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<h2> CHAPTER IV. THE INTERVENER </h2>
<p>The parson had notions of riding after Sir Oliver, and begged Master Baine
to join him. But the Justice looked down his long nose and opined that no
good purpose was to be served; that Tressilians were ever wild and bloody
men; and that an angry Tressilian was a thing to be avoided. Sir Andrew,
who was far from valorous, thought there might be wisdom in the Justice's
words, and remembered that he had troubles enough of his own with a
froward wife without taking up the burdens of others. Master Godolphin and
Sir Oliver between them, quoth the justice, had got up this storm of
theirs. A God's name let them settle it, and if in the settling they
should cut each other's throats haply the countryside would be well rid of
a brace of turbulent fellows. The pedlar deemed them a couple of madmen,
whose ways were beyond the understanding of a sober citizen. The others—the
fishermen and the rustics—had not the means to follow even had they
had the will.</p>
<p>They dispersed to put abroad the news of that short furious quarrel and to
prophesy that blood would be let in the adjusting of it. This
prognostication the they based entirely upon their knowledge of the short
Tressilian way. But it was a matter in which they were entirely wrong. It
is true that Sir Oliver went galloping along that road that follows the
Penryn river and that he pounded over the bridge in the town of Penryn in
Master Godolphin's wake with murder in his heart. Men who saw him riding
wildly thus with the red wheal across his white furious face said that he
looked a very devil.</p>
<p>He crossed the bridge at Penryn a half-hour after sunset, as dusk was
closing into night, and it may be that the sharp, frosty air had a hand in
the cooling of his blood. For as he reached the river's eastern bank he
slackened his breakneck pace, even as he slackened the angry galloping of
his thoughts. The memory of that oath he had sworn three months ago to
Rosamund smote him like a physical blow. It checked his purpose, and,
reflecting this, his pace fell to an amble. He shivered to think how near
he had gone to wrecking all the happiness that lay ahead of him. What was
a boy's whiplash, that his resentment of it; should set all his future
life in jeopardy? Even though men should call him a coward for submitting
to it and leaving the insult unavenged, what should that matter? Moreover,
upon the body of him who did so proclaim him he could brand the lie of a
charge so foolish. Sir Oliver raised his eyes to the deep sapphire dome of
heaven where an odd star was glittering frostily, and thanked God from a
swelling heart that he had not overtaken Peter Godolphin whilst his
madness was upon him.</p>
<p>A mile or so below Penryn, he turned up the road that ran down to the
ferry there, and took his way home over the shoulder of the hill with a
slack rein. It was not his usual way. He was wont ever to go round by
Trefusis Point that he might take a glimpse at the walls of the house that
harboured Rosamund and a glance at the window of her bower. But to-night
he thought the shorter road over the hill would be the safer way. If he
went by Godolphin Court he might chance to meet Peter again, and his past
anger warned him against courting such a meeting, warned him to avoid it
lest evil should betide. Indeed, so imperious was the warning, and such
were his fears of himself after what had just passed, that he resolved to
leave Penarrow on the next day. Whither he would go he did not then
determine. He might repair to London, and he might even go upon another
cruise—an idea which he had lately dismissed under Rosamund's
earnest intercession. But it was imperative that he should quit the
neighbourhood, and place a distance between Peter Godolphin and himself
until such time as he might take Rosamund to wife. Eight months or so of
exile; but what matter? Better so than that he should be driven into some
deed that would compel him to spend his whole lifetime apart from her. He
would write, and she would understand and approve when he told her what
had passed that day.</p>
<p>The resolve was firmly implanted in him by the time he reached Penarrow,
and he felt himself uplifted by it and by the promise it afforded him that
thus his future happiness would be assured.</p>
<p>Himself he stabled his horse; for of the two grooms he kept, one had by
his leave set out yesterday to spend Christmas in Devon with his parents,
the other had taken a chill and had been ordered to bed that very day by
Sir Oliver, who was considerate with those that served him. In the
dining-room he found supper spread, and a great log fire blazed in the
enormous cowled fire-place, diffusing a pleasant warmth through the vast
room and flickering ruddily upon the trophies of weapons that adorned the
walls, upon the tapestries and the portraits of dead Tressilians. Hearing
his step, old Nicholas entered bearing a great candle-branch which he set
upon the table.</p>
<p>"You'm late, Sir Oliver," said the servant, "and Master Lionel bain't home
yet neither."</p>
<p>Sir Oliver grunted and scowled as he crunched a log and set it sizzling
under his wet heel. He thought of Malpas and cursed Lionel's folly, as,
without a word, he loosed his cloak and flung it on an oaken coffer by the
wall where already he had cast his hat. Then he sat down, and Nicholas
came forward to draw off his boots.</p>
<p>When that was done and the old servant stood up again, Sir Oliver shortly
bade him to serve supper.</p>
<p>"Master Lionel cannot be long now," said he. "And give me to drink, Nick.
'Tis what I most require."</p>
<p>"I've brewed ee a posset o' canary sack," announced Nicholas; "there'm no
better supping o' a frosty winter's night, Sir Oliver."</p>
<p>He departed to return presently with a black jack that was steaming
fragrantly. He found his master still in the same attitude, staring at the
fire, and frowning darkly. Sir Oliver's thoughts were still of his brother
and Malpas, and so insistent were they that his own concerns were for the
moment quite neglected; he was considering whether it was not his duty,
after all, to attempt a word of remonstrance. At length he rose with a
sigh and got to table. There he bethought him of his sick groom, and asked
Nicholas for news of him. Nicholas reported the fellow to be much as he
had been, whereupon Sir Oliver took up a cup and brimmed it with the
steaming posset.</p>
<p>"Take him that," he said. "There's no better medicine for such an
ailment."</p>
<p>Outside fell a clatter of hooves.</p>
<p>"Here be Master Lionel at last," said the servant.</p>
<p>"No doubt," agreed Sir Oliver. "No need to stay for him. Here is all he
needs. Carry that to Tom ere it cools."</p>
<p>It was his object to procure the servant's absence when Lionel should
arrive, resolved as he was to greet him with a sound rating for his folly.
Reflection had brought him the assurance that this was become his duty in
view of his projected absence from Penarrow; and in his brother's interest
he was determined not to spare him.</p>
<p>He took a deep draught of the posset, and as he set it down he heard
Lionel's step without. Then the door was flung open, and his brother stood
on the threshold a moment at gaze.</p>
<p>Sir Oliver looked round with a scowl, the well-considered reproof already
on his lips.</p>
<p>"So...." he began, and got no further. The sight that met his eyes drove
the ready words from his lips and mind; instead it was with a sharp gasp
of dismay that he came immediately to his feet. "Lionel!"</p>
<p>Lionel lurched in, closed the door, and shot home one of its bolts. Then
he leaned against it, facing his brother again. He was deathly pale, with
great dark stains under his eyes; his ungloved right hand was pressed to
his side, and the fingers of it were all smeared with blood that was still
oozing and dripping from between them. Over his yellow doublet on the
right side there was a spreading dark stain whose nature did not intrigue
Sir Oliver a moment.</p>
<p>"My God!" he cried, and ran to his brother. "What's happened, Lal? Who has
done this?"</p>
<p>"Peter Godolphin," came the answer from lips that writhed in a curious
smile.</p>
<p>Never a word said Sir Oliver, but he set his teeth and clenched his hands
until the nails cut into his palms. Then he put an arm about this lad he
loved above all save one in the whole world, and with anguish in his mind
he supported him forward to the fire. There Lionel dropped to the chair
that Sir Oliver had lately occupied.</p>
<p>"What is your hurt, lad? Has it gone deep?" he asked, in terror almost.</p>
<p>"'Tis naught—a flesh wound; but I have lost a mort of blood. I
thought I should have been drained or ever I got me home."</p>
<p>With fearful speed Sir Oliver drew his dagger and ripped away doublet,
vest, and shirt, laying bare the lad's white flesh. A moment's
examination, and he breathed more freely.</p>
<p>"Art a very babe, Lal," he cried in his relief. "To ride without thought
to stanch so simple a wound, and so lose all this blood—bad
Tressilian blood though it be." He laughed in the immensity of his
reaction from that momentary terror. "Stay thou there whilst I call Nick
to help us dress this scratch."</p>
<p>"No, no!" There was note of sudden fear in the lad's voice, and his hand
clutched at his brother's sleeve. "Nick must not know. None must know, or
I am undone else."</p>
<p>Sir Oliver stared, bewildered. Lionel smiled again that curious twisted,
rather frightened smile.</p>
<p>"I gave better than I took, Noll," said he. "Master Godolphin is as cold
by now as the snow on which I left him."</p>
<p>His brother's sudden start and the fixed stare from out of his slowly
paling face scared Lionel a little. He observed, almost subconsciously,
the dull red wheal that came into prominence as the colour faded out of
Sir Oliver's face, yet never thought to ask how it came there. His own
affairs possessed him too completely.</p>
<p>"What's this?" quoth Oliver at last, hoarsely.</p>
<p>Lionel dropped his eyes, unable longer to meet a glance that was becoming
terrible.</p>
<p>"He would have it," he growled almost sullenly, answering the reproach
that was written in every line of his brother's taut body. "I had warned
him not to cross my path. But to-night I think some madness had seized
upon him. He affronted me, Noll; he said things which it was beyond human
power to endure, and...." He shrugged to complete his sentence.</p>
<p>"Well, well," said Oliver in a small voice. "First let us tend this wound
of yours."</p>
<p>"Do not call Nick," was the other's swift admonition. "Don't you see,
Noll?" he explained in answer to the inquiry of his brother's stare,
"don't you see that we fought there almost in the dark and without
witnesses. It...." he swallowed, "it will be called murder, fair fight
though it was; and should it be discovered that it was I...." He shivered
and his glance grew wild; his lips twitched.</p>
<p>"I see," said Oliver, who understood at last, and he added bitterly: "You
fool!"</p>
<p>"I had no choice," protested Lionel. "He came at me with his drawn sword.
Indeed, I think he was half-drunk. I warned him of what must happen to the
other did either of us fall, but he bade me not concern myself with the
fear of any such consequences to himself. He was full of foul words of me
and you and all whoever bore our name. He struck me with the flat of his
blade and threatened to run me through as I stood unless I drew to defend
myself. What choice had I? I did not mean to kill him—as God's my
witness, I did not, Noll."</p>
<p>Without a word Oliver turned to a side-table, where stood a metal basin
and ewer. He poured water, then came in the same silence to treat his
brother's wound. The tale that Lionel told made blame impossible, at least
from Oliver. He had but to recall the mood in which he himself had ridden
after Peter Godolphin; he had but to remember, that only the consideration
of Rosamund—only, indeed, the consideration of his future—had
set a curb upon his own bloodthirsty humour.</p>
<p>When he had washed the wound he fetched some table linen from a press and
ripped it into strips with his dagger; he threaded out one of these and
made a preliminary crisscross of the threads across the lips of the wound—for
the blade had gone right through the muscles of the breast, grazing the
ribs; these threads would help the formation of a clot. Then with the
infinite skill and cunning acquired in the course of his rovings he
proceeded to the bandaging.</p>
<p>That done, he opened the window and flung out the blood-tinted water. The
cloths with which he had mopped the wound and all other similar evidences
of the treatment he cast upon the fire. He must remove all traces even
from the eyes of Nicholas. He had the most implicit trust in the old
servant's fidelity. But the matter was too grave to permit of the
slightest risk. He realized fully the justice of Lionel's fears that
however fair the fight might have been, a thing done thus in secret must
be accounted murder by the law.</p>
<p>Bidding Lionel wrap himself in his cloak, Sir Oliver unbarred the door,
and went upstairs in quest of a fresh shirt and doublet for his brother.
On the landing he met Nicholas descending. He held him a moment in talk of
the sick man above, and outwardly at least he was now entirely composed.
He dispatched him upstairs again upon a trumped-up errand that must keep
him absent for some little time, whilst himself he went to get the things
he needed.</p>
<p>He returned below with them, and when he had assisted his brother into
fresh garments with as little movement as possible so as not to disturb
his dressing of the wound or set it bleeding afresh, he took the
blood-stained doublet, vest, and shirt which he had ripped and flung them,
too, into the great fire.</p>
<p>When some moments later Nicholas entered the vast room he found the
brothers sitting composedly at table. Had he faced Lionel he would have
observed little amiss with him beyond the deep pallor of his face. But he
did not even do so much. Lionel sat with his back to the door and the
servant's advance into the room was checked by Sir Oliver with the
assurance that they did not require him. Nicholas withdrew again, and the
brothers were once more alone.</p>
<p>Lionel ate very sparingly. He thirsted and would have emptied the measure
of posset, but that Sir Oliver restrained him, and refused him anything
but water lest he should contract a fever. Such a sparing meal as they
made—for neither had much appetite—was made in silence. At
last Sir Oliver rose, and with slow, heavy steps, suggestive of his
humour, he crossed to the fire-place. He threw fresh logs on the blaze,
and took from the tall mantelshelf his pipe and a leaden jar of tobacco.
He filled the pipe pensively, then with the short iron tongs seized a
fragment of glowing wood and applied it to the herb.</p>
<p>He returned to the table, and standing over his brother, he broke at last
the silence that had now endured some time.</p>
<p>"What," he asked gruffly, "was the cause of your quarrel?"</p>
<p>Lionel started and shrank a little; between finger and thumb he kneaded a
fragment of bread, his eyes upon it. "I scarce know," he replied.</p>
<p>"Lal, that is not the truth."</p>
<p>"How?"</p>
<p>"'Tis not the truth. I am not to be put off with such an answer. Yourself
you said that you had warned him not to cross your path. What path was in
your mind?"</p>
<p>Lionel leaned his elbows on the table and took his head in his hands. Weak
from loss of blood, overwrought mentally as well, in a state of revulsion
and reaction also from the pursuit which had been the cause of to-night's
tragic affair, he had not strength to withhold the confidence his brother
asked. On the contrary, it seemed to him that in making such a confidence,
he would find a haven and refuge in Sir Oliver.</p>
<p>"'Twas that wanton at Malpas was the cause of all," he complained. And Sir
Oliver's eye flashed at the words. "I deemed her quite other; I was a
fool, a fool! I"—he choked, and a sob shook him—"I thought she
loved me. I would have married her, I would so, by God."</p>
<p>Sir Oliver swore softly under his breath.</p>
<p>"I believed her pure and good, and...." He checked. "After all, who am I
to say even now that she was not? 'Twas no fault of hers. 'Twas he, that
foul dog Godolphin, who perverted her. Until he came all was well between
us. And then...."</p>
<p>"I see," said Sir Oliver quietly. "I think you have something for which to
thank him, if he revealed to you the truth of that strumpet's nature. I
would have warned thee, lad. But... Perhaps I have been weak in that."</p>
<p>"It was not so; it was not she...."</p>
<p>"I say it was, and if I say so I am to be believed, Lionel. I'd smirch no
woman's reputation without just cause. Be very sure of that."</p>
<p>Lionel stared up at him. "O God!" he cried presently, "I know not what to
believe. I am a shuttle-cock flung this way and that way."</p>
<p>"Believe me," said Sir Oliver grimly. "And set all doubts to rest." Then
he smiled. "So that was the virtuous Master Peter's secret pastime, eh?
The hypocrisy of man! There is no plumbing the endless depths of it!"</p>
<p>He laughed outright, remembering all the things that Master Peter had said
of Ralph Tressilian—delivering himself as though he were some chaste
and self-denying anchorite. Then on that laugh he caught his breath quite
suddenly. "Would she know?" he asked fearfully. "Would that harlot know,
would she suspect that 'twas your hand did this?"</p>
<p>"Aye—would she," replied the other. "I told her to-night, when she
flouted me and spoke of him, that I went straight to find him and pay the
score between us. I was on my way to Godolphin Court when I came upon him
in the park."</p>
<p>"Then you lied to me again, Lionel. For you said 'twas he attacked you."</p>
<p>"And so he did." Lionel countered instantly. "He never gave me time to
speak, but flung down from his horse and came at me snarling like a
cross-grained mongrel. Oh, he was as ready for the fight as I—as
eager."</p>
<p>"But the woman at Malpas knows," said Sir Oliver gloomily. "And if she
tells...."</p>
<p>"She'll not," cried Lionel. "She dare not for her reputation's sake."</p>
<p>"Indeed, I think you are right," agreed his brother with relief. "She dare
not for other reasons, when I come to think of it. Her reputation is
already such, and so well detested is she that were it known she had been
the cause, however indirect, of this, the countryside would satisfy
certain longings that it entertains concerning her. You are sure none saw
you either going or returning?"</p>
<p>"None."</p>
<p>Sir Oliver strode the length of the room and back, pulling at his pipe.
"All should be well, then, I think," said he at last. "You were best abed.
I'll carry you thither."</p>
<p>He took up his stripling brother in his powerful arms and bore him
upstairs as though he were a babe.</p>
<p>When he had seen him safely disposed for slumber, he returned below, shut
the door in the hall, drew up the great oaken chair to the fire, and sat
there far into the night smoking and thinking.</p>
<p>He had said to Lionel that all should be well. All should be well for
Lionel. But what of himself with the burden of this secret on his soul?
Were the victim another than Rosamund's brother the matter would have
plagued him but little. The fact that Godolphin was slain, it must be
confessed, was not in itself the source of his oppression. Godolphin had
more than deserved his end, and he would have come by it months ago at Sir
Oliver's own hand but for the fact that he was Rosamund's brother, as we
know. There was the rub, the bitter, cruel rub. Her own brother had fallen
by the hand of his. She loved her brother more than any living being next
to himself, just as he loved Lionel above any other but herself. The pain
that must be hers he knew; he experienced some of it in anticipation,
participating it because it was hers and because all things that were hers
he must account in some measure his own.</p>
<p>He rose up at last, cursing that wanton at Malpas who had come to fling
this fresh and terrible difficulty where already he had to face so many.
He stood leaning upon the overmantel, his foot upon one of the dogs of the
fender, and considered what to do. He must bear his burden in silence,
that was all. He must keep this secret even from Rosamund. It split his
heart to think that he must practise this deceit with her. But naught else
was possible short of relinquishing her, and that was far beyond his
strength.</p>
<p>The resolve adopted, he took up a taper and went off to bed.</p>
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