Some hours later, fifty men followed
Norman of Torn on foot through the ravine below the
castle where John de Fulm, Earl of Buckingham, had
his headquarters; while nearly a thousand more lurked
in the woods before the grim pile.
Under cover of the tangled shrubbery,
they crawled unseen to the little door through which
Joan de Tany had led him the night before. Following
the corridors and vaults beneath the castle, they came
to the stone stairway, and mounted to the passage
which led to the false panel that had given the two
fugitives egress.
Slipping the spring lock, Norman of
Torn entered the apartment followed closely by his
henchmen. On they went, through apartment after
apartment, but no sign of the Earl or his servitors
rewarded their search, and it was soon apparent that
the castle was deserted.
As they came forth into the courtyard,
they descried an old man basking in the sun, upon
a bench. The sight of them nearly caused the
old fellow to die of fright, for to see fifty armed
men issue from the untenanted halls was well reckoned
to blanch even a braver cheek.
When Norman of Torn questioned him,
he learned that De Fulm had ridden out early in the
day bound for Dover, where Prince Edward then was.
The outlaw knew it would be futile to pursue him,
but yet, so fierce was his anger against this man,
that he ordered his band to mount, and spurring to
their head, he marched through Middlesex, and crossing
the Thames above London, entered Surrey late the same
afternoon.
As they were going into camp that
night in Kent, midway between London and Rochester,
word came to Norman of Torn that the Earl of Buckingham,
having sent his escort on to Dover, had stopped to
visit the wife of a royalist baron, whose husband
was with Prince Edward’s forces.
The fellow who gave this information
was a servant in my lady’s household who held
a grudge against his mistress for some wrong she had
done him. When, therefore, he found that these
grim men were searching for De Fulm, he saw a way
to be revenged upon his mistress.
“How many swords be there at
the castle ?” asked Norman of Torn.
“Scarce a dozen, barring the
Earl of Buckingham,” replied the knave; “and,
furthermore, there be a way to enter, which I may show
you, My Lord, so that you may, unseen, reach the apartment
where My Lady and the Earl be supping.”
“Bring ten men, beside yourself,
Shandy,” commanded Norman of Torn. “We
shall pay a little visit upon our amorous friend, My
Lord, the Earl of Buckingham.”
Half an hour’s ride brought
them within sight of the castle. Dismounting,
and leaving their horses with one of the men, Norman
of Torn advanced on foot with Shandy and the eight
others, close in the wake of the traitorous servant.
The fellow led them to the rear of
the castle, where, among the brush, he had hidden
a rude ladder, which, when tilted, spanned the moat
and rested its farther end upon a window ledge some
ten feet above the ground.
“Keep the fellow here till last,
Shandy,” said the outlaw, “till all be
in, an’ if there be any signs of treachery,
stick him through the gizzard — death thus
be slower and more painful.”
So saying, Norman of Torn crept boldly
across the improvised bridge, and disappeared within
the window beyond. One by one the band of cut-throats
passed through the little window, until all stood within
the castle beside their chief; Shandy coming last
with the servant.
“Lead me quietly, knave, to
the room where My Lord sups,” said Norman of
Torn. “You, Shandy, place your men where
they can prevent my being interrupted.”
Following a moment or two after Shandy
came another figure stealthily across the ladder and,
as Norman of Torn and his followers left the little
room, this figure pushed quietly through the window
and followed the great outlaw down the unlighted corridor.
A moment later, My Lady of Leybourn
looked up from her plate upon the grim figure of an
armored knight standing in the doorway of the great
dining hall.
“My Lord Earl !” she cried. “Look
! Behind you.”
And as the Earl of Buckingham glanced
behind him , he overturned the bench upon which he
sat in his effort to gain his feet; for My Lord Earl
of Buckingham had a guilty conscience.
The grim figure raised a restraining
hand, as the Earl drew his sword.
“A moment, My Lord,” said a low voice
in perfect French.
“Who are you ?” cried the lady.
“I be an old friend of My Lord, here; but let
me tell you a little story.
“In a grim old castle in Essex,
only last night, a great lord of England held by force
the beautiful daughter of a noble house and, when she
spurned his advances, he struck her with his clenched
fist upon her fair face, and with his brute hands
choked her. And in that castle also was a despised
and hunted outlaw, with a price upon his head, for
whose neck the hempen noose has been yawning these
many years. And it was this vile person who
came in time to save the young woman from the noble
flower of knighthood that would have ruined her young
life.
“The outlaw wished to kill the
knight, but many men-at-arms came to the noble’s
rescue, and so the outlaw was forced to fly with the
girl lest he be overcome by numbers, and the girl
thus fall again into the hands of her tormentor.
“But this crude outlaw was not
satisfied with merely rescuing the girl, he must needs
mete out justice to her noble abductor and collect
in full the toll of blood which alone can atone for
the insult and violence done her.
“My Lady, the young girl was
Joan de Tany; the noble was My Lord the Earl of Buckingham;
and the outlaw stands before you to fulfill the duty
he has sworn to do. En garde, My Lord !”
The encounter was short, for Norman
of Torn had come to kill, and he had been looking
through a haze of blood for hours — in fact
every time he had thought of those brutal fingers
upon the fair throat of Joan de Tany and of the cruel
blow that had fallen upon her face.
He showed no mercy, but backed the
Earl relentlessly into a corner of the room, and when
he had him there where he could escape in no direction,
he drove his blade so deep through his putrid heart
that the point buried itself an inch in the oak panel
beyond.
Claudia Leybourn sat frozen with horror
at the sight she was witnessing, and, as Norman of
Torn wrenched his blade from the dead body before him
and wiped it on the rushes of the floor, she gazed
in awful fascination while he drew his dagger and
made a mark upon the forehead of the dead nobleman.
“Outlaw or Devil,” said
a stern voice behind them, “Roger Leybourn owes
you his friendship for saving the honor of his home.”
Both turned to discover a mail-clad
figure standing in the doorway where Norman of Torn
had first appeared.
“Roger !” shrieked Claudia Leybourn, and
swooned.
“Who be you ?” continued the master of
Leybourn addressing the outlaw.
For answer Norman of Torn pointed
to the forehead of the dead Earl of Buckingham, and
there Roger Leybourn saw, in letters of blood, NT.
The Baron advanced with outstretched hand.
“I owe you much. You have
saved my poor, silly wife from this beast, and Joan
de Tany is my cousin, so I am doubly beholden to you,
Norman of Torn.”
The outlaw pretended that he did not see the hand.
“You owe me nothing, Sir Roger,
that may not be paid by a good supper. I have
eaten but once in forty-eight hours.”
The outlaw now called to Shandy and
his men, telling them to remain on watch, but to interfere
with no one within the castle.
He then sat at the table with Roger
Leybourn and his lady, who had recovered from her
swoon, and behind them on the rushes of the floor lay
the body of De Fulm in a little pool of blood.
Leybourn told them that he had heard
that De Fulm was at his home, and had hastened back;
having been in hiding about the castle for half an
hour before the arrival of Norman of Torn, awaiting
an opportunity to enter unobserved by the servants.
It was he who had followed across the ladder after
Shandy.
The outlaw spent the night at the
castle of Roger Leybourn; for the first time within
his memory a welcomed guest under his true name at
the house of a gentleman.
The following morning, he bade his
host goodbye, and returning to his camp started on
his homeward march toward Torn.
Near midday, as they were approaching
the Thames near the environs of London, they saw a
great concourse of people hooting and jeering at a
small party of gentlemen and gentlewomen.
Some of the crowd were armed, and
from very force of numbers were waxing brave to lay
violent hands upon the party. Mud and rocks and
rotten vegetables were being hurled at the little
cavalcade, many of them barely missing the women of
the party.
Norman of Torn waited to ask no questions,
but spurring into the thick of it laid right and left
of him with the flat of his sword, and his men, catching
the contagion of it, swarmed after him until the whole
pack of attacking ruffians were driven into the Thames.
And then, without a backward glance
at the party he had rescued, he continued on his march
toward the north.
The little party sat upon their horses
looking in wonder after the retreating figures of
their deliverers. Then one of the ladies turned
to a knight at her side with a word of command and
an imperious gesture toward the fast disappearing
company. He, thus addressed, put spurs to his
horse, and rode at a rapid gallop after the outlaw’s
troop. In a few moments he had overtaken them
and reined up beside Norman of Torn.
“Hold, Sir Knight,” cried
the gentleman, “the Queen would thank you in
person for your brave defence of her.”
Ever keen to see the humor of a situation,
Norman of Torn wheeled his horse and rode back with
the Queen’s messenger.
As he faced Her Majesty, the Outlaw
of Torn bent low over his pommel.
“You be a strange knight that
thinks so lightly on saving a queen’s life that
you ride on without turning your head, as though you
had but driven a pack of curs from annoying a stray
cat,” said the Queen.
“I drew in the service of a
woman, Your Majesty, not in the service of a queen.”
“What now ! Wouldst even
belittle the act which we all witnessed ? The
King, my husband, shall reward thee, Sir Knight, if
you but tell me your name.”
“If I told my name, methinks
the King would be more apt to hang me,” laughed
the outlaw. “I be Norman of Torn.”
The entire party looked with startled
astonishment upon him, for none of them had ever seen
this bold raider whom all the nobility and gentry of
England feared and hated.
“For lesser acts than that which
thou hast just performed, the King has pardoned men
before,” replied Her Majesty. “But
raise your visor, I would look upon the face of so
notorious a criminal who can yet be a gentleman and
a loyal protector of his queen.”
“They who have looked upon my
face, other than my friends,” replied Norman
of Torn quietly, “have never lived to tell what
they saw beneath this visor, and as for you, Madame,
I have learned within the year to fear it might mean
unhappiness to you to see the visor of the Devil of
Torn lifted from his face.” Without another
word he wheeled and galloped back to his little army.
“The puppy, the insolent puppy,”
cried Eleanor of England, in a rage.
And so the Outlaw of Torn and his
mother met and parted after a period of twenty years.
Two days later, Norman of Torn directed
Red Shandy to lead the forces of Torn from their Essex
camp back to Derby. The numerous raiding parties
which had been constantly upon the road during the
days they had spent in this rich district had loaded
the extra sumpter beasts with rich and valuable booty
and the men, for the time satiated with fighting and
loot, turned their faces toward Torn with evident
satisfaction.
The outlaw was speaking to his captains
in council; at his side the old man of Torn.
“Ride by easy stages, Shandy,
and I will overtake you by tomorrow morning.
I but ride for a moment to the castle of De Tany on
an errand, and, as I shall stop there but a few moments,
I shall surely join you tomorrow.”
“Do not forget, My Lord,”
said Edwild the Serf, a great yellow-haired Saxon
giant, “that there be a party of the King’s
troops camped close by the road which branches to
Tany.”
“I shall give them plenty of
room,” replied Norman of Torn. “My
neck itcheth not to be stretched,” and he laughed
and mounted.
Five minutes after he had cantered
down the road from camp, Spizo the Spaniard, sneaking
his horse unseen into the surrounding forest, mounted
and spurred rapidly after him. The camp, in the
throes of packing refractory, half broken sumpter
animals, and saddling their own wild mounts, did not
notice his departure. Only the little grim, gray,
old man knew that he had gone, or why, or whither.
That afternoon, as Roger de Conde
was admitted to the castle of Richard de Tany and
escorted to a little room where he awaited the coming
of the Lady Joan, a swarthy messenger handed a letter
to the captain of the King’s soldiers camped
a few miles south of Tany.
The officer tore open the seal as
the messenger turned and spurred back in the direction
from which he had come.
And this was what he read:
Norman of Torn is now at the castle of Tany, without
escort.
Instantly the call “to arms”
and “mount” sounded through the camp and,
in five minutes, a hundred mercenaries galloped rapidly
toward the castle of Richard de Tany, in the visions
of their captain a great reward and honor and preferment
for the capture of the mighty outlaw who was now almost
within his clutches.
Three roads meet at Tany; one from
the south along which the King’s soldiers were
now riding; one from the west which had guided Norman
of Torn from his camp to the castle; and a third which
ran northwest through Cambridge and Huntingdon toward
Derby.
All unconscious of the rapidly approaching
foes, Norman of Torn waited composedly in the anteroom
for Joan de Tany.
Presently she entered, clothed in
the clinging house garment of the period; a beautiful
vision, made more beautiful by the suppressed excitement
which caused the blood to surge beneath the velvet
of her cheek, and her breasts to rise and fall above
her fast beating heart.
She let him take her fingers in his
and raise them to his lips, and then they stood looking
into each other’s eyes in silence for a long
moment.
“I do not know how to tell you
what I have come to tell,” he said sadly.
“I have not meant to deceive you to your harm,
but the temptation to be with you and those whom you
typify must be my excuse. I — ” He
paused. It was easy to tell her that he was the
Outlaw of Torn, but if she loved him, as he feared,
how was he to tell her that he loved only Bertrade
de Montfort ?
“You need tell me nothing,”
interrupted Joan de Tany. “I have guessed
what you would tell me, Norman of Torn. ’The
spell of moonlight and adventure is no longer upon
us’ — those are your own words, and
still I am glad to call you friend.”
The little emphasis she put upon the
last word bespoke the finality of her decision that
the Outlaw of Torn could be no more than friend to
her.
“It is best,” he replied,
relieved that, as he thought, she felt no love for
him now that she knew him for what he really was.
“Nothing good could come to such as you, Joan,
if the Devil of Torn could claim more of you than
friendship; and so I think that for your peace of mind
and for my own, we will let it be as though you had
never known me. I thank you that you have not
been angry with me. Remember me only to think
that in the hills of Derby, a sword is at your service,
without reward and without price. Should you
ever need it, Joan, tell me that you will send for
me — wilt promise me that, Joan ?”
“I promise, Norman of Torn.”
“Farewell,” he said, and
as he again kissed her hand he bent his knee to the
ground in reverence. Then he rose to go, pressing
a little packet into her palm. Their eyes met,
and the man saw, in that brief instant, deep in the
azure depths of the girl’s that which tumbled
the structure of his new-found complacency about his
ears.
As he rode out into the bright sunlight
upon the road which led northwest toward Derby, Norman
of Torn bowed his head in sorrow, for he realized two
things. One was that the girl he had left still
loved him, and that some day, mayhap tomorrow, she
would suffer because she had sent him away; and the
other was that he did not love her, that his heart
was locked in the fair breast of Bertrade de Montfort.
He felt himself a beast that he had
allowed his loneliness and the aching sorrow of his
starved, empty heart to lead him into this girl’s
life. That he had been new to women and newer
still to love did not permit him to excuse himself,
and a hundred times he cursed his folly and stupidity,
and what he thought was fickleness.
But the unhappy affair had taught
him one thing for certain: to know without question
what love was, and that the memory of Bertrade de
Montfort’s lips would always be more to him than
all the allurements possessed by the balance of the
women of the world, no matter how charming, or how
beautiful.
Another thing, a painful thing he
had learned from it, too, that the attitude of Joan
de Tany, daughter of an old and noble house, was but
the attitude which the Outlaw of Torn must expect
from any good woman of her class; what he must expect
from Bertrade de Montfort when she learned that Roger
de Conde was Norman of Torn.
The outlaw had scarce passed out of
sight upon the road to Derby ere the girl, who still
stood in an embrasure of the south tower, gazing with
strangely drawn, sad face up the road which had swallowed
him, saw a body of soldiers galloping rapidly toward
Tany from the south.
The King’s banner waved above
their heads, and intuitively, Joan de Tany knew for
whom they sought at her father’s castle.
Quickly she hastened to the outer barbican that it
might be she who answered their hail rather than one
of the men-at-arms on watch there.
She had scarcely reached the ramparts
of the outer gate ere the King’s men drew rein
before the castle.
In reply to their hail, Joan de Tany asked their mission.
“We seek the outlaw, Norman
of Torn, who hides now within this castle,”
replied the officer.
“There be no outlaw here,”
replied the girl, “but, if you wish, you may
enter with half a dozen men and search the castle.”
This the officer did and, when he
had assured himself that Norman of Torn was not within,
an hour had passed, and Joan de Tany felt certain that
the Outlaw of Torn was too far ahead to be caught
by the King’s men; so she said:
“There was one here just before
you came who called himself though by another name
than Norman of Torn. Possibly it is he ye seek.”
“Which way rode he ?” cried the officer.
“Straight toward the west by
the middle road,” lied Joan de Tany. And,
as the officer hurried from the castle and, with his
men at his back, galloped furiously away toward the
west, the girl sank down upon a bench, pressing her
little hands to her throbbing temples.
Then she opened the packet which Norman
of Torn had handed her, and within found two others.
In one of these was a beautiful jeweled locket, and
on the outside were the initials JT, and on the inside
the initials NT; in the other was a golden hair ornament
set with precious stones, and about it was wound a
strand of her own silken tresses.
She looked long at the little trinkets
and then, pressing them against her lips, she threw
herself face down upon an oaken bench, her lithe young
form racked with sobs.
She was indeed but a little girl chained
by the inexorable bonds of caste to a false ideal.
Birth and station spelled honor to her, and honor,
to the daughter of an English noble, was a mightier
force even than love.
That Norman of Torn was an outlaw
she might have forgiven, but that he was, according
to report, a low fellow of no birth placed an impassable
barrier between them.
For hours the girl lay sobbing upon
the bench, whilst within her raged the mighty battle
of the heart against the head.
Thus her mother found her, and kneeling
beside her, and with her arms about the girl’s
neck, tried to soothe her and to learn the cause of
her sorrow. Finally it came, poured from the
flood gates of a sorrowing heart; that wave of bitter
misery and hopelessness which not even a mother’s
love could check.
“Joan, my dear daughter,”
cried Lady de Tany, “I sorrow with thee that
thy love has been cast upon so bleak and impossible
a shore. But it be better that thou hast learnt
the truth ere it were too late; for, take my word
upon it, Joan, the bitter humiliation such an alliance
must needs have brought upon thee and thy father’s
house would soon have cooled thy love; nor could his
have survived the sneers and affronts even the menials
would have put upon him.”
“Oh, mother, but I love him
so,” moaned the girl. “I did not
know how much until he had gone, and the King’s
officer had come to search for him, and then the thought
that all the power of a great throne and the mightiest
houses of an entire kingdom were turned in hatred against
him raised the hot blood of anger within me and the
knowledge of my love surged through all my being.
Mother, thou canst not know the honor, and the bravery,
and the chivalry of the man as I do. Not since
Arthur of Silures kept his round table hath ridden
forth upon English soil so true a knight as Norman
man of Torn.
“Couldst thou but have seen
him fight, my mother, and witnessed the honor of his
treatment of thy daughter, and heard the tone of dignified
respect in which he spoke of women thou wouldst have
loved him, too, and felt that outlaw though he be,
he is still more a gentleman than nine-tenths the
nobles of England.”
“But his birth, my daughter
!” argued the Lady de Tany. “Some
even say that the gall marks of his brass collar still
showeth upon his neck, and others that he knoweth
not himself the name of his own father, nor had he
any mother.”
Ah, but this was the mighty argument
! Naught could the girl say to justify so heinous
a crime as low birth. What a man did in those
rough cruel days might be forgotten and forgiven but
the sins of his mother or his grandfather in not being
of noble blood, no matter howsoever wickedly attained,
he might never overcome or live down.
Torn by conflicting emotions, the
poor girl dragged herself to her own apartment and
there upon a restless, sleepless couch, beset by wild,
impossible hopes, and vain, torturing regrets, she
fought out the long, bitter night; until toward morning
she solved the problem of her misery in the only way
that seemed possible to her poor, tired, bleeding,
little heart. When the rising sun shone through
the narrow window, it found Joan de Tany at peace
with all about her; the carved golden hilt of the toy
that had hung at her girdle protruded from her breast,
and a thin line of crimson ran across the snowy skin
to a little pool upon the sheet beneath her.
And so the cruel hand of a mighty
revenge had reached out to crush another innocent
victim.