny boys, and who had been by no means won by his manners at
their first meeting, was especially distant and severe with him,
hardly ever speaking to him except with some rebuke, which, it
must be confessed, Richard often deserved.</p>
<p>As to the boys, his constant companions, Richard was on very
friendly terms with Carlo-man, a gentle, timid, weakly
child. Richard looked down upon him; but he was kind, as a
generous-tempered boy could not fail to be, to one younger and
weaker than himself. He was so much kinder than Lothaire,
that Carloman was fast growing very fond of him, and looked up to
his strength and courage as something noble and marvellous.</p>
<p>It was very different with Lothaire, the person from whom,
above all others, Richard would have most expected to meet with
affection, as his father’s god-son, a relationship which in
those times was thought almost as near as kindred by blood.
Lothaire had been brought up by an indulgent mother, and by
courtiers who never ceased flattering him, as the heir to the
crown, and he had learnt to think that to give way to his
naturally imperious and violent disposition was the way to prove
his power and assert his rank. He had always had his own
way, and nothing had ever been done to check his faults; somewhat
weakly health had made him fretful and timid; and a latent
consciousness of this fearfulness made him all the more cruel,
sometimes because he was frightened, sometimes because he fancied
it manly.</p>
<p>He treated his little brother in a way which in these times
boys would call bullying; and, as no one ever dared to oppose the
King’s eldest son, it was pretty much the same with every
one else, except now and then some dumb creature, and then all
Lothaire’s cruelty was shown. When his horse kicked,
and ended by throwing him, he stood by, and caused it to be
beaten till the poor creature’s back streamed with blood;
when his dog bit his hand in trying to seize the meat with which
he was teazing it, he insisted on having it killed, and it was
worse still when a falcon pecked one of his fingers. It
really hurt him a good deal, and, in a furious rage, he caused
two nails to be heated red hot in the fire, intending to have
them thrust into the poor bird’s eyes.</p>
<p>“I will not have it done!” exclaimed Richard,
expecting to be obeyed as he was at home; but Lothaire only
laughed scornfully, saying, “Do you think you are master
here, Sir pirate?”</p>
<p>“I will not have it done!” repeated Richard.
“Shame on you, shame on you, for thinking of such an
unkingly deed.”</p>
<p>“Shame on me! Do you know to whom you speak, master
savage?” cried Lothaire, red with passion.</p>
<p>“I know who is the savage now!” said
Richard. “Hold!” to the servant who was
bringing the red-hot irons in a pair of tongs.</p>
<p>“Hold?” exclaimed Lothaire. “No one
commands here but I and my father. Go on
Charlot—where is the bird? Keep her fast,
Giles.”</p>
<p>“Osmond. You I can command—”</p>
<p>“Come away, my Lord,” said Osmond, interrupting
Richard’s order, before it was issued. “We have no
right to interfere here, and cannot hinder it. Come away
from such a foul sight.”</p>
<p>“Shame on you too, Osmond, to let such a deed be done
without hindering it!” exclaimed Richard, breaking from
him, and rushing on the man who carried the hot irons. The
French servants were not very willing to exert their strength
against the Duke of Normandy, and Richard’s onset, taking
the man by surprise, made him drop the tongs. Lothaire,
both afraid and enraged, caught them up as a weapon of defence,
and, hardly knowing what he did, struck full at Richard’s
face with the hot iron. Happily it missed his eye, and the
heat had a little abated; but, as it touched his cheek, it burnt
him sufficiently to cause considerable pain. With a cry of
passion, he flew at Lothaire, shook him with all his might, and
ended by throwing him at his length on the pavement. But
this was the last of Richard’s exploits, for he was at the
same moment captured by his Squire, and borne off, struggling and
kicking as if Osmond had been his greatest foe; but the young
Norman’s arms were like iron round him; and he gave over
his resistance sooner, because at that moment a whirring flapping
sound was heard, and the poor hawk rose high, higher, over their
heads in ever lessening circles, far away from her enemies.
The servant who held her, had relaxed his grasp in the
consternation caused by Lothaire’s fall, and she was
mounting up and up, spying, it might be, her way to her native
rocks in Iceland, with the yellow eyes which Richard had
saved.</p>
<p>“Safe! safe!” cried Richard, joyfully, ceasing his
struggles. “Oh, how glad I am! That young
villain should never have hurt her. Put me down, Osmond,
what are you doing with me?”</p>
<p>“Saving you from your—no, I cannot call it
folly,—I would hardly have had you stand still to see
such—but let me see your face.”</p>
<p>“It is nothing. I don’t care now the hawk is
safe,” said Richard, though he could hardly keep his lips
in order, and was obliged to wink very hard with his eyes to keep
the tears out, now that he had leisure to feel the smarting; but
it would have been far beneath a Northman to complain, and he
stood bearing it gallantly, and pinching his fingers tightly
together, while Osmond knelt down to examine the hurt.
“’Tis not much,” said he, talking to himself,
“half bruise, half burn—I wish my grandmother was
here—however, it can’t last long! ’Tis
right, you bear it like a little Berserkar, and it is no bad
thing that you should have a scar to show, that they may not be
able to say you did <i>all</i> the damage.”</p>
<p>“Will it always leave a mark?” said Richard.
“I am afraid they will call me Richard of the scarred
cheek, when we get back to Normandy.”</p>
<p>“Never mind, if they do—it will not be a mark to
be ashamed of, even if it does last, which I do not believe it
will.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, I am so glad the gallant falcon is out of his
reach!” replied Richard, in a somewhat quivering voice.</p>
<p>“Does it smart much? Well, come and bathe it with
cold water—or shall I take you to one of the Queen’s
women?”</p>
<p>“No—the water,” said Richard, and to the
fountain in the court they went; but Osmond had only just begun
to splash the cheek with the half-frozen water, with a sort of
rough kindness, afraid at once of teaching the Duke to be
effeminate, and of not being as tender to him as Dame Astrida
would have wished, when a messenger came in haste from the King,
commanding the presence of the Duke of Normandy and his
Squire.</p>
<p>Lothaire was standing between his father and mother on their
throne-like seat, leaning against the Queen, who had her arm
round him; his face was red and glazed with tears, and he still
shook with subsiding sobs. It was evident he was just
recovering from a passionate crying fit.</p>
<p>“How is this?” began the King, as Richard
entered. “What means this conduct, my Lord of
Normandy? Know you what you have done in striking the heir
of France? I might imprison you this instant in a dungeon
where you would never see the light of day.”</p>
<p>“Then Bernard de Harcourt would come and set me
free,” fearlessly answered Richard.</p>
<p>“Do you bandy words with me, child? Ask Prince
Lothaire’s pardon instantly, or you shall rue
it.”</p>
<p>“I have done nothing to ask his pardon for. It
would have been cruel and cowardly in me to let him put out the
poor hawk’s eyes,” said Richard, with a
Northman’s stern contempt for pain, disdaining to mention
his own burnt cheek, which indeed the King might have seen
plainly enough.</p>
<p>“Hawk’s eyes!” repeated the King.
“Speak the truth, Sir Duke; do not add slander to your
other faults.”</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p124b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="False accusation" src="images/p124s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>“I have spoken the truth—I always speak it!”
cried Richard. “Whoever says otherwise lies in his
throat.”</p>
<p>Osmond here hastily interfered, and desired permission to tell
the whole story. The hawk was a valuable bird, and
Louis’s face darkened when he heard what Lothaire had
purposed, for the Prince had, in telling his own story, made it
appear that Richard had been the aggressor by insisting on
letting the falcon fly. Osmond finished by pointing to the
mark on Richard’s cheek, so evidently a burn, as to be
proof that hot iron had played a part in the matter. The
King looked at one of his own Squires and asked his account, and
he with some hesitation could not but reply that it was as the
young Sieur de Centeville had said. Thereupon Louis angrily
reproved his own people for having assisted the Prince in trying
to injure the hawk, called for the chief falconer, rated him for
not better attending to his birds, and went forth with him to see
if the hawk could yet be recaptured, leaving the two boys neither
punished nor pardoned.</p>
<p>“So you have escaped for this once,” said
Gerberge, coldly, to Richard; “you had better beware
another time. Come with me, my poor darling
Lothaire.” She led her son away to her own
apartments, and the French Squires began to grumble to each other
complaints of the impossibility of pleasing their Lords, since,
if they contradicted Prince Lothaire, he was so spiteful that he
was sure to set the Queen against them, and that was far worse in
the end than the King’s displeasure. Osmond, in the
meantime, took Richard to re-commence bathing his face, and
presently Carloman ran out to pity him, wonder at him for not
crying, and say he was glad the poor hawk had escaped.</p>
<p>The cheek continued inflamed and painful for some time, and
there was a deep scar long after the pain had ceased, but Richard
thought little of it after the first, and would have scorned to
bear ill-will to Lothaire for the injury.</p>
<p>Lothaire left off taunting Richard with his Norman accent, and
calling him a young Sea-king. He had felt his strength, and
was afraid of him; but he did not like him the better—he
never played with him willingly—scowled, and looked dark
and jealous, if his father, or if any of the great nobles took
the least notice of the little Duke, and whenever he was out of
hearing, talked against him with all his natural
spitefulness.</p>
<p>Richard liked Lothaire quite as little, contemning almost
equally his cowardly ways and his imperious disposition.
Since he had been Duke, Richard had been somewhat inclined to
grow imperious himself, though always kept under restraint by Fru
Astrida’s good training, and Count Bernard’s
authority, and his whole generous nature would have revolted
against treating Alberic, or indeed his meanest vassal, as
Lothaire used the unfortunate children who were his
playfellows. Perhaps this made him look on with great
horror at the tyranny which Lothaire exercised; at any rate he
learnt to abhor it more, and to make many resolutions against
ordering people about uncivilly when once he should be in
Normandy again. He often interfered to protect the poor
boys, and generally with success, for the Prince was afraid of
provoking such another shake as Richard had once given him, and
though he generally repaid himself on his victim in the end, he
yielded for the time.</p>
<p>Carloman, whom Richard often saved from his brother’s
unkindness, clung closer and closer to him, went with him
everywhere, tried to do all he did, grew very fond of Osmond, and
liked nothing better than to sit by Richard in some wide
window-seat, in the evening, after supper, and listen to
Richard’s version of some of Fru Astrida’s favourite
tales, or hear the never-ending history of sports at Centeville,
or at Rollo’s Tower, or settle what great things they would
both do when they were grown up, and Richard was ruling
Normandy—perhaps go to the Holy Land together, and
slaughter an unheard-of host of giants and dragons on the
way. In the meantime, however, poor Carloman gave small
promise of being able to perform great exploits, for he was very
small for his age and often ailing; soon tired, and never able to
bear much rough play. Richard, who had never had any reason
to learn to forbear, did not at first understand this, and made
Carloman cry several times with his roughness and violence, but
this always vexed him so much that he grew careful to avoid such
things for the future, and gradually learnt to treat his poor
little weakly friend with a gentleness and patience at which
Osmond used to marvel, and which he would hardly have been taught
in his prosperity at home.</p>
<p>Between Carloman and Osmond he was thus tolerably happy at
Laon, but he missed his own dear friends, and the loving
greetings of his vassals, and longed earnestly to be at Rouen,
asking Osmond almost every night when they should go back, to
which Osmond could only answer that he must pray that Heaven
would be pleased to bring them home safely.</p>
<p>Osmond, in the meantime, kept a vigilant watch for anything
that might seem to threaten danger to his Lord; but at present
there was no token of any evil being intended; the only point in
which Louis did not seem to be fulfilling his promises to the
Normans was, that no preparations were made for attacking the
Count of Flanders.</p>
<p>At Easter the court was visited by Hugh the White, the great
Count of Paris, the most powerful man in France, and who was only
prevented by his own loyalty and forbearance, from taking the
crown from the feeble and degenerate race of Charlemagne.
He had been a firm friend of William Longsword, and Osmond
remarked how, on his arrival, the King took care to bring Richard
forward, talk of him affectionately, and caress him almost as
much as he had done at Rouen. The Count himself was really
kind and affectionate to the little Duke; he kept him by his
side, and seemed to like to stroke down his long flaxen hair,
looking in his face with a grave mournful expression, as if
seeking for a likeness to his father. He soon asked about
the scar which the burn had left, and the King was obliged to
answer hastily, it was an accident, a disaster that had chanced
in a boyish quarrel. Louis, in fact, was uneasy, and
appeared to be watching the Count of Paris the whole time of his
visit, so as to prevent him from having any conversation in
private with the other great vassals assembled at the
court. Hugh did not seem to perceive this, and acted as if
he was entirely at his ease, but at the same time he watched his
opportunity. One evening, after supper, he came up to the
window where Richard and Carloman were, as usual, deep in story
telling; he sat down on the stone seat, and taking Richard on his
knee, he asked if he had any greetings for the Count de
Harcourt.</p>
<p>How Richard’s face lighted up! “Oh,
Sir,” he cried, “are you going to
Normandy?”</p>
<p>“Not yet, my boy, but it may be that I may have to meet
old Harcourt at the Elm of Gisors.”</p>
<p>“Oh, if I was but going with you.”</p>
<p>“I wish I could take you, but it would scarcely do for
me to steal the heir of Normandy. What shall I tell
him?”</p>
<p>“Tell him,” whispered Richard, edging himself
close to the Count, and trying to reach his ear, “tell him
that I am sorry, now, that I was sullen when he reproved
me. I know he was right. And, sir, if he brings with
him a certain huntsman with a long hooked nose, whose name is
Walter, <SPAN name="citation12"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote12" class="citation">[12]</SPAN> tell him I am sorry I used to order him
about so unkindly. And tell him to bear my greetings to Fru
Astrida and Sir Eric, and to Alberic.”</p>
<p>“Shall I tell him how you have marked your
face?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Richard, “he would think me a
baby to care about such a thing as that!”</p>
<p>The Count asked how it happened, and Richard told the story,
for he felt as if he could tell the kind Count anything—it
was almost like that last evening that he had sat on his
father’s knee. Hugh ended by putting his arm round
him, and saying, “Well, my little Duke, I am as glad as you
are the gallant bird is safe—it will be a tale for my own
little Hugh and Eumacette <SPAN name="citation13"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote13" class="citation">[13]</SPAN> at home—and
you must one day be friends with them as your father has been
with me. And now, do you think your Squire could come to my
chamber late this evening when the household is at
rest?”</p>
<p>Richard undertook that Osmond should do so, and the Count,
setting him down again, returned to the dais. Osmond,
before going to the Count that evening, ordered Sybald to come
and guard the Duke’s door. It was a long conference,
for Hugh had come to Laon chiefly for the purpose of seeing how
it went with his friend’s son, and was anxious to know what
Osmond thought of the matter. They agreed that at present
there did not seem to be any evil intended, and that it rather
appeared as if Louis wished only to keep him as a hostage for the
tranquillity of the borders of Normandy; but Hugh advised that
Osmond should maintain a careful watch, and send intelligence to
him on the first token of mischief.</p>
<p>The next morning the Count of Paris quitted Laon, and
everything went on in the usual course till the feast of
Whitsuntide, when there was always a great display of splendour
at the French court. The crown vassals generally came to
pay their duty and go with the King to Church; and there was a
state banquet, at which the King and Queen wore their crowns, and
every one sat in great magnificence according to their rank.</p>
<p>The grand procession to Church was over. Richard had
walked with Carloman, the Prince richly dressed in blue,
embroidered with golden fleur-de-lys, and Richard in scarlet,
with a gold Cross on his breast; the beautiful service was over,
they had returned to the Castle, and there the Seneschal was
marshalling the goodly and noble company to the banquet, when
horses’ feet were heard at the gate announcing some fresh
arrival. The Seneschal went to receive the guests, and
presently was heard ushering in the noble Prince, Arnulf, Count
of Flanders.</p>
<p>Richard’s face became pale—he turned from Carloman
by whose side he had been standing, and walked straight out of
the hall and up the stairs, closely followed by Osmond. In
a few minutes there was a knock at the door of his chamber, and a
French Knight stood there saying, “Comes not the Duke to
the banquet?”</p>
<p>“No,” answered Osmond: “he eats not with the
slayer of his father.”</p>
<p>“The King will take it amiss; for the sake of the child
you had better beware,” said the Frenchman, hesitating.</p>
<p>“He had better beware himself,” exclaimed Osmond,
indignantly, “how he brings the treacherous murderer of
William Longsword into the presence of a free-born Norman, unless
he would see him slain where he stands. Were it not for the
boy, I would challenge the traitor this instant to single
combat.”</p>
<p>“Well, I can scarce blame you,” said the Knight,
“but you had best have a care how you tread.
Farewell.”</p>
<p>Richard had hardly time to express his indignation, and his
wishes that he was a man, before another message came through a
groom of Lothaire’s train, that the Duke must fast, if he
would not consent to feast with the rest.</p>
<p>“Tell Prince Lothaire,” replied Richard,
“that I am not such a glutton as he—I had rather fast
than be choked with eating with Arnulf.”</p>
<p>All the rest of the day, Richard remained in his own chamber,
resolved not to run the risk of meeting with Arnulf. The
Squire remained with him, in this voluntary imprisonment, and
they occupied themselves, as best they could, with furbishing
Osmond’s armour, and helping each other out in repeating
some of the Sagas. They once heard a great uproar in the
court, and both were very anxious to learn its cause, but they
did not know it till late in the afternoon.</p>
<p>Carloman crept up to them—“Here I am at
last!” he exclaimed. “Here, Richard, I have
brought you some bread, as you had no dinner: it was all I could
bring. I saved it under the table lest Lothaire should see
it.”</p>
<p>Richard thanked Carloman with all his heart, and being very
hungry was glad to share the bread with Osmond. He asked
how long the wicked Count was going to stay, and rejoiced to hear
he was going away the next morning, and the King was going with
him.</p>
<p>“What was that great noise in the court?” asked
Richard.</p>
<p>“I scarcely like to tell you,” returned
Carloman.</p>
<p>Richard, however, begged to hear, and Carloman was obliged to
tell that the two Norman grooms, Sybald and Henry, had quarrelled
with the Flemings of Arnulf’s train; there had been a fray,
which had ended in the death of three Flemings, a Frank, and of
Sybald himself—And where was Henry? Alas! there was
more ill news—the King had sentenced Henry to die, and he
had been hanged immediately.</p>
<p>Dark with anger and sorrow grew young Richard’s face; he
had been fond of his two Norman attendants, he trusted to their
attachment, and he would have wept for their loss even if it had
happened in any other way; but now, when it had been caused by
their enmity to his father’s foes, the Flemings,—when
one had fallen overwhelmed by numbers, and the other been
condemned hastily, cruelly, unjustly, it was too much, and he
almost choked with grief and indignation. Why had he not
been there, to claim Henry as his own vassal, and if he could not
save him, at least bid him farewell? Then he would have
broken out in angry threats, but he felt his own helplessness,
and was ashamed, and he could only shed tears of passionate
grief, refusing all Carloman’s attempts to comfort
him. Osmond was even more concerned; he valued the two
Normans extremely for their courage and faithfulness, and had
relied on sending intelligence by their means to Rouen, in case
of need. It appeared to him as if the first opportunity had
been seized of removing these protectors from the little Duke,
and as if the designs, whatever they might be, which had been
formed against him, were about to take effect. He had
little doubt that his own turn would be the next; but he was
resolved to endure anything, rather than give the smallest
opportunity of removing him, to bear even insults with patience,
and to remember that in his care rested the sole hope of safety
for his charge.</p>
<p>That danger was fast gathering around them became more evident
every day, especially after the King and Arnulf had gone away
together. It was very hot weather, and Richard began to
weary after the broad cool river at Rouen, where he used to bathe
last summer; and one evening he persuaded his Squire to go down
with him to the Oise, which flowed along some meadow ground about
a quarter of a mile from the Castle; but they had hardly set
forth before three or four attendants came running after them,
with express orders from the Queen that they should return
immediately. They obeyed, and found her standing in the
Castle hall, looking greatly incensed.</p>
<p>“What means this?” she asked, angrily.
“Knew you not that the King has left commands that the Duke
quits not the Castle in his absence?”</p>
<p>“I was only going as far as the river—”
began Richard, but Gerberge cut him short. “Silence,
child—I will hear no excuses. Perhaps you think,
Sieur de Centeville, that you may take liberties in the
King’s absence, but I tell you that if you are found
without the walls again, it shall be at your peril; ay, and
his! I’ll have those haughty eyes put out, if you
disobey!”</p>
<p>She turned away, and Lothaire looked at them with his air of
gratified malice. “You will not lord it over your
betters much longer, young pirate!” said he, as he followed
his mother, afraid to stay to meet the anger he might have
excited by the taunt he could not deny himself the pleasure of
making; but Richard, who, six months ago could not brook a slight
disappointment or opposition, had, in his present life of
restraint, danger, and vexation, learnt to curb the first
outbreak of temper, and to bear patiently instead of breaking out
into passion and threats, and now his only thought was of his
beloved Squire.</p>
<p>“Oh, Osmond! Osmond!” he exclaimed,
“they shall not hurt you. I will never go out
again. I will never speak another hasty word. I will
never affront the Prince, if they will but leave you with
me!” <SPAN name="citation14"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote14" class="citation">[14]</SPAN></p>
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