<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
<p>Montémar was too near the frontier to be a safe abode
for the little Duke, and his uncle, Count Hubert of Senlis,
agreed with Bernard the Dane that he would be more secure beyond
the limits of his own duchy, which was likely soon to be the
scene of war; and, sorely against his will, he was sent in
secret, under a strong escort, first to the Castle of Coucy, and
afterwards to Senlis.</p>
<p>His consolation was, that he was not again separated from his
friends; Alberic, Sir Eric, and even Fru Astrida, accompanied
him, as well as his constant follower, Osmond. Indeed, the
Baron would hardly bear that he should be out of his sight; and
he was still so carefully watched, that it was almost like a
captivity. Never, even in the summer days, was he allowed
to go beyond the Castle walls; and his guardians would fain have
had it supposed that the Castle did not contain any such
guest.</p>
<p>Osmond did not give him so much of his company as usual, but
was always at work in the armourer’s forge—a low,
vaulted chamber, opening into the Castle court. Richard and
Alberic were very curious to know what he did there; but he
fastened the door with an iron bar, and they were forced to
content themselves with listening to the strokes of the hammer,
keeping time to the voice that sang out, loud and cheerily, the
song of “Sigurd’s sword, and the maiden sleeping
within the ring of flame.” Fru Astrida said Osmond
was quite right—no good weapon-smith ever toiled with open
doors; and when the boys asked him questions as to his work, he
only smiled, and said that they would see what it was when the
call to arms should come.</p>
<p>They thought it near at hand, for tidings came that Louis had
assembled his army, and marched into Normandy to recover the
person of the young Duke, and to seize the country. No
summons, however, arrived, but a message came instead, that Rouen
had been surrendered into the bands of the King. Richard
shed indignant tears. “My father’s
Castle! My own city in the hands of the foe! Bernard
is a traitor then! None shall hinder me from so calling
him. Why did we trust him?”</p>
<p>“Never fear, Lord Duke,” said Osmond.
“When you come to the years of Knighthood, your own sword
shall right you, in spite of all the false Danes, and falser
Franks, in the land.”</p>
<p>“What! you too, son Osmond? I deemed you carried a
cooler brain than to miscall one who was true to Rollo’s
race before you or yon varlet were born!” said the old
Baron.</p>
<p>“He has yielded my dukedom! It is mis-calling to
say he is aught but a traitor!” cried Richard.
“Vile, treacherous, favour-seeking—”</p>
<p>“Peace, peace, my Lord,” said the Baron.
“Bernard has more in that wary head of his than your young
wits, or my old ones, can unwind. What he is doing I may
not guess, but I gage my life his heart is right.”</p>
<p>Richard was silent, remembering he had been once unjust, but
he grieved heartily when he thought of the French in
Rollo’s tower, and it was further reported that the King
was about to share Normandy among his French vassals. A
fresh outcry broke out in the little garrison of Senlis, but Sir
Eric still persisted in his trust in his friend Bernard, even
when he heard that Centeville was marked out as the prey of the
fat French Count who had served for a hostage at Rouen.</p>
<p>“What say you now, my Lord?” said he, after a
conference with a messenger at the gate. “The Black
Raven has spread its wings. Fifty keels are in the Seine,
and Harald Blue-tooth’s Long Serpent at the head of
them.”</p>
<p>“The King of Denmark! Come to my aid!”</p>
<p>“Ay, that he is! Come at Bernard’s secret
call, to right you, and put you on your father’s
seat. Now call honest Harcourt a traitor, because he gave
not up your fair dukedom to the flame and sword!”</p>
<p>“No traitor to me,” said Richard, pausing.
“No, verily, but what more would you say?”</p>
<p>“I think, when I come to my dukedom, I will not be so
politic,” said Richard. “I will be an open
friend or an open foe.”</p>
<p>“The boy grows too sharp for us,” said Sir Eric,
smiling, “but it was spoken like his father.”</p>
<p>“He grows more like his blessed father each day,”
said Fru Astrida.</p>
<p>“But the Danes, father, the Danes!” said
Osmond. “Blows will be passing now. I may join
the host and win my spurs?”</p>
<p>“With all my heart,” returned the Baron, “so
my Lord here gives you leave: would that I could leave him and go
with you. It would do my very spirit good but to set foot
in a Northern keel once more.”</p>
<p>“I would fain see what these men of the North
are,” said Osmond.</p>
<p>“Oh! they are only Danes, not Norsemen, and there are no
Vikings, such as once were when Ragnar laid
waste—”</p>
<p>“Son, son, what talk is this for the child’s
ears?” broke in Fru Astrida, “are these words for a
Christian Baron?”</p>
<p>“Your pardon, mother,” said the grey warrior, in
all humility, “but my blood thrills to hear of a Northern
fleet at hand, and to think of Osmond drawing sword under a
Sea-King.”</p>
<p>The next morning, Osmond’s steed was led to the door,
and such men-at-arms as could be spared from the garrison of
Senlis were drawn up in readiness to accompany him. The
boys stood on the steps, wishing they were old enough to be
warriors, and wondering what had become of him, until at length
the sound of an opening door startled them, and there, in the low
archway of the smithy, the red furnace glowing behind him, stood
Osmond, clad in bright steel, the links of his hauberk reflecting
the light, and on his helmet a pair of golden wings, while the
same device adorned his long pointed kite-shaped shield.</p>
<p>“Your wings! our wings!” cried Richard, “the
bearing of Centeville!”</p>
<p>“May they fly after the foe, not before him,” said
Sir Eric. “Speed thee well, my son—let not our
Danish cousins say we learn Frank graces instead of Northern
blows.”</p>
<p>With such farewells, Osmond quitted Senlis, while the two boys
hastened to the battlements to watch him as long as he remained
in view.</p>
<p>The highest tower became their principal resort, and their
eyes were constantly on the heath where he had disappeared; but
days passed, and they grew weary of the watch, and betook
themselves to games in the Castle court.</p>
<p>One day, Alberic, in the character of a Dragon, was lying on
his back, panting hard so as to be supposed to cast out volumes
of flame and smoke at Richard, the Knight, who with a stick for a
lance, and a wooden sword, was waging fierce war; when suddenly
the Dragon paused, sat up, and pointed towards the warder on the
tower. His horn was at his lips, and in another moment, the
blast rang out through the Castle.</p>
<p>With a loud shout, both boys rushed headlong up the turret
stairs, and came to the top so breathless, that they could not
even ask the warder what he saw. He pointed, and the
keen-eyed Alberic exclaimed, “I see! Look, my Lord, a
speck there on the heath!”</p>
<p>“I do not see! where, oh where?”</p>
<p>“He is behind the hillock now, but—oh, there
again! How fast he comes!”</p>
<p>“It is like the flight of a bird,” said Richard,
“fast, fast—”</p>
<p>“If only it be not flight in earnest,” said
Alberic, a little anxiously, looking into the warder’s
face, for he was a borderer, and tales of terror of the inroad of
the Vicomte du Contentin were rife on the marches of the
Epte.</p>
<p>“No, young Sir,” said the warder, “no fear
of that. I know how men ride when they flee from the
battle.”</p>
<p>“No, indeed, there is no discomfiture in the pace of
that steed,” said Sir Eric, who had by this time joined
them.</p>
<p>“I see him clearer! I see the horse,” cried
Richard, dancing with eagerness, so that Sir Eric caught hold of
him, exclaiming, “You will be over the battlements! hold
still! better hear of a battle lost than that!”</p>
<p>“He bears somewhat in his hand,” said Alberic.</p>
<p>“A banner or pennon,” said the warder;
“methinks he rides like the young Baron.”</p>
<p>“He does! My brave boy! He has done good
service,” exclaimed Sir Eric, as the figure became more
developed. “The Danes have seen how we train our
young men.”</p>
<p>“His wings bring good tidings,” said
Richard. “Let me go, Sir Eric, I must tell Fru
Astrida.”</p>
<p>The drawbridge was lowered, the portcullis raised, and as all
the dwellers in the Castle stood gathered in the court, in rode
the warrior with the winged helm, bearing in his hand a drooping
banner; lowering it as he entered, it unfolded, and displayed,
trailing on the ground at the feet of the little Duke of
Normandy, the golden lilies of France.</p>
<p>A shout of amazement arose, and all gathered round him, asking
hurried questions. “A great victory—the King a
prisoner—Montreuil slain!”</p>
<p>Richard would not be denied holding his hand, and leading him
to the hall, and there, sitting around him, they heard his
tidings. His father’s first question was, what he
thought of their kinsmen, the Danes?</p>
<p>“Rude comrades, father, I must own,” said Osmond,
smiling, and shaking his head. “I could not pledge
them in a skull-goblet—set in gold though it
were.”</p>
<p>“None the worse warriors,” said Sir Eric.
“Ay, ay, and you were dainty, and brooked not the hearty
old fashion of tearing the whole sheep to pieces. You must
needs cut your portion with the fine French knife at your
girdle.”</p>
<p>Osmond could not see that a man was braver for being a savage,
but he held his peace; and Richard impatiently begged to hear how
the battle had gone, and where it had been fought.</p>
<p>“On the bank of the Dive,” said Osmond.
“Ah, father, you might well call old Harcourt
wary—his name might better have been Fox-heart than
Bear-heart! He had sent to the Franks a message of
distress, that the Danes were on him in full force, and to pray
them to come to his aid.”</p>
<p>“I trust there was no treachery. No foul dealing
shall be wrought in my name,” exclaimed Richard, with such
dignity of tone and manner, as made all feel he was indeed their
Duke, and forget his tender years.</p>
<p>“No, or should I tell the tale with joy like
this?” said Osmond. “Bernard’s view was
to bring the Kings together, and let Louis see you had friends to
maintain your right. He sought but to avoid
bloodshed.”</p>
<p>“And how chanced it?”</p>
<p>“The Danes were encamped on the Dive, and so soon as the
French came in sight, Blue-tooth sent a messenger to Louis, to
summon him to quit Neustria, and leave it to you, its lawful
owner. Thereupon, Louis, hoping to win him over with wily
words, invited him to hold a personal conference.”</p>
<p>“Where were you, Osmond?”</p>
<p>“Where I had scarce patience to be. Bernard had
gathered all of us honest Normans together, and arranged us
beneath that standard of the King, as if to repel his Danish
inroad. Oh, he was, in all seeming, hand-and-glove with
Louis, guiding him by his counsel, and, verily, seeming his
friend and best adviser! But in one thing he could not
prevail. That ungrateful recreant, Herluin of Montreuil,
came with the King, hoping, it seems, to get his share of our
spoils; and when Bernard advised the King to send him home, since
no true Norman could bear the sight of him, the hot-headed Franks
vowed no Norman should hinder them from bringing whom they
chose. So a tent was set up by the riverside, wherein the
two Kings, with Bernard, Alan of Brittany, and Count Hugh, held
their meeting. We all stood without, and the two hosts
began to mingle together, we Normans making acquaintance with the
Danes. There was a red-haired, wild-looking fellow, who
told me he had been with Anlaff in England, and spoke much of the
doings of Hako in Norway; when, suddenly, he pointed to a Knight
who was near, speaking to a Cotentinois, and asked me his
name. My blood boiled as I answered, for it was Montreuil
himself! ‘The cause of your Duke’s
death!’ said the Dane. ‘Ha, ye Normans are
fallen sons of Odin, to see him yet live!’”</p>
<p>“You said, I trust, my son, that we follow not the laws
of Odin?” said Fru Astrida.</p>
<p>“I had no space for a word, grandmother; the Danes took
the vengeance on themselves. In one moment they rushed on
Herluin with their axes, and the unhappy man was dead. All
was tumult; every one struck without knowing at whom, or for
what. Some shouted, ‘<i>Thor Hulfe</i>!’ some
‘<i>Dieu aide</i>!’ others ‘<i>Montjoie St.
Denis</i>!’ Northern blood against French, that was
all our guide. I found myself at the foot of this standard,
and had a hard combat for it; but I bore it away at
last.”</p>
<p>“And the Kings?”</p>
<p>“They hurried out of the tent, it seems, to rejoin their
men. Louis mounted, but you know of old, my Lord, he is but
an indifferent horseman, and the beast carried him into the midst
of the Danes, where King Harald caught his bridle, and delivered
him to four Knights to keep. Whether he dealt secretly with
them, or whether they, as they declared, lost sight of him whilst
plundering his tent, I cannot say; but when Harald demanded him
of them, he was gone.”</p>
<p>“Gone! is this what you call having the King
prisoner?”</p>
<p>“You shall hear. He rode four leagues, and met one
of the baser sort of Rouennais, whom he bribed to hide him in the
Isle of Willows. However, Bernard made close inquiries,
found the fellow had been seen in speech with a French horseman,
pounced on his wife and children, and threatened they should die
if he did not disclose the secret. So the King was forced
to come out of his hiding-place, and is now fast guarded in
Rollo’s tower—a Dane, with a battle-axe on his
shoulder, keeping guard at every turn of the stairs.”</p>
<p>“Ha! ha!” cried Richard. “I wonder how
he likes it. I wonder if he remembers holding me up to the
window, and vowing that he meant me only good!”</p>
<p>“When you believed him, my Lord,” said Osmond,
slyly.</p>
<p>“I was a little boy then,” said Richard,
proudly. “Why, the very walls must remind him of his
oath, and how Count Bernard said, as he dealt with me, so might
Heaven deal with him.”</p>
<p>“Remember it, my child—beware of broken
vows,” said Father Lucas; “but remember it not in
triumph over a fallen foe. It were better that all came at
once to the chapel, to bestow their thanksgivings where alone
they are due.”</p>
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