"Then, sir, I yield myself your prisoner," answered the knight, "seeing that you are two and I but one."
"Not so. I take no prisoners, who seek vengeance, not ransom, and least of all from you. My companion shall not touch you unless I fall. Swift now, the light dies, and I would kill you fighting."
The knight picked up his shield.
"I know you," he said. "I am not he you think."
"And I know you," answered Hugh. "Now, no words, of them there have been enough between us," and he smote at him.
For two minutes or more they fought, for the armour of both was good, and one was full of rage and the other of despair. There was little fine sword-play about this desperate duel; the light was too low for it. They struck and warded, that was all, while Grey d.i.c.k stood by and watched grimly. Some more fugitives came up, but seeing that blows pa.s.sed, veered off to the left, for of blows they had known enough that day. The swan knight missed a great stroke, for Hugh leapt aside; then, as the Frenchman staggered forward, struck at him with all his strength.
The heavy sword, grasped in both hands, for Hugh had thrown aside his shield, caught his foe where neck joins shoulder and sank through his mail deep into the flesh beneath. Down he went. It was finished.
"Unlace his helm, d.i.c.k," grasped Hugh. "I would see his face for the last time, and if he still lives----"
d.i.c.k obeyed, cutting the lashings of the helm.
"By the Saints!" he said presently in a startled voice, "if this be Sir Edmund Acour he has strangely changed."
"I am not Acour, lord of Noyon," said the dying man in a hollow voice.
"Had you given me time I would have told you so."
"Then, in Christ"s name, who are you?" asked Hugh, "that wear de Noyon"s cognizance?"
"I am Pierre de la Roche, one of his knights. You have seen me in England. I was with him there, and you made me prisoner on Dunwich heath. He bade me change arms with him before the battle, promising me great reward, because he knew that if he were taken, Edward of England would hang him as a traitor, whereas me they might ransom. Also, he feared your vengeance."
"Well, of a truth, you have the reward," said d.i.c.k, looking at his ghastly wound.
"Where then is Acour?" gasped Hugh.
"I know not. He fled from the battle an hour ago with the King of France, but I who was doomed would not fly. Oh, that I could find a priest to shrive me!"
"Whither does he fly?" asked Hugh again.
"I know not. He said that if the battle went against us he would seek his castle in Italy, where Edward cannot reach him."
"What armour did he wear?" asked d.i.c.k.
"Mine, mine--a wolf upon his shield, a wolf"s head for crest."
Hugh reeled as though an arrow had pa.s.sed through him.
"The wolf knight, Acour!" he groaned. "And I spared his life."
"A very foolish deed, for which you now pay the price," said d.i.c.k, as though to himself.
"We met in the battle and he told me," said de la Roche, speaking very slowly, for he grew weak. "Yes, he told me and laughed. Truly we are Fate"s fools, all of us," and he smiled a ghastly smile and died.
Hugh hid his face in his hands and sobbed in his helpless rage.
"The innocent slain," he said, "by me, and the guilty spared--by me. Oh, G.o.d! my cup is full. Take his arms, man, that one day I may show them to Acour, and let us be going ere we share this poor knight"s fate. Ah!
who could have guessed it was thus that I and Sir Pierre should meet and part again."
CHAPTER X
THE KING"S CHAMPION
Back over that fearful field, whereof the silence was broken only by the groans of the wounded and the dying, walked Hugh and Grey d.i.c.k. They came to the great rampart of dead men and horses that surrounded the English line, and climbed it as though it were a wall. On the further side bonfires had been lit to lighten the darkness, and by the flare of them they saw Edward of England embracing and blessing his son, the Black Prince, who, unhelmeted, bowed low before him in his bloodstained mail.
"Who were they besides, Sir Robert Fitzsimmon and Richard de Beaumont who helped you when you were down, my son?" asked the King.
The Prince looked about him.
"I know not, Sire. Many, but here is one of them," and he pointed to Hugh, who just then appeared within the circle of the firelight. "I think that he slew the Count Louis of Flanders."
"Ah!" said the King, "our young merchant of Dunwich--a gallant man.
Kneel you down, merchant of Dunwich."
Hugh knelt, and the King, taking the red sword from his hand, struck him with it on the shoulder, saying:
"Rise, Sir Hugh de Cressi, for now I give you that boon which your deathfaced servant asked before the battle. You have served us, or rather England well, both of you. But whose armour is that the archer carries, Sir Hugh?"
"Sir Edmund Acour"s, lord de Noyon, Sire, only, alack! another man was within the armour."
"Your meaning?" said the King briefly, and in few words Hugh told the tale.
"A strange story, Sir Hugh. It would seem that G.o.d fought against you in this matter. Also I am wroth; my orders were that none of my men should sally out, though I fear me that you are not the only one who has broken them, and for your great deeds I forgive you."
"Sire," said Hugh, dropping to his knee again, "a boon. This de Noyon, your enemy and mine, has cheated and mocked me. Grant to me and my servant, Richard the archer, permission to follow after him and be avenged upon him."
"What is this you ask, Sir Hugh? That you and your brave henchman should wander off into the depths of France, there to perish in a dungeon or be hanged like felons? Nay, nay, we need good men and have none to spare for private quarrels. As for this traitor, de Noyon, and his plot, that egg is broken ere it was hatched, and we fear him no more. You follow me, Sir Hugh, and your servant with you, whom we make a captain of our archers. Until Calais is taken, leave not our person for any cause, and ask no more such boons lest you lose our favour. Nay, we have no more words for you since many others seek them. Stand back, Sir Hugh! What say you, my lord of Warwick? Ay, it is a gruesome task, but let the Welshmen out, those wounded will be well rid of their pain, and Christ have mercy on their souls. Forget not when it is finished to gather all men that they may give thanks to G.o.d for His great mercies."
Well nigh a year had gone, for once again the sun shone in the brazen August heavens. Calais had fallen at last. Only that day six of her n.o.blest citizens had come forth, bearing the keys of the fortress, clad in white shirts, with ropes about their necks, and been rescued from instant death at the hands of the headsman by the prayer of Queen Philippa.
In his tent sat Hugh de Cressi, who, after so much war and hardship, looked older than his years, perhaps because of a red scar across the forehead, which he had come by during the siege. With him was his father, Master de Cressi, who had sailed across from Dunwich with a cargo of provisions, whereof, if the truth were known, he had made no small profit. For they were sold, every pound of them, before they left the ship"s hold, though it is true the money remained to be collected.
"You say that Eve is well, my father?"
"Aye, well enough, son. Never saw I woman better or more beautiful, though she wears but a sad face. I asked her if she would not sail with me and visit you. But she answered: "Nay, how can I who am another man"s wife? Sir Hugh, your son, should have killed the wolf and let the poor swan go. When the wolf is dead, then, perchance, I will visit him. But, meanwhile, say to him that Red Eve"s heart is where it always was, and that, like all Dunwich, she joys greatly in his fame and is honoured in his honour." Moreover, to Grey d.i.c.k here, she sends many messages, and a present of wines and spiced foods for his stomach and of six score arrows made after his own pattern for his quiver."
"But for me no gift, father?" said Hugh.
"Nothing, son, save her love, which she said was enough. Also, in all this press of business and in my joy at finding you safe I had almost forgotten it, there is a letter from the holy Father, Sir Andrew. I have it somewhere in my pouch amid the bills of exchange," and he began to hunt through the parchments which he carried in a bag within his robe.
At length the letter was found. It ran thus: