Read Beatrix of Clare Page 16


  XVI

  THE FLAT-NOSE REAPPEARS

  It was September, and Their Majesties had come to Pontefract with theimmediate Household for a brief rest after the labors and fatigues ofthe summer, and which had culminated in the festivities and ceremoniesat York. In the room where Sir Aymer de Lacy first saw Richard ofGloucester, the King and Queen were alone together. Evening hadfallen, but the brilliancy of a full moon in a cloudless sky hadprolonged the day. Through the open windows came the freshness of thewoods and hills, and the candles flickered and flamed in coquetry withthe gentle breeze.

  "Come, Anne, let us walk. It is too fine an evening to spend indoors,"Richard said, laying aside the papers he had been examining.

  She answered with the sweet smile that was always on her lips for him,and arm in arm they passed out upon the ramparts.

  The main body of the soldiery were quartered in the town below thehill, and the castle was very quiet, save only for the tramp of theguards on the wall, the rattle of their weapons, and an occasionalburst of laughter from the great hall. The peace and calm appealed tothe Queen, and she sighed.

  "How so, sweetheart," said Richard; "what troubles you?"

  "I was thinking how much preferable Pontefract is to London."

  The King laughed. "I believe you would rather be Duchess than Queen."

  "Aye, Richard, much rather, much rather," she replied instantly.

  He put his hand on her fair hair and stroked it softly. "Nay, dear,the wearisome work is over now, I trust. Henceforth it will bepleasanter . . . Pardieu! was there ever another woman, I wonder, whoneeded encouragement to wear a crown?"

  "A Neville once refused one," she replied.

  "True, indeed; and gave it back to the miserable Henry. . . Youresemble your great father in many ways--and may our own dear son belike you both."

  "You are very good to me, Richard," she said, taking his hand.

  "But much short of what you deserve, dear one."

  Suddenly a bugle rang loudly from before the barbican, followed in amoment by the rattle of the drawbridge and the clatter of hoofs on theplanks.

  "It is Beatrix and Sir John returning from their ride," the Queen said.

  "It was not De Bury's call," he answered.

  "Why, it is Sir Aymer de Lacy!" she exclaimed, as a pair of horsemencantered across the inner bailey.

  Richard nodded. "And a day earlier than I anticipated . . . but he hasa good excuse."

  "And a bit of disappointment also, that Beatrix is not here to greethim."

  "He can spare her until he has supped, I fancy."

  "She would not be pleased to think so."

  "A woman wants a man to think of naught but her," he smiled.

  "Yes, she does--and even though she know it to be futile . . . it isfoolish, doubtless."

  "It is more than foolish; it is unfortunate. It annoys the man andgrieves the woman."

  "Nay, Richard, you look at it with a man's view only."

  "And you, my dear?"

  "I?--with the proper view, of course."

  The King laughed aloud; and as De Lacy, who had just dismounted beforethe keep, recognized the voice and glanced up, Richard leaned over theparapet and beckoned to him.

  "We are glad to see you," he said, as the Knight presently bent kneeand kissed the Queen's hand.

  "Yes, Sir Aymer, you are always welcome," she added.

  "Your Majesties overwhelm me."

  "Well, if our greeting overwhelm you," the King remarked, "the Countessof Clare's wilt likely end your life."

  "I am very anxious to risk it, Sire," De Lacy answered quickly.

  "Beatrix has left the castle," said Richard.

  "Gone!" Aymer exclaimed.

  "Oh . . . only for a ride."

  "A ride--at night?"

  "Surely--why not--on a fine night and with a gallant escort?"

  "Nay, Richard," the Queen broke in, "do not distress him. Sir Aymer,Beatrix is with her uncle, and as they have been absent since beforevespers, they must soon return."

  De Lacy's face cleared so quickly that Richard smiled.

  "A bad case, truly," he commented, putting his arm about the Queen."Has the lady the disease so deep?"

  "I would not tell you even if I knew," she answered.

  "Nay, I only jested. . . But seriously, De Lacy, why should thewedding be delayed . . . why not have the ceremony here at Pontefractbefore we go Southward?"

  "That it has not already taken place is no fault of mine------"

  "It is, sir; you should have won the Countess to consent," the Kinginterrupted.

  "Her wish runs with mine."

  "Then what ails the matter? . . . Not De Bury surely?"

  "Sir John is as willing as we. It is the behest of the dead Earl thatbars."

  "Beatrix's father?"

  "Yes; she promised him she would not wed before her twenty-fifthbirthday."

  "Peste! A senseless thing to exact; she was little more than child.As King I can absolve her from it."

  "I fear that would not help the matter, Sire; Beatrix regards it assacred--it was given at the Earl's deathbed."

  Richard made a gesture of annoyance. "Does no consideration lift theobligation from her?" he demanded.

  "Naught, as she views it now, but a question of life, honor, orimperative necessity."

  "Now may the Devil fly away with such foolishness! Wherefore shall thedead rule the living? . . . How old is the Countess?"

  "She was four and twenty last month."

  "Great St. George! You have a wait, indeed; and ample time to pray forthe imperative necessity. Meanwhile, best continue to keep thebetrothal secret. It will likely save you both some embarrassment andconsiderable gossip at the long delay."

  Just then another bugle blared from the barbican.

  "Sir John and Beatrix!" the Queen exclaimed.

  Richard shook his head.

  "It was Ratcliffe's call," he said.

  A moment later the Master of Horse came at full gallop across thecourtyard.

  Jumping from saddle and letting his horse run loose to be caught by thegrooms, he sprang up the steps. In the anteroom the page met him withthe information that Their Majesties were on the wall and were not tobe disturbed. But at the first word, Ratcliffe dashed into the King'schamber and thence to the ramparts. Richard saw him coming and wentquickly to meet him.

  "What is it?" he demanded.

  "Where is De Bury?" Ratcliffe asked.

  "Gone for a ride with the Countess."

  "I feared it. I found his horse at the foot of the hill, trottingtoward the castle from the West. There is blood on the saddle cloth,and the rein is cut in twain at the bit."

  "Foul work!" the King exclaimed. "Send an order to the camp for ahundred men to scour the country toward the Aire, and let another fiftymuster before the barbican at daybreak; then come to me." . . . andturning, he sauntered back to the Queen. "Come, my dear, let us goin," he said, putting his arm through hers, "I must take up somematters that Ratcliffe has brought. And do you remain, De Lacy;perchance you can aid me."

  "Will you be occupied very late?" she asked, as he held back the arras.

  "Only a short time, my dear. I will come to you presently," andhimself closed the door behind her.

  "Are you very weary?" he asked De Lacy.

  "Fit for any service Your Majesty may wish."

  "It will be your own service."

  "Mine! Mine! . . . You cannot mean----" taking a step forward.

  "Steady, man, steady! I mean only that Sir John's riderless horse hasjust been found near the castle, with severed rein and bloody saddle."

  De Lacy passed his hand across his forehead.

  "And Beatrix?" he asked huskily.

  The King shook his head.

  Again Aymer passed his hand across his eyes; his brain was working veryslowly how.

  "You have given orders?" he asked.

  "One hundred men-at-arms are seeking for a clue.
Fifty others willawait you at the barbican at daybreak."

  "Meanwhile I, too, will seek," and he sprang toward the door--and intoRatcliffe's arms.

  "Stay, Sir Aymer," said the King; "it would do no good for you tosearch at night--you may go far astray. All that can be done tilldaybreak the scouts will do. . . You gave the orders, Ratcliffe?"

  "I did, and venture to amplify them by sending twenty men along theNorth road as far as the Aire for any trace of Sir John or of thefight--for, of course, there was a fight."

  "And a passing hard one ere De Bury was unhorsed," said Richard.

  "The remaining eighty," Ratcliffe continued, "I divided into bands often and five, bidding them follow every cross-road or bridle-path, andinquire for information from every traveler and at every habitation.The instant aught is discovered you will be advised."

  The King turned to De Lacy. "You rescued Sir John when he was attackedlast April near his own castle; might this be the same band?"

  Aymer shook his head. "We killed all of them but one."

  "True, I remember now. . . The flat-nosed one alone escaped. . . DidDe Bury ever speak to you of enemies in these parts?"

  "Never directly; though, as you know, he seemed to dislike the Abbot ofKirkstall and suspected him of being, at least, party to the otherattack."

  "Well, we must wait for even a plausible solution until we have a fewfacts. Yet I would wager much it is an abduction--and God grant it beso. . . Of course, it may be the villains did not molest the Countess.In that case, find Sir John and you find her, too."

  "The chance is slight," De Lacy said quickly, "yet I shall ride rapidlyback for a few miles and, perchance, it may be so. If I be not here bydaybreak, Sire, I will join the men en route."

  "It will be a relief for you to be on the move," said Richard kindly;"but return here for your escort. We may have clues then; and if theCountess has been abducted, she is quite as likely to be carried Southas North."

  "I shall be here at daybreak," Aymer answered. He saddled Selim withhis own hand, and with Dauvrey beside him hurried away. They rode insilence with eyes alert, scanning sharply the ground on both sides ofthe road that lay like a silver stream before them. A mile from thecastle a soldier rode out from the shadow and reined across the track,his casquetel and drawn sword glistening in the moonlight.

  "Hold!" he ordered.

  "Yorkshire!" said De Lacy . . . "Any news?" he demanded, as they sweptby.

  "None, my lord."

  At the first cross-road two horsemen barred the way. Aymer paused toquestion them, but learning nothing, the pace was resumed. Anothermile was passed, and they had tarried a moment to breathe and water thehorses at a rivulet that gurgled across the road, when Selim suddenlythrew up his head.

  "Some one comes!" said De Lacy . . . "it is news . . . he ridesfuriously; he must be stopped."

  They drew out into the middle of the track and waited. Presently arunning horse shot into view ahead, and the rider, seeing the two infront, shouted the royal messenger's call: "Way! In the King's name!Way!"

  "Stay, Allen," Giles Dauvrey cried, recognizing him. "What word?"

  "Sir John has been found," the man answered, drawing up short.

  "Dead?" Aymer demanded.

  "No, my lord, not yet."

  "And the Countess of Clare?"

  "Gone, my lord; no trace."

  "God in Heaven! . . . Where Is Sir John?"

  "Half a league further on."

  "Tell the King I have gone thither," Aymer called over his shoulder ashe raced away.

  In a patch of moonlight, fifty feet or so in from the road, lay SirJohn de Bury, his eyes closed, his face upturned, motionless--to allappearances a corpse. De Lacy sprang down and knelt beside him.

  "He is not dead, my lord," said a soldier.

  Aymer laid back the doublet and shirt, wet and heavy with blood thathad come from a deep wound in the right breast, and was still oozingslowly. The heart was beating, but very faintly, and forcing the setjaws apart with his dagger, he poured a measure of cordial down SirJohn's throat.

  "May it please you, sir," said one of the men, "we have arranged alitter of boughs, and if you think it good we will bear him back to thecastle."

  "It can do him no harm," De Lacy answered. . . "How say you, Giles?"

  "With even step it will not hurt him," the squire replied.

  Lifting the old Knight carefully they placed him on the litter andAymer wrapped his own cloak around him, then nodded to the soldiers toproceed.

  "Go slowly," he ordered, "a jolt may end his life. Watch his heartclosely; if it grow weaker, use the cordial," and he handed them theflask.

  "The fight was not at this place," said Dauvrey after a moment'sexamination of the ground; "there are no mingling hoof marks. De Burylikely fell from the saddle here and the horse kept on to the castle;his tracks point thither."

  "Let us follow the back track," De Lacy exclaimed.

  For a score of paces it led them, slowly and laboriously, into the darkforest, and then vanished, and though they searched in all directions,no further trace was found. It was a fruitless quest; and at lengththe squire persuaded his master to abandon it and await the coming ofthe dawn.

  Reluctantly De Lacy remounted and they rode slowly back to Pontefract.The soldiers bearing Sir John de Bury had reached there some timebefore, and he lay on the couch in his own room. There was no materialchange in his condition, though under the candle-light there was lessof the ghastly pallor of death in the face; and about the ears wereevidences that the blood was beginning to circulate more strongly. TheKing's own physician, Antonio Carcea--an Italian--sat beside him withhis hand on the pulse and, ever and anon, bent to listen to therespiration.

  At Be Lacy's entrance he glanced up with a frown which faded when hesaw who it was.

  "He will live, Signor," he said in Italian. "He has not yet come toconsciousness, but it is only a matter of a little while."

  "Will he speak by daybreak?" De Lacy asked.

  "Most likely, Signor."

  "Summon me on the instant, and may the Good God aid you."

  Going to his quarters and waving Dauvrey aside when he would haverelieved him of his doublet, Aymer threw himself upon the bed. He hadridden far that day, and with the coming of the sun would begin whatpromised to be a labor long and arduous. He could not sleep--and hisclosed eyes but made the fancies of his brain more active and thevisions of his love, abducted and in hideous peril, more real andagonizing. Yet to serve her he must needs be strong and so he tried tocompose himself and rest his body. There was scanty time untilmorning; but an hour of quiet now might breed a day of vigor in thefuture.

  Presently there came a sharp knock and Ratcliffe entered.

  "Lie still," he said, as De Lacy would have risen. "I know you foundno trace of the Countess else you would not be here. Yet, perchance,Sir John may speak or some of the scouts return with a clue. If not,the sunlight, doubtless, will reveal what the night has hidden. TheKing has retired, but he bade me say to you not to depart without wordwith him. Meanwhile if any of the scouts come in they are to report toyou."

  Slowly the minutes dragged themselves out. The shadows lengthened moreand more as the moon went to its rest behind the distant Craven hills.Then of a sudden, light and shadow mingled and all was dark. Presentlya cock crowed; and the sound seemed loud as a roar of a bombard. Againthe cock crowed, and from the retainers' houses another and anotheranswered, until the shrill cry ran along the outer bailey and acrossthe wall and on down the hill to the village, growing fainter andfainter until, at the last, it was like a far distant echo, more memorythan reality.

  De Lacy turned his head toward the window, hoping for some sign of day,but the East was black. With an impatient sigh he lay back. Was everman so sorely tried--so cruelly used--so choked by horrors of theprobable! Then came a troubled slumber--a tossing and a waking--thatwas ended by a quick step in the corridor, and with a bound he reachedthe door an
d flung it open.

  "Sir John------" the page began, but got no farther--De Lacy was gone.

  Sir John de Bury lay as when Aymer left him, but the color was comingback to his face and his eyes were open, and he smiled very faintly ingreeting.

  "He may speak?" De Lacy asked.

  "A few words, Signor," the Italian answered.

  Just then the King entered hastily, a long gown about him. Sir Johntried to raise his hand in salute, but Richard quickly caught the weakfingers.

  "Nay, nay, my friend," he said; "another time for that." . . . Then toCarcea: "Has he spoken?"

  "Not yet, Sire; and if it please Your Majesty, it would be well to askthe questions so that they can be answered by a motion of the head.The patient's strength will permit few words."

  "Do you understand, John?" Richard asked.

  De Bury smiled faintly and indicated that he did.

  "Were you attacked?" the King went on.

  "Yes," said the nod.

  "By highwaymen?"

  A pause, and then--"No."

  "By men hired for the purpose?"

  "Yes," readily.

  "Do you know by whom?"

  Another pause; then--"No."

  "You have suspicion?"

  "Yes," quickly.

  "More of that in a moment; first, tell me, did they carry off theCountess?"

  "Yes," and the old eyes glowed fiercely.

  "Was she hurt in the struggle?"

  "No."

  "Were you attacked in the main road?"

  "No."

  "On a by-track?"

  "Yes."

  "North of the main road?"

  "Yes."

  "Near the main road?"

  "Yes."

  "Two leagues from here?"

  "Yes," after a slight pause.

  "More than two?"

  "No."

  "Oh! the path to the Hermit's Cell?"

  "Yes," quickly.

  "How long after you left Pontefract--two hours?"

  "Yes," readily.

  "Can you show the number of your assailants on your fingers?"

  The right hand opened and closed twice.

  "Ten, mean you?" the King exclaimed.

  "Yes," instantly.

  "Pardieu! did you recognize any of them?"

  "One," said the raised finger.

  "Can you whisper his name?" and the King bent low over the bed.

  Sir John's lips twitched. He labored hard to speak, but the strengthwas wanting; no sound came; the tongue refused to move. A spasm ofdisappointment passed over his face. Then suddenly he fixed his eyesmeaningly upon De Lacy, and Richard understood.

  "Does Sir Aymer know this fellow?" he asked.

  "Yes," was the instant answer.

  "Has he been about the Court?"

  "No."

  "St. Denis!" exclaimed De Lacy, "was it Flat-Nose?"

  "Yes! Yes!" eagerly.

  "One more question," said the King: "Can you suggest whither theycarried the Countess?"

  Again the eyes turned to De Lacy.

  "Kirkstall Abbey?" Aymer asked.

  "Yes," but the hesitating nod signified it was only a suspicion.

  "We will leave you now, old friend," said Richard. "Be not concerned.Ample precautions were taken hours ago to trace the Countess; and DeLacy with fifty horsemen rides in pursuit at daybreak--as soon as trailcan be followed. The quest ends only when she is found and saved.Come, Sir Aymer, morning dawns and a word with you before you mount.Hark! your troopers muster now within the camp."