Norman of Torn did not return to the
castle of Leicester “in a few days,” nor
for many months. For news came to him that Bertrade
de Montfort had been posted off to France in charge
of her mother.
From now on, the forces of Torn were
employed in repeated attacks on royalist barons, encroaching
ever and ever southward until even Berkshire and Surrey
and Sussex felt the weight of the iron hand of the
outlaw.
Nearly a year had elapsed since that
day when he had held the fair form of Bertrade de
Montfort in his arms, and in all that time he had heard
no word from her.
He would have followed her to France
but for the fact that, after he had parted from her
and the intoxication of her immediate presence had
left his brain clear to think rationally, he had realized
the futility of his hopes, and he had seen that the
pressing of his suit could mean only suffering and
mortification for the woman he loved.
His better judgment told him that
she, on her part, when freed from the subtle spell
woven by the nearness and the newness of a first love,
would doubtless be glad to forget the words she had
spoken in the heat of a divine passion. He would
wait, then, until fate threw them together, and should
that ever chance, while she was still free, he would
let her know that Roger de Conde and the Outlaw of
Torn were one and the same.
If she wants me then, he thought,
but she will not. No it is impossible.
It is better that she marry her French prince than
to live, dishonored, the wife of a common highwayman;
for though she might love me at first, the bitterness
and loneliness of her life would turn her love to hate.
As the outlaw was sitting one day
in the little cottage of Father Claude, the priest
reverted to the subject of many past conversations;
the unsettled state of civil conditions in the realm,
and the stand which Norman of Torn would take when
open hostilities between King and baron were declared.
“It would seem that Henry,”
said the priest, “by his continued breaches of
both the spirit and letter of the Oxford Statutes,
is but urging the barons to resort to arms; and the
fact that he virtually forced Prince Edward to take
up arms against Humphrey de Bohun last fall, and to
carry the ravages of war throughout the Welsh border
provinces, convinces me that he be, by this time,
well equipped to resist De Montfort and his associates.”
“If that be the case,”
said Norman of Torn, “we shall have war and fighting
in real earnest ere many months.”
“And under which standard does
My Lord Norman expect to fight ?” asked Father
Claude.
“Under the black falcon’s wing,”
laughed he of Torn.
“Thou be indeed a close-mouthed
man, my son,” said the priest, smiling.
“Such an attribute helpeth make a great statesman.
With thy soldierly qualities in addition, my dear
boy, there be a great future for thee in the paths
of honest men. Dost remember our past talk ?”
“Yes, father, well; and often
have I thought on’t. I have one more duty
to perform here in England and then, it may be, that
I shall act on thy suggestion, but only on one condition.”
“What be that, my son ?”
“That wheresoere I go, thou
must go also. Thou be my best friend; in truth,
my father; none other have I ever known, for the little
old man of Torn, even though I be the product of his
loins, which I much mistrust, be no father to me.”
The priest sat looking intently at
the young man for many minutes before he spoke.
Without the cottage, a swarthy figure
skulked beneath one of the windows, listening to such
fragments of the conversation within as came to his
attentive ears. It was Spizo, the Spaniard.
He crouched entirely concealed by a great lilac bush,
which many times before had hid his traitorous form.
At length the priest spoke.
“Norman of Torn,” he said,
“so long as thou remain in England, pitting thy
great host against the Plantagenet King and the nobles
and barons of his realm, thou be but serving as the
cats-paw of another. Thyself hast said an hundred
times that thou knowst not the reason for thy hatred
against them. Thou be too strong a man to so
throw thy life uselessly away to satisfy the choler
of another.
“There be that of which I dare
not speak to thee yet and only may I guess and dream
of what I think, nor do I know whether I must hope
that it be false or true, but now, if ever, the time
hath come for the question to be settled. Thou
hast not told me in so many words, but I be an old
man and versed in reading true between the lines,
and so I know that thou lovest Bertrade de Montfort.
Nay, do not deny it. And now, what I would say
be this. In all England there lives no more
honorable man than Simon de Montfort, nor none who
could more truly decide upon thy future and thy past.
Thou may not understand of what I hint, but thou know
that thou may trust me, Norman of Torn.”
“Yea, even with my life and
honor, my father,” replied the outlaw.
“Then promise me, that with
the old man of Torn alone, thou wilt come hither when
I bidst thee and meet Simon de Montfort, and abide
by his decision should my surmises concerning thee
be correct. He will be the best judge of any
in England, save two who must now remain nameless.”
“I will come, Father, but it
must be soon for on the fourth day we ride south.”
“It shall be by the third day,
or not at all,” replied Father Claude, and Norman
of Torn, rising to leave, wondered at the moving leaves
of the lilac bush without the window, for there was
no breeze.
Spizo, the Spaniard, reached Torn
several minutes before the outlaw chief and had already
poured his tale into the ears of the little, grim,
gray, old man.
As the priest’s words were detailed
to him the old man of Torn paled in anger.
“The fool priest will upset
the whole work to which I have devoted near twenty
years,” he muttered, “if I find not the
means to quiet his half-wit tongue. Between
priest and petticoat, it be all but ruined now.
Well then, so much the sooner must I act, and I know
not but that now be as good a time as any. If
we come near enough to the King’s men on this
trip south, the gibbet shall have its own, and a Plantagenet
dog shall taste the fruits of his own tyranny,”
then glancing up and realizing that Spizo, the Spaniard,
had been a listener, the old man, scowling, cried:
“What said I, sirrah ? What didst hear
?”
“Naught, My Lord; thou didst
but mutter incoherently”, replied the Spaniard.
The old man eyed him closely.
“An did I more, Spizo, thou heardst naught but
muttering, remember.”
“Yes, My Lord.”
An hour later, the old man of Torn
dismounted before the cottage of Father Claude and
entered.
“I am honored,” said the priest, rising.
“Priest,” cried the old
man, coming immediately to the point, “Norman
of Torn tells me that thou wish him and me and Leicester
to meet here. I know not what thy purpose may
be, but for the boy’s sake, carry not out thy
design as yet. I may not tell thee my reasons,
but it be best that this meeting take place after
we return from the south.”
The old man had never spoken so fairly
to Father Claude before, and so the latter was quite
deceived and promised to let the matter rest until
later.
A few days after, in the summer of
1263, Norman of Torn rode at the head of his army
of outlaws through the county of Essex, down toward
London town. One thousand fighting men there
were, with squires and other servants, and five hundred
sumpter beasts to transport their tents and other impedimenta,
and bring back the loot.
But a small force of ailing men-at-arms,
and servants had been left to guard the castle of
Torn under the able direction of Peter the Hermit.
At the column’s head rode Norman
of Torn and the little grim, gray, old man; and behind
them, nine companies of knights, followed by the catapult
detachment; then came the sumpter beasts. Horsan
the Dane, with his company, formed the rear guard.
Three hundred yards in advance of the column rode
ten men to guard against surprise and ambuscades.
The pennons, and the banners and the
bugles; and the loud rattling of sword, and lance
and armor and iron-shod hoof carried to the eye and
ear ample assurance that this great cavalcade of iron
men was bent upon no peaceful mission.
All his captains rode today with Norman
of Torn. Beside those whom we have met, there
was Don Piedro Castro y Pensilo of Spain; Baron of
Cobarth of Germany, and Sir John Mandecote of England.
Like their leader, each of these fierce warriors
carried a great price upon his head, and the story
of the life of any one would fill a large volume with
romance, war, intrigue, treachery, bravery and death.
Toward noon one day, in the midst
of a beautiful valley of Essex, they came upon a party
of ten knights escorting two young women. The
meeting was at a turn in the road, so that the two
parties were upon each other before the ten knights
had an opportunity to escape with their fair wards.
“What the devil be this,”
cried one of the knights, as the main body of the
outlaw horde came into view, “the King’s
army or one of his foreign legions ?”
“It be Norman of Torn and his
fighting men,” replied the outlaw.
The faces of the knights blanched,
for they were ten against a thousand, and there were
two women with them.
“Who be ye ?” said the outlaw.
“I am Richard de Tany of Essex,”
said the oldest knight, he who had first spoken, “and
these be my daughter and her friend, Mary de Stutevill.
We are upon our way from London to my castle.
What would you of us ? Name your price, if
it can be paid with honor, it shall be paid; only let
us go our way in peace. We cannot hope to resist
the Devil of Torn, for we be but ten lances.
If ye must have blood, at least let the women go
unharmed.”
“My Lady Mary is an old friend,”
said the outlaw. “I called at her father’s
home but little more than a year since. We are
neighbors, and the lady can tell you that women are
safer at the hands of Norman of Torn than they might
be in the King’s palace.”
“Right he is,” spoke up
Lady Mary, “Norman of Torn accorded my mother,
my sister, and myself the utmost respect; though I
cannot say as much for his treatment of my father,”
she added, half smiling.
“I have no quarrel with you,
Richard de Tany,” said Norman of Torn.
“Ride on.”
The next day, a young man hailed the
watch upon the walls of the castle of Richard de Tany,
telling him to bear word to Joan de Tany that Roger
de Conde, a friend of her guest Lady Mary de Stutevill,
was without.
In a few moments, the great drawbridge
sank slowly into place and Norman of Torn trotted
into the courtyard.
He was escorted to an apartment where
Mary de Stutevill and Joan de Tany were waiting to
receive him. Mary de Stutevill greeted him as
an old friend, and the daughter of de Tany was no
less cordial in welcoming her friend’s friend
to the hospitality of her father’s castle.
“Are all your old friends and
neighbors come after you to Essex,” cried Joan
de Tany, laughingly, addressing Mary. “Today
it is Roger de Conde, yesterday it was the Outlaw
of Torn. Methinks Derby will soon be depopulated
unless you return quickly to your home.”
“I rather think it be for news
of another that we owe this visit from Roger de Conde,”
said Mary, smiling. “For I have heard tales,
and I see a great ring upon the gentleman’s
hand — a ring which I have seen before.”
Norman of Torn made no attempt to
deny the reason for his visit, but asked bluntly if
she heard aught of Bertrade de Montfort.
“Thrice within the year have
I received missives from her,” replied Mary.
“In the first two she spoke only of Roger de
Conde, wondering why he did not come to France after
her; but in the last she mentions not his name, but
speaks of her approaching marriage with Prince Philip.”
Both girls were watching the countenance
of Roger de Conde narrowly, but no sign of the sorrow
which filled his heart showed itself upon his face.
“I guess it be better so,”
he said quietly. “The daughter of a De
Montfort could scarcely be happy with a nameless adventurer,”
he added, a little bitterly.
“You wrong her, my friend,”
said Mary de Stutevill. “She loved you
and, unless I know not the friend of my childhood
as well as I know myself, she loves you yet; but Bertrade
de Montfort is a proud woman and what can you expect
when she hears no word from you for a year ?
Thought you that she would seek you out and implore
you to rescue her from the alliance her father has
made for her ?”
“You do not understand,”
he answered, “and I may not tell you; but I ask
that you believe me when I say that it was for her
own peace of mind, for her own happiness, that I did
not follow her to France. But, let us talk of
other things. The sorrow is mine and I would
not force it upon others. I cared only to know
that she is well, and, I hope, happy. It will
never be given to me to make her or any other woman
so. I would that I had never come into her life,
but I did not know what I was doing; and the spell
of her beauty and goodness was strong upon me, so
that I was weak and could not resist what I had never
known before in all my life — love.”
“You could not well be blamed,”
said Joan de Tany, generously. “Bertrade
de Montfort is all and even more than you have said;
it be a benediction simply to have known her.”
As she spoke, Norman of Torn looked
upon her critically for the first time, and he saw
that Joan de Tany was beautiful, and that when she
spoke, her face lighted with a hundred little changing
expressions of intelligence and character that cast
a spell of fascination about her. Yes, Joan de
Tany was good to look upon, and Norman of Torn carried
a wounded heart in his breast that longed for surcease
from its sufferings — for a healing balm
upon its hurts and bruises.
And so it came to pass that, for many
days, the Outlaw of Torn was a daily visitor at the
castle of Richard de Tany, and the acquaintance between
the man and the two girls ripened into a deep friendship,
and with one of them, it threatened even more.
Norman of Torn, in his ignorance of
the ways of women, saw only friendship in the little
acts of Joan de Tany. His life had been a hard
and lonely one. The only ray of brilliant and
warming sunshine that had entered it had been his
love for Bertrade de Montfort and hers for him.
His every thought was loyal to the
woman whom he knew was not for him, but he longed
for the companionship of his own kind and so welcomed
the friendship of such as Joan de Tany and her fair
guest. He did not dream that either looked upon
him with any warmer sentiment than the sweet friendliness
which was as new to him as love — how could
he mark the line between or foresee the terrible price
of his ignorance !
Mary de Stutevill saw and she thought
the man but fickle and shallow in matters of the heart
— many there were, she knew, who were thus.
She might have warned him had she known the truth,
but instead, she let things drift except for a single
word of warning to Joan de Tany.
“Be careful of thy heart, Joan,”
she said, “lest it be getting away from thee
into the keeping of one who seems to love no less quickly
than he forgets.”
The daughter of De Tany flushed.
“I am quite capable of safeguarding
my own heart, Mary de Stutevill,” she replied
warmly. “If thou covet this man thyself,
why, but say so. Do not think though that, because
thy heart glows in his presence, mine is equally susceptible.”
It was Mary’s turn now to show
offense, and a sharp retort was on her tongue when
suddenly she realized the folly of such a useless quarrel.
Instead she put her arms about Joan and kissed her.
“I do not love him,” she
said, “and I be glad that you do not, for I know
that Bertrade does, and that but a short year since,
he swore undying love for her. Let us forget
that we have spoken on the subject.”
It was at this time that the King’s
soldiers were harassing the lands of the rebel barons,
and taking a heavy toll in revenge for their stinging
defeat at Rochester earlier in the year, so that it
was scarcely safe for small parties to venture upon
the roadways lest they fall into the hands of the
mercenaries of Henry III.
Not even were the wives and daughters
of the barons exempt from the attacks of the royalists;
and it was no uncommon occurrence to find them suffering
imprisonment, and something worse, at the hands of
the King’s supporters.
And in the midst of these alarms,
it entered the willful head of Joan de Tany that she
wished to ride to London town and visit the shops of
the merchants.
While London itself was solidly for
the barons and against the King’s party, the
road between the castle of Richard de Tany and the
city of London was beset with many dangers.
“Why,” cried the girl’s
mother in exasperation, “between robbers and
royalists and the Outlaw of Torn, you would not be
safe if you had an army to escort you.”
“But then, as I have no army,”
retorted the laughing girl, “if you reason by
your own logic, I shall be indeed quite safe.”
And when Roger de Conde attempted
to dissuade her, she taunted him with being afraid
of meeting with the Devil of Torn, and told him that
he might remain at home and lock himself safely in
her mother’s pantry.
And so, as Joan de Tany was a spoiled
child, they set out upon the road to London; the two
girls with a dozen servants and knights; and Roger
de Conde was of the party.
At the same time a grim, gray, old
man dispatched a messenger from the outlaw’s
camp; a swarthy fellow, disguised as a priest, whose
orders were to proceed to London, and when he saw
the party of Joan de Tany, with Roger de Conde, enter
the city, he was to deliver the letter he bore to the
captain of the gate.
The letter contained this brief message:
“The tall knight in gray with
closed helm is Norman of Torn,” and was unsigned.
All went well and Joan was laughing
merrily at the fears of those who had attempted to
dissuade her when, at a cross road, they discovered
two parties of armed men approaching from opposite
directions. The leader of the nearer party spurred
forward to intercept the little band, and, reining
in before them, cried brusquely,
“Who be ye ?”
“A party on a peaceful mission
to the shops of London,” replied Norman of Torn.
“I asked not your mission,”
cried the fellow. “I asked, who be ye ?
Answer, and be quick about it.”
“I be Roger de Conde, gentleman
of France, and these be my sisters and servants,”
lied the outlaw, “and were it not that the ladies
be with me, your answer would be couched in steel,
as you deserve for your boorish insolence.”
“There be plenty of room and
time for that even now, you dog of a French coward,”
cried the officer, couching his lance as he spoke.
Joan de Tany was sitting her horse
where she could see the face of Roger de Conde, and
it filled her heart with pride and courage as she saw
and understood the little smile of satisfaction that
touched his lips as he heard the man’s challenge
and lowered the point of his own spear.
Wheeling their horses toward one another,
the two combatants, who were some ninety feet apart,
charged at full tilt. As they came together the
impact was so great that both horses were nearly overturned
and the two powerful war lances were splintered into
a hundred fragments as each struck the exact center
of his opponent’s shield. Then, wheeling
their horses and throwing away the butts of their
now useless lances, De Conde and the officer advanced
with drawn swords.
The fellow made a most vicious return
assault upon De Conde, attempting to ride him down
in one mad rush, but his thrust passed harmlessly from
the tip of the outlaw’s sword, and as the officer
wheeled back to renew the battle, they settled down
to fierce combat, their horses wheeling and turning
shoulder to shoulder.
The two girls sat rigid in their saddles
watching the encounter, the eyes of Joan de Tany alight
with the fire of battle as she followed every move
of the wondrous swordplay of Roger de Conde.
He had not even taken the precaution
to lower his visor, and the grim and haughty smile
that played upon his lips spoke louder than many words
the utter contempt in which he held the sword of his
adversary. And as Joan de Tany watched, she
saw the smile suddenly freeze to a cold, hard line,
and the eyes of the man narrow to mere slits, and
her woman’s intuition read the death warrant
of the King’s officer ere the sword of the outlaw
buried itself in his heart.
The other members of the two bodies
of royalist soldiers had sat spellbound as they watched
the battle, but now, as their leader’s corpse
rolled from the saddle, they spurred furiously in
upon De Conde and his little party.
The Baron’s men put up a noble
fight, but the odds were heavy and even with the mighty
arm of Norman of Torn upon their side the outcome was
apparent from the first.
Five swords were flashing about the
outlaw, but his blade was equal to the thrust and
one after another of his assailants crumpled up in
their saddles as his leaping point found their vitals.
Nearly all of the Baron’s men
were down, when one, an old servitor, spurred to the
side of Joan de Tany and Mary de Stutevill.
“Come, my ladies,” he
cried, “quick and you may escape. They
be so busy with the battle that they will never notice.”
“Take the Lady Mary, John,”
cried Joan, “I brought Roger de Conde to this
pass against the advice of all and I remain with him
to the end.”
“But, My Lady — ” cried John.
“But nothing, sirrah !”
she interrupted sharply. “Do as you are
bid. Follow my Lady Mary, and see that she comes
to my father’s castle in safety,” and
raising her riding whip, she struck Mary’s palfrey
across the rump so that the animal nearly unseated
his fair rider as he leaped frantically to one side
and started madly up the road down which they had
come.
“After her, John,” commanded
Joan peremptorily, and see that you turn not back
until she be safe within the castle walls; then you
may bring aid.”
The old fellow had been wont to obey
the imperious little Lady Joan from her earliest childhood,
and the habit was so strong upon him that he wheeled
his horse and galloped after the flying palfrey of
the Lady Mary de Stutevill.
As Joan de Tany turned again to the
encounter before her, she saw fully twenty men surrounding
Roger de Conde, and while he was taking heavy toll
of those before him, he could not cope with the men
who attacked him from behind; and even as she looked,
she saw a battle axe fall full upon his helm, and
his sword drop from his nerveless fingers as his lifeless
body rolled from the back of Sir Mortimer to the battle-tramped
clay of the highroad.
She slid quickly from her palfrey
and ran fearlessly toward his prostrate form, reckless
of the tangled mass of snorting, trampling, steel-clad
horses, and surging fighting-men that surrounded him.
And well it was for Norman of Torn that this brave
girl was there that day, for even as she reached his
side, the sword point of one of the soldiers was at
his throat for the coup de grace.
With a cry, Joan de Tany threw herself
across the outlaw’s body, shielding him as best
she could from the threatening sword.
Cursing loudly, the soldier grasped
her roughly by the arm to drag her from his prey,
but at this juncture, a richly armored knight galloped
up and drew rein beside the party.
The newcomer was a man of about forty-five
or fifty; tall, handsome, black-mustached and with
the haughty arrogance of pride most often seen upon
the faces of those who have been raised by unmerited
favor to positions of power and affluence.
He was John de Fulm, Earl of Buckingham,
a foreigner by birth and for years one of the King’s
favorites; the bitterest enemy of De Montfort and the
barons.
“What now ?” he cried. “What
goes on here ?”
The soldiers fell back, and one of them replied:
“A party of the King’s
enemies attacked us, My Lord Earl, but we routed them,
taking these two prisoners.”
“Who be ye ?” he said,
turning toward Joan who was kneeling beside De Conde,
and as she raised her head, “My God ! The
daughter of De Tany ! a noble prize indeed my men.
And who be the knight ?”
“Look for yourself, My Lord
Earl,” replied the girl removing the helm, which
she had been unlacing from the fallen man.
“Edward ?” he ejaculated.
“But no, it cannot be, I did but yesterday leave
Edward in Dover.”
“I know not who he be,”
said Joan de Tany, “except that he be the most
marvelous fighter and the bravest man it has ever been
given me to see. He called himself Roger de
Conde, but I know nothing of him other than that he
looks like a prince, and fights like a devil.
I think he has no quarrel with either side, My Lord,
and so, as you certainly do not make war on women,
you will let us go our way in peace as we were when
your soldiers wantonly set upon us.”
“A De Tany, madam, were a great
and valuable capture in these troublous times,”
replied the Earl, “and that alone were enough
to necessitate my keeping you; but a beautiful De
Tany is yet a different matter and so I will grant
you at least one favor. I will not take you to
the King, but a prisoner you shall be in mine own
castle for I am alone, and need the cheering company
of a fair and loving lady.”
The girl’s head went high as
she looked the Earl full in the eye.
“Think you, John de Fulm, Earl
of Buckingham, that you be talking to some comely
scullery maid ? Do you forget that my house is
honored in England, even though it does not share
the King’s favors with his foreign favorites,
and you owe respect to a daughter of a De Tany ?”
“All be fair in war, my beauty,”
replied the Earl. “Egad,” he continued,
“methinks all would be fair in hell were they
like unto you. It has been some years since
I have seen you and I did not know the old fox Richard
de Tany kept such a package as this hid in his grimy
old castle.”
“Then you refuse to release us ?” said
Joan de Tany.
“Let us not put it thus harshly,”
countered the Earl. “Rather let us say
that it be so late in the day, and the way so beset
with dangers that the Earl of Buckingham could not
bring himself to expose the beautiful daughter of
his old friend to the perils of the road, and so —
“
“Let us have an end to such
foolishness,” cried the girl. “I
might have expected naught better from a turncoat
foreign knave such as thee, who once joined in the
councils of De Montfort, and then betrayed his friends
to curry favor with the King.”
The Earl paled with rage, and pressed
forward as though to strike the girl, but thinking
better of it, he turned to one of the soldiers, saying:
“Bring the prisoner with you.
If the man lives bring him also. I would learn
more of this fellow who masquerades in the countenance
of a crown prince.”
And turning, he spurred on towards
the neighboring castle of a rebel baron which had
been captured by the royalists, and was now used as
headquarters by De Fulm.