<h3>Old Men at Pevensey</h3>
<hr />
<SPAN name="page_105"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[105]</span>
<h4>Old Men at Pevensey</h4>
<p>'It has naught to do with apes or Devils,'Sir Richard went on, in an
undertone. 'It concerns De Aquila, than whom there was never bolder nor
craftier, nor more hardy knight born. And remember he was an old, old
man at that time.'</p>
<p>'When?' said Dan.</p>
<p>'When we came back from sailing with Witta.'</p>
<p>'What did you do with your gold?' said Dan.</p>
<p>'Have patience. Link by link is chain-mail made. I will tell all in its
place. We bore the gold to Pevensey on horseback—three loads of it—and
then up to the north chamber, above the Great Hall of Pevensey Castle,
where De Aquila lay in winter. He sat on his bed like a little white
falcon, turning his head swiftly from one to the other as we told our
tale. Jehan the Crab, an old sour man-at-arms, guarded the stairway, but
De Aquila bade him wait at the stair-foot, and let down both leather
curtains over the door. It was Jehan whom De Aquila had sent to us with
the horses, and only Jehan had loaded the gold. When our story was told,
De Aquila gave us the news of England, for we were as men waked from a
year-long sleep. The Red King was dead—slain (ye
<SPAN name="page_106"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[106]</span>
remember?) the day we
set sail—and Henry, his younger brother, had made himself King of
England over the head of Robert of Normandy. This was the very thing
that the Red King had done to Robert when our Great William died. Then
Robert of Normandy, mad, as De Aquila said, at twice missing of this
kingdom, had sent an army against England, which army had been well
beaten back to their ships at Portsmouth. A little earlier, and Witta's
ship would have rowed through them.</p>
<p>'"And now," said De Aquila, "half the great Barons of the North and West
are out against the King between Salisbury and Shrewsbury, and half the
other half wait to see which way the game shall go. They say Henry is
overly English for their stomachs, because he hath married an English
wife and she hath coaxed him to give back their old laws to our Saxons.
(Better ride a horse on the bit he knows, <i>I</i> say!) But that is only a
cloak to their falsehood." He cracked his finger on the table, where the
wine was spilt, and thus he spoke:—</p>
<p>'"William crammed us Norman barons full of good English acres after
Santlache. <i>I</i> had my share too," he said, and clapped Hugh on the
shoulder; "but I warned him—I warned him before Odo rebelled—that he
should have bidden the Barons give up their lands and lordships in
Normandy if they would be English lords. Now they are all but princes
both in England and Normandy—trencher-fed hounds, with a foot in one
trough and both eyes on the other! Robert of Normandy has sent them word
that if they do not
<SPAN name="page_107"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[107]</span>
fight for him in England he will sack and harry out
their lands in Normandy. Therefore Clare has risen, FitzOsborne has
risen, Montgomery has risen—whom our First William made an English
Earl. Even D'Arcy is out with his men, whose father I remember a little
hedge-sparrow knight nearby Caen. If Henry wins, the Barons can still
flee to Normandy, where Robert will welcome them. If Henry loses,
Robert, he says, will give them more lands in England. Oh, a pest—a
pest on Normandy, for she will be our England's curse this many a long
year!"</p>
<p>'"Amen," said Hugh. "But will the war come our ways, think you?"</p>
<p>'"Not from the North," said De Aquila. "But the sea is always open. If
the Barons gain the upper hand Robert will send another army into
England for sure, and this time I think he will land here—where his
father, the Conqueror, landed. Ye have brought your pigs to a pretty
market! Half England alight, and gold enough on the ground"—he stamped
on the bars beneath the table—"to set every sword in Christendom
fighting."</p>
<p>'"What is to do?" said Hugh. "I have no keep at Dallington; and if we
buried it, whom could we trust?"</p>
<p>'"Me," said De Aquila. "Pevensey walls are strong. No man but Jehan, who
is my dog, knows what is between them." He drew a curtain by the
shot-window and showed us the shaft of a well in the thickness of the
wall.</p>
<p>'"I made it for a drinking-well," he said,
<SPAN name="page_108"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[108]</span>
"but we found salt water, and
it rises and falls with the tide. Hark!" We heard the water whistle and
blow at the bottom. "Will it serve?" said he.</p>
<p>'"Needs must," said Hugh. "Our lives are in thy hands." So we lowered
all the gold down except one small chest of it by De Aquila's bed, which
we kept as much for his delight in its weight and colour as for any of
our needs.</p>
<p>'In the morning, ere we rode to our Manors, he said: "I do not say
farewell; because ye will return and bide here. Not for love nor for
sorrow, but to be with the gold. Have a care," he said, laughing, "lest
I use it to make myself Pope. Trust me not, but return!"'</p>
<p>Sir Richard paused and smiled sadly.</p>
<p>'In seven days, then, we returned from our Manors—from the Manors which
had been ours.'</p>
<p>'And were the children quite well?' said Una.</p>
<p>'My sons were young. Land and governance belong by right to young men.'
Sir Richard was talking to himself. 'It would have broken their hearts
if we had taken back our Manors. They made us great welcome, but we
could see—Hugh and I could see—that our day was done. I was a cripple
and he a one-armed man. No!' He shook his head. 'And therefore'—he
raised his voice—'we rode back to Pevensey.'</p>
<p>'I'm sorry,' said Una, for the knight seemed very sorrowful.</p>
<p>'Little maid, it all passed long ago. They were young; we were old. We
let them rule the Manors. "Aha!" cried De Aquila from his shot-window,
<SPAN name="page_109"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[109]</span>
when we dismounted. "Back again to earth, old foxes?" but when we were
in his chamber above the Hall he puts his arms about us and says,
"Welcome, ghosts! Welcome, poor ghosts!" ... Thus it fell out that we
were rich beyond belief, and lonely. And lonely!'</p>
<p>'What did you do?' said Dan.</p>
<p>'We watched for Robert of Normandy,' said the knight. 'De Aquila was
like Witta. He suffered no idleness. In fair weather we would ride along
between Bexlei on the one side, to Cuckmere on the other—sometimes with
hawk, sometimes with hound (there are stout hares both on the Marsh and
the Downland), but always with an eye to the sea, for fear of fleets
from Normandy. In foul weather he would walk on the top of his tower,
frowning against the rain—peering here and pointing there. It always
vexed him to think how Witta's ship had come and gone without his
knowledge. When the wind ceased and ships anchored, to the wharf's edge
he would go and, leaning on his sword among the stinking fish, would
call to the mariners for their news from France. His other eye he kept
landward for word of Henry's war against the Barons.</p>
<p>'Many brought him news—jongleurs, harpers, pedlars, sutlers, priests
and the like; and, though he was secret enough in small things, yet, if
their news misliked him, then, regarding neither time nor place nor
people, he would curse our King Henry for a fool or a babe. I have heard
him cry aloud by the fishing boats: "If I were King of England I would
do thus and thus"; and
<SPAN name="page_110"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[110]</span>
when I rode out to see that the warning-beacons
were laid and dry, he hath often called to me from the shot-window:
"Look to it, Richard! Do not copy our blind King, but see with thine own
eyes and feel with thine own hands." I do not think he knew any sort of
fear. And so we lived at Pevensey, in the little chamber above the Hall.</p>
<p>'One foul night came word that a messenger of the King waited below. We
were chilled after a long riding in the fog towards Bexlei, which is an
easy place for ships to land. De Aquila sent word the man might either
eat with us or wait till we had fed. Anon Jehan, at the stair-head,
cried that he had called for horse, and was gone. "Pest on him!" said De
Aquila. "I have more to do than to shiver in the Great Hall for every
gadling the King sends. Left he no word?"</p>
<p>'"None," said Jehan, "except"—he had been with De Aquila at
Santlache—"except he said that if an old dog could not learn new tricks
it was time to sweep out the kennel."</p>
<p>'"Oho!" said De Aquila, rubbing his nose, "to whom did he say that?"</p>
<p>'"To his beard, chiefly, but some to his horse's flank as he was
girthing up. I followed him out," said Jehan the Crab.</p>
<p>'"What was his shield-mark?"</p>
<p>'"Gold horseshoes on black," said the Crab.</p>
<p>'"That is one of Fulke's men," said De Aquila.'</p>
<p>Puck broke in very gently, 'Gold horseshoes on black is <i>not</i> the
Fulkes' shield. The Fulkes' arms are——'</p>
<SPAN name="page_111"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[111]</span>
<p>The knight waved one hand statelily.</p>
<p>'Thou knowest that evil man's true name,' he replied, 'but I have chosen
to call him Fulke because I promised him I would not tell the story of
his wickedness so that any man might guess it. I have changed <i>all</i> the
names in my tale. His children's children may be still alive.'</p>
<p>'True—true,' said Puck, smiling softly. 'It is knightly to keep
faith—even after a thousand years.'</p>
<p>Sir Richard bowed a little and went on:—</p>
<p>'"Gold horseshoes on black?" said De Aquila. "I had heard Fulke had
joined the Barons, but if this is true our King must be of the upper
hand. No matter, all Fulkes are faithless. Still, I would not have sent
the man away empty."</p>
<p>'"He fed," said Jehan. "Gilbert the Clerk fetched him meat and wine from
the kitchens. He ate at Gilbert's table."</p>
<p>'This Gilbert was a clerk from Battle Abbey, who kept the accounts of
the Manor of Pevensey. He was tall and pale-coloured, and carried those
new-fashioned beads for counting of prayers. They were large brown nuts
or seeds, and hanging from his girdle with his pen and inkhorn they
clashed when he walked. His place was in the great fireplace. There was
his table of accounts, and there he lay o' nights. He feared the hounds
in the Hall that came nosing after bones or to sleep on the warm ashes,
and would slash at them with his beads—like a woman. When De Aquila sat
in Hall to do justice, take fines, or grant lands, Gilbert would so
write it in
<SPAN name="page_112"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[112]</span>
the Manor-roll. But it was none of his work to feed our
guests, or to let them depart without his lord's knowledge.</p>
<p>'Said De Aquila, after Jehan was gone down the stair: "Hugh, hast thou
ever told my Gilbert thou canst read Latin hand-of-write?"</p>
<p>'"No," said Hugh. "He is no friend to me, or to Odo my hound either."
'"No matter," said De Aquila. "Let him never know thou canst tell one
letter from its fellow, and"—here he jerked us in the ribs with his
scabbard—"watch him, both of ye. There be devils in Africa, as I have
heard, but by the Saints, there be greater devils in Pevensey!" And that
was all he would say.</p>
<p>'It chanced, some small while afterwards, a Norman man-at-arms would wed
a Saxon wench of the Manor, and Gilbert (we had watched him well since
De Aquila spoke) doubted whether her folk were free or slave. Since De
Aquila would give them a field of good land, if she were free, the
matter came up at the justice in Great Hall before De Aquila. First the
wench's father spoke; then her mother; then all together, till the hall
rang and the hounds bayed. De Aquila held up his hands. "Write her
free," he called to Gilbert by the fireplace. "A' God's name write her
free, before she deafens me! Yes, yes," he said to the wench that was on
her knees at him; "thou art Cerdic's sister, and own cousin to the Lady
of Mercia, if thou wilt be silent. In fifty years there will be neither
Norman nor Saxon, but all English," said he, "and <i>these</i> are the men
that do</p>
<hr />
<SPAN name="page_113"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[113]</span>
<center>
<SPAN href="./images/page_113_full.png">
<ANTIMG src="./images/page_113.png" height-obs="652" width-obs="400" alt="'A' God's name write her free, before she deafens me!'" /></SPAN>
<div class="caption">'A' God's name write her free, before she deafens me!'</div>
</center>
<hr />
<SPAN name="page_115"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[115]</span>
<p>our work!" He clapped the man-at-arms that was Jehan's nephew on
the shoulder, and kissed the wench, and fretted with his feet among the
rushes to show it was finished. (The Great Hall is always bitter cold.)
I stood at his side; Hugh was behind Gilbert in the fireplace making to
play with wise rough Odo. He signed to De Aquila, who bade Gilbert
measure the new field for the new couple. Out then runs our Gilbert
between man and maid, his beads clashing at his waist, and the Hall
being empty, we three sit by the fire.</p>
<p>'Said Hugh, leaning down to the hearthstones, "I saw this stone move
under Gilbert's foot when Odo snuffed at it. Look!" De Aquila digged in
the ashes with his sword; the stone tilted; beneath it lay a parchment
folden, and the writing atop was: "Words spoken against the King by our
Lord of Pevensey—the second part."</p>
<p>'Here was set out (Hugh read it us whispering) every jest De Aquila had
made to us touching the King; every time he had called out to me from
the shot-window, and every time he had said what he would do if he were
King of England. Yes, day by day had his daily speech, which he never
stinted, been set down by Gilbert, tricked out and twisted from its true
meaning, yet withal so cunningly that none could deny who knew him that
De Aquila had in some sort spoken those words. Ye see?'</p>
<p>Dan and Una nodded.</p>
<p>'Yes,' said Una gravely. 'It isn't what you say so much. It's what you
mean when you say
<SPAN name="page_116"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[116]</span>
it. Like calling Dan a beast in fun. Only grown-ups
don't always understand.'</p>
<p>'"He hath done this day by day before our very face?" said De Aquila.</p>
<p>'"Nay, hour by hour," said Hugh. "When De Aquila spoke even now, in the
Hall, of Saxons and Normans, I saw Gilbert write on a parchment, which
he kept beside the Manor-roll, that De Aquila said soon there would be
no Normans left in England if his men-at-arms did their work aright."</p>
<p>'"Bones of the Saints!" said De Aquila. "What avail is honour or a sword
against a pen? Where did Gilbert hide that writing? He shall eat it."</p>
<p>'"In his breast when he ran out," said Hugh. "Which made me look to see
where he kept his finished stuff. When Odo scratched at this stone here,
I saw his face change. So I was sure."</p>
<p>'"He is bold," said De Aquila. "Do him justice. In his own fashion, my
Gilbert is bold."</p>
<p>'"Overbold," said Hugh. "Hearken here," and he read: "Upon the Feast of
St Agatha, our Lord of Pevensey, lying in his upper chamber, being
clothed in his second fur gown reversed with rabbit——"</p>
<p>'"Pest on him! He is not my tire-woman!" said De Aquila, and Hugh and I
laughed.</p>
<p>'"Reversed with rabbit, seeing a fog over the marshes, did wake Sir
Richard Dalyngridge, his drunken cup-mate" (here they laughed at me)
"and said, 'Peer out, old fox, for God is on the Duke of Normandy's
side."'</p>
<SPAN name="page_117"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[117]</span>
<p>'"So did I. It was a black fog. Robert could have landed ten thousand
men, and we none the wiser. Does he tell how we were out all day riding
the Marsh, and how I near perished in a quicksand, and coughed like a
sick ewe for ten days after?" cried De Aquila.</p>
<p>'"No," said Hugh. "But here is the prayer of Gilbert himself to his
master Fulke."</p>
<p>'"Ah," said De Aquila. "Well I knew it was Fulke. What is the price of
my blood?"</p>
<p>'"Gilbert prayeth that when our Lord of Pevensey is stripped of his
lands on this evidence which Gilbert hath, with fear and pains,
collected——"</p>
<p>'"Fear and pains is a true word," said De Aquila, and sucked in his
cheeks. "But how excellent a weapon is a pen! I must learn it."</p>
<p>'"He prays that Fulke will advance him from his present service to that
honour in the Church which Fulke promised him. And lest Fulke should
forget, he has written below, 'To be Sacristan of Battle'."</p>
<p>'At this De Aquila whistled. "A man who can plot against one lord can
plot against another. When I am stripped of my lands Fulke will whip off
my Gilbert's foolish head. None the less Battle needs a new Sacristan.
They tell me the Abbot Henry keeps no sort of rule there."</p>
<p>'"Let the Abbot wait," said Hugh. "It is our heads and our lands that
are in danger. This parchment is the second part of the tale. The first
has gone to Fulke, and so to the King, who will hold us traitors."</p>
<SPAN name="page_118"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[118]</span>
<p>"Assuredly," said De Aquila. "Fulke's man took the first part that
evening when Gilbert fed him, and our King is so beset by his brother
and his Barons (small blame, too!) that he is mad with mistrust. Fulke
has his ear, and pours poison into it. Presently the King gives him my
land and yours. This is old," and he leaned back and yawned.</p>
<p>'"And thou wilt surrender Pevensey without word or blow?" said Hugh. "We
Saxons will fight your King then. I will go warn my nephew at
Dallington. Give me a horse!"</p>
<p>'"Give thee a toy and a rattle," said De Aquila. "Put back the
parchment, and rake over the ashes. If Fulke is given my Pevensey, which
is England's gate, what will he do with it? He is Norman at heart, and
his heart is in Normandy, where he can kill peasants at his pleasure. He
will open England's gate to our sleepy Robert, as Odo and Mortain tried
to do, and then there will be another landing and another Santlache.
Therefore I cannot give up Pevensey."</p>
<p>'"Good," said we two.</p>
<p>'"Ah, but wait! If my King be made, on Gilbert's evidence, to mistrust
me, he will send his men against me here, and while we fight, England's
gate is left unguarded. Who will be the first to come through thereby?
Even Robert of Normandy. Therefore I cannot fight my King." He nursed
his sword—thus.</p>
<p>'"This is saying and unsaying like a Norman," said Hugh. "What of our
Manors?"</p>
<SPAN name="page_119"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[119]</span>
<p>'"I do not think for myself," said De Aquila, "nor for our King, nor for
your lands. I think for England, for whom neither King nor Baron thinks.
I am not Norman, Sir Richard, nor Saxon, Sir Hugh. English am I."</p>
<p>'"Saxon, Norman or English," said Hugh, "our lives are thine, however
the game goes. When do we hang Gilbert?"</p>
<p>'"Never," said De Aquila. "Who knows, he may yet be Sacristan of Battle,
for, to do him justice, he is a good writer. Dead men make dumb
witnesses. Wait."</p>
<p>'"But the King may give Pevensey to Fulke. And our Manors go with it,"
said I. "Shall we tell our sons?"</p>
<p>'"No. The King will not wake up a hornets' nest in the South till he has
smoked out the bees in the North. He may hold me a traitor; but at least
he sees I am not fighting against him; and every day that I lie still is
so much gain to him while he fights the Barons. If he were wise he would
wait till that war were over before he made new enemies. But I think
Fulke will play upon him to send for me, and if I do not obey the
summons, that will, to Henry's mind, be proof of my treason. But mere
talk, such as Gilbert sends, is no proof nowadays. We Barons follow the
Church, and, like Anselm, we speak what we please. Let us go about our
day's dealings, and say naught to Gilbert."</p>
<p>'"Then we do nothing?" said Hugh.</p>
<p>'"We wait," said De Aquila. "I am old, but still I find that the most
grievous work I know."</p>
<SPAN name="page_120"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[120]</span>
<p>'And so we found it, but in the end De Aquila was right.</p>
<p>'A little later in the year, armed men rode over the hill, the Golden
Horseshoes flying behind the King's banner. Said De Aquila, at the
window of our chamber: "How did I tell you? Here comes Fulke himself to
spy out his new lands which our King hath promised him if he can bring
proof of my treason."</p>
<p>'"How dost thou know?" said Hugh.</p>
<p>'"Because that is what I would do if I were Fulke, but <i>I</i> should have
brought more men. My roan horse to your old shoes," said he, "Fulke
brings me the King's Summons to leave Pevensey and join the war." He
sucked in his cheeks and drummed on the edge of the shaft, where the
water sounded all hollow.</p>
<p>'"Shall we go?" said I.</p>
<p>'"Go! At this time of year? Stark madness," said he. "Take <i>me</i> from
Pevensey to fisk and flyte through fern and forest, and in three days
Robert's keels would be lying on Pevensey mud with ten thousand men! Who
would stop them—Fulke?"</p>
<p>'The horns blew without, and anon Fulke cried the King's Summons at the
great door, that De Aquila with all men and horse should join the King's
camp at Salisbury.</p>
<p>'"How did I tell you?" said De Aquila. "There are twenty Barons 'twixt
here and Salisbury could give King Henry good land service, but he has
been worked upon by Fulke to send South and call me—<i>me</i>!—off the Gate
of England,
<SPAN name="page_121"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[121]</span>
when his enemies stand about to batter it in. See that
Fulke's men lie in the big south barn," said he. "Give them drink, and
when Fulke has eaten we will drink in my chamber. The Great Hall is too
cold for old bones."</p>
<p>'As soon as he was off-horse Fulke went to the chapel with Gilbert to
give thanks for his safe coming, and when he had eaten—he was a fat
man, and rolled his eyes greedily at our good roast Sussex wheatears—we
led him to the little upper chamber, whither Gilbert had already gone
with the Manor-roll. I remember when Fulke heard the tide blow and
whistle in the shaft he leaped back, and his long down-turned
stirrup-shoes caught in the rushes and he stumbled, so that Jehan behind
him found it easy to knock his head against the wall.'</p>
<p>'Did you know it was going to happen?' said Dan.</p>
<p>'Assuredly,' said Sir Richard, with a sweet smile. 'I put my foot on his
sword and plucked away his dagger, but he knew not whether it was day or
night for awhile. He lay rolling his eyes and bubbling with his mouth,
and Jehan roped him like a calf. He was cased all in that newfangled
armour which we call lizard-mail. Not rings like my hauberk here'—Sir
Richard tapped his chest—but little pieces of dagger-proof steel
overlapping on stout leather. We stripped it off (no need to spoil good
harness by wetting it), and in the neck-piece De Aquila found the same
folden piece of parchment which we had put back under the hearthstone.</p>
<SPAN name="page_122"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[122]</span>
<p>'At this Gilbert would have run out. I laid my hand on his shoulder. It
sufficed. He fell to trembling and praying on his beads.</p>
<p>'"Gilbert," said De Aquila, "here be more notable sayings and doings of
our Lord of Pevensey for thee to write down. Take pen and ink-horn,
Gilbert. We cannot all be Sacristans of Battle."</p>
<p>'Said Fulke from the floor, "Ye have bound a King's messenger. Pevensey
shall burn for this."</p>
<p>'"Maybe. I have seen it besieged once," said De Aquila, "but heart up,
Fulke. I promise thee that thou shalt be hanged in the middle of the
flames at the end of that siege, if I have to share my last loaf with
thee; and that is more than Odo would have done when we starved out him
and Mortain."</p>
<p>'Then Fulke sat up and looked long and cunningly at De Aquila.</p>
<p>'"By the Saints," said he, "why didst thou not say thou wast on the Duke
Robert's side at the first?"</p>
<p>'"Am I?" said De Aquila.</p>
<p>'Fulke laughed and said, "No man who serves King Henry dare do this much
to his messenger. When didst thou come over to the Duke? Let me up and
we can smooth it out together." And he smiled and becked and winked.</p>
<p>'"Yes, we will smooth it out," said De Aquila. He nodded to me, and
Jehan and I heaved up Fulke—he was a heavy man—and lowered him into
the shaft by a rope, not so as to stand on our
<SPAN name="page_123"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[123]</span>
gold, but dangling by his
shoulders a little above. It was turn of ebb, and the water came to his
knees. He said nothing, but shivered somewhat.</p>
<p>'Then jehan of a sudden beat down Gilbert's wrist with his sheathed
dagger. "Stop!" he said. "He swallows his beads."</p>
<p>'"Poison, belike," said De Aquila. "It is good for men who know too
much. I have carried it these thirty years. Give me!"</p>
<p>'Then Gilbert wept and howled. De Aquila ran the beads through his
fingers. The last one—I have said they were large nuts—opened in two
halves on a pin, and there was a small folded parchment within. On it
was written: "<i>The Old Dog goes to Salisbury to be beaten. I have his
Kennel. Come quickly</i>."</p>
<p>'"This is worse than poison," said De Aquila, very softly, and sucked in
his cheeks. Then Gilbert grovelled in the rushes, and told us all he
knew. The letter, as we guessed, was from Fulke to the Duke (and not the
first that had passed between them); Fulke had given it to Gilbert in
the chapel, and Gilbert thought to have taken it by morning to a certain
fishing boat at the wharf, which trafficked between Pevensey and the
French shore. Gilbert was a false fellow, but he found time between his
quakings and shakings to swear that the master of the boat knew nothing
of the matter.</p>
<p>'"He hath called me shaved head," said Gilbert, "and he hath thrown
haddock-guts at me; but for all that, he is no traitor."</p>
<p>'"I will have no clerk of mine mishandled or
<SPAN name="page_124"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[124]</span>
miscalled," said De Aquila.
"That seaman shall be whipped at his own mast. Write me first a letter,
and thou shalt bear it, with the order for the whipping, to-morrow to
the boat."</p>
<p>'At this Gilbert would have kissed De Aquila's hand—he had not hoped to
live until the morning—and when he trembled less he wrote a letter as
from Fulke to the Duke, saying that the Kennel, which signified
Pevensey, was shut, and that the Old Dog (which was De Aquila) sat
outside it, and, moreover, that all had been betrayed.</p>
<p>'"Write to any man that all is betrayed," said De Aquila, "and even the
Pope himself would sleep uneasily. Eh, Jehan? If one told thee all was
betrayed, what wouldst thou do?"</p>
<p>'"I would run away," said Jehan. "it might be true."</p>
<p>'"Well said," quoth De Aquila. "Write, Gilbert, that Montgomery, the
great Earl, hath made his peace with the King, and that little D'Arcy,
whom I hate, hath been hanged by the heels. We will give Robert full
measure to chew upon. Write also that Fulke himself is sick to death of
a dropsy."</p>
<p>'"Nay!" cried Fulke, hanging in the well-shaft. "Drown me out of hand,
but do not make a jest of me."</p>
<p>'"Jest? I?" said De Aquila. "I am but fighting for life and lands with a
pen, as thou hast shown me, Fulke."</p>
<p>'Then Fulke groaned, for he was cold, and, "Let me confess," said he.</p>
<p>'"Now, this is right neighbourly," said De
<SPAN name="page_125"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[125]</span>
Aquila, leaning over the
shaft. "Thou hast read my sayings and doings—or at least the first part
of them—and thou art minded to repay me with thy own doings and
sayings. Take pen and inkhorn, Gilbert. Here is work that will not irk
thee."</p>
<p>'"Let my men go without hurt, and I will confess my treason against the
King," said Fulke.</p>
<p>'"Now, why has he grown so tender of his men of a sudden?" said Hugh to
me; for Fulke had no name for mercy to his men. Plunder he gave them,
but pity, none.</p>
<p>'"Té! Té!" said De Aquila. "Thy treason was all confessed long ago by
Gilbert. It would be enough to hang Montgomery himself."</p>
<p>'"Nay; but spare my men," said Fulke; and we heard him splash like a
fish in a pond, for the tide was rising.</p>
<p>'"All in good time," said De Aquila. "The night is young; the wine is
old; and we need only the merry tale. Begin the story of thy life since
when thou wast a lad at Tours. Tell it nimbly!"</p>
<p>'"Ye shame me to my soul," said Fulke.</p>
<p>'"Then I have done what neither King nor Duke could do," said De Aquila.
"But begin, and forget nothing."</p>
<p>'"Send thy man away," said Fulke.</p>
<p>'"That much can I do," said De Aquila. "But, remember, I am like the
Danes' King; I cannot turn the tide."</p>
<p>'"How long will it rise?" said Fulke, and splashed anew.</p>
<p>'"For three hours," said De Aquila. "Time
<SPAN name="page_126"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[126]</span>
to tell all thy good deeds.
Begin, and Gilbert,—I have heard thou art somewhat careless—do not
twist his words from his true meaning."</p>
<p>'So—fear of death in the dark being upon him—Fulke began, and Gilbert,
not knowing what his fate might be, wrote it word by word. I have heard
many tales, but never heard I aught to match the tale of Fulke his black
life, as Fulke told it hollowly, hanging in the shaft.'</p>
<p>'Was it bad?' said Dan, awestruck.</p>
<p>'Beyond belief,' Sir Richard answered. 'None the less, there was that in
it which forced even Gilbert to laugh. We three laughed till we ached.
At one place his teeth so chattered that we could not well hear, and we
reached him down a cup of wine. Then he warmed to it, and smoothly set
out all his shifts, malices, and treacheries, his extreme boldnesses (he
was desperate bold); his retreats, shufflings, and counterfeitings (he
was also inconceivably a coward); his lack of gear and honour; his
despair at their loss; his remedies, and well-coloured contrivances.
Yes, he waved the filthy rags of his life before us, as though they had
been some proud banner. When he ceased, we saw by torches that the tide
stood at the corners of his mouth, and he breathed strongly through his
nose.</p>
<p>'We had him out, and rubbed him; we wrapped him in a cloak, and gave him
wine, and we leaned and looked upon him, the while he drank. He was
shivering, but shameless.</p>
<p>'Of a sudden we heard Jehan at the stairway wake, but a boy pushed past
him, and stood before
<SPAN name="page_127"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[127]</span>
us, the hall rushes in his hair, all slubbered
with sleep. "My father! My father! I dreamed of treachery," he cried,
and babbled thickly.</p>
<p>'"There is no treachery here," said Fulke. "Go!" and the boy turned,
even then not fully awake, and Jehan led him by the hand to the Great
Hall.</p>
<p>'"Thy only son!" said De Aquila. "Why didst thou bring the child here?"</p>
<p>'"He is my heir. I dared not trust him to my brother," said Fulke, and
now he was ashamed. De Aquila said nothing, but sat weighing a wine cup
in his two hands—thus. Anon, Fulke touched him on the knee.</p>
<p>'"Let the boy escape to Normandy," said he, "and do with me at thy
pleasure. Yea, hang me tomorrow, with my letter to Robert round my neck,
but let the boy go."</p>
<p>'"Be still," said De Aquila. "I think for England."</p>
<p>'So we waited what our Lord of Pevensey should devise; and the sweat ran
down Fulke's forehead.</p>
<p>'At last said De Aquila: "I am too old to judge, or to trust any man. I
do not covet thy lands, as thou hast coveted mine; and whether thou art
any better or any worse than any other black Angevin thief, it is for
thy King to find out. Therefore, go back to thy King, Fulke."</p>
<p>'"And thou wilt say nothing of what has passed?" said Fulke.</p>
<p>'"Why should I? Thy son will stay with me. If the King calls me again to
leave Pevensey,
<SPAN name="page_128"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[128]</span>
which I must guard against England's enemies; if the
King sends his men against me for a traitor; or if I hear that the King
in his bed thinks any evil of me or my two knights, thy son will be
hanged from out this window, Fulke."'</p>
<p>'But it hadn't anything to do with his son,' cried Una, startled.</p>
<p>'How could we have hanged Fulke?' said Sir Richard. 'We needed him to
make our peace with the King. He would have betrayed half England for
the boy's sake. Of that we were sure.'</p>
<p>'I don't understand,' said Una. 'But I think it was simply awful.'</p>
<p>'So did not Fulke. He was well pleased.'</p>
<p>'What? Because his son was going to be killed?'</p>
<p>'Nay. Because De Aquila had shown him how he might save the boy's life
and his own lands and honours. "I will do it," he said. "I swear I will
do it. I will tell the King thou art no traitor, but the most excellent,
valiant, and perfect of us all. Yes, I will save thee."</p>
<p>'De Aquila looked still into the bottom of the cup, rolling the
wine-dregs to and fro.</p>
<p>'"Ay," he said. "If I had a son, I would, I think, save him. But do not
by any means tell me how thou wilt go about it."</p>
<p>'"Nay, nay," said Fulke, nodding his bald head wisely. "That is my
secret. But rest at ease, De Aquila, no hair of thy head nor rood of thy
land shall be forfeited," and he smiled like one planning great good
deeds.</p>
<SPAN name="page_129"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[129]</span>
<p>'"And henceforward," said De Aquila, "I counsel thee to serve one
master—not two."</p>
<p>'"What?" said Fulke. "Can I work no more honest trading between the two
sides these troublous times?"</p>
<p>'"Serve Robert or the King—England or Normandy," said De Aquila. "I
care not which it is, but make thy choice here and now."</p>
<p>'"The King, then," said Fulke, "for I see he is better served than
Robert. Shall I swear it?"</p>
<p>'"No need," said De Aquila, and he laid his hand on the parchments which
Gilbert had written. "It shall be some part of my Gilbert's penance to
copy out the savoury tale of thy life, till we have made ten, twenty, an
hundred, maybe, copies. How many cattle, think you, would the Bishop of
Tours give for that tale? Or thy brother? Or the Monks of Blois?
Minstrels will turn it into songs which thy own Saxon serfs shall sing
behind their plough-stilts, and men-at-arms riding through thy Norman
towns. From here to Rome, Fulke, men will make very merry over that
tale, and how Fulke told it, hanging in a well, like a drowned puppy.
This shall be thy punishment, if ever I find thee double-dealing with
thy King any more. Meantime, the parchments stay here with thy son. Him
I will return to thee when thou hast made my peace with the King. The
parchments never."</p>
<p>'Fulke hid his face and groaned.</p>
<p>'"Bones of the Saints!" said De Aquila, laughing. "The pen cuts deep. I
could never have fetched that grunt out of thee with any sword."</p>
<SPAN name="page_130"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[130]</span>
<p>'"But so long as I do not anger thee, my tale will be secret?" said
Fulke.</p>
<p>'"Just so long. Does that comfort thee, Fulke?" said De Aquila.</p>
<p>'"What other comfort have ye left me?" he said, and of a sudden he wept
hopelessly like a child, dropping his face on his knees.'</p>
<p>'Poor Fulke,' said Una.</p>
<p>'I pitied him also,' said Sir Richard.</p>
<p>'"After the spur, corn," said De Aquila, and he threw Fulke three wedges
of gold that he had taken from our little chest by the bedplace.</p>
<p>'"If I had known this," said Fulke, catching his breath, "I would never
have lifted hand against Pevensey. Only lack of this yellow stuff has
made me so unlucky in my dealings."</p>
<p>'It was dawn then, and they stirred in the Great Hall below. We sent
down Fulke's mail to be scoured, and when he rode away at noon under his
own and the King's banner, very splendid and stately did he show. He
smoothed his long beard, and called his son to his stirrup and kissed
him. De Aquila rode with him as far as the New Mill landward. We thought
the night had been all a dream.'</p>
<p>'But did he make it right with the King?' Dan asked. 'About your not
being traitors, I mean.'</p>
<p>Sir Richard smiled. 'The King sent no second summons to Pevensey, nor
did he ask why De Aquila had not obeyed the first. Yes, that was Fulke's
work. I know not how he did it, but it was well and swiftly done.'</p>
<hr />
<SPAN name="page_132"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[132]</span>
<center>
<SPAN href="./images/page_132_full.png">
<ANTIMG src="./images/page_132.png" height-obs="670" width-obs="400" alt="'He drew his dagger on Jehan, who threw him down the stairway.'" /></SPAN>
<div class="caption">'He drew his dagger on Jehan, who threw him down the stairway.'</div>
</center>
<hr />
<SPAN name="page_133"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[133]</span>
<p>'Then you didn't do anything to his son?' said Una.</p>
<p>'The boy? Oh, he was an imp! He turned the keep doors out of dortoirs
while we had him. He sang foul songs, learned in the Barons' camps—poor
fool; he set the hounds fighting in Hall; he lit the rushes to drive
out, as he said, the fleas; he drew his dagger on Jehan, who threw him
down the stairway for it; and he rode his horse through crops and among
sheep. But when we had beaten him, and showed him wolf and deer, he
followed us old men like a young, eager hound, and called us "uncle".
His father came the summer's end to take him away, but the boy had no
lust to go, because of the otter-hunting, and he stayed on till the
fox-hunting. I gave him a bittern's claw to bring him good luck at
shooting. An imp, if ever there was!'</p>
<p>'And what happened to Gilbert?' said Dan.</p>
<p>'Not even a whipping. De Aquila said he would sooner a clerk, however
false, that knew the Manor-roll than a fool, however true, that must be
taught his work afresh. Moreover, after that night I think Gilbert loved
as much as he feared De Aquila. At least he would not leave us—not even
when Vivian, the King's Clerk, would have made him Sacristan of Battle
Abbey. A false fellow, but, in his fashion, bold.'</p>
<p>'Did Robert ever land in Pevensey after all?' Dan went on.</p>
<p>'We guarded the coast too well while Henry was fighting his Barons; and
three or four years later, when England had peace, Henry crossed to
<SPAN name="page_134"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[134]</span>
Normandy and showed his brother some work at Tenchebrai that cured
Robert of fighting. Many of Henry's men sailed from Pevensey to that
war. Fulke came, I remember, and we all four lay in the little chamber
once again, and drank together. De Aquila was right. One should not
judge men. Fulke was merry. Yes, always merry—with a catch in his
breath.'</p>
<p>'And what did you do afterwards?' said Una.</p>
<p>'We talked together of times past. That is all men can do when they grow
old, little maid.'</p>
<p>The bell for tea rang faintly across the meadows. Dan lay in the bows of
the <i>Golden Hind</i>; Una in the stern, the book of verses open in her lap,
was reading from 'The Slave's Dream':</p>
<blockquote>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<span>'Again, in the mist and shadow of sleep,</span>
<span>He saw his native land.'</span></div>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p>'I don't know when you began that,' said Dan, sleepily.</p>
<p>On the middle thwart of the boat, beside Una's sun-bonnet, lay an Oak
leaf, an Ash leaf, and a Thorn leaf, that must have dropped down from
the trees above; and the brook giggled as though it had just seen some
joke.</p>
<hr />
<SPAN name="page_135"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[135]</span>
<h4>THE RUNES ON WELAND'S SWORD</h4>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>A Smith makes me</i></span>
<span><i>To betray my Man</i></span>
<span><i>In my first fight.</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>To gather Gold</i></span>
<span><i>At the world's end</i></span>
<span><i>I am sent.</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>The Gold I gather</i></span>
<span><i>Comes into England</i></span>
<span><i>Out of deep Water.</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>Like a shining Fish</i></span>
<span><i>Then it descends</i></span>
<span><i>Into deep Water.</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>It is not given</i></span>
<span><i>For goods or gear,</i></span>
<span><i>But for The Thing.</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>The Gold I gather</i></span>
<span><i>A King covets</i></span>
<span><i>For an ill use.</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>The Gold I gather</i></span>
<span><i>Is drawn up</i></span>
<span><i>Out of deep Water.</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>Like a shining Fish</i></span>
<span><i>Then it descends</i></span>
<span><i>Into deep Water.</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>It is not given</i></span>
<span><i>For goods or gear,</i></span>
<span><i>But for The Thing.</i></span></div>
</div>
<hr class="wide" />
<SPAN name="page_137"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[137]</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />