For three weeks after his meeting
with Bertrade de Montfort and his sojourn at the castle
of John de Stutevill, Norman of Torn was busy with
his wild horde in reducing and sacking the castle
of John de Grey, a royalist baron who had captured
and hanged two of the outlaw’s fighting men;
and never again after his meeting with the daughter
of the chief of the barons did Norman of Torn raise
a hand against the rebels or their friends.
Shortly after his return to Torn,
following the successful outcome of his expedition,
the watch upon the tower reported the approach of a
dozen armed knights. Norman sent Red Shandy
to the outer walls to learn the mission of the party,
for visitors seldom came to this inaccessible and unhospitable
fortress; and he well knew that no party of a dozen
knights would venture with hostile intent within the
clutches of his great band of villains.
The great red giant soon returned
to say that it was Henry de Montfort, oldest son of
the Earl of Leicester, who had come under a flag of
truce and would have speech with the master of Torn.
“Admit them, Shandy,”
commanded Norman of Torn, “I will speak with
them here.”
When the party, a few moments later,
was ushered into his presence it found itself facing
a mailed knight with drawn visor.
Henry de Montfort advanced with haughty
dignity until he faced the outlaw.
“Be ye Norman of Torn ?”
he asked. And, did he try to conceal the hatred
and loathing which he felt, he was poorly successful.
“They call me so,” replied
the visored knight. “And what may bring
a De Montfort after so many years to visit his old
neighbor ?”
“Well ye know what brings me,
Norman of Torn,” replied the young man.
“It is useless to waste words, and we cannot
resort to arms, for you have us entirely in your power.
Name your price and it shall be paid, only be quick
and let me hence with my sister.”
“What wild words be these, Henry
de Montfort ? Your sister ! What mean
you ?”
“Yes, my sister Bertrade, whom
you stole upon the highroad two days since, after
murdering the knights of John de Stutevill who were
fetching her home from a visit upon the Baron’s
daughter. We know that it was you for the foreheads
of the dead men bore your devil’s mark.”
“Shandy !” roared Norman
of Torn. “What means this
? Who has been upon the road, attacking women,
in my absence ? You were here and in charge
during my visit to my Lord de Grey. As you value
your hide, Shandy, the truth !”
“Since you laid me low in the
hut of the good priest, I have served you well, Norman
of Torn. You should know my loyalty by this time
and that never have I lied to you. No man of
yours has done this thing, nor is it the first time
that vile scoundrels have placed your mark upon their
dead that they might thus escape suspicion, themselves.”
“Henry de Montfort,” said
Norman of Torn, turning to his visitor, “we of
Torn bear no savory name, that I know full well, but
no man may say that we unsheath our swords against
women. Your sister is not here. I give
you the word of honor of Norman of Torn. Is
it not enough ?”
“They say you never lie,”
replied De Montfort. “Would to God I knew
who had done this thing, or which way to search for
my sister.”
Norman of Torn made no reply, his
thoughts were in wild confusion, and it was with difficulty
that he hid the fierce anxiety of his heart or his
rage against the perpetrators of this dastardly act
which tore his whole being.
In silence De Montfort turned and
left, nor had his party scarce passed the drawbridge
ere the castle of Torn was filled with hurrying men
and the noise and uproar of a sudden call to arms.
Some thirty minutes later, five hundred
iron-clad horses carried their mailed riders beneath
the portcullis of the grim pile, and Norman the Devil,
riding at their head, spurred rapidly in the direction
of the castle of Peter of Colfax.
The great troop, winding down the
rocky trail from Torn’s buttressed gates, presented
a picture of wild barbaric splendor.
The armor of the men was of every
style and metal from the ancient banded mail of the
Saxon to the richly ornamented plate armor of Milan.
Gold and silver and precious stones set in plumed
crest and breastplate and shield, and even in the
steel spiked chamfrons of the horses’ head armor
showed the rich loot which had fallen to the portion
of Norman of Torn’s wild raiders.
Fluttering pennons streamed from five
hundred lance points, and the gray banner of Torn,
with the black falcon’s wing, flew above each
of the five companies. The great linden wood
shields of the men were covered with gray leather
and, in the upper right hand corner of each, was the
black falcon’s wing. The surcoats of the
riders were also uniform, being of dark gray villosa
faced with black wolf skin, so that notwithstanding
the richness of the armor and the horse trappings,
there was a grim, gray warlike appearance to these
wild companies that comported well with their reputation.
Recruited from all ranks of society
and from every civilized country of Europe, the great
horde of Torn numbered in its ten companies serf and
noble; Britain, Saxon, Norman, Dane, German, Italian
and French, Scot, Pict and Irish.
Here birth caused no distinctions;
the escaped serf, with the gall marks of his brass
collar still visible about his neck, rode shoulder
to shoulder with the outlawed scion of a noble house.
The only requisites for admission to the troop were
willingness and ability to fight, and an oath to obey
the laws made by Norman of Torn.
The little army was divided into ten
companies of one hundred men, each company captained
by a fighter of proven worth and ability.
Our old friends Red Shandy, and John
and James Flory led the first three companies, the
remaining seven being under command of other seasoned
veterans of a thousand fights.
One Eye Kanty, owing to his early
trade, held the always important post of chief armorer,
while Peter the Hermit, the last of the five cut-throats
whom Norman of Torn had bested that day, six years
before, in the hut of Father Claude, had become majordomo
of the great castle of Torn, which post included also
the vital functions of quartermaster and commissary.
The old man of Torn attended to the
training of serf and squire in the art of war, for
it was ever necessary to fill the gaps made in the
companies, due to their constant encounters upon the
highroad and their battles at the taking of some feudal
castle; in which they did not always come off unscathed,
though usually victorious.
Today, as they wound west across the
valley, Norman of Torn rode at the head of the cavalcade,
which strung out behind him in a long column.
Above his gray steel armor, a falcon’s wing
rose from his crest. It was the insignia which
always marked him to his men in the midst of battle.
Where it waved might always be found the fighting
and the honors, and about it they were wont to rally.
Beside Norman of Torn rode the grim,
gray, old man, silent and taciturn; nursing his deep
hatred in the depths of his malign brain.
At the head of their respective companies
rode the five captains: Red Shandy; John Flory;
Edwild the Serf; Emilio, Count de Gropello of Italy;
and Sieur Ralph de la Campnee, of France.
The hamlets and huts which they passed
in the morning and early afternoon brought forth men,
women and children to cheer and wave God-speed to them;
but as they passed farther from the vicinity of Torn,
where the black falcon wing was known more by the
ferocity of its name than by the kindly deeds of the
great outlaw to the lowly of his neighborhood, they
saw only closed and barred doors with an occasional
frightened face peering from a tiny window.
It was midnight ere they sighted the
black towers of Colfax silhouetted against the starry
sky. Drawing his men into the shadows of the
forest a half mile from the castle, Norman of Torn
rode forward with Shandy and some fifty men to a point
as close as they could come without being observed.
Here they dismounted and Norman of Torn crept stealthily
forward alone.
Taking advantage of every cover, he
approached to the very shadows of the great gate without
being detected. In the castle, a light shone
dimly from the windows of the great hall, but no other
sign of life was apparent. To his intense surprise,
Norman of Torn found the drawbridge lowered and no
sign of watchmen at the gate or upon the walls.
As he had sacked this castle some
two years since, he was familiar with its internal
plan, and so he knew that through the scullery he could
reach a small antechamber above, which let directly
into the great hall.
And so it happened that, as Peter
of Colfax wheeled toward the door of the little room,
he stopped short in terror, for there before him stood
a strange knight in armor, with lowered visor and
drawn sword. The girl saw him too, and a look
of hope and renewed courage overspread her face.
“Draw !” commanded a low
voice in English, “unless you prefer to pray,
for you are about to die.”
“Who be ye, varlet ?”
cried the Baron. “Ho, John ! Ho,
Guy ! To the rescue, quick !” he shrieked,
and drawing his sword, he attempted to back quickly
toward the main doorway of the hall; but the man in
armor was upon him and forcing him to fight ere he
had taken three steps.
It had been short shrift for Peter
of Colfax that night had not John and Guy and another
of his henchmen rushed into the room with drawn swords.
“Ware ! Sir Knight,”
cried the girl, as she saw the three knaves rushing
to the aid of their master.
Turning to meet their assault, the
knight was forced to abandon the terror-stricken Baron
for an instant, and again he had made for the doorway
bent only on escape; but the girl had divined his intentions,
and running quickly to the entrance, she turned the
great lock and threw the key with all her might to
the far corner of the hall. In an instant she
regretted her act, for she saw that where she might
have reduced her rescuer’s opponents by at least
one, she had now forced the cowardly Baron to remain,
and nothing fights more fiercely than a cornered rat.
The knight was holding his own splendidly
with the three retainers, and for an instant Bertrade
de Montfort stood spell-bound by the exhibition of
swordsmanship she was witnessing.
Fighting the three alternately, in
pairs and again all at the same time, the silent knight,
though weighted by his heavy armor, forced them steadily
back; his flashing blade seeming to weave a net of
steel about them. Suddenly his sword stopped
just for an instant, stopped in the heart of one of
his opponents, and as the man lunged to the floor,
it was flashing again close to the breasts of the
two remaining men-at-arms.
Another went down less than ten seconds
later, and then the girl’s attention was called
to the face of the horrified Baron; Peter of Colfax
was moving — slowly and cautiously, he was
creeping, from behind, toward the visored knight,
and in his raised hand flashed a sharp dagger.
For an instant, the girl stood frozen
with horror, unable to move a finger or to cry out;
but only for an instant, and then, regaining control
of her muscles, she stooped quickly and, grasping
a heavy foot-stool, hurled it full at Peter of Colfax.
It struck him below the knees and
toppled him to the floor just as the knight’s
sword passed through the throat of his final antagonist.
As the Baron fell, he struck heavily
upon a table which supported the only lighted cresset
within the chamber. In an instant, all was darkness.
There was a rapid shuffling sound as of the scurrying
of rats and then the quiet of the tomb settled upon
the great hall.
“Are you safe and unhurt, my
Lady Bertrade ?” asked a grave English voice
out of the darkness.
“Quite, Sir Knight,” she replied, “and
you ?”
“Not a scratch, but where is our good friend
the Baron ?”
“He lay here upon the floor
but a moment since, and carried a thin long dagger
in his hand. Have a care, Sir Knight, he may
even now be upon you.”
The knight did not answer, but she
heard him moving boldly about the room. Soon
he had found another lamp and made a light. As
its feeble rays slowly penetrated the black gloom,
the girl saw the bodies of the three men-at-arms,
the overturned table and lamp, and the visored knight;
but Peter of Colfax was gone.
The knight perceived his absence at
the same time, but he only laughed a low, grim laugh.
“He will not go far, My Lady Bertrade,”
he said.
“How know you my name ?”
she asked. “Who may you be ? I do
not recognize your armor, and your breastplate bears
no arms.”
He did not answer at once and her
heart rose in her breast as it filled with the hope
that her brave rescuer might be the same Roger de Conde
who had saved her from the hirelings of Peter of Colfax
but a few short weeks since. Surely it was the
same straight and mighty figure, and there was the
marvelous swordplay as well. It must be he, and
yet Roger de Conde had spoken no English while this
man spoke it well, though, it was true, with a slight
French accent.
“My Lady Bertrade, I be Norman
of Torn,” said the visored knight with quiet
dignity.
The girl’s heart sank, and a
feeling of cold fear crept through her. For
years that name had been the symbol of fierce cruelty,
and mad hatred against her kind. Little children
were frightened into obedience by the vaguest hint
that the Devil of Torn would get them, and grown men
had come to whisper the name with grim, set lips.
“Norman of Torn !” she
whispered. “May God have mercy on my soul
!”
Beneath the visored helm, a wave of
pain and sorrow surged across the countenance of the
outlaw, and a little shudder, as of a chill of hopelessness,
shook his giant frame.
“You need not fear, My Lady,”
he said sadly. “You shall be in your father’s
castle of Leicester ere the sun marks noon. And
you will be safer under the protection of the hated
Devil of Torn than with your own mighty father, or
your royal uncle.”
“It is said that you never lie,
Norman of Torn,” spoke the girl, “and I
believe you, but tell me why you thus befriend a De
Montfort.”
“It is not for love of your
father or your brothers, nor yet hatred of Peter of
Colfax, nor neither for any reward whatsoever.
It pleases me to do as I do, that is all. Come.”
He led her in silence to the courtyard
and across the lowered drawbridge, to where they soon
discovered a group of horsemen, and in answer to a
low challenge from Shandy, Norman of Torn replied
that it was he.
“Take a dozen men, Shandy, and
search yon hellhole. Bring out to me, alive,
Peter of Colfax, and My Lady’s cloak and a palfrey
— and Shandy, when all is done as I say,
you may apply the torch ! But no looting, Shandy.”
Shandy looked in surprise upon his
leader, for the torch had never been a weapon of Norman
of Torn, while loot, if not always the prime object
of his many raids, was at least a very important consideration.
The outlaw noticed the surprised hesitation
of his faithful subaltern and signing him to listen,
said:
“Red Shandy, Norman of Torn
has fought and sacked and pillaged for the love of
it, and for a principle which was at best but a vague
generality. Tonight we ride to redress a wrong
done to My Lady Bertrade de Montfort, and that, Shandy,
is a different matter. The torch, Shandy, from
tower to scullery, but in the service of My Lady,
no looting.”
“Yes, My Lord,” answered
Shandy, and departed with his little detachment.
In a half hour he returned with a
dozen prisoners, but no Peter of Colfax.
“He has flown, My Lord,”
the big fellow reported, and indeed it was true.
Peter of Colfax had passed through the vaults beneath
his castle and, by a long subterranean passage, had
reached the quarters of some priests without the lines
of Norman of Torn. By this time, he was several
miles on his way to the coast and France; for he had
recognized the swordsmanship of the outlaw, and did
not care to remain in England and face the wrath of
both Norman of Torn and Simon de Montfort.
“He will return,” was
the outlaw’s only comment, when he had been fully
convinced that the Baron had escaped.
They watched until the castle had
burst into flames in a dozen places, the prisoners
huddled together in terror and apprehension, fully
expecting a summary and horrible death.
When Norman of Torn had assured himself
that no human power could now save the doomed pile,
he ordered that the march be taken up, and the warriors
filed down the roadway behind their leader and Bertrade
de Montfort, leaving their erstwhile prisoners sorely
puzzled but unharmed and free.
As they looked back, they saw the
heavens red with the great flames that sprang high
above the lofty towers. Immense volumes of dense
smoke rolled southward across the sky line.
Occasionally it would clear away from the burning
castle for an instant to show the black walls pierced
by their hundreds of embrasures, each lit up by the
red of the raging fire within. It was a gorgeous,
impressive spectacle, but one so common in those fierce,
wild days, that none thought it worthy of more than
a passing backward glance.
Varied emotions filled the breasts
of the several riders who wended their slow way down
the mud-slippery road. Norman of Torn was both
elated and sad. Elated that he had been in time
to save this girl who awakened such strange emotions
in his breast; sad that he was a loathesome thing in
her eyes. But that it was pure happiness just
to be near her, sufficed him for the time; of the
morrow, what use to think ! The little, grim,
gray, old man of Torn nursed the spleen he did not
dare vent openly, and cursed the chance that had sent
Henry de Montfort to Torn to search for his sister;
while the followers of the outlaw swore quietly over
the vagary which had brought them on this long ride
without either fighting or loot.
Bertrade de Montfort was but filled
with wonder that she should owe her life and honor
to this fierce, wild cut-throat who had sworn especial
hatred against her family, because of its relationship
to the house of Plantagenet. She could not fathom
it, and yet, he seemed fair spoken for so rough a
man; she wondered what manner of countenance might
lie beneath that barred visor.
Once the outlaw took his cloak from
its fastenings at his saddle’s cantel and threw
it about the shoulders of the girl, for the night air
was chilly, and again he dismounted and led her palfrey
around a bad place in the road, lest the beast might
slip and fall.
She thanked him in her courtly manner
for these services, but beyond that, no word passed
between them, and they came, in silence, about midday
within sight of the castle of Simon de Montfort.
The watch upon the tower was thrown
into confusion by the approach of so large a party
of armed men, so that, by the time they were in hailing
distance, the walls of the great structure were crowded
with fighting men.
Shandy rode ahead with a flag of truce,
and when he was beneath the castle walls Simon de
Montfort called forth:
“Who be ye and what your mission ? Peace
or war ?”
“It is Norman of Torn, come
in peace, and in the service of a De Montfort,”
replied Shandy. “He would enter with one
companion, my Lord Earl.”
“Dares Norman of Torn enter
the castle of Simon de Montfort — thinks
he that I keep a robbers’ roost !” cried
the fierce old warrior.
“Norman of Torn dares ride where
he will in all England,” boasted the red giant.
“Will you see him in peace, My Lord ?”
“Let him enter,” said
De Montfort, “but no knavery, now, we are a thousand
men here, well armed and ready fighters.”
Shandy returned to his master with
the reply, and together, Norman of Torn and Bertrade
de Montfort clattered across the drawbridge beneath
the portcullis of the castle of the Earl of Leicester,
brother-in-law of Henry III of England.
The girl was still wrapped in the
great cloak of her protector, for it had been raining,
so that she rode beneath the eyes of her father’s
men without being recognized. In the courtyard,
they were met by Simon de Montfort, and his sons Henry
and Simon.
The girl threw herself impetuously
from her mount, and, flinging aside the outlaw’s
cloak, rushed toward her astounded parent.
“What means this,” cried
De Montfort, “has the rascal offered you harm
or indignity ?”
“You craven liar,” cried
Henry de Montfort, “but yesterday you swore upon
your honor that you did not hold my sister, and I,
like a fool, believed.” And with his words,
the young man flung himself upon Norman of Torn with
drawn sword.
Quicker than the eye could see, the
sword of the visored knight flew from its scabbard,
and, with a single lightning-like move, sent the blade
of young De Montfort hurtling cross the courtyard;
and then, before either could take another step, Bertrade
de Montfort had sprung between them and placing a
hand upon the breastplate of the outlaw, stretched
forth the other with palm out-turned toward her kinsmen
as though to protect Norman of Torn from further assault.
“Be he outlaw or devil,”
she cried, “he is a brave and courteous knight,
and he deserves from the hands of the De Montforts
the best hospitality they can give, and not cold steel
and insults.” Then she explained briefly
to her astonished father and brothers what had befallen
during the past few days.
Henry de Montfort, with the fine chivalry
that marked him, was the first to step forward with
outstretched hand to thank Norman of Torn, and to ask
his pardon for his rude words and hostile act.
The outlaw but held up his open palm, as he said,
“Let the De Montforts think
well ere they take the hand of Norman of Torn.
I give not my hand except in friendship, and not for
a passing moment; but for life. I appreciate
your present feelings of gratitude, but let them not
blind you to the fact that I am still Norman the Devil,
and that you have seen my mark upon the brows of your
dead. I would gladly have your friendship, but
I wish it for the man, Norman of Torn, with all his
faults, as well as what virtues you may think him
to possess.”
“You are right, sir,”
said the Earl, “you have our gratitude and our
thanks for the service you have rendered the house
of Montfort, and ever during our lives you may command
our favors. I admire your bravery and your candor,
but while you continue the Outlaw of Torn, you may
not break bread at the table of De Montfort as a friend
would have the right to do.”
“Your speech is that of a wise
and careful man,” said Norman of Torn quietly.
“I go, but remember that from this day, I have
no quarrel with the House of Simon de Montfort, and
that should you need my arms, they are at your service,
a thousand strong. Goodbye.” But as
he turned to go, Bertrade de Montfort confronted him
with outstretched hand.
“You must take my hand in friendship,”
she said, “for, to my dying day, I must ever
bless the name of Norman of Torn because of the horror
from which he has rescued me.”
He took the little fingers in his
mailed hand, and bending upon one knee raised them
to his lips.
“To no other — woman,
man, king, God, or devil — has Norman of
Torn bent the knee. If ever you need him, My
Lady Bertrade, remember that his services are yours
for the asking.”
And turning, he mounted and rode in
silence from the courtyard of the castle of Leicester.
Without a backward glance, and with his five hundred
men at his back, Norman of Torn disappeared beyond
a turning in the roadway.
“A strange man,” said
Simon de Montfort, “both good and bad, but from
today, I shall ever believe more good than bad.
Would that he were other than he be, for his arm
would wield a heavy sword against the enemies of England,
an he could be persuaded to our cause.”
“Who knows,” said Henry
de Montfort, “but that an offer of friendship
might have won him to a better life. It seemed
that in his speech was a note of wistfulness.
I wish, father, that we had taken his hand.”