The visit of Bertrade de Montfort
with her friend Mary de Stutevill was drawing to a
close. Three weeks had passed since Roger de
Conde had ridden out from the portals of Stutevill
and many times the handsome young knight’s name
had been on the lips of his fair hostess and her fairer
friend.
Today the two girls roamed slowly
through the gardens of the great court, their arms
about each other’s waists, pouring the last confidences
into each other’s ears, for tomorrow Bertrade
had elected to return to Leicester.
“Methinks thou be very rash
indeed, my Bertrade,” said Mary. “Wert
my father here he would, I am sure, not permit thee
to leave with only the small escort which we be able
to give.”
“Fear not, Mary,” replied
Bertrade. “Five of thy father’s knights
be ample protection for so short a journey.
By evening it will have been accomplished; and, as
the only one I fear in these parts received such a
sound set back from Roger de Conde recently, I do not
think he will venture again to molest me.”
“But what about the Devil of
Torn, Bertrade ?” urged Mary. “Only
yestereve, you wot, one of Lord de Grey’s men-at-arms
came limping to us with the news of the awful carnage
the foul fiend had wrought on his master’s household.
He be abroad, Bertrade, and I canst think of naught
more horrible than to fall into his hands.”
“Why, Mary, thou didst but recently
say thy very self that Norman of Torn was most courteous
to thee when he sacked this, thy father’s castle.
How be it thou so soon has changed thy mind ?”
“Yes, Bertrade, he was indeed
respectful then, but who knows what horrid freak his
mind may take, and they do say that he be cruel beyond
compare. Again, forget not that thou be Leicester’s
daughter and Henry’s niece; against both of
whom the Outlaw of Torn openly swears his hatred and
his vengeance. Oh, Bertrade, wait but for a
day or so, I be sure my father must return ere then,
and fifty knights shall accompany thee instead of
five.”
“What be fifty knights against
Norman of Torn, Mary ? Thy reasoning is on a
parity with thy fears, both have flown wide of the
mark.
“If I am to meet with this wild
ruffian, it were better that five knights were sacrificed
than fifty, for either number would be but a mouthful
to that horrid horde of unhung murderers. No,
Mary, I shall start tomorrow and your good knights
shall return the following day with the best of word
from me.”
“If thou wilst, thou wilst,”
cried Mary petulantly. “Indeed it were
plain that thou be a De Montfort; that race whose
historic bravery be second only to their historic
stubbornness.”
Bertrade de Montfort laughed, and
kissed her friend upon the cheek.
“Mayhap I shall find the brave
Roger de Conde again upon the highroad to protect
me. Then indeed shall I send back your five knights,
for of a truth, his blade is more powerful than that
of any ten men I ere saw fight before.”
“Methinks,” said Mary,
still peeved at her friend’s determination to
leave on the morrow, “that should you meet the
doughty Sir Roger all unarmed, that still would you
send back my father’s knights.”
Bertrade flushed, and then bit her
lip as she felt the warm blood mount to her cheek.
“Thou be a fool, Mary,” she said.
Mary broke into a joyful, teasing
laugh; hugely enjoying the discomfiture of the admission
the tell-tale flush proclaimed.
“Ah, I did but guess how thy
heart and thy mind tended, Bertrade; but now I seest
that I divined all too truly. He be indeed good
to look upon, but what knowest thou of him ?”
“Hush, Mary !” commanded
Bertrade. “Thou know not what thou sayest.
I would not wipe my feet upon him, I care naught
whatever for him, and then — it has been
three weeks since he rode out from Stutevill and no
word hath he sent.”
“Oh, ho,” cried the little
plague, “so there lies the wind ? My Lady
would not wipe her feet upon him, but she be sore
vexed that he has sent her no word. Mon Dieu,
but thou hast strange notions, Bertrade.”
“I will not talk with you, Mary,”
cried Bertrade, stamping her sandaled foot, and with
a toss of her pretty head she turned abruptly toward
the castle.
In a small chamber in the castle of
Colfax two men sat at opposite sides of a little table.
The one, Peter of Colfax, was short and very stout.
His red, bloated face, bleary eyes and bulbous nose
bespoke the manner of his life; while his thick lips,
the lower hanging large and flabby over his receding
chin, indicated the base passions to which his life
and been given. His companion was a little,
grim, gray man but his suit of armor and closed helm
gave no hint to his host of whom his guest might be.
It was the little armored man who was speaking.
“Is it not enough that I offer
to aid you, Sir Peter,” he said, “that
you must have my reasons ? Let it go that my
hate of Leicester be the passion which moves me.
Thou failed in thy attempt to capture the maiden;
give me ten knights and I will bring her to you.”
“How knowest thou she rides
out tomorrow for her father’s castle ?”
asked Peter of Colfax.
“That again be no concern of
thine, my friend, but I do know it, and, if thou wouldst
have her, be quick, for we should ride out tonight
that we may take our positions by the highway in ample
time tomorrow.”
Still Peter of Colfax hesitated, he
feared this might be a ruse of Leicester’s to
catch him in some trap. He did not know his guest
— the fellow might want the girl for himself
and be taking this method of obtaining the necessary
assistance to capture her.
“Come,” said the little,
armored man irritably. “I cannot bide here
forever. Make up thy mind; it be nothing to me
other than my revenge, and if thou wilst not do it,
I shall hire the necessary ruffians and then not even
thou shalt see Bertrade de Montfort more.”
This last threat decided the Baron.
“It is agreed,” he said.
“The men shall ride out with you in half an
hour. Wait below in the courtyard.”
When the little man had left the apartment,
Peter of Colfax summoned his squire whom he had send
to him at once one of his faithful henchmen.
“Guy,” said Peter of Colfax,
as the man entered, “ye made a rare fizzle of
a piece of business some weeks ago. Ye wot of
which I speak ?”
“Yes, My Lord.”
“It chances that on the morrow
ye may have opportunity to retrieve thy blunder.
Ride out with ten men where the stranger who waits
in the courtyard below shall lead ye, and come not
back without that which ye lost to a handful of men
before. You understand ?”
“Yes, My Lord !”
“And, Guy, I half mistrust this
fellow who hath offered to assist us. At the
first sign of treachery, fall upon him with all thy
men and slay him. Tell the others that these
be my orders.”
“Yes, My Lord. When do we ride ?”
“At once. You may go.”
The morning that Bertrade de Montfort
had chosen to return to her father’s castle
dawned gray and threatening. In vain did Mary
de Stutevill plead with her friend to give up the
idea of setting out upon such a dismal day and without
sufficient escort, but Bertrade de Montfort was firm.
“Already have I overstayed my
time three days, and it is not lightly that even I,
his daughter, fail in obedience to Simon de Montfort.
I shall have enough to account for as it be.
Do not urge me to add even one more day to my excuses.
And again, perchance, my mother and my father may
be sore distressed by my continued absence.
No, Mary, I must ride today.” And so she
did, with the five knights that could be spared from
the castle’s defence.
Scarcely half an hour had elapsed
before a cold drizzle set in, so that they were indeed
a sorry company that splashed along the muddy road,
wrapped in mantle and surcoat. As they proceeded,
the rain and wind increased in volume, until it was
being driven into their faces in such blinding gusts
that they must needs keep their eyes closed and trust
to the instincts of their mounts.
Less than half the journey had been
accomplished. They were winding across a little
hollow toward a low ridge covered with dense forest,
into the somber shadows of which the road wound.
There was a glint of armor among the drenched foliage,
but the rain-buffeted eyes of the riders saw it not.
On they came, their patient horses plodding slowly
through the sticky road and hurtling storm.
Now they were half way up the ridge’s
side. There was a movement in the dark shadows
of the grim wood, and then, without cry or warning,
a band of steel-clad horsemen broke forth with couched
spears. Charging at full run down upon them,
they overthrew three of the girl’s escort before
a blow could be struck in her defense. Her two
remaining guardians wheeled to meet the return attack,
and nobly did they acquit themselves, for it took
the entire eleven who were pitted against them to overcome
and slay the two.
In the melee, none had noticed the
girl, but presently one of her assailants, a little,
grim, gray man, discovered that she had put spurs to
her palfrey and escaped. Calling to his companions
he set out at a rapid pace in pursuit.
Reckless of the slippery road and
the blinding rain, Bertrade de Montfort urged her
mount into a wild run, for she had recognized the arms
of Peter of Colfax on the shields of several of the
attacking party.
Nobly, the beautiful Arab bent to
her call for speed. The great beasts of her
pursuers, bred in Normandy and Flanders, might have
been tethered in their stalls for all the chance they
had of overtaking the flying white steed that fairly
split the gray rain as lightning flies through the
clouds.
But for the fiendish cunning of the
little grim, gray man’s foresight, Bertrade
de Montfort would have made good her escape that day.
As it was, however, her fleet mount had carried her
but two hundred yards ere, in the midst of the dark
wood, she ran full upon a rope stretched across the
roadway between two trees.
As the horse fell, with a terrible
lunge, tripped by the stout rope, Bertrade de Montfort
was thrown far before him, where she lay, a little,
limp bedraggled figure, in the mud of the road.
There they found her. The little,
grim, gray man did not even dismount, so indifferent
was he to her fate; dead or in the hands of Peter of
Colfax, it was all the same to him. In either
event, his purpose would be accomplished, and Bertrade
de Montfort would no longer lure Norman of Torn from
the path he had laid out for him.
That such an eventuality threatened,
he knew from one Spizo the Spaniard, the single traitor
in the service of Norman of Torn, whose mean aid the
little grim, gray man had purchased since many months
to spy upon the comings and goings of the great outlaw.
The men of Peter of Colfax gathered
up the lifeless form of Bertrade de Montfort and placed
it across the saddle before one of their number.
“Come,” said the man called
Guy, “if there be life left in her, we must
hasten to Sir Peter before it be extinct.”
“I leave ye here,” said
the little old man. “My part of the business
is done.”
And so he sat watching them until
they had disappeared in the forest toward the castle
of Colfax.
Then he rode back to the scene of
the encounter where lay the five knights of Sir John
de Stutevill. Three were already dead, the other
two, sorely but not mortally wounded, lay groaning
by the roadside.
The little grim, gray man dismounted
as he came abreast of them and, with his long sword,
silently finished the two wounded men. Then,
drawing his dagger, he made a mark upon the dead foreheads
of each of the five, and mounting, rode rapidly toward
Torn.
“And if one fact be not enough,”
he muttered, “that mark upon the dead will quite
effectually stop further intercourse between the houses
of Torn and Leicester.”
Henry de Montfort, son of Simon, rode
fast and furious at the head of a dozen of his father’s
knights on the road to Stutevill.
Bertrade de Montfort was so long overdue
that the Earl and Princess Eleanor, his wife, filled
with grave apprehensions, had posted their oldest
son off to the castle of John de Stutevill to fetch
her home.
With the wind and rain at their backs,
the little party rode rapidly along the muddy road,
until late in the afternoon they came upon a white
palfrey standing huddled beneath a great oak, his
arched back toward the driving storm.
“By God,” cried De Montfort,
“tis my sister’s own Abdul. There
be something wrong here indeed.” But a
rapid search of the vicinity, and loud calls brought
no further evidence of the girl’s whereabouts,
so they pressed on toward Stutevill.
Some two miles beyond the spot where
the white palfrey had been found, they came upon the
dead bodies of the five knights who had accompanied
Bertrade from Stutevill.
Dismounting, Henry de Montfort examined
the bodies of the fallen men. The arms upon
shield and helm confirmed his first fear that these
had been Bertrade’s escort from Stutevill.
As he bent over them to see if he
recognized any of the knights, there stared up into
his face from the foreheads of the dead men the dreaded
sign, NT, scratched there with a dagger’s point.
“The curse of God be on him
!” cried De Montfort. “It be the
work of the Devil of Torn, my gentlemen,” he
said to his followers. “Come, we need no
further guide to our destination.” And,
remounting, the little party spurred back toward Torn.
When Bertrade de Montfort regained
her senses, she was in bed in a strange room, and
above her bent an old woman; a repulsive, toothless
old woman, whose smile was but a fangless snarl.
“Ho, ho !” she croaked.
“The bride waketh. I told My Lord that
it would take more than a tumble in the mud to kill
a De Montfort. Come, come, now, arise and clothe
thyself, for the handsome bridegroom canst scarce restrain
his eager desire to fold thee in his arms. Below
in the great hall he paces to and fro, the red blood
mantling his beauteous countenance.”
“Who be ye ?” cried Bertrade
de Montfort, her mind still dazed from the effects
of her fall. “Where am I ?” and then,
“O, Mon Dieu !” as she remembered the
events of the afternoon; and the arms of Colfax upon
the shields of the attacking party. In an instant
she realized the horror of her predicament; its utter
hopelessness.
Beast though he was, Peter of Colfax
stood high in the favor of the King; and the fact
that she was his niece would scarce aid her cause with
Henry, for it was more than counter-balanced by the
fact that she was the daughter of Simon de Montfort,
whom he feared and hated.
In the corridor without, she heard
the heavy tramp of approaching feet, and presently
a man’s voice at the door.
“Within there, Coll !
Hast the damsel awakened from her swoon ?”
“Yes, Sir Peter,” replied
the old woman, “I was but just urging her to
arise and clothe herself, saying that you awaited her
below.”
“Haste then, My Lady Bertrade,”
called the man, “no harm will be done thee if
thou showest the good sense I give thee credit for.
I will await thee in the great hall, or, if thou
prefer, wilt come to thee here.”
The girl paled, more in loathing and
contempt than in fear, but the tones of her answer
were calm and level.
“I will see thee below, Sir
Peter, anon,” and rising, she hastened to dress,
while the receding footsteps of the Baron diminished
down the stairway which led from the tower room in
which she was imprisoned.
The old woman attempted to draw her
into conversation, but the girl would not talk.
Her whole mind was devoted to weighing each possible
means of escape.
A half hour later, she entered the
great hall of the castle of Peter of Colfax.
The room was empty. Little change had been wrought
in the apartment since the days of Ethelwolf.
As the girl’s glance ranged the hall in search
of her jailer it rested upon the narrow, unglazed windows
beyond which lay freedom. Would she ever again
breathe God’s pure air outside these stifling
walls ? These grimy hateful walls ! Black
as the inky rafters and wainscot except for occasional
splotches a few shades less begrimed, where repairs
had been made. As her eyes fell upon the trophies
of war and chase which hung there her lips curled in
scorn, for she knew that they were acquisitions by
inheritance rather than by the personal prowess of
the present master of Colfax.
A single cresset lighted the chamber,
while the flickering light from a small wood fire
upon one of the two great hearths seemed rather to
accentuate the dim shadows of the place.
Bertrade crossed the room and leaned
against a massive oak table, blackened by age and
hard usage to the color of the beams above, dented
and nicked by the pounding of huge drinking horns
and heavy swords when wild and lusty brawlers had
been moved to applause by the lay of some wandering
minstrel, or the sterner call of their mighty chieftains
for the oath of fealty.
Her wandering eyes took in the dozen
benches and the few rude, heavy chairs which completed
the rough furnishings of this rough room, and she
shuddered. One little foot tapped sullenly upon
the disordered floor which was littered with a miscellany
of rushes interspread with such bones and scraps of
food as the dogs had rejected or overlooked.
But to none of these surroundings
did Bertrade de Montfort give but passing heed; she
looked for the man she sought that she might quickly
have the encounter over and learn what fate the future
held in store for her.
Her quick glance had shown her that
the room was quite empty, and that in addition to
the main doorway at the lower end of the apartment,
where she had entered, there was but one other door
leading from the hall. This was at one side,
and as it stood ajar she could see that it led into
a small room, apparently a bedchamber.
As she stood facing the main doorway,
a panel opened quietly behind her and directly back
of where the thrones had stood in past times.
From the black mouth of the aperture stepped Peter
of Colfax. Silently, he closed the panel after
him, and with soundless steps, advanced toward the
girl. At the edge of the raised dais he halted,
rattling his sword to attract her attention.
If his aim had been to unnerve her
by the suddenness and mystery of his appearance, he
failed signally, for she did not even turn her head
as she said:
“What explanation hast thou
to make, Sir Peter, for this base treachery against
thy neighbor’s daughter and thy sovereign’s
niece ?”
“When fond hearts be thwarted
by a cruel parent,” replied the pot-bellied
old beast in a soft and fawning tone, “love must
still find its way; and so thy gallant swain hath
dared the wrath of thy great father and majestic uncle,
and lays his heart at thy feet, O beauteous Bertrade,
knowing full well that thine hath been hungering after
it since we didst first avow our love to thy hard-hearted
sire. See, I kneel to thee, my dove !”
And with cracking joints the fat baron plumped down
upon his marrow bones.
Bertrade turned and as she saw him
her haughty countenance relaxed into a sneering smile.
“Thou art a fool, Sir Peter,”
she said, “and, at that, the worst species of
fool — an ancient fool. It is useless
to pursue thy cause, for I will have none of thee.
Let me hence, if thou be a gentleman, and no word
of what hath transpired shall ever pass my lips.
But let me go, ’tis all I ask, and it is useless
to detain me for I cannot give what you would have.
I do not love you, nor ever can I.”
Her first words had caused the red
of humiliation to mottle his already ruby visage to
a semblance of purple, and now, as he attempted to
rise with dignity, he was still further covered with
confusion by the fact that his huge stomach made it
necessary for him to go upon all fours before he could
rise, so that he got up much after the manner of a
cow, raising his stern high in air in a most ludicrous
fashion. As he gained his feet he saw the girl
turn her head from him to hide the laughter on her
face.
“Return to thy chamber,”
he thundered. “I will give thee until tomorrow
to decide whether thou wilt accept Peter of Colfax
as thy husband, or take another position in his household
which will bar thee for all time from the society
of thy kind.”
The girl turned toward him, the laugh
still playing on her lips.
“I will be wife to no buffoon;
to no clumsy old clown; to no debauched, degraded
parody of a man. And as for thy other rash threat,
thou hast not the guts to put thy wishes into deeds,
thou craven coward, for well ye know that Simon de
Montfort would cut out thy foul heart with his own
hand if he ever suspected thou wert guilty of speaking
of such to me, his daughter.” And Bertrade
de Montfort swept from the great hall, and mounted
to her tower chamber in the ancient Saxon stronghold
of Colfax.
The old woman kept watch over her
during the night and until late the following afternoon,
when Peter of Colfax summoned his prisoner before him
once more. So terribly had the old hag played
upon the girl’s fears that she felt fully certain
that the Baron was quite equal to his dire threat,
and so she had again been casting about for some means
of escape or delay.
The room in which she was imprisoned
was in the west tower of the castle, fully a hundred
feet above the moat, which the single embrasure overlooked.
There was, therefore, no avenue of escape in this
direction. The solitary door was furnished with
huge oaken bars, and itself composed of mighty planks
of the same wood, cross barred with iron.
If she could but get the old woman
out, thought Bertrade, she could barricade herself
within and thus delay, at least, her impending fate
in the hope that succor might come from some source.
But her most subtle wiles proved ineffectual in ridding
her, even for a moment, of her harpy jailer; and now
that the final summons had come, she was beside herself
for a lack of means to thwart her captor.
Her dagger had been taken from her,
but one hung from the girdle of the old woman and
this Bertrade determined to have.
Feigning trouble with the buckle of
her own girdle, she called upon the old woman to aid
her, and as the hag bent her head close to the girl’s
body to see what was wrong with the girdle clasp,
Bertrade reached quickly to her side and snatched
the weapon from its sheath. Quickly she sprang
back from the old woman who, with a cry of anger and
alarm, rushed upon her.
“Back !” cried the girl.
“Stand back, old hag, or thou shalt feel the
length of thine own blade.”
The woman hesitated and then fell
to cursing and blaspheming in a most horrible manner,
at the same time calling for help.
Bertrade backed to the door, commanding
the old woman to remain where she was, on pain of
death, and quickly dropped the mighty bars into place.
Scarcely had the last great bolt been slipped than
Peter of Colfax, with a dozen servants and men-at-arms,
were pounding loudly upon the outside.
“What’s wrong within, Coll,” cried
the Baron.
“The wench has wrested my dagger
from me and is murdering me,” shrieked the old
woman.
“An’ that I will truly
do, Peter of Colfax,” spoke Bertrade, “if
you do not immediately send for my friends to conduct
me from thy castle, for I will not step my foot from
this room until I know that mine own people stand
without.”
Peter of Colfax pled and threatened,
commanded and coaxed, but all in vain. So passed
the afternoon, and as darkness settled upon the castle
the Baron desisted from his attempts, intending to
starve his prisoner out.
Within the little room, Bertrade de
Montfort sat upon a bench guarding her prisoner, from
whom she did not dare move her eyes for a single second.
All that long night she sat thus, and when morning
dawned, it found her position unchanged, her tired
eyes still fixed upon the hag.
Early in the morning, Peter of Colfax
resumed his endeavors to persuade her to come out;
he even admitted defeat and promised her safe conduct
to her father’s castle, but Bertrade de Montfort
was not one to be fooled by his lying tongue.
“Then will I starve you out,” he cried
at length.
“Gladly will I starve in preference
to falling into thy foul hands,” replied the
girl. “But thy old servant here will starve
first, for she be very old and not so strong as I.
Therefore, how will it profit you to kill two and
still be robbed of thy prey ?”
Peter of Colfax entertained no doubt
but that his fair prisoner would carry out her threat
and so he set his men to work with cold chisels, axes
and saws upon the huge door.
For hours, they labored upon that
mighty work of defence, and it was late at night ere
they made a little opening large enough to admit a
hand and arm, but the first one intruded within the
room to raise the bars was drawn quickly back with
a howl of pain from its owner. Thus the keen
dagger in the girl’s hand put an end to all
hopes of entering without completely demolishing the
door.
To this work, the men without then
set themselves diligently while Peter of Colfax renewed
his entreaties, through the small opening they had
made. Bertrade replied but once.
“Seest thou this poniard ?”
she asked. “When that door falls, this
point enters my heart. There is nothing beyond
that door, with thou, poltroon, to which death in
this little chamber would not be preferable.”
As she spoke, she turned toward the
man she was addressing, for the first time during
all those weary, hideous hours removing her glance
from the old hag. It was enough. Silently,
but with the quickness of a tigress the old woman
was upon her back, one claw-like paw grasping the wrist
which held the dagger.
“Quick, My Lord !” she shrieked, “the
bolts, quick.”
Instantly Peter of Colfax ran his
arm through the tiny opening in the door and a second
later four of his men rushed to the aid of the old
woman.
Easily they wrested the dagger from
Bertrade’s fingers, and at the Baron’s
bidding, they dragged her to the great hall below.
As his retainers left the room at
his command, Peter of Colfax strode back and forth
upon the rushes which strewed the floor. Finally
he stopped before the girl standing rigid in the center
of the room.
“Hast come to thy senses yet,
Bertrade de Montfort ?” he asked angrily.
“I have offered you your choice; to be the
honored wife of Peter of Colfax, or, by force, his
mistress. The good priest waits without, what
be your answer now ?”
“The same as it has been these
past two days,” she replied with haughty scorn.
“The same that it shall always be. I will
be neither wife nor mistress to a coward; a hideous,
abhorrent pig of a man. I would die, it seems,
if I felt the touch of your hand upon me. You
do not dare to touch me, you craven. I, the
daughter of an earl, the niece of a king, wed to the
warty toad, Peter of Colfax !”
“Hold, chit !” cried the
Baron, livid with rage. “You have gone
too far. Enough of this; and you love me not
now, I shall learn you to love ere the sun rises.”
And with a vile oath he grasped the girl roughly by
the arm, and dragged her toward the little doorway
at the side of the room.