John Hull sc.r.a.ped with his foot and made a clumsy bow as his new master turned away. Then, suddenly, he seemed to remember something. His face changed in expression.
"G.o.d forgive me, sir," he said, "indeed, I had near forgot it. When I went into your chamber and took this harness for cleaning, there was a letter lying there for you. I can read, sir; Dr. Taylor taught me to read somewhat. I took the letter, fearing that it might be overlooked or e"en taken away, for there are a plaguey lot of serving-men in this pa.s.sage. "Tis here, sir, and I crave you pardon me for forgetting of it till now."
He handed Johnnie a missive of thick yellow-brown paper--such as was woven from linen rags at Arches Smithfield Factory of that day. The letter was folded four-square and tied round with a cord of green silk, and where the threads intersected at the back was a broad seal of dull red wax, bearing the sign of a lamb in its centre.
Johnnie pulled off the cord, the wax cracked, and the thick yellow paper rustled as he pulled it open.
This was the letter:
"HONOURED SIR,--This from my house in Chepe. Thy honoured father who hath lately left the City hath left with me a sum of money which remaineth here at your charges, and for your disposal thereof as you may think fit. This shall be sent to you upon your letter and signature, to-morrow an you so wish.
"Natheless, should you come to my house to-night I will hand it into your keeping in gold coin. I will say that Sir Henry expressed hope that you might care to come to my poor house which has long been the agency for Commendone. For your father"s son, sir, there will be very open welcome.
"Your obt. svt., and good friend, ROBERT CRESSEMER, Alderman of ye City of London."
Commendone read the letter through with care.
His father had been most generous since Johnnie had arrived at Court, and the young man was in no need of money. Sir Henry had, indeed, hinted that further supplies would be sent shortly, and he must have arranged it with the Alderman ere he left the City.
Johnnie sighed. His father had always been good to him. No desire of his had ever been left ungratified. Many sons of n.o.blemen at Court had neither such a generous allowance nor perfect equipment as he had. He never thought of his father and the old house in Kent without a little pang of regret. Was it worth it all? Were not the silent woods of Commendone, with their shy forest creatures, better far than this stately citadel and home of kings?
His life had been so tranquil in the past. The happy days had gone by with the regularity of some slow-turning wheel. Now all was stress and turmoil. Dark and dreadful doings encompa.s.sed him. He was afloat upon strange waters, and there was no pilot aboard, nor did he know what port he should make, what unknown coast-line should greet his troubled eyes when dawn should come.
These thoughts were but fleeting, as he sat in his bedroom, where he had taken the letter from Mr. Cressemer. He sent them away with an effort of will. The past life was definitely over; now he must gather himself together and consider the immediate future without vain regrets.
As he mounted the stairs from the Common Room he had it in mind to change from his riding costume and sleep. He needed sleep. He wanted to enter that mysterious country so close to the frontiers of death, to be alone that he might think of Elizabeth. He knew now how men dreamed and meditated of their loves, why lovers loved to be alone.
He held the letter in his hand, looking down at the firm, clear writing with lack-l.u.s.tre eyes. What should he do? sleep, lose himself in happy fancies, or go to the house of the Alderman? He had no Court duties that night.
He knew Robert Cressemer"s name well. Every one knew it in London, but Commendone had heard it mentioned at home for many years. Mr. Cressemer, who would be the next Lord Mayor, was one of those merchant princes who, ever since the time of that great commercial genius, Henry VII, had become such an important factor in the national life.
For many years the Alderman, the foundation of whose fortune had been the export of English wool, had been in intimate relations, both of business and friendship, with Sir Henry Commendone. The knight"s wool all went to the warehouses in Chepe. He had shares in the fleet of trading vessels belonging to Cressemer, which supplied the wool-fairs of Holland and the Netherlands. The childlike and absolutely uneconomic act of Edward VI which endeavoured to make all interest illegal, and enacted that "_whoever shall henceforth lend any sum of money for any manner of usury, increase, lucre, gain or interest to be had, received, or hoped for, over and above the sum so lent_," should suffer serious penalties, had been repealed.
Banking had received a tremendous impetus, Robert Cressemer had adventured largely in it, and Sir Henry Commendone was a partner with him in more than one enterprise.
Of all this Johnnie knew nothing. He had not the slightest idea how rich his father was, and knew nothing of the fortune that would one day be his.
He did know, however, that Mr. Cressemer was a very important person indeed, the admired and trusted confidant of Sir Henry, and a man of enormous influence. Such a letter, coming from such a man, was hardly to be neglected by a young courtier. Johnnie knew how, if one of his colleagues had received it, it would have been shown about in the Common Room, what rosy visions of fortune and paid bills it would invoke!
He read the letter again. There was no need to go to Mr. Cressemer"s house that night if he did not wish to do so. He was weary, he wanted to be alone to taste and savour this new thing within him that was called love. Yet something kept urging him to go, nevertheless. He could not quite have said what it was, though again the sense that he stood very much alone and friends were good--especially such a powerful one as this--crossed his mind. And, as an instance of the quite unconscious but very real revolution that had taken place in his thoughts during the last forty hours, it is to be noted that he _did_ feel the need of friends and supporters.
Yet he was high in favour with the King and Queen, envied by every one, certain of rapid advancement.
But he no longer thought anything of this. Those great ones were on one side of a great _something_ which he would not or could not define. He was on the other, he and the girl with eyes of crushed sapphire and a red mouth of sorrow.
It would be politic to go.... "I"ll put it to chance," he said to himself at length. "How doth Ovid have it?...
""_Casus ubique valet; semper tibi pendeat hamus: Quo minime credas gurgite, piscis erit_."
I remember Father Chilches" translation:
""There"s always room for chance, so drop thy hook, A fish there"ll be when least for it you look."
Here goes!"
He opened his purse to find a coin with which to settle the matter, and poured out the contents into his palm. There were eight or nine gold sovereigns of Henry VIII, beautiful coins with "_Hiberniae Rex_" among the other t.i.tles, which were still known as "double ryals," three gold ducats, coined in that year, with the Queen and King Consort _vis-a-vis_ and one crown above the heads of both, and one little silver half testoon.
He put the gold back in his purse and held out the small coin upon his hand. "What is"t to be, little testoon?" he said whimsically, looking at the big M and crown, "bed and thoughts of her, or the worshipful Master Cressemer and, I don"t doubt, a better supper than I"m likely to get in the Tower? "M," I go."
He spun the coin, and it came down with the initial uppermost. He laughed and flung it on to a shelf, calling John Hull to help him change his dress.
Nothing told him that in that spin he had decided--or let it better be said there was decided for him--the whole course of his life. At that actual moment!
Thus the intrusion of the little testoon.
CHAPTER V
THE FINDING OF ELIZABETH
At a little before nine in the late twilight, Commendone left the Tower.
He was attended by John Hull, whom he had armed with the short cutla.s.s-shaped sword which serving-men were allowed to wear.
He might be late, and the City was no very safe place in those days for people returning home through the dark. Johnnie knew, moreover, that he would be carrying a considerable sum in gold with him, and it was as well to have an attendant.
They walked towards Chepe, Johnnie in front, his man a yard or so behind. It was summer-time, but even in summer London went to bed early, and the prentices were returning home from their cudgel-play and shooting at the b.u.t.ts in Finsbury fields.
The sky was a faint primrose above the spires of the town. The sun, that tempest of fire, had sunk, but still left long lines in the sky, lines which looked as if they had been drawn by a vermilion pencil; while, here and there, were locks, friths, and islands of gold and purple floating in the sky, billowed and upheaved into an infinity of distant glory.
They went through the narrow streets beneath the hundreds of coloured signs which hung from shop and warehouse.
At a time when the ordinary porter, prentice, and messenger could hardly read, each place of business must signify and locate itself by a sign. A merchant of those days did not send a letter by hand to a business house, naming it to the messenger. He told the man to go to the sign of the Three Cranes, the Gold Pig on a black ground, the Tower and Dragon in such and such a street.
London was not lit on a summer night at this hour. In the winter, up to half-past eight or so the costers" barrows with their torches provided the only illumination. After that all was dark, and in summer there was no artificial light at all when the day had gone.
They came up to the cross standing to the east of Wood Street, which was silhouetted against the last gleams of day in the sky. Its hexagonal form of three sculptured tiers, which rose from one another like the divisions of a telescope, cut out a black pattern against the coloured background. The niches with their statues, representing many of the Sovereigns of England, were all in grey shadow, but the large gilt cross which surmounted it still caught something of the evening fires.
To the east there was the smaller tower of octagonal form, which was the Conduit, and here also the top was bathed in light--a figure standing upon a gilded cone and blowing a horn.
The gutters in the streets were dry now, for the rain storm of two days ago had not lasted long, and they were sticky and odorous with vegetable and animal filth.
The two men walked in the centre of the street, as was wiser in those days, for--as still happens in the narrow quarters of old French towns to-day--garret windows were open, and pails were emptied with but little regard for those who were pa.s.sing by.
When they came into Chepe itself, things were a little less congested, for great houses were built there, and Johnnie walked more quickly. Many of the houses of the merchant princes were but little if at all inferior to the mansions of the n.o.bility at that time. They stood often enough in gloomy and unfrequented courts, and were accessible only by inconvenient pa.s.sages, but once arrived at, their interiors were of extraordinary comfort and magnificence.
Johnnie knew that Mr. Cressemer"s house was hereabouts, but was not certain of the precise location. He looked up through the endless succession of Saracens" heads, Tudor roses, blue bears, and golden lambs, but could see nothing in the growing dark. He turned round and beckoned to John Hull.